Adverse possession is one of property law’s most central doctrines. Yet, this Article contends, the need it answers has been largely misunderstood. Adverse possession’s doctrinal effects are clear—and stark: when its requirements are met, an owner loses her land to an invader. To explain a doctrine instituting such a radical result, scholars resort to property law’s major philosophical theories. These theories, they argue, at times demand that an owner lose her land to another person who is more committed to that land. The problem with these prevailing justifications of adverse possession, this Article shows, is that they imagine a very specific case of adverse possession: a squatter putting invaded land to a meaningful use. In reality, how...
Plaintiff in an ejectment action claimed under a chain of title tracing back to a government patent....
Human nature dictates that private ownership of land creates conflict among neighbors. In the realm ...
The hornbook rule is that adverse possession statutes do not run against land owned by state governm...
Adverse possession is one of property law’s most central doctrines. Yet, this Article contends, the ...
Property law scholars in the United States have discussed the doctrine of adverse possession for mor...
non-peer-reviewedThe doctrine of adverse possession, as most people know, operates to extinguish the...
Adverse possession is an anomaly in the law in that it is a system whereby a legal right is obtained...
non-peer-reviewedThe doctrine of adverse possession has generated a lot of controversy over the last...
The law of adverse possession tends to be regarded as a quiet backwater. Both judicial opinions and ...
In the wake of the present real estate crisis, there has been prolonged discussion of the wrongdoing...
Adverse-possession doctrine labors under a pair of disabilities: a hesitancy by theorists to embrace...
Occupation of land by a squatter in England is seen as a wrong, and the squatter a trespasser. This ...
In Wissinger v. Reed et al., 125 Pac. lO3O (Aug. 24, 1912) the Supreme Court of Washington held that...
It might be supposed that there is no longer anything worth saying with respect to the legal doctrin...
(print) 120 p. ; 21cmProperty, Policy, And Possession 3 -- Adverse Possession : The Law 41 -- The Qu...
Plaintiff in an ejectment action claimed under a chain of title tracing back to a government patent....
Human nature dictates that private ownership of land creates conflict among neighbors. In the realm ...
The hornbook rule is that adverse possession statutes do not run against land owned by state governm...
Adverse possession is one of property law’s most central doctrines. Yet, this Article contends, the ...
Property law scholars in the United States have discussed the doctrine of adverse possession for mor...
non-peer-reviewedThe doctrine of adverse possession, as most people know, operates to extinguish the...
Adverse possession is an anomaly in the law in that it is a system whereby a legal right is obtained...
non-peer-reviewedThe doctrine of adverse possession has generated a lot of controversy over the last...
The law of adverse possession tends to be regarded as a quiet backwater. Both judicial opinions and ...
In the wake of the present real estate crisis, there has been prolonged discussion of the wrongdoing...
Adverse-possession doctrine labors under a pair of disabilities: a hesitancy by theorists to embrace...
Occupation of land by a squatter in England is seen as a wrong, and the squatter a trespasser. This ...
In Wissinger v. Reed et al., 125 Pac. lO3O (Aug. 24, 1912) the Supreme Court of Washington held that...
It might be supposed that there is no longer anything worth saying with respect to the legal doctrin...
(print) 120 p. ; 21cmProperty, Policy, And Possession 3 -- Adverse Possession : The Law 41 -- The Qu...
Plaintiff in an ejectment action claimed under a chain of title tracing back to a government patent....
Human nature dictates that private ownership of land creates conflict among neighbors. In the realm ...
The hornbook rule is that adverse possession statutes do not run against land owned by state governm...