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LAND | Ownership
Co-ownership:
Overview
Revision Note | Degree
1 AUGUST 2015
Introduction
• two ways co-owners can own land
• joint tenants:
co-owners not treated as having separate shares
treated as single person not two individuals
right of survivorship (if one owner dies other becomes sole owner) applies
cannot make gift of land in will to third party
share proceeds of sale equally
• tenants in common:
co-owners own distinct shares, which may be equal or unequal
right of survivorship does not apply
land passes under will or rules of intestacy
share proceeds of sale proportionate to share of ownership
• process of severance: if parties originally bought as joint tenants may convert to tenants in common
• co-owners either expressly declare land is held on trust or land or law will impose implied trust of land
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BULL V BULL [1955] 1 QB 234
FACTS:
ISSUE:
HELD:
• resulting trust arose & in equity a tenancy in common due to unequal contributions
• Lord Denning: 'Since 1925 there has been no such thing as a legal tenancy in common. All
tenancies in common now are equitable only...'
• there are maximum number of trustees who can own legal estate in land
• s.34(1): undivided share in land cannot be created except as provided for under Settled Land
Act 1925
• s.34(2) : maximum four trustees can own legal estate in land, if more than four named in deed -
first four hold land as joint tenants on trust of land for all in equity
• to establish if co-owners hold equitable interests joint tenants or tenants in common four tests applied
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Second test: express declaration in transfer?
• under second test wording of declaration transferring land to co-owners is considered
• if transfer of land to co-owners contains an express declaration of how co-owners should hold the
equitable interest , declaration is conclusive
Title
• if land is registered: co-owners will be registered proprietors
• if tenants in common in equity: should place a restriction on proprietorship register to warn buyer of need to
overreach
• if joint tenants in equity: no restriction on the register
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LAW OF PROPERTY ACT 1925
• prayer in divorce petition did 'no more than invite the court to consider at some future time
whether to exercise its jurisdiction' so did not satisfy immediate intention for severance
• s.196(3): notice sufficiently served if left at last know address or place of business of other joint
tenants
• s.196(4): notice sufficiently served if sent by registered post & recorded delivery, unless returned
by post office as undelivered
• s.196(4) applies even if proved notice never actually arrived at destination, whereas s.196(3) requires proof of
physical service
• notice correctly served: even though serving co-owner had signed on behalf of the recipient to
prove receipt of notice
• other methods of severance existed at common law prior to LPA 1925 still exist
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• act by joint tenant which can sever: if unity of interest, title of time ceases to be present there is no longer a
joint tenancy
• if co-owner sells or gives their equitable interest to third party or mortgages it, transaction will have the effect
of severing the equitable joint tenancy
• bankruptcy also has effect of severing equitable joint tenancy (involuntary alienation of the equitable interest -
co-owner's equitable interest vest in bankruptcy trustee )
• actual alienation required is required
• a co-owner's unilateral declaration did not destroy any of the three crucial unities & could not
sever joint tenancy
• Walton J: 'Moreover, if it did, it would appear that a wholly unconscionable amount of time
and trouble has been wasted by conveyancers of old in framing elaborate assignments for
the purpose of effecting a severance, when all that was required was a simple declaration'
• making gift of equitable interest to third party in will insufficient method of severance: before gift takes effect,
right of survivorship will vest legal estate & equitable interest in land in surviving co-owner
• mutual agreement and course of dealing may sever a joint tenancy
• mutual agreement: if co-owners expressly agree to sever joint tenancy in equity or if parties agree
to deal with land in way which would have effect of severing
• agreement need not be binding, if common intention to sever can be shown
• course of dealing being relied on does not have to amount to an express or implied agreement to
sever
• course of dealing sufficient: if co-owner has made clear to other he wants to hold property under
tenancy in common not joint tenancy
• course of dealing sufficient: if co-owners intend shares to be held as tenants in common
(executing simultaneous mutual wills which direct future distribution of each testator's 'share)
RE K [1985] CH 85
• if a co-owner kills the other this severs joint tenancy in equity to prevent murderers benefitting
from crime
• victim's equitable interest passes to beneficiaries under will or intestacy
• murderer takes legal estate in and as result of survivorship
• legal estate held on trust of land for murderer & victim's estate as equitable tenants in common
• if equitable joint tenants sever their equitable interest: the severing joint tenant takes a share in the property
as a tenant in common
• effect of severance: if two each co-owner takes an equal share in the equitable interest as tenants in common
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• if three co-owners: severing joint tenant takes a third share in the property as a tenant in common & other two
having remaining equitable interest as joint tenants
Sale by co-owners
• where land is co-owned there is an implied land of trust
• as trustees of land holding the legal estate: have power to sell the trust land, but issues can arise in relation to
co-owners
• sale by two or more co-owners: no issue if both joint the sale as buyer pays purchase price to both legal
owners to buy whole legal estate & as from at least two trustees, equitable interests under implied trust of
land are overreached (s.2 & s.27 LPA 1925).
• Sale by sole surviving owner can cause issues:
A & B originally bought land as beneficial joint tenants
B dies & A wishes to sell to P
problem: P cannot be sure joint tenancy was not severed in equity before B's death
• if not severed:
A & B continued to hold equitable interest as joint tenants
on B's death legal estate & equitable vested in A by survivorship
A can sell alone
• if severed:
legal estate would still have continued to be held by A & B as joint tenants
on B's death legal estate would vest in A by survivorship
however, B's equitable interest was held as tenant in common
on B's death equitable interest would pass under will or intestacy
• if B's equitable interest not passed to A:
A holding land on trust for himself & beneficiaries under B's will or intestacy
P needs to ensure interests beneficiaries are overreached by insisting A appoints a second trustee
• if registered land: A can prove ownership to P by copies of entries on the register of title:
if there is no restriction on the proprietorship register, P entitled to assume A & B held land as joint tenants in
equity before B's death
A can show P copy of B's death certificate & P can assume A has taken whole legal estate & equitable
interest by survivorship
Reform
• number of arguments surrounding the benefits & disadvantages of types of equitable interests
• if co-owners initially buy as beneficial joint tenants & later decide they decide they would rather hold as
beneficial joint in common (relationship breakdown & would now wish interest in property passes to someone
else), the joint tenancy must be severed or survivorship will apply
• if tenants in common from outset: parties could leave respective shares to each other or third party
• alternatively right of survivorship allows for automatic transfer on death to the surviving co-owner: can be
simpler if co-owners buy land as beneficial joint tenants & continue to hold as such without need to ensure
correct will in place
• problems arise in checking whether severance has occurred for personal representatives: if co-owners could
only hold as tenants in common the property would always pass under terms of will or intestacy
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• if purchasers make unequal contributions towards purchase price, but declare in conveyance wish to hold the
land as beneficial joint tenants & later joint tenancy is severed in equity, co-owners will end up tenants in
common in equal shares, if co-owners had to hold as beneficial tenants in common in proportion to their
contributions problem would not arise
• the Law Commission highlighted a number issues with the severance procedure in 1985
• may increase litigation if severance by alienation abolished: need to serve notice to sever joint tenancy in
equity before trustee in bankruptcy could acquire bankrupt's interest in the land
• would decrease litigation in relation to disputes over severance by mutual agreement or conduct but would
lose flexibility of informal arrangements severing joint tenancies
• severance by will may have advantages in acrimonious relationship breakdowns or to help avoid errors
regarding right of survivorship, but means joint tenants do not have security of knowing must be served with
notice if tenancy is to be severed in equity
This article can be found online at www.bitsoflaw.org/land/ownership/revision-note/degree/co-ownership where links to further resources are
available.
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