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University of Michigan Law School

Michigan Law Review

1958

Conveyance

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Law

Real Property - Adverse Possession - Between Cotenants, Paul K. Gaston Jun 1958

Real Property - Adverse Possession - Between Cotenants, Paul K. Gaston

Michigan Law Review

C. V. James and his wife and children owned certain property as tenants in common. In 1931 defendant Fallon recovered a judgment against C. V. James, and the land was sold by a sheriff under execution. Fallon became the purchaser at the sheriff's sale and was issued a sheriff's deed purporting to convey the entire interest in the property. Thereafter he was "in the actual, visible, distant, hostile, exclusive, continuous and uninterrupted possession" of the land and paid all taxes thereon. Plaintiffs, the wife and children of James, brought this action to determine the ownership of the property. Fallon claimed …


The Practical Location Of Boundaries, Olin L. Browder Jr. Feb 1958

The Practical Location Of Boundaries, Olin L. Browder Jr.

Michigan Law Review

Early in the development of the common law of conveyancing, as everyone knows, the practice of physically consummating a conveyance by acts on the land itself was abandoned in favor of the more flexible and convenient devices authorized or required by the Statute of Uses and the Statute of Frauds. Now we do it all on paper and consummate the transaction at any convenient place. One of the requirements of this process is to make clear what land is being conveyed. So we describe the land on paper in one of the several ways which have been approved for this …