Nuisance
Adverse Possession
Patent
Inf./Pub.
Estates
Landlord/Tenant
100

Who may bring a nuisance claim

A landowner or person with a possessory interest in land including a lessee

100

List the elements of AP and the majority rule for the last element

1) Actual entry 

2) Continuous for the statutory period 

3) Open and notorious 

4) Adverse/hostile under a claim of right 

Objective standard 

100

Discuss the policy rationale behind allowing patents 

Encourage contributions to creative and socially useful enterprises 

100

What are the elements of copyright infringement?

1) Ownership of a valid copyright 

2) Copying of the constituent parts 

3) Improper appropriation

100

How does a life estate differ from a fee simple absolute 

Life estates are anchored to the time a person lives while fee simple absolutes can be possessed forever

100

What is the majority rule for delivery of possession after signing a lease

Legal possession and actual possession must be granted to the lessee

200

Discuss the elements of intentional private nuisance, include the names of any relevant tests

- Substantial (Effecting a person of normal sensitivity) 

 - Unreasonable invasion (Restatement Test v. Threshold Test) 

- Intentional 


200

Is the following adverse possession claim likely to succeed and why? What if ouster?


A co-tenant attempts to claim sole possession of his shared property after living there for 10 years. 

Likely not because co-tenants require clear & unequivocal notice of exclusive and sole title of the property. 

Ouster begins the running SOL for an adverse possession claim

200

What are the requirements for a patent 

Patentability, novelty, utility, Non-obviousness, Enablement 

200

Discuss the policy behind allowing copyright infringement claims 

Court wants to encourage development of arts sciences and creativity in presenting facts, crediting people for their original work. 

200

O says "To A for the life of B" 

A life estate measured in the lifetime of another (Life estate pur autra vie) 

200

What is a sublease and how does the landlord's realationship fit with the subtenant?

A sublease is an independent transaction creating a wholly new and distinct LL-T relationship b/w the sublessor and the sublessee. 

Landlord would still need to go after the original lessee for rent. 

300

What are the factors included under both the restatement test and unreasonableness test? 


Threshold: Extent and character of harm, social value, burden too avoid harm, suitability of use or enjoyment to the locality 

Restatement: Utility, suitiability of the conduct to the locality, D's ability to prevent invasion 

300

Discuss the policy arguments underlying adverse possession 


Sleeping Theory - Punishing landowners who ignore their land (avoiding waste) 

Earning Theory (Locke labor theory) - People who put work into property should be rewarded 

Stability of title - Efficient way to deal with conflct establishing stability of title 

300

What are the 4 types of inventions that can be patented? 

Process, machine, manufacture, or any composition of matter

300

Elements of a Right of Publicity Claim

D used P’s identity

The appropriation of P’s name or likeness to D’s advantage, commercial or otherwise

Lack of consent, and

Injury

300

Distinguish a remainder from a reversion

Reversion: A party's automatic resulting right to possession after conveyance of a life estate 

Remainder: If a party creates a future interest for a third party 

300

Name and define the types of tenancies

Term of years - fixed duration 

Periodic tenancy - Automatically renews unless proper notice is given (Example month to month) 

Tenancy at will - Can be terminated by either party at any time 

Tenancy at sufferance - When T stays in possession after expiration of lease 

400

How can a court remedy a successful nuisance claim

Courts have discretion in granting injunctions, periodic damages, or creative damages

400

Give your recommendation regarding success for the following adverse possession claim : 

A client approaches claiming they have been possessing a plot of land unbeknownst to the true owner for 7 years. They also claim the property was transferred to them 3 years ago by a party who is not the true owner. 

If our client and the transferring party are in privity, the doctrine of tacking would allow you to add the 3 years onto our client's time. Therefore, they can likely establish an AP claim. 

400

Hot news doctrine

Unless there is a protected right, others may freely imitate

400

In defense of an infringement claim what factors are applicable?

Fair use

400

Distinguish a joint tenancy from a tenancy in common

Joint tenancies require the 4 unities and have a right to survivorship that must be explicitly laid out when created 

Tenancy in common happen where each co-owner of this estate holds an undivided, fractional share in the entire parcel of land; and each is entitled to simultaneous possession and enjoyment of the whole parcel

400

Discuss authority split on rule of "self help" 

Common law 

LL can use self-help to retake premises from a T in possession without liability for wrongful eviction if:

LL is legally entitled to possession, such as where a T holds over after the lease term or where a T breaches a lease containing a reentry clause, AND

LL means of reentry are peaceable – no violence (State specific, some are okay with reasonable force)  

Modern trend 

No right to self help 


500

Discuss the factors for the unreasonableness test of public nuisance 

Whether the conduct involves a significant interference with the public health, the public safety, the public peace OR

Whether the conduct is proscribed by a statute, ordinance or regulation, or

Whether the conduct is of a continuing nature or has produced a permanent and long-lasting effect, and , as the actor knows or has reason to know, has significant effect upon the public right.

500

Discuss the general rule of disabilities in relation to AP, and when may they be removed?

Disability is an exception to the AP SOL if the true owner is disabled at the time the SOL begins. (Examples: Under 18, unsound mind, prison) It allows disabled owner to have an extra specified amount of time before SOL begins to run. 


Removal: Insane person dies or deemed sane, child turns 18 or prisoner released from prison

 

500

Generally how can one prove a fair housing claim

Discriminate impact or disparate treatment

500

Distinguish FHA and Civil Rights Act 

Civil Rights Act is limited to claims based on racial discrimination

500

What are the different types of partition

Partition in kind and partition by sale

500

Name 2 of a landlord's duties to their tenants and how may a tenant proceed if any of those are breached

Covenant of quiet enjoyment 

- Tenant may claim constructive eviction 

Implied warranty of habitability 

- T may withhold rent and possinly pursue punitive damages