When a person holds title to land,
there are few things to consider. If
there is more than one person, such as husband/wife, or business partners, the
State of
Tenancy in Common: The most basic form of title. In
Joint Tenancy: Basically joint tenants with right of survivorship. This ownership may be attained by satisfying
the legal requirements of the four unities of ownership to include: time (all
tenants must take title at the same time), title (all tenants must take title
by the same document), interest (all tenants must have an equal interest), and
possession (all tenants have an undivided possession right).
As in tenants in common, all owners
have an undivided interest and can use the entire property. The difference is there is a unity of
ownership. Upon death of one of the
owners any remaining owners will take the rights of the deceased ownership, no
new owners can take title. The property
will be passed to the surviving owners.
Property held in joint tenancy may be partitioned, sold, or encumbered
without the consent of the other owners.
Tenancy by the Entirety: This is reserved only for married couples and provides extra protection to marital property. This must be the couple’s homestead. This method of holding title has all of the benefits of joint tenancy however also protects against some creditors. A home held as tenants by the entirety may only be reached by creditors of joint debts of husband and wife. In the case of non-joint debts, the property may not be partitioned, sold or encumbered without the permission of both spouses.
