Concurrent estate
A concurrent estate or co-tenancy is a concept
in property law, particularly derived from the
common law of real property, which describes
the various ways in which property can be owned
by more than one person at a given time. The
parties who own property jointly are referred
to as co-tenants or joint tenants. Most common-law
jurisdictions recognize three kinds of concurrent
estate: tenancy in common, joint tenancy with
right of survivorship, and tenancy by the entirety.
Many jurisdictions simply refer to a joint tenancy
with right of survivorship as a joint tenancy,
but a few U.S. States treat the phrase joint
tenancy as synonymous with a tenancy in common.
The type of ownership determines the rights
of the parties to convey their interest in the
property to others, to will the property to
their devisees, or to sever their joint ownership
of the property. Just as each of these affords
a different set of rights and responsibilities
to the joint owners of property, each requires
a different set of conditions in order to exist.
* 1 Rights and duties shared by all co-tenants
* 2 Tenancy in common
o 2.1 Destruction of a tenancy in common
* 3 Joint tenancy with right of survivorship
o 3.1 The four unities
o 3.2 Breaking a JTWROS
o 3.3 Effect of a mortgage
* 4 Tenancy by the entirety
Rights and duties shared by all co-tenants
Co-tenants, irrespective of the type of tenancy,
share certain rights to the property:
1. Each tenant has an unrestricted right of
access to the property. Where one co-tenant
wrongfully excludes another from making use
of the property, the excluded co-tenant can
bring a cause of action for ouster, and may
receive the fair rental value of the property
for the time that he was dispossessed. 2. Each
tenant has a right to an accounting of profits
made from the property. If the property generates
income such as rent, each tenant is entitled
to a proportion of that income. 3. Each tenant
has a right of contribution for the costs of
owning the property. Co-tenants can be forced
to contribute to the payment of expenses such
as repairs, property taxes, and mortgages on
the entire property.
Co-tenants do not have any obligation to contribute
to any costs of improving the property. If one
co-tenant adds a feature that enhances the value
of the property, that co-tenant has no right
to demand that any others share the cost of
adding that feature - even if other co-tenants
reap greater profits from the property because
of it.
Furthermore, each co-tenant can independently
encumber their own share in the property by
taking out a mortgage on that share; other co-tenants
have no obligation to help pay a mortgage that
only runs to another tenant's share of the property,
and the mortgagee can only foreclose on that
share.
Finally, co-tenants owe one another a duty of
fair dealing. Because of this, any co-tenant
who acquires a mortgage claim against the property
must give his co-tenants a reasonable opportunity
to purchase proportionate shares in that claim.
Tenancy in common
Tenancy in common is the default form of concurrent
estate, in which each owner, referred to as
a tenant in common, is regarded by the law as
each owning separate and distinct shares which
may differ in size. This form of ownership is
common where the co-owners are not married or
have contributed different amounts to the acquisition
of the property. Also, if joint owners had attempted
to use another form of joint ownership such
as a joint tenancy with right of survivorship
or a tenancy by the entirety, and the effort
was for some reason invalid, the joint owners
would then be tenants in common. If conclusive
evidence is not available of the desire to create
a tenancy with rights of survivorship or a tenancy
by the entirety, courts will determine that
a tenancy in common has in fact been created.
Tenants in common have no right of survivorship,
meaning that if one owner dies, that owner's
interest in the property will pass by inheritance
to that owner's devisees or heirs, either by
will, or by intestate succession.
Destruction of a tenancy in common
Where the parties to a tenancy in common wish
to destroy the joint interest, they can do so
through a partition of the property - a division
of the land into distinctly owned plots.
If the parties are unable to agree to a partition,
any or all of them may seek the ruling of a
court to determine how the land should be divided
up, physically divide it between the joint owners
(partition in kind), leaving each with ownership
of a portion of the property representing their
share. Courts may also order a partition by
sale in which the property is sold and the proceeds
are distributed to the owners. [edit]
Joint tenancy with right of survivorship
A joint tenancy with right of survivorship or
JTWROS is a type of concurrent estate in which
the joint owners have a right of survivorship,
meaning that if one owner dies, that owner's
interest in the property will automatically
pass to the remaining owner or owners. On the
death of one of the tenants, the whole of the
property passes to remaining tenant(s); this
is the "right of survivorship." The
deceased tenant's property interest simply evaporates
by operation of law, and cannot be inherited
by his heirs (which means it avoids going through
probate). Under this type of ownership, the
last owner living takes all.
It is important to note, however, that creditors'
claims against the deceased tenant's estate
may, under certain circumstances, be satisfied
by the portion of ownership previously owned
by the deceased, but now owned by the survivor
or survivors. In other words, the deceased's
liabilities can sometimes remain attached to
the property.
This form of ownership is common between husband
and wife, and parent and child, and in any other
situation where parties want absolute ownership
to immediately pass to the survivor. For bank
and brokerage accounts held in this fashion,
the acronym JTWROS is commonly appended to the
account name as evidence of the owners' intent.
In order to create this type joint ownership,
the party or parties seeking to create it must
use specific language indicating that intent.
For example, if Joey wishes to convey property
for Kelly and Lisa to share as joint tenants
with right of survivorship, Joey must state
in the deed that the property is being conveyed
"to Kelly and Lisa as joint tenants with
right of survivorship, and not as tenants in
common."
The four unities
In order for a JTWROS to be created, the co-owners
must share the "four unities":
* Time = the property interest must be acquired
by both tenants at the same time. * Title =
both tenants must have the same title to the
property in the deed - if the deed places a
condition on one tenant and not the other, they
do not have the same title, and the attempt
to create a JTWROS is invalid. * Interest =
both tenants must have the same interest in
the property - e.g. three owners each having
a 1/3 interest. * Possession = both tenants
must have the right to possess the whole property
- if one owner can prove that he or she has
been improperly excluded from the property by
the other, the JTWROS will be invalidated.
If any one of the four unities is missing, the
JTWROS is invalid, and becomes a tenancy in
common.
Breaking a JTWROS
The co-tenant in property owned by a JTWROS
can break the JTWROS as to their interest in
the property at any time by conveying their
interest in the property to another person.
Under the old common law, this required an actual
exchange with a straw man - another person who
would buy the property from the co-tenant for
some nominal consideration, then sell it back
to the co-tenant at the same low price. Many
states now permit a joint tenant to break the
JTWROS without a straw man, simply by executing
a document to that effect - even if that owner
does not inform the other owners. In either
case, the JTWROS will, again, revert to a tenancy
in common as to that owner's interest in the
property.
It is important to note, however, that if there
are three or more owners, and only one of the
owners breaks the JTWROS, the other owners remain
in the JTWROS as to each other. For example,
suppose Joey, Kelly, and Lisa own a piece of
property as joint tenants with right of survivorship,
but then Joey conveys his share in the property
to Ryan. If Ryan dies, his 1/3 share will go
to his heirs. But if Kelly dies, her 1/3 share
will go to Lisa, because they still owned their
total 2/3 share in JTWROS.
Effect of a mortgage
Where one party takes out a mortgage on the
jointly owned property, this may break the JWTROS,
depending on the law of the state. Some states
use a lien theory, which posits that the taking
of a mortgage merely places a lien on the property,
leaving the joint tenancy undisturbed. However,
other states that use a title theory, contending
that a mortgage actually conveys title to the
mortgagor until the mortgage is paid. In such
states, the taking of a mortgage by one owner
breaks the joint tenancy as to that owner.
A creditor's judgment lien is not enough, no
severance, if debtor dies before creditor sues,
the creditor has no interest in the property
left to collect against.
Tenancy by the entirety
Tenancy by the entirety is a type of concurrent
estate available only to married couples, wherein
ownership of the property is treated as though
the husband and wife are a single legal person.
Like a JTWROS, the tenancy by the entirety also
encompasses a right of survivorship, so if one
spouse dies, the entire interest in the property
passes to the surviving spouse, without going
through probate.
In order for a tenancy by the entirety to be
created, the party or parties seeking to create
it must specify in the deed that the property
is being conveyed to the couple "as tenants
by the entirety". Also, the parties must
share the four unities necessary to create a
joint tenancy with right of survivorship - time,
title, interest, and possession - plus a fifth
unity, marriage. However, unlike a JTWROS, neither
party in a tenancy by the entirety has a unilateral
right to sever the tenancy by the entirety -
if it is to be undone, or if any part of the
property is to be conveyed to another person,
this must be carried out by both husband and
wife. A divorce breaks the unity of marriage,
leaving the default tenancy – a tenancy in common.
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