It has been twenty-six years since Professor (now Dean) Emerson G. Spies of the University of Virginia School of Law first called for much-needed basic reform in the conveyancing of real property. Professor Spies suggestions centered around the need for a Marketable Title Act, tract indexes, and the development and use of standards for title examination
Rental housing has been converted to condominiums at an increasingly rapid rate in recent years. Bet...
Writing under the somewhat question-begging title of The Resurrection of Title Registration in the...
The purpose of this article is to provide an understanding of the basic procedures of title examinat...
As the ancient legal apparatus providing for the transfer of land creaks into the final quarter of t...
As legal years go, action on the 1996 legislative and judicial fronts was relatively quiet in the ar...
Many years ago, the licensing of lawyers in Virginia was the direct obligation of the Supreme Court ...
There is little unanimity of viewpoint concerning the complex and controversial subject of real esta...
This year, the courts decided many property law issues of interest to the general practitioner. Sect...
In response to a committee study on the sale of recreational property, the 1978 Virginia General Ass...
The General Assembly made several minor changes affecting property law in Virginia. The most signifi...
The Torrens law is perhaps the most advantageous yet most infrequently used method of land conveyanc...
A Review of The Improvement of Conveyancing by Legislation. By Lewis M. Simes and Clarence B. Taylor
This article seeks to explain the mechanics of an examination of title to real property in Virginia....
The question in this article is what has and should be done to achieve a more efficient land transfe...
This article surveys significant cases concerning real property law decided by the Supreme Court of ...
Rental housing has been converted to condominiums at an increasingly rapid rate in recent years. Bet...
Writing under the somewhat question-begging title of The Resurrection of Title Registration in the...
The purpose of this article is to provide an understanding of the basic procedures of title examinat...
As the ancient legal apparatus providing for the transfer of land creaks into the final quarter of t...
As legal years go, action on the 1996 legislative and judicial fronts was relatively quiet in the ar...
Many years ago, the licensing of lawyers in Virginia was the direct obligation of the Supreme Court ...
There is little unanimity of viewpoint concerning the complex and controversial subject of real esta...
This year, the courts decided many property law issues of interest to the general practitioner. Sect...
In response to a committee study on the sale of recreational property, the 1978 Virginia General Ass...
The General Assembly made several minor changes affecting property law in Virginia. The most signifi...
The Torrens law is perhaps the most advantageous yet most infrequently used method of land conveyanc...
A Review of The Improvement of Conveyancing by Legislation. By Lewis M. Simes and Clarence B. Taylor
This article seeks to explain the mechanics of an examination of title to real property in Virginia....
The question in this article is what has and should be done to achieve a more efficient land transfe...
This article surveys significant cases concerning real property law decided by the Supreme Court of ...
Rental housing has been converted to condominiums at an increasingly rapid rate in recent years. Bet...
Writing under the somewhat question-begging title of The Resurrection of Title Registration in the...
The purpose of this article is to provide an understanding of the basic procedures of title examinat...