An estate in land is
an interest in real
property that is or may
become possessory.
This should be distinguished from an "estate"
as used in reference to an area of land, and "estate"
as used to refer to property in general.
In property law, the rights and interests associated with an estate in land
may be conceptually understood as a "bundle
of rights" because of the potential for different parties having
different interests in the same real
property.
[edit]Categories
of estates
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Estates in land can
be divided into five basic categories:
-
Freehold estates: rights of ownership
-
fee simple (fee
simple absolute)—most rights, least limitations, indefeasible
-
fee tail—inalienable rights of inheritance
- conditional, Defeasible
estate, or determinable fee—voidable ownership
-
life estate—ownership for duration of someone's life
-
Leasehold estates: rights of possession and use but
not ownership. The lessor (owner/landlord)
gives this right to the lessee (tenant).
There are four categories of leasehold estates:
- estate for years (tenancy for
years)—lease of any length with specific begin and end date
- periodic estate (periodic
tenancy)—automatically renewing lease (month to month, week to week)
- estate at will (tenancy
at will)—leasehold for no fixed time or period. It lasts as long
as both parties desire. Termination is bilateral (either party may
terminate at any time) or by operation of law.
- tenancy at sufferance—created when
tenant remains after lease expires and becomes a holdover tenant,
converts to holdover tenancy upon landlord acceptance; see Forcible
Entry and Detainer Statutes
-
Statutory estates: created by law
-
Equitable estates: neither ownership nor possession