Rights Flashcards
What are real rights?
Real rights are rights directly in a thing. You can sue whoever challenges that right.
What are personal rights?
Personal rights are rights held by a person against another person. That person is obligated to perform in a certain way.
What makes real rights stronger than personal rights?
Real rights are enforceable against everyone, personal rights are enforceable to particular persons.
What is the main real right?
the right of ownership
Why is there a fixed list of real rights?
Real rights are enforceable
against anyone and affect third parties so they have to be publicised in a fixed list.
What are subordinate real rights?
Rights you can have in other people’s property.
Subordinate real rights examples?
lease of land, servitude, rights in security, real burden (neg), proper liferent etc
Explain rights in security?
Giving something (watch, gold etc) as a security for a loan, if you don’t pay the loan it can be sold.
Mortgage (standard security) you buy a house, you get funding from a bank, the bank takes a security over the house, if you don’t keep up payments, then they sell the house
What is a real burden?
A positive or negative obligation affecting land
Give an example of a positive real burden.
A and B have a wall between them and agree to be responsible for 50% of the maintenance costs each
Positive real burdens are not enforceable against everyone only the landowners.
Give an example of a negative real burden.
A may agree with B not to build above a certain height, so there’s a negative condition on the land
Negative real burdens are real rights in the sense that they are enforceable against everyone
Explain lease of land
A contract, signed.
A lease is a real right you have property to make use of your landlord’s property
What is a proper liferent ?
Right to use a property for life, Liferenter has a real right in property which allows them to use it for life
Proper – real right
Improper – personal right
What is a servitude?
The right of a landowner to make limited use of their neighbour’s land
Difference between a real right in servitude and a contractual agreement.
if A and B have an agreement and then A sells the land to C, C is not bound by that agreement as they were not a party to that contract
However if A and B have a real right of servitude, C would be bound as a real right of servitude binds successors