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Property Law and Real Estate

2015

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Articles 61 - 90 of 401

Full-Text Articles in Law

Resolving Property Claims In A Post-Socialist Cuba, Kern Alexander, Jon L. Mills Aug 2015

Resolving Property Claims In A Post-Socialist Cuba, Kern Alexander, Jon L. Mills

Jon L. Mills

This Article analyzes some of the major Cuban and international legal issues confronting U.S. and Cuban claimants whose property was expropriated by the Cuban government. Part II reviews the history of the Cuban nationalizations and examines the historical development of the property protection provisions of the Cuban Constitution. Part III analyzes the implications of deciding which Cuban legal system should apply to the claims of expropriated property owners.

Part IV discusses the legal and procedural barriers to recovering expropriated property, focusing upon international law of claimant eligibility, abandonment of property, and compensation to expropriated investors. This Part also analyzes both …


The Ohio Rules Of Civil Procedure And Their Effect On Real Property Titles, Alvin W. Lasher Aug 2015

The Ohio Rules Of Civil Procedure And Their Effect On Real Property Titles, Alvin W. Lasher

Akron Law Review

T HE REVOLUTION IS HERE! It has come quietly, almost without a murmur of opposition or civil discord. Indeed, many who will be most profoundly affected by it were not-are not even now, perhaps-aware of its coming. But it is here, nevertheless. The revolution in question, of course, relates not to some massive proletarian uprising which many today profess to see upon the horizon, but to the revolution in Ohio procedural law which became effective on July 1, 1970. For a revolution indeed it is, bringing changes so sweeping in their nature that the procedural law, both statutory and judge-made, …


Property Insurance For Ohio's Urban Areas, R. D. Welsh Aug 2015

Property Insurance For Ohio's Urban Areas, R. D. Welsh

Akron Law Review

Thirty-eight million dollars damage to property occurred in Watts in 1965, $49,000,000 in Detroit, and $10,000,000 in Newark, New Jersey in 1967, plus many others that have resulted in about $187,000,000 being paid in the five years ending in 1968. Until Watts, riot coverage was provided as an afterthought by the insurance industry with little or no additional charge. Besides this problem, insurers were faced with loss of reinsurance by foreign reinsurers alarmed by inability of Government authorities to maintain law and order.


The Ohio Rules Of Civil Procedure And Their Effect On Real Property Titles, Alvin W. Lasher Aug 2015

The Ohio Rules Of Civil Procedure And Their Effect On Real Property Titles, Alvin W. Lasher

Akron Law Review

The revolution is here! It has come quietly, almost without a murmur of opposition or civil discord. Indeed, many who will be most profoundly affected by it were not-are not even now, perhaps-aware of its coming. But it is here, nevertheless. The revolution in question, of course, relates not to some massive proletarian uprising which many today profess to see upon the horizon, but to the revolution in Ohio procedural law which became effective on July 1, 1970. For a revolution indeed it is, bringing changes so sweeping in their nature that the procedural law, both statutory and judge-made, which …


Property Insurance For Ohio's Urban Areas, R. D. Welsh Aug 2015

Property Insurance For Ohio's Urban Areas, R. D. Welsh

Akron Law Review

Thirty-eight million dollars damage to property occurred in Watts in 1965, $49,000,000 in Detroit, and $10,000,000 in Newark, New Jersey in 1967, plus many others that have resulted in about $187,000,000 being paid in the five years ending in 1968. Until Watts, riot coverage was provided as an afterthought by the insurance industry with little or no additional charge. Besides this problem, insurers were faced with loss of reinsurance by foreign reinsurers alarmed by inability of Government authorities to maintain law and order.


The Secured Party And His Nemesis, The Trustee In Bankruptcy: After-Acquired Property, Unidentified Proceeds, And Selected Preference Problems, John P. Finan Aug 2015

The Secured Party And His Nemesis, The Trustee In Bankruptcy: After-Acquired Property, Unidentified Proceeds, And Selected Preference Problems, John P. Finan

Akron Law Review

A trustee in bankruptcy, in addition to succeeding to the rights of the bankrupt,' has several avoiding powers. Some of these avoiding powers are based on practices which, like vice, are of "so frightful mien that to be hated [need] but to be seen." Preferences may not be included among such practices. Indeed, the English view exhibits ambivalence towards preferences. At one time it regarded "preferences [as] the good fortune of the creditor." A later view was "that the preferring of one creditor over others within a short time of bankruptcy and in contemplation thereof, was a 'fraud on the …


A National Landlord-Tenant Relations Act: A Legislative Proposal For The 1970'S, D. Richard Froelke Aug 2015

A National Landlord-Tenant Relations Act: A Legislative Proposal For The 1970'S, D. Richard Froelke

Akron Law Review

While education and employment are significant aspects of poverty law in this country, the focus of this paper is on housing in general and the recent development of tenant unions in particular. Specifically, the author proposes as a phase of a nationally developed program of housing for the 1970's the enactment of a federal National Landlord-Tenant Relations Act. Several thorough and thoughtful articles have recently been written' in which the vehicle of tenant unionization has been discussed and analyzed. Part II will briefly set forth the historical background of the tenant union concept. Part III will examine the case for …


Priority Of Liens Between Construction Mortgagee And Mechanic's Lienors; Wayne Building & Loan Of Wooster V. Yarborough, Allan S. Hoffman Aug 2015

Priority Of Liens Between Construction Mortgagee And Mechanic's Lienors; Wayne Building & Loan Of Wooster V. Yarborough, Allan S. Hoffman

Akron Law Review

Ohio follows the generally accepted rule that where there is a mortgage securing future advances such advances create liens only as they are actually made, unless the mortgagee is obligated to make the advances. In the latter case the mortgagee's lien will date from the time of its recording. In addition to this nonstatutory method by which a mortgagee can obtain lien priority, there is a statutory method by which he can do so, namely the procedure provided by § 1311.14 of Ohio Rev. Code. This statute is not new, having been enacted in 1915. However, in 1919 the Ohio …


Standing Of Future Residents In Exclusionary Zoning Cases, David H. Moskowitz Aug 2015

Standing Of Future Residents In Exclusionary Zoning Cases, David H. Moskowitz

Akron Law Review

The purpose of this article is to explore the standing of future residents to bring suit in exclusionary-zoning cases. Exclusionary zoning may be defined as zoning and land-use control practices that have the effect of precluding construction of dwelling units that could house low-income and moderate-income persons either by direct exclusion or by raising the price of access.1 An example of direct exclusion would be the imposition of restrictions upon the number of bedrooms in apartment units, which would have the direct effect of excluding large families. An example of indirect exclusion would be the effect of zoning upon land …


The Mobile Home And The Law, Marvin M. Moore Aug 2015

The Mobile Home And The Law, Marvin M. Moore

Akron Law Review

In the past decade, house trailers have dramatically increased their share of the housing market in the United States….The manner in which mobile homes are dealt with under our zoning laws is therefore a matter of some importance. Surprisingly, comparatively little has been written regarding the zoning of mobile homes and trailer parks. The purpose of this article is to lessen this deficiency. The writer proposes to examine the subject by considering the following aspects of mobile home regulation: the need for mobile homes or a similar type of housing; the objectionable features of house trailers and trailer parks; the …


In The Racial Crosshairs: Reconsidering Racially Targeted Predatory Lending Under A New Theory Of Economic Hate Crime, 35 U. Tol. L. Rev. 211 (2003), Cecil J. Hunt Ii Aug 2015

In The Racial Crosshairs: Reconsidering Racially Targeted Predatory Lending Under A New Theory Of Economic Hate Crime, 35 U. Tol. L. Rev. 211 (2003), Cecil J. Hunt Ii

Cecil J. Hunt II

No abstract provided.


Buyers Beware: Statutes Shield Real Estate Brokers And Sellers Who Do Not Disclose That Properties Are Psychologically Tainted, Ronald B. Brown, Thomas H. Thurlow Iii Aug 2015

Buyers Beware: Statutes Shield Real Estate Brokers And Sellers Who Do Not Disclose That Properties Are Psychologically Tainted, Ronald B. Brown, Thomas H. Thurlow Iii

Ronald Brown

Real estate sellers and their brokers were traditionally not required to disclose any information about property because the controlling doctrine was caveat emptor. The protection provided by that doctrine has gradually been eroded by judicial application of the theory of common law fraud, under which sellers are required to disclose conditions that the buyer could not be expected to discover by a diligent inspection, but which the seller knows or should know would materially affect the value of the property to the buyer. That disclosure obligation has been expanded in some states to the listing broker and the selling …


The Phenomenon Of Substitution And The Statute Quia Emptores, Ronald B. Brown Aug 2015

The Phenomenon Of Substitution And The Statute Quia Emptores, Ronald B. Brown

Ronald Brown

Law students generally think that American property law is a confusing mix of unconnected, inconsistent and nearly incomprehensible rules. In fact, an overview of property law reveals a recurring pattern. In numerous situations, a successor in title takes the place of his or her predecessor regarding rights and responsibilities that are related to ownership of that land. That process is called substitution because the successor is substituted for the predecessor regarding those rights and responsibilities. But sometimes substitution happens automatically and other times it happens only if that is the parties' intent. Automatic substitution seems to follow the pattern established …


2000 Survey Of Florida Law: Real Property, Ronald B. Brown, Joseph M. Grohman Aug 2015

2000 Survey Of Florida Law: Real Property, Ronald B. Brown, Joseph M. Grohman

Ronald Brown

No abstract provided.


Ohio Residential Landlord Tenant Act, Robert J. Croyle Aug 2015

Ohio Residential Landlord Tenant Act, Robert J. Croyle

Akron Law Review

The new Ohio Landlord-Tenant Act is the legislature's attempt at correcting the imbalance between landlord and tenant. This new law is Ohio's unique adaptation of the Uniform Residential Landlord and Tenant Act. The thrust of the new act is to abrogate the Ohio common law of caveat emptor and independent covenants and reinterpret residential leases in light of modem contract law.

The purpose of this article is to acquaint the reader with the newly defined rights, duties and remedies of the landlord and the tenant. Analysis will be placed on: (1) Ohio case law prior to the act; (2) similar …


Book Review, 18 J. Marshall L. Rev. 559 (1985), Ann Lousin Aug 2015

Book Review, 18 J. Marshall L. Rev. 559 (1985), Ann Lousin

Ann M. Lousin

No abstract provided.


Legal Problems Confronting The Effective Creation And Administration Of New Towns In The United States, Richard W. Hemingway Aug 2015

Legal Problems Confronting The Effective Creation And Administration Of New Towns In The United States, Richard W. Hemingway

Akron Law Review

IT MAY SEEM a startling statistic to some that the population in the United States is increasing at the rate of some three hundred thousand people per month.' Stated more dramatically, this increase is equal in size to the addition, during a year, of twelve cities the size of Toledo, Ohio, or, in a decade, of ten cities the size of Detroit, Michigan. On a world basis the growth is even more startling.


Legal Problems Confronting The Effective Creation And Administration Of New Towns In The United States, Richard W. Hemingway Aug 2015

Legal Problems Confronting The Effective Creation And Administration Of New Towns In The United States, Richard W. Hemingway

Akron Law Review

IT MAY SEEM a startling statistic to some that the population in the United States is increasing at the rate of some three hundred thousand people per month.' Stated more dramatically, this increase is equal in size to the addition, during a year, of twelve cities the size of Toledo, Ohio, or, in a decade, of ten cities the size of Detroit, Michigan. On a world basis the growth is even more startling.


Mandatory Referendum For Zoning Amendments; Unlawful Delegation Of Legislative Power; Denial Of Due Process; Forest City Enterprises, Inc. V. Eastlake, Jane E. Bond Aug 2015

Mandatory Referendum For Zoning Amendments; Unlawful Delegation Of Legislative Power; Denial Of Due Process; Forest City Enterprises, Inc. V. Eastlake, Jane E. Bond

Akron Law Review

IN 1971 FOREST CITY ENTERPRISES applied to the Planning Commission of Eastlake, Ohio, to rezone its property, an eight-acre parcel of land, from industrial to multi-family high-rise use. After the application was filed, initiative petitions were circulated proposing the adoption of an amendment to the Eastlake city charter. The proposed amendment provided for mandatory voter approval' of any ordinance changing the city's existing comprehensive zoning plan. An amendment to this effect was adopted in November, 1971.


Problems Of Groundwater Rights In Ohio, Alan H. Coogan Aug 2015

Problems Of Groundwater Rights In Ohio, Alan H. Coogan

Akron Law Review

TO A NOVICE IN THE LAW, the problems of groundwater rights seem to straddle awkwardly the physical and social realms. The law-a formal set of rules by which society is ordered-seems to the physical scientist a strangely confusing and confused tool with which to define, even in a social context, the parameters and limits of a physical continuum. For example, on the basis of attorney's briefs, bolstered even by expert testimony, judges have legally defined "subterranean streams"' and erected criteria for recognizing such streams that sound more like the rhetoric of Humpty Dumpty than a description of a body of …


The Measurement Of Damages To Public Property And Interest, Norman Leonard Aug 2015

The Measurement Of Damages To Public Property And Interest, Norman Leonard

Akron Law Review

The new concern with measuring damages to public property and interest comes in part from attempts to include such damages in the evaluation of the desirability of constructing private and public projects. Environmental impact statements and land use studies need objective measurement of the consequences flowing from proposed projects. No one method or technique is going to solve the problem of the measurement of impacts, but this article will attempt a partial and limited answer.


A Glimpse Into The Realpolitik Of Federal Land Planning, In Comparative Context With The Mysterious Nlupa And The Czma, Zygmunt J.B. Plater Aug 2015

A Glimpse Into The Realpolitik Of Federal Land Planning, In Comparative Context With The Mysterious Nlupa And The Czma, Zygmunt J.B. Plater

Zygmunt J.B. Plater

There is an old adage that “those who fail to plan, plan to fail.” Planning is a fundamentally rational, basal process shared at some level and to some degree by all, establishing and implementing frameworks to guide our human actions toward the accomplishment of various desired and defined objectives. Thoughtfully designed and implemented planning is no less rational and essential for governmental entities than it is for corporations and individuals. This essay surveys an interesting comparison between two quite different federal approaches to directive land and resource management planning. On one hand, the analysis reviews the federal mandate for layered, …


The Availability Of Benefit Of The Bargain Expectancy-Based Damages For Buyers Defrauded In California Real Estate Transactions, Laurence A. Steckman, Robert E. Conner, Kris Steckman Taylor Aug 2015

The Availability Of Benefit Of The Bargain Expectancy-Based Damages For Buyers Defrauded In California Real Estate Transactions, Laurence A. Steckman, Robert E. Conner, Kris Steckman Taylor

Touro Law Review

No abstract provided.


I'M In The Pursuit Of Your Property: How The Government Disguises A Taking, Amanda Miller Aug 2015

I'M In The Pursuit Of Your Property: How The Government Disguises A Taking, Amanda Miller

Touro Law Review

No abstract provided.


The Customary Practice Of Gerawee In Afghanistan: A Case For Transitioning To Real Equity-Based Finance, Haroun Rahimi Aug 2015

The Customary Practice Of Gerawee In Afghanistan: A Case For Transitioning To Real Equity-Based Finance, Haroun Rahimi

Haroun Rahimi

The customary practice of Gerawee, in principle, refers to a specific form of synthetic loan. It is a pledge-lease transaction that enables owners of immovable properties to obtain financing based on the market value of those properties in exchange for either paying regular payments in form of rent or transferring the right to lease those properties to a financer. The practice has been developed to help debtors and creditors avoid the prohibition of interest bearing loans under Shari’ah. Despite the efforts of some Muslim jurists to justify the practice under Shari’ah, it is widely criticized. In particular, Afghan muftis …


Brigham-Kanner Property Rights Conference Journal, Volume 4, William & Mary Law School Aug 2015

Brigham-Kanner Property Rights Conference Journal, Volume 4, William & Mary Law School

Brigham-Kanner Property Rights Journal

Defining the Reach of Property

October 30-31, 2014

Panel 1: The Role of the Advocate in Defining Property

Panel 3: Balancing Private Property and Community Rights

Panel 4: Property Rights in Developing and Transitional Countries

Panel 3 Q&A: Discussion on Balancing Private Property and Community Rights


Revealing The Rapist Next Door: Property Impacts Of A Sex Offender Registry, Susan Yeh Aug 2015

Revealing The Rapist Next Door: Property Impacts Of A Sex Offender Registry, Susan Yeh

Susan Yeh

How do homebuyers respond to perceived crime risks about sex offenders in the neighborhood? I evaluate local property and crime responses to Internet sex offender registry listings. Among more permanent listings, a nearby offender depresses house prices by up to 4 percentage points. I document that the majority of registered sex offenders are transient, with durations of less than 6 months at an address. While a growing literature suggests that housing stability is important in reducing criminal behavior, the market perceives heightened crime risks to be attached to the listings of registered offenders with more stable housing, but not to …


Algunas Razones Por Las Que Debe Prevalecer La Posición Del Acreedor Embargante. A Propósito De La Decisión Pendiente En El Vii Pleno Casatorio Civil, Jimmy J. Ronquillo Pascual Aug 2015

Algunas Razones Por Las Que Debe Prevalecer La Posición Del Acreedor Embargante. A Propósito De La Decisión Pendiente En El Vii Pleno Casatorio Civil, Jimmy J. Ronquillo Pascual

Jimmy J. Ronquillo Pascual

No abstract provided.


The Constitutional Dimensions Of Aboriginal Title, Brian Slattery Aug 2015

The Constitutional Dimensions Of Aboriginal Title, Brian Slattery

Brian Slattery

As the Supreme Court reaffirms in Tsilhqot’in Nation v. British Columbia (2014), Aboriginal title is a sui generis right which cannot be described in traditional property terms. This paper argues that the explanation for this fact is that Aboriginal title is not a concept of private law. It is a concept of public law. It does not deal with the rights of private entities but with the rights and powers of constitutional entities that form part of the Canadian federation. If we look for analogies to Aboriginal title, we find a close parallel in Provincial title – the rights held …


Banks, Break-Ins, And Bad Actors In Mortgage Foreclosure, Christopher K. Odinet Aug 2015

Banks, Break-Ins, And Bad Actors In Mortgage Foreclosure, Christopher K. Odinet

Faculty Scholarship

During the housing crisis banks were confronted with a previously unknown number mortgage foreclosures, and even as the height of the crisis has passed lenders are still dealing with a tremendous backlog. Overtime lenders have increasingly engaged third party contractors to assist them in managing these assets. These property management companies — with supposed expertise in the management and preservation of real estate — have taken charge of a large swathe of distressed properties in order to ensure that, during the post-default and pre-foreclosure phases, the property is being adequately preserved and maintained. But in mid-2013 a flurry of articles …