elements
defenses
easements
theories
random
100

trespass

unprivileged intentional entry on property possessed by another

100

nuisance defense

  1. Defendant got there first

  2. That the plaintiff is too sensitive 

100

prescriptive easements 

open and notorious 

continuous for statutory period

hostile or adverse

acquiescence

100

personality theory

  1.   Hegelian Theory

  2.   Property is self-constructive

 Property identifies people (external goods are so important that they become a part of us) – people are identified by the things we own

100

right to roam

entitles everyone to hike across or camp in the countryside or on the property of another as long as they do not damage the land, interfere with the owner’s use, or intrude on the privacy of owners

200

trademark

a name symbol, or type of packaging that identifies the producer of a good or service

200

terminating easements


(1)   Agreement in writing;

(2)  By their own terms;

(3)  By merger when the holder of the servient estate becomes the owner of the dominant estate;

(4)  By abandonment, if it can shoe that the owner of the easement, by her conduct, indicated an intent to abandon the easement; or

(5)  By adverse possession or prescription by the owner of the servient estate or by a third party

(6)  SOMETIMES, courts terminate easements because of frustration of purpose, finding that the purpose of the easement has become impossible to accomplish, or the easement no longer serves its intended purpose

200

easements by necessity 

May arise when an estate is severed and upon severance one part of the estate becomes landlocked, requiring a right of way over the other part of the severed estate to access a public road



200

first possession and labor theory

  1.    Lockean Theory: People own themselves and therefore they own their own labor

    Have a right to what you produce from labor

200

public forum doctrine

  1.  If the government makes a public forum available for speaking it cannot discriminate based on viewpoint – the city is “the people”, and therefore, public streets and parks are there to exercise the right of free speech

300

adverse possession

one possesses another’s land in a manner that is exclusive, visible (open and notorious), continuous, and without the owner’s permission (adverse or hostile) for a period defined by state statute, this action transfers title from the true/record owner ti the adverse possessor

300

remedy for adverse possession

  1. Temporary occupancy/possessors= trespass

  2. Permanent occupancy= ejectment 

300

easements by estoppel

May be found when (1)  a landowner grants the claimant permission to use the property, and (2) the claimant so changes position in reasonable reliance on the continuation of the permission, (3) that it would create substantial injustice to revoke it



300

positivism

Sovereign Says – no law, no property

  1.    Bentham

  2.  Property is whatever the sovereign says it is

    Sovereign can give or take property at will

300

functionality doctrine

 if it serves an actual purpose then it cannot be trademarked because it stifles competition

400

copyright act

  1. grants owners of “original works of authorship” that are fixed in a “tangible medium of expression,” exclusive rights to copy, distribute, perform, or display those works publicly and to make derivative works from them

400

bringing a claim for adverse possession

  1. Adverse Possessors can sue to quiet title to gain possession to the title

    1. If you win, then title is transferred permanently

    2. Title owner can defeat a claim through easements by estoppel or expressing permission for the possession

  2. Claims can also be brought by the record title holder (trespass or ejectment claims)

    1. Adverse possession is brought as a defense

400

easements implied by prior use

May be found when (1) the servient and dominant estates were once under common ownership, (2) the land is  divided or severed, and (3) prior to severance, one part of the estate used the other part of the estate, (4) the use was obvious or apparent and not merely temporary (continuous a permanent), and (5) is reasonably necessary for enjoyment of the estate, and (6) a contrary intention is neither express nor implied



400

social relations theory

  1. Singer

  2.   Focuses on role property plays in formation of social relations and vice versa

    Property has multiple owners and can be subdivided

400

factors in considering a nuisance 

  1. The extent of the harm

  2. The character of the harm

  3. The economic and social value of the conflicting activities

  4. The sustainability of the activities for the location

  5. The ability of either party to avoid the conflict and the practicability abd fairness of making the party do so

500

nuisance

 is a substantial and unreasonable interference with the use or enjoyment of land

500

what to do if 2 people create same trademark

 use the first possession theory

500

express easements to run with the land


An express easement will run with the burdened or benefitted estate if:

It is in writing (statute of frauds)

For the burdened estate to run, there has to be notice to the servient estate holder of the easement


It was intended to run with the land

500

utilitarian theory

  1.  Strive for clear property rights


    1.    When I own it, it belongs to nobody else

  Social utility (welfare) is the goal of this theory in attempt to promote economic efficiency

500

lifetime of a copyright

  Copyright protection lasts for the life of the author + 70 years – then the work becomes part of public domain