Head 15: Co-Ownership Flashcards

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1
Q

It is possible for the same piece of property to be owned by more than one person. What is property owned in this way called? How is it divided?

A

Co-ownership:

Each co- owner has a pro indiviso (undivided) share. On the land register, both names will appear on the proprietorship section of the title sheet. The same can be true of moveable property. Co-ownership is not limited to two people.

Co-ownership is also called pro indiviso ownership and it is of two different kinds: Common ownership is the standard case of co-ownership and joint ownership is the special case.

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2
Q

What are the main examples of co-ownership in practice?

A

Main examples in practice are
(1) co-ownership by spouses of matrimonial home and contents
(2) in flatted property, co-ownership of certain common parts (for which see Semester 2).
Shares may be uneven[ Typically if there are 20 people co-owning, each will have a 1/20 share. However, for example, one person may have 1/2 and the other 19 have one 19th of the remaining half.]. No limit to the number of co-owners.
(3) Patrimonial rights can also be co-owned.

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3
Q

What is the presumption of co-ownership?

A

The law presumes that the shares of co-owners are equal. This is only a presumption. The shares can be unequal. That will be stated in the disposition and on the title sheet. There is no legal requirement that the size of the share and size of the contribution match.

Possession is shared and each co-owner has a right to make use of ‘every inch’ of the property. The rights to exclusive use of certain rooms are based in contract law or a non-binding understanding, not in property law.

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4
Q

What is the usual rule of alteration and repairs?

A

The case law is somewhat incomplete however, Bell’s rules have been accepted by the courts as being authoritative.
The usual rule is that for alterations and repairs consent of all is required. So one owner cannot alter the property without the consent of all the other owners — unanimous agreement is required

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5
Q

Is the usual rule of alteration and repairs practical? How has this been resolved?

A

This rule is so impractical that there is a separate rule for necessary repairs which may be carried out by any one proprietor without the full consent of all co-owners. Accordingly, any one owner can carry out necessary repairs and recover pro rata costs from all the other owners.

[What is a ‘necessary repair’? Hard to say. Therefore there is a danger that if you carry out a repair, the other owners will claim that it was not necessary.].

And for tenements there is a completely separate regime in the Tenements (S) Act 2004.

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6
Q

Where co-owners are strangers how much are they allowed to use and who is allowed to use?

A

There is a difference between cases where the owners have agreed amongst themselves and cases where there is no agreement:

1) With agreement
⁃ The owners can agree[ E.g. by contract.] whatever they want concerning use of the property.
⁃ Such an agreement would not bind successors since it is purely personal rights.
⁃ One of the uncertainties is how many co-owners are needed for a valid agreement in relation to use. KR thinks that as far as use is concerned, a majority is probably[ It is uncertain and has never been decided in a case.] enough.

2) Without agreement
⁃ A) In the absence of agreement, each co-owner is allowed to use the entire property (this stems from the nature of pro-indiviso ownership).
⁃ Therefore it is unlawful for one party to annex part of the property and us it exclusively.
⁃ B) Only ‘ordinary uses are permitted
⁃ C) No excessive benefit
[Can holder of 99/100 share make greater use that holder of 1/100 share? How much use is each co-owner allowed? The law is that your use has to take into account that there are other co-owners. So you cannot use it excessively in a way that makes it difficult for other co-owners also to exercise their right of ownership.
⁃ Also, if the shares are uneven (e.g. 99/100 : 1/100) the person with the bigger share is entitled to proportionately greater use.
⁃ The right of use that a co-owner has can be communicated to third parties[ I.e. if you lease your property out then the tenant would be allowed to use the common property which you, as owner, are allowed to use.

Similarly, guests can use the common property.].
⁃ However, the right of use can only be communicated to the extent that the holder has it - you can’t communicate a better right:

[An ordinary use in this context depends on the nature of the property in question.

It may also depend on the past history of the property - if it has been used for a particular purpose for a long time, even though this is not its natural purpose this purpose may come to be regarded as ordinary use.]’
- So drying green must not be used as a market garden.

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7
Q

What happened in the case of Carmichael v Simpson?

A
  • the dispute concerned a shared entrance passageway to a tenement. Under tenement law, the entrance passageway and the stairs are common property. The owner of one of the ground floor properties was disabled and used a wheelchair, and took to keeping the wheelchair in the entrance passageway. The other owners objected and sued. The question was whether this was an ordinary use. It was held that the ordinary use of an entrance passageway was for entrance and exit and therefore not for storing large obstructive objects - so the defender was not allowed to use the passageway for that purpose because it was not an ordinary use.
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8
Q

What happened in the case of Rafique v Amin?

A

?

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9
Q

What happened in the case of Black v Duncan?

A
  • shared back garden. One of the owners built a dog-run in the back garden. The dog was noisy and prone to toilet accidents. The other owner objected. The question was whether this was an ‘ordinary’ use of the back garden? The court held this was not an ordinary use so the owner could not use it for his dog.
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10
Q

What happened in the case of Bailey’s Exs v Upper Crathes Fishing Ltd?

A
  • there was a co-owned right to fish salmon from a river between two parties, each with a 1/2 share. The parties agreed to fish on alternate weeks for the coming season. Having reached the agreement, one owner then advertised for sale a right to use the river on those alternate weeks indefinitely. The other party litigated because the defendants had attempted to sell a right for the future (which was better than the right that they had for the coming season). The action was successful because the defendants had tried to communicate a greater right than they had.
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11
Q

What if one party takes exclusive possession? Can you get him/her out? Can you recover a notional rent for the period of unlawful possession? What about ordinary profits?

A

⁃ Price v Watson 1951 - this happened and one co-owner raised an action of ejection against the other co-owner. The court held that ejection was not the appropriate remedy because you can only use ejection where the defender has no right to occupy the property at all.
⁃ So it is thought that the correct remedy is interdict (although there is no authority on this point.)
⁃ If the land has produced a profit in this period then you are entitled to a proportionate share of that profit.
⁃ In addition if the other owner has been living in the property himself, then it is thought there is a remedy in U/E for a notional rent for that period.

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12
Q

What are juridicial acts?

A

Juridical acts are acts with legal consequences. Juridical acts affecting the whole property (e.g. sale, rights in security, leases, servitudes) require the participation of all co-owners. If the share can be dealt with separately from the other shares the co-owner can transfer his or her share or grant a subordinate real right. Otherwise the answer is no. A co-owner can dispense the share without the consent of the others. However a servitude must be granted by all the owners.

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13
Q

What happened in the case of Grant v Heriot’s Trust (1906)?

A

one co-owner purported to grant a servitude over a property. This was held not to be competent because the participation of all co-owners was necessary.

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14
Q

What happened in the case of Clydesdale Bank Plc v Davidson?

A
  • a farm was owned by various people who contracted that one would have the right to use the farm who would pay rent to all the others. The question was whether this was a lease? This is important because if it is a real right it will bind successive owners. HL held that it cannot count as a lease because one person cannot have both a real right of ownership and a real right of lease.
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15
Q

Can a co-owner transfer his own share?

A

Co-owner can transfer or burden his own share where this can be done without affecting the shares of others. Share may be subdivided and then transferred to an unlimited number of other people.

[ So when you sell a flat you not only sell the flat but also the pro indiviso share to the common parts of the building.]

[So you can transfer half your share for example and keep the other half for yourself.]

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16
Q

What happened in the case of Menzies v Macdonald (1854)?

A
  • Loch Rannoch was owned in common by two people. One of the co-owners decided to divide his half up and sell it to lots of different people. The other co-owner objected for the reason that instead of sharing ownership with one person he now shared it with a large number of other people, each of whom had a right to use the loch. HL held that there was no limit to the number of shares you could divide it into.
17
Q

Can you get out of co-ownership?

A

The law is that any common owner can demand to be let out whether the others like it or not — in communionem…nemo compellitur invitus detineri. So if an action is raised the court cannot refuse it.

But not things of ‘common and indispensable use’: Bell s 1082.

18
Q

How do you get out of co-ownership?

A

There are two ways of getting out of co-ownership:

⁃ 1) Each co-owner is entitled to transfer his own share

⁃ 2) Each co-owner entitled to physical division or, if ‘impossible’ to ‘division and sale
[This is much more common than (1). However often the property cannot be physically divided so the right is transferred into a right to sell the entire property and to divide the proceeds to the co-owners.].’
⁃ In practice, the courts have not allowed physical division often - they normally take the view that physical division is impractical because even if it is literally possible, it is economically disastrous since the value of the individual parts is less than the undivided whole. So division and sale is much more likely than physical division.
⁃ This can be used as a weapon in negotiations with unreasonable co-owners - if they don’t agree to what you want then you can force division or division and sale.
⁃ Upper Crathes Fishing Ltd v Bailey’s Exrs 1991 - the salmon fishing case. Since the parties couldn’t agree about use, one party raised an action for division and sale. The court held that the right of division and sale is normally an absolute one[ However, there is one important exception - when the property is of “common and indispensable use” then division and sale is not allowed.

So for example in a tenant, the common parts of a building cannot be subject to division and sale.], even if it is unfair on the other party.

19
Q

Does one co-owner have the right to buy out the share of the other at market value?

A

In the case of division and sale this is normally on the open market. However, there have been cases where one party (A) has sought division and sale on the basis that the other party (B) should be forced to sell their share to (A). A wants to avoid the sale on the open market and having to big against other people because the price A would have to pay would probably be higher.
⁃ However this has become a controversial question if this is a competent remedy. Everyone agrees that sale on the open market is always competent, but whether this type of closed sale is allowed. The case law is in consistent:
⁃ Scrimgeour v Scrimgeour 1988 - the court allowed this type of remedy between a husband and wife in this undefended action

[KR thinks it is significant that the action was undefended - he thinks that the remedy will only be allowed if the defendant does not defend the action.].
⁃ Collins v Sweeney 2013 - Sheriff held that there was no right on behalf of one party to buy out the other parties share - instead the property had to be put on the open market.

20
Q

How do you get out of co-ownership of matrimonial property?

A

Matrimonial Homes (Family Protection) (Scotland) Act 1981 ss 2(4), 9 & 19

This makes certain alterations to the common law rules in relation to matrimonial homes.
⁃ S 19 is about division and sale. Normally there is an absolute right of division and sale. However for matrimonial homes that right is qualified by s 19 which gives the court a discretion to delay or even refuse division and sale (to stop a family being thrown out onto the street just because the parents have fallen out).

These alterations equally apply to Civil Partnerships in the Civil Partnership Act 2004 ss 102(4), 109, 110.

21
Q

When is property jointly owned rather than co-owned?

A

Exceptionally pro indiviso ownership may amount to joint rather than common property. Here each owner has an equal but unascertainable share which is indissolubly tied to the shares of his co-owners.

Joint ownership arises in a trust if there is more than one trustee. Each has a full title along with the other two; if one dies the title in him as trustee becomes extinct, if the others die his title carries the whole right, to the exclusion of any others.
**NB There can be no action of division of sale — the property can be dealt with only as a unit.
So far as has been traced, there is no instance of a joint right in the strict sense having been held to exist except in persons who were inter-related by virtue of some trust, contractual or quasi- contractual bond .. and it seems to me that such an independent relationship is the indispensable basis of every joint right.

22
Q

What are the two cases when joint property is allowed?

A

There are only 2 cases where joint property is allowed:

1) Trusts
⁃ The trust property is owned by the trustees. If there is more than one trustee they own it as joint property.

2) Unincorporated associations[ E.g. a club - doesn’t have legal personality]
⁃ Since there is no legal personality, they cannot own their own property.
⁃ So the ownership is in the members in ‘joint property’.
- e.g. A chess club - the chess sets, etc. Are the joint property of the members - a member who leaves ceases to be a joint owner of the club’s assets, joint property is only possible for moveables in unincorporated associations.

23
Q

What do the two cases of joint property have in common?

A

These two examples have something in common - that membership is fluctuating so therefore the owners will change over time, and also the ownership is not for the persons themselves, it is on behalf of someone else. So it is a kind of notional ownership - this is why they are given a special status of joint ownership, rather than common ownership.

24
Q

What are the characteristics of joint property?

A

⁃ ‘Elastic’ title: you are an owner only for as long as trustee/club member.
⁃ No separate share to transfer or burden.
⁃ No right to division and sale.
⁃ Rules of management provided by deed of trust/club constitution.