Trespass/Nuisance
Adverse Possession
Life Estates
Defeasible Estates
Wild Card
100

A fence built maliciously for the sole purpose of bothering a neighbor is known as what, and is treated as what type of claim?

A spite fence and is a nuisance claim.

100

What acronym helps remember the elements of adverse possession?

OCEANS: Open, Continuous, Exclusive, Adverse/Hostile, Notorious, Statutory period

100

What does “pur autre vie” translate to?

For the life of another

100

Executory interests come in two forms. What are they and what is the difference? 

Shifting: Cuts short a grantee’s estate and shifts it to another grantee. 

Springing: Cuts short the grantor’s estate and springs out of it to a grantee.

100

What are the 3 types of restraints on alienation?

Disabling → blocks transfer altogether. 

Forfeiture → estate lost if transferee tries to transfer. 

Promissory → transferee promises not to transfer

200

An _______ nuisance is a substantial and unreasonable interference with the enjoyment of one's land by unsightly objects or structures on another's land

Aesthetic.

200

When an adverse possessor enters under a faulty deed or other invalid instrument, the law may treat them as possessing the entire property, not just the part they occupy. This doctrine is known by two names. Name both.

Color of title and constructive adverse possession

200

A grants “To B for life”. What interest does A have? (name it fully)

Reversion by operation of law

200

Explain the difference between the effect of breaking a condition in a fee simple determinable and a fee simple subject to condition subsequent.

FSD ends automatically on breach; FSCS continues until the grantor affirmatively exercises the right of re-entry

200

In which 4 states can you still create a fee tail?

Delaware, Maine, Massachusetts, and Rhode Island

300

The doctrine of ____________ prevents someone from claiming a nuisance if they were aware of it before acquiring the property. This is similar to the doctrine of ____________ in torts, which involves knowingly accepting the risks of a situation.

Coming to the Nuisance and Assumption of Risk.

300

What are the three I’s of disabilities? (50 Bonus points if you can name another less common disability)


Insanity, infancy, incarceration. Active military duty/service can also be a disability.

300

If O conveys “to A for life, then to B”. B later sells A his interest in the land, what doctrine applies and what estate results?

Doctrine of merger, and A owns the land in fee simple absolute.

300

Which words usually signal a fee simple determinable, and which signal a fee simple subject to condition subsequent? Give 3 examples of each.

Fee Simple Determinable (temporal language): “so long as,” “while,” “during,” “until.” Fee Simple Subject to Condition Subsequent (conditional language): “but if,” “on condition that,” “provided that,” “however, if.”

300

What does “inter vivos” conveyance mean? Give an example of one. 

In life/during life. Selling land, deeding it away in life, an in life gift.

400

Sometimes courts will allow a nuisance to continue if shutting it down would cause major economic harm. Instead of an injunction, what remedy do courts often order?

They will order monetary damages (economic damages/compensation) paid to the plaintiff

400

Two adverse possessors, A and B, occupy land one after another. When can their time be added together, and what requirement must be met?

Privity.

400

A grantor conveys “to X Corporation for life.” Why is this conveyance invalid as a life estate?

Because corporations (and other entities) do not have natural lives, so they cannot hold a life estate. Life estates must be measured by a human life.

400

 If conveyance language is unclear, whether it creates a fee simple determinable or fee simple subject to condition subsequent, which do courts prefer, and why?

Fee simple subject to a condition subsequent because it avoids automatic forfeiture, courts disfavor cutting off estates automatically.

400

If someone with a fee simple absolute dies with no will, no beneficiaries, and no heirs, what happens to the land?

The estate escheats to the state

500

What is a nuisance per se?

An activity that is always considered a nuisance, in any circumstance, usually because it’s illegal (e.g., crack house).

500

Name 3 instruments you can gain color of title through.

Deed, court judgement, and will.

500

What happens if a remainderman murders the life tenant with the intent to get the land faster?


"Slayer statutes" that prevent a wrongdoer from inheriting property from the person they killed.

500

O conveys: “To A, beginning on the day she graduates from medical school.” A is in undergrad. What estate does A have, and what interest does O hold until then?

A has a springing executory interest; O retains a fee simple subject to an executory limitation until A graduates.

500

Under common law and modern majority rule, what interest is “To A”

Common Law = Life estate because it required “and to his heirs”. Modern Majority Rule = Fee simple absolute.