In 2015, the Arkansas Court of Appeals ruled that a warranty deed with the grantees listed as “Herbert Love and Gloria Love” vested the property in a tenancy by the entirety. There was no language in the deed designating the grantees as a married couple, such as “husband and wife” or “tenants by the entirety.” In fact, the only way someone reading the deed would know that the grantees were married was that the grantees were also the grantors, where it listed them as husband and wife. The court made its decision by looking to precedent case law which states that the words “husband and wife” or “tenants by the entirety” are not necessary to the creation of a tenancy by the entirety
This article discusses California cases involving severing joint tenancies and the differences b...
A mother, her daughter, and her son-in-law received title to a North Carolina home as joint tenants ...
Property law may be the most eternal of secular law. Its basic precepts and conceptions are largely ...
H owned real estate in fee simple. His wife, W, joined with him in a warranty deed conveying the lan...
Two recent independent reports have revealed that Arkansas\u27s residential landlord-tenant law is s...
Can the owner of a piece of real property in West Virginia create a joint tenancy in himself and ano...
Decedent executed a deed conveying to himself and wife as joint tenants and not as tenants in commo...
Real covenants occupy a doctrinal abyss within property law. The subject perpetually frustrates firs...
At an execution sale to satisfy a judgment against her, plaintiff\u27s interest in certain lots whic...
The use of joint tenancies has increased in Nebraska within the past decade to the point where it ha...
In 2001, the Uniform Law Commission adopted the Uniform Trust Code, which regulates certain aspects ...
The net effect of the general legislation pertaining to the creation of joint tenancy has been to ma...
Decedent, owning land and personal property thereon, executed a deed purporting to convey to herself...
In two recent cases the Supreme Court of Michigan has had occasion to pass upon the doctrine of surv...
The common law rule was well settled that a conveyance to two or more, not husband and wife, made th...
This article discusses California cases involving severing joint tenancies and the differences b...
A mother, her daughter, and her son-in-law received title to a North Carolina home as joint tenants ...
Property law may be the most eternal of secular law. Its basic precepts and conceptions are largely ...
H owned real estate in fee simple. His wife, W, joined with him in a warranty deed conveying the lan...
Two recent independent reports have revealed that Arkansas\u27s residential landlord-tenant law is s...
Can the owner of a piece of real property in West Virginia create a joint tenancy in himself and ano...
Decedent executed a deed conveying to himself and wife as joint tenants and not as tenants in commo...
Real covenants occupy a doctrinal abyss within property law. The subject perpetually frustrates firs...
At an execution sale to satisfy a judgment against her, plaintiff\u27s interest in certain lots whic...
The use of joint tenancies has increased in Nebraska within the past decade to the point where it ha...
In 2001, the Uniform Law Commission adopted the Uniform Trust Code, which regulates certain aspects ...
The net effect of the general legislation pertaining to the creation of joint tenancy has been to ma...
Decedent, owning land and personal property thereon, executed a deed purporting to convey to herself...
In two recent cases the Supreme Court of Michigan has had occasion to pass upon the doctrine of surv...
The common law rule was well settled that a conveyance to two or more, not husband and wife, made th...
This article discusses California cases involving severing joint tenancies and the differences b...
A mother, her daughter, and her son-in-law received title to a North Carolina home as joint tenants ...
Property law may be the most eternal of secular law. Its basic precepts and conceptions are largely ...