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Full-Text Articles in Law

Heirs' Property In Virginia: Filling In The Gaps, J. Noble Pearson, Lillian Coward Apr 2023

Heirs' Property In Virginia: Filling In The Gaps, J. Noble Pearson, Lillian Coward

Virginia Coastal Policy Center

The term heirs’ property refers to land that has been passed down informally for multiple generations through intestate succession. Each generation of intestate succession can drastically increase the number of heirs who own the property as tenants-in-common to the point that many may not even know their heirship status. This clouds the title to the property and makes ownership more fractionalized. Because heirs’ property exists outside of the official estate and title systems, owners are vulnerable both at the community and individual levels for three main reasons.

First, and most importantly, heirs’ property is a leading cause of involuntary Black …


Reforming The Visual Artists Rights Act To Protect #Streetart In The Digital Age, Ellen Matthews Nov 2021

Reforming The Visual Artists Rights Act To Protect #Streetart In The Digital Age, Ellen Matthews

William & Mary Law Review

Consider the following: Building Owner commissions Artist to paint a mural on the wall of his building. A decade later, Business buys that building from Building Owner and, unaware of details relative to Artist’s wall mural, develops plans to renovate the building for a new use. Upon hearing of Business’s attempt to alter its newly acquired property, Artist seeks an injunction to prevent Business from restoring its building in a way that would change or destroy her mural. Would a court prevent Business from altering its building due to Artist’s moral rights to her work? If the court follows the …


Property Law For The Ages, Michael C. Pollack, Lior Jacob Strahilevitz Nov 2021

Property Law For The Ages, Michael C. Pollack, Lior Jacob Strahilevitz

William & Mary Law Review

Within the next forty years, the number of Americans over age sixty-five is projected to nearly double. This seismic demographic shift will necessitate a reckoning in several areas of law and policy, but property law is especially unprepared. Built primarily for young and middle-aged white men, the common law of property has been critiqued for decades for the ways in which it oppresses or simply leaves behind people based on their race, sex, Native heritage, and more. This Article contributes a new focus on property law’s treatment of people based on their advanced age. Burdened by higher relocation costs, more …


The Importance Of Viewing Property As A System, Lynda L. Butler Feb 2021

The Importance Of Viewing Property As A System, Lynda L. Butler

Faculty Publications

Can--or should--the American property system adapt to curb the excesses inherent in the dominant form of capitalism? Those extolling the virtues of privatization of resources would likely answer in the negative. Such a response would ignore the core functions and infrastructure of the American institution of property. This Article discusses the structure of property that enables property law to evolve over time, reacting to changing conditions, recognizing informal customs and usages, and otherwise taking into account important feedbacks. It explains how property provides an ordering system of concepts and principles that define and govern relations between a society and its …


Right On Time: A Reply To Professors Allen, Claeys, Epstein, Gordon, Holbrook, Mossoff, Rose, And Van Houweling, Dotan Oliar, James Y. Stern Jan 2020

Right On Time: A Reply To Professors Allen, Claeys, Epstein, Gordon, Holbrook, Mossoff, Rose, And Van Houweling, Dotan Oliar, James Y. Stern

Faculty Publications

A simple observation started us off in writing Right on Time. Studying and teaching intellectual property law, we noticed striking parallels between traditional first possession rules in property law and analagous rules governing the acquisition of patent, copyright, and trademark rights. We thought that established first possession principles could illuminate the workings of IP law. As we dug in, however, it became increasingly clear that our premise wasn’t quite right. While many penetrating commentators had said many penetrating things about first possession, the leading treatments tended to focus on significant individual aspects of the overall issue. What we could …


Right On Time: First Possession In Property And Intellectual Property, Dotan Oliar, James Y. Stern Mar 2019

Right On Time: First Possession In Property And Intellectual Property, Dotan Oliar, James Y. Stern

Faculty Publications

How should we allocate property rights in unowned tangible and intangible resources? This Article develops a model of original acquisition that draws together common law doctrines of first possession with original acquisition doctrines in patent, copyright, and trademark law. The common denominator is time: in each context, doctrine involves a trade-off between assigning entitlements to resources earlier or later in the process of their development and use. Early awards risk granting exclusivity to parties who may not be capable of putting resources to their best use. Late awards prolong contests for ownership, which may generate waste or discourage acquisition efforts …


Cutting Pension Rights For Public Workers: Don't Look To The Courts For Help, Ronald H. Rosenberg Jan 2019

Cutting Pension Rights For Public Workers: Don't Look To The Courts For Help, Ronald H. Rosenberg

Faculty Publications

Every day we rely on public employees to provide us with a broad range of services necessary to daily life. These workers include public school teachers, fire and police, emergency medical technicians, park rangers, nurses just to name a few. As public employees, these people work for local and state government and they are compensated by us for their services through the taxes we pay. In general, these are modestly paid workers who also receive pensions when they retire after many years of work. Following the financial crisis of 2008-2009, government retirement trust funds significantly lost value and their long-term …


Patent Prior Art And Possession, Timothy R. Holbrook Oct 2018

Patent Prior Art And Possession, Timothy R. Holbrook

William & Mary Law Review

Prior art in patent law defines the set of materials that the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) and courts use to determine whether the invention claimed in a patent is new and nonobvious. One would think that, as a central, crucial component of patent law, prior art would be thoroughly theorized and doctrinally coherent. Nothing could be further from the truth. The prior art provisions represent an ad hoc codification of various policies and doctrines that arose in the courts.

This Article provides coherency to this morass. It posits a prior art system that draws upon property law’s …


Buying Happiness: Property, Acquisition, And Subjective Well-Being, David Fagundes May 2017

Buying Happiness: Property, Acquisition, And Subjective Well-Being, David Fagundes

William & Mary Law Review

Acquiring property is a central part of the modern American vision of the good life. The assumption that accruing more land or chattels will make us better off is so central to the contemporary preoccupation with acquisition that it typically goes without saying. Yet an increasing body of evidence from psychologists and economists who study hedonics—the science of happiness—yields the surprising conclusion that getting and having property does not actually increase our subjective well-being. In fact, it might even decrease it. While scholars have integrated the insights of hedonics into other areas of law, no scholarship has yet done so …


Dead Men Bring No Claims: How Takings Claims Can Provide Redress For Real Property Owning Victims Of Jim Crow Race Riots, Melissa Fussell Apr 2016

Dead Men Bring No Claims: How Takings Claims Can Provide Redress For Real Property Owning Victims Of Jim Crow Race Riots, Melissa Fussell

William & Mary Law Review

No abstract provided.


The Coming Wave Of Pretextually Profiteering Social Entrepreneurs: A Case Study At The Nexus Of Property And Civil Rights, David Groshoff May 2015

The Coming Wave Of Pretextually Profiteering Social Entrepreneurs: A Case Study At The Nexus Of Property And Civil Rights, David Groshoff

William & Mary Environmental Law and Policy Review

This Article builds on my prior publications employing case studies that serve as the prisms through which this Article applies a legal analysis to a newly trending problem in social entrepreneurship.

Specifically, this Article reviews the financial and property interests implicated when, in the milieu of an aging baby-boomer demographic likely to display decaying neurocognitive abilities, ostensibly socially beneficent limited liability companies (“LLCs”) pretextually pose as small businesses with a desire to serve people suffering from particular alleged mental disorders. In reality however, these brand-managed social entrepreneurs may represent conveniently detachable arms of integrated corporate enterprises that have hundreds of …


Property, Exclusivity, And Jurisdiction, James Y. Stern Mar 2014

Property, Exclusivity, And Jurisdiction, James Y. Stern

Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


The Resilience Of Property, Lynda L. Butler Dec 2013

The Resilience Of Property, Lynda L. Butler

Faculty Publications

Resilience is essential to the ability of property to face transforming social and environmental change. For centuries, property has responded to such change through a dialectical process that identifies emerging disciplinary perspectives and debates conflicting values and norms. This dialectic promotes the resilience of property, allowing it to adapt to changing conditions and needs. Today the mainstream economic theory dominating common law property is progressively being intertwined with constitutionally protected property, undermining its long-term resilience. The coupling of the economic vision of ordinary property with constitutional property embeds the assumptions, choices, and values of the economic theory into both realms …


The "Middle Ground" Perspective On The Expropriation Of Indian Lands, Eric Kades Jul 2008

The "Middle Ground" Perspective On The Expropriation Of Indian Lands, Eric Kades

Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


Introductory Remarks: Property Law, James G. Dwyer Apr 2007

Introductory Remarks: Property Law, James G. Dwyer

William & Mary Law Review

No abstract provided.


Michelman As Doctrinalist, Gregory S. Alexander Dec 2006

Michelman As Doctrinalist, Gregory S. Alexander

William & Mary Bill of Rights Journal

Presented at the 2004 Brigham-Kanner Property Rights Conference.


From Jeans To Genes: The Evolving Nature Of Property Of The Estate, A. Mechele Dickerson Apr 1999

From Jeans To Genes: The Evolving Nature Of Property Of The Estate, A. Mechele Dickerson

Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


Virginia Survey Of Law: Property Section; Trusts And Estates Section, Lynda L. Butler Jan 1976

Virginia Survey Of Law: Property Section; Trusts And Estates Section, Lynda L. Butler

Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


A Reassessment Of The Legal Bases Of Zoning, John E. Donaldson Apr 1973

A Reassessment Of The Legal Bases Of Zoning, John E. Donaldson

Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


Treasury Regulations Section 1.165-3(B)(2): Lessor Deduction For Demolition Loss Mar 1973

Treasury Regulations Section 1.165-3(B)(2): Lessor Deduction For Demolition Loss

William & Mary Law Review

No abstract provided.


The Student As University Resident, William W. Van Alstyne Jan 1968

The Student As University Resident, William W. Van Alstyne

Faculty Publications

This examination argues that the position that a student’s rights are determined by whether he lives on or off-campus is unraveled by the institution’s position as a state actor. This article disposes of the notion that the university is equivalent to a landlord in property and contract rights and discusses how this distinction affects students’ rights.


Contracts - Landlord And Tenant - Applicability Of Right Of First Refusal To Judicial Sale - Cities Service Oil Co. V. Estes, 208 Va. 44 (1967), Jon W. Bruce Dec 1967

Contracts - Landlord And Tenant - Applicability Of Right Of First Refusal To Judicial Sale - Cities Service Oil Co. V. Estes, 208 Va. 44 (1967), Jon W. Bruce

William & Mary Law Review

No abstract provided.


The "Aggrieved Person" Requirement In Zoning, Robert A. Hendel Feb 1967

The "Aggrieved Person" Requirement In Zoning, Robert A. Hendel

William & Mary Law Review

No abstract provided.


Status Of The Social Guest: A New Look, Jerry Franklin May 1966

Status Of The Social Guest: A New Look, Jerry Franklin

William & Mary Law Review

No abstract provided.


Land Trusts: Some Problems In Virginia, William C. Cowardin Jr. May 1966

Land Trusts: Some Problems In Virginia, William C. Cowardin Jr.

William & Mary Law Review

No abstract provided.


Constitutional Law - Elements Of Reasonable Notice In Emeninent Domain Proceedings, Allan H. Harbert Jan 1963

Constitutional Law - Elements Of Reasonable Notice In Emeninent Domain Proceedings, Allan H. Harbert

William & Mary Law Review

No abstract provided.


Constitutional Law - Limitation Of Powers Of State Improvement Agencies, Joseph F. Phillips Mar 1962

Constitutional Law - Limitation Of Powers Of State Improvement Agencies, Joseph F. Phillips

William & Mary Law Review

No abstract provided.


Class Gifts: Increase In Class Membership And The Rule Of Convenience, Theodore H. Focht Oct 1959

Class Gifts: Increase In Class Membership And The Rule Of Convenience, Theodore H. Focht

William & Mary Law Review

No abstract provided.


Recordation Of Deed Of Trust As Inquiry Notice, Janet R. Sumpter Oct 1957

Recordation Of Deed Of Trust As Inquiry Notice, Janet R. Sumpter

William & Mary Law Review

No abstract provided.


Suit For Partition Of Real Estate, Wallace R. Heatwole Dec 1948

Suit For Partition Of Real Estate, Wallace R. Heatwole

William and Mary Review of Virginia Law

No abstract provided.