The Limits & Possibilities of Property
The System of Estates
First Possession & Capture
Acquisition & Special Doctrines
Restraints on Alienation, Tenancies, Waste
100

Ownership of land.

What is real property?

100

This type of executory interest divests the grantor. 

What is a springing executory interest? 

100

This Latin phrase describes wild animals that are not owned until captured.

what is ferae naturae?

100

The Doctrine of Capture and the Doctrine of Discovery both rely on this temporal principle to determine ownership. 

What is "first in time, first in right"?

100

These are the three types of restraints on alienation.

What is disabling, forfeiture, and 
promissory? 

200

Right to possess, use, exclude, transfer (alienate), destroy

what are the "bundle of sticks" of property? 

200

This estate is created by words of duration such as "so long as," "while," or "during," and terminates automatically upon breach of the condition. 

what is fee simple determinable?
200

In Popov v. Hayashi, the court recognized this novel property interest for someone who nearly achieved possession but was unlawfully interrupted. 

what is a pre-possessory interest? 

200

Trover, Replevin, and Bailment 

What are the possible remedies for acquisition by find?

200

This Texas case determined that a will's language created a life estate rather than a fee simple. 

what is Knopf v. Gray?

300

This is the occupancy theory.

What is Intent+occupancy=discovery?
300

Automatically returns property to the grantor upon the occurrence of a specified event. 

What is a possibility of reverter?

300

Under the American Rule for groundwater, a landowner's use must meet this standard, unlike the absolute use allowed under the English Rule. 

What is reasonableness?

300

These are the 5 elements required for acquisition by adverse possession.

What is ROACH? (Running of the statute, open and notorious, actual and exlusive, continuous, and hostile)

300

In this form of co-ownership, the shares may be unequal and there is no right of survivorship.

what is tenancy in common?

400

This case ruled that property in wild animals is acquired by intent + occupancy, not mere pursuit. 

What is Pierson v. Post?

400

O to A but if ....
words of condition
possibility of reverter/reentry

What is fee simple subject to a condition subsequent?

400

This area of property law concerns interference with the use and enjoyment of land. 

what is nuisance law?

400

This case's rule explains that a valid inter vivos gift of chattel may be made where the donor reserves a life estate and the donee never has physical possession until the donor's death.

What is Gruen v. Gruen? 

400

In Baker v. Weedon, the court balanced the interests of life tenants and remaindermen under this equitable principle.

What is the doctrine of waste?

500

This form of water rights is prior appropriation for the West and riparian rights for the East. 

What is surface water?

500

This rule converts a contingent remainder into an executory interest if it follows a fee simple subject to condition subsequent.

What is the rule in shelley's case?

500

This concept, emphasized in the slides, refers to property rights being enforceable against the world, not just between parties.

What is the in rem nature of property rights?

500

This form of property gives creators rights for life + 70 years. 

What is a copyright?

500

Courts prefer this type of partition unless it would cause substantial prejudice to the owners.

What is partition in kind?

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