Rights and duties of co-owners (general)
Under the common law, Co-owners share a number of rights by default: # Each owner has an unrestricted right of ''access'' to the property. When one co-owner wrongfully excludes another from using the shared property, the excluded co-owner can bring a cause of action for ''ouster''. As a remedy, the court may grant the wronged co-owner the fair rental value of the property for the time that they were ousted. # Each owner has a right to an ''accounting'' of profits made from the property. If the property generates any income (''e.g.'' rent, farming, etc. . . .) each owner is entitled to aContribution and improvements
Co-owners generally do not have any obligation to contribute to any costs of ''improving'' the property. If one co-owner adds a feature that enhances the value of the property, that co-owner has no right to demand that any others share the cost of adding that feature even if other co-owners reap greater profits from the property because of it. However, at partition, a co-owner is entitled to recover the value added by his or her improvements of the property if the "improvements" resulted in an increase in property value. Conversely, if the co-owner's "improvements" decrease the value of the property, the co-owner is responsible for the decrease. In an Australian case, the High Court said that the costs of repairing by one co-owner must be taken into account on the partition or final distribution (''i.e.'' sale) of the property.Mortgages
Each co-owner can independently encumber the co-owner's own share in the property by taking out a mortgage on that share (although this may effectively convert a joint tenancy to a tenancy in common, as described below); other co-owners have no obligation to help pay a mortgage that only runs to another owner's share of the property, and the mortgagee can only foreclose on that mortgagor's share. Bank loans secured by mortgages on individual shares of co-owned property are one of the most rapidly expanding areas in the mortgage lending industry.Tenancy in common
Tenancy in common (TIC) is a form of concurrent estate in which each owner, referred to as a tenant in common, owns a separate and distinct share of the property, by law due to the nature of their interest. By default, all co-owners own equal shares, but their interests remains separate ( unless they get married or register as domestic partners) and may differ in size. TIC owners own divisible shares in percentage of an undivided property, rather than particular units or apartments, and their deeds show only their ownership percentages and their legal names. The right of a particular TIC owner to use a particular dwelling comes from a written contract signed by all co-owners (often called a "Tenancy In Common Agreement"), not from a deed, map or other document recorded in county records. This form of ownership is where the co-owners are not married or partnered to each other, and have contributed different amounts to the purchase of the property, reflected by the percentage of their share. The assets of a commercial partnership may be held as a tenancy in common although a commerce is most commonly own by a business type of ownership such as a LP, LLC, or Inc. Tenants in common are single individuals, but might have a surviving spouse or domestic partner with right of survivorship, when they die, from a marriage or domestic partnership formed after the acquisition of the property. As a result, the tenant's interest in the property pass to the surviving spouse or domestic partner of his or her estate if applicable, or pass by to that owner's devisees via a will, to the exception of real estate assets, or that owner's beneficiary via a Trust, or via inheritance to that owner's next of kin by law, known as intestate succession in the absence of a surviving spouse or domestic partner. There is no law that dictates the content of a will or a trust supersedes its provisions. Also, as each tenant in common has an interest in the property, they may, in the absence of any restriction agreed to between all the tenants in common, sell or otherwise deal with the interest in the property (e.g. mortgage it) during their lifetime, like any other property interest.Partition of tenancy in common
Where any party to a tenancy in common wishes to terminate (usually termed "partition") the joint interest, he or she may obtain a '' partition of the property''. This is a division of the land into distinctly owned lots, if such division is legally permitted under zoning and other local land-use restrictions. Where such division is not permitted, a forced sale of the property is the only alternative, followed by a division of the proceeds. If the parties are unable to agree, any or all of them may seek the ruling of a court to determine how the land should be divided physically division 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. Where local law does not permit physical division, the court must order a partition by sale. Each co-owner is entitled to partition as a matter of right, meaning that the court will order a partition at the request of any of the co-owners. The only exception to this general rule is where the co-owners have agreed, either expressly or implied, to waive the right of partition. The right may be waived either permanently, for a specific period of time, or under certain conditions. The court, however, will likely not enforce this waiver because it is a restraint on the alienable right to own property.Joint tenancy
A joint tenancy or joint tenancy with right of survivorship (JTWROS) is a type of concurrent estate in which co-owners have a ''right of survivorship'', meaning that if one owner dies, that owner's interest in the property will pass to the surviving owner or owners by operation of law, and avoiding probate. The deceased owner's interest in the property simply evaporates and cannot be inherited by his or her heirs. Under this type of ownership, the last owner living owns all the property, and on his or her death the property will form part of theirFour unities of a joint tenancy
To create a joint tenancy, the co-owners must share "''four unities''": * Time – the co-owners must acquire the property at the same time. So, for example, if a piece of land was vested to ABCD as co-owners on 1 January 2018 and ‘A’ died before the date leaving ‘K’ to succeed him for, as between K on the one hand and BCD on the other hand, there is no unity of time. K becomes a tenant in common, while BCD are joint tenants. * Title – the co-owners must have the same title to the property. If a condition applies to one owner and not another, there is no unity of title. Also, there must be unity in the sense that title must emanate from the same grantor. Thus, in the hypothetical example above, there is no unity of title between ‘K’ on the one hand and ‘BCD’ on the other hand because K derives his title from a distinct individual, that is; A. * Interest – each co-owner owns an equal share of the property; for example, if three co-owners are on the deed, then each co-owner owns a one-third interest in the property regardless of the amount each co-owner contributed to the purchase price * Possession – the co-owners must have an equal right to possess the whole property. If any of these elements is missing, the joint tenancy is ineffective, and the joint tenancy will be treated as a tenancy in common in equal shares.Breaking a joint tenancy
If any joint co-owner deals in any way with a property inconsistent with a joint tenancy, that co-owner will be treated as having terminated (sometimes called "breaking") the joint tenancy. The remaining co-owners maintain joint ownership of the remaining interest. The dealing may be a conveyance or sale of the co-owner's share in the property. The position in relation to a mortgage is more doubtful (see below). For example, if one of three joint co-owners conveys his or her share in the property to a third party, the third party owns a 1/3 share on a tenancy in common basis, while the other two original joint co-owners continue to hold the remaining 2/3s on a joint tenancy basis. This result arises because the "unity of time" is broken: that is, because on the transfer the timing of the new interest is different from the original one. If it is desired to continue to maintain a joint tenancy, then the three original joint co-owners would need to transfer, in the one instrument, the joint interest to the two remaining joint co-owners and the new joint co-owner. A joint co-owner may break a joint tenancy and maintain an interest in the property. Most jurisdictions permit a joint owner to break a joint tenancy by the execution of a document to that effect. But in jurisdictions that retain the common law requirements, an exchange with a '' straw man'' is required. This requires another person to "buy" the property from the joint co-owner for some nominal consideration, followed immediately by a sale-back to the co-owner at the same price. In either case, the joint tenancy will revert to a tenancy in common as to that owner's interest in the property. A significant issue can arise with the simple document execution method. In the ''straw man'' approach, there are witnesses to the transfer. With the document, there may not be witnesses. With either method, as soon as the break occurs, it works both ways. Because there may not be witnesses, the party with the document could take advantage of that fact and hide the document when the other party dies.Mortgages to break joint tenancy
If one joint co-owner takes out a mortgage on jointly owned property, in some jurisdictions this may terminate the joint tenancy. Jurisdictions which use a ''title theory'' in this situation treat a mortgage as an actual conveyance of title until the mortgage is repaid, if not permanently. In such jurisdictions, the taking of a mortgage by one owner terminates the joint tenancy as to that co-owner. In jurisdictions which use the ''lien theory'', the mortgage merely places a lien on the property, leaving the joint tenancy undisturbed. As a lien is not enough to terminate a joint tenancy, if the debtor dies before the creditor sues, the creditor is left with no claim against the property, as the debtor's interest in the property evaporates and automatically vests in the other surviving co-owners. Sana all.Petition to partition to sever a joint tenancy
A co-owner of a joint tenancy with rights of survivorship deed may sever the joint tenancy by filing a petition to partition. A petition to partition is a legal right, so usually there is no way to stop such an action. When a court grants a partition action for a joint tenants with rights of survivorship deed, the property is either physically broken into parts and each owner is given a part of equal value OR the property is sold and the proceeds are distributed equally between the co-owners regardless of contribution to purchase price. No credits would be issued to any tenant who may have made a superior contribution toward purchase price. Some states allow a co-owner the option of buying out the other co-owners to avoid a public sale of the property. Some states also allow multiple co-owners to join their shares together to claim a majority ownership to avoid public sale of the property and to have the property awarded to the majority owners. If the property is sold publicly, the usual method is a public auction. During a partition process, credits may be granted to co-tenants who have paid property expenses in excess of their share, such as utilities and property maintenance. Credit may be given for improvements done to the property if the improvements have increased the value of the property. No credit would be given for excess contribution to purchase price, as joint tenancy with rights of survivorship deeds are taken in equal shares as a matter of law.Tenancy by the entirety
A tenancy by the entirety (sometimes called a tenancy by the entireties) is a type of concurrent estate formerly available only toSee also
* Jus accrescendi * Community propertyReferences
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