Property Outline – Professor Kieff Property Law Theory What is property?
essentialists- property confers exclusive control over an “external thing”
skeptics- property is a “bundle of rights”; there is plasticity
Grey- property is a contingent bundle of rights
Rent-Seeking Rent- the gain; may be private or public
Rent (benefit) Dissipation (ruining the benefit); 2 types:
overinvestment- ex. 10 people in a room, each spend $9 to get a $10 prize; net loss
racing toward a common prize
net investment exceeds benefit
bad investment- i.e. investing in lobbying rather than in building the economy
Solution: property entitlements: focal point for coordination (i.e. hassidic diamond-trading Jews), which helps prevent overinvestment; owner has power (b/c right to exclude)
Lockean Labor Theory: mixing of sweat/labor = conversion of common property into private property (i.e. adverse possession, IP)
Gvmt does not create priv. property- God created private property; gvmt may not redistribute
Locke’s Proviso: One must leave “as good and enough for others” (used by Rawls to justify redistribution if extreme concentration of wealth)
Hegel Personality theory of property- the subjective value of an object to an individual is not recognized by the law- disconnect
the only way to understand property is to understand its relationship to the person
Law and Economics School Goal- efficiency, not morality
2 most common definitions of EFFICIENCY:
Pareto Efficiency Goal- get a pareto superior result- produces at least one winner and doesn’t make anyone worse off- making things more efficient
Pareto optimality- point of optimal efficiency; point before first loser is produced
Kador-Hicks Efficiency Goal- wealth maximization; producing losers doesn’t matter as long as there is a net gain; no need to compensate losers
Externalities/ Transaction Costs Transaction costs- includes cost of finding/dealing w/each other in a deal; getting info about what something is worth, transmitting info; lock-in problems (once you’ve started investing); failed transactions
transaction costs are a bigger problem if the market is thinner (fewer number of trading partners/ moving pieces) in the market and the # of things they are trading)
goal: look for the lowest cost provider, evaluator
Rational actors try to externalize their cost to others (i.e. externalizing pollution)
Hardin’s Tragedy of the commons- wealth maximizing farmers will continue to add cows to shared land w/finite amt. of grass even if doing so will cause the land to stop producing food; result- everyone starves
Solution? Introduce private property creates incentive to keep resource healthy
Coase Theorum Coase I- in a perfect market, the market determines the outcome of conflicts btw two uses – more valuable resource will ultimately prevail (farmer/ rancher ex.)
redistribution/regulation not necessary- market will handle it
Coase II- there is no perfect market; must include transactional costs (cost of reaching an accord btw parties), which can cause the outcome to flip- less valuable activity can continue b/c of the high transaction cost of stopping the activity; fewer people affected = higher transactional costs
goal- information-forcing rule- want knowledge (i.e. who is lowest cost provider) brought to attn of decision-maker
Normative Thoery descriptive norms- what people tend to do
diamond-trading Hassidic Jews- resolve disputes w/community counsels (cheaper, more effective)
Kieff The more property has predictable enforcement and the ability to be traded/bundled/divided, the more it encourages private actors to interact economic growth
Conversely, the more entitlement can be changed at the whim of gov’t actors and is inflexible, creating a system where actors must negotiate w/the gov’t bad for economic growth
Inducements/Constraints on Behavior Markets capital (who will invest in you, how much, terms); products; control; exit options; compensation structures
Government legislators, regulators, judges; mandatory vs. default rules; taxes, tax credits; property rights, regulatory entitlements
Assignation of Property Rights: Original Acquisition First Possession benefits: used commonly, equal opportunity (to race), requires work to possess, easy to administer, gives notice to how good is allocated
Wild Animals Pierson v. Post- Pierson took fox Post was hunting; Held- pursuit not sufficient to establish possession; only person to mortally wound/ seize animal acquires possession
benefit of assigning property right w/possession? clear demarcation by which people can order their affairs (prevent others from making investment); notice impt
Ghen v. Rich- whale hunter sues to recover value of whale; Held- defer to custom when universal w/in community (and when custom is efficient)
Keeble v. Hickeringill- Held- interfering w/duck harvest (i.e. trade essential to your livelihood that you have entitlement to) is actionable
Open Access and the Commons Open access- no one has a right to exclude others; open to all
Problems: rent dissipation, racing
Solutions: exclusive “property” rights, private owner or state regulates the group, individual transferable quotas (ITQs)
Semi-commons- a resource is subject to private exclusion rights in some uses, but is open access for other purposes (shifts from common property to private property)
Anti-commons- too many have the right to exclude, so no one is able to use a resource
Patent- property rights in ideas; creates incentive for inventors
monopoly (creating giant transaction cost causing hold-ups/outs) or anti-monopoly (creates increased access to technology)?
Eads v. Brazelton- Brazelton intended to salvage a boat, Eads moved in first; Held- possession of property requires actual taking and intent to reduce it to possession; possession requires notice plus diligence
Popov v. Hayashi- issue- who was 1st to possess a homerun baseball; Held- Popov had pre-possessory interest b/c he grasped it, Hayashi held on; ball sold, proceeds split btw them
Discovery Johnson v. M’Intosh- Π bought the land from Indians, fed. gov’t conveyed the land to Δ; Held- Native Americans were granted right of occupancy only, no right to transfer/ exclude
Lockean theory – mix your labor/sweat w/it – you own it
Creation Misappropriation/ quasi-property right in hot news Int. News v. Assoc. Press- INS (West Coast) used AP’s (East) bulletins as a source for news stories; Held- “hot news rule:” some limited form of right to news at newest moment
costs of quasi-property right: racing leading to overinvestment, inefficient, higher price to consumers, transaction costs
Right of Publicity Midler v. Ford Motor Co.- Ford’s advertising agency used a “sound alike” (to Midler); Held- Ford is trespassing on Midler’s right of publicity (b/c her voice is widely known, and that was used by Ford to sell a product)
Novelty Trenton Indus. v. A.E. Peterson Mfg.- claim for patent infringement of improvement in high chairs; Held- no property right; objective standard for patentability requires: 1. new to the world (compare to prior art references) and 2. non-obviousness;
Accession- one person adds to the property of another either by labor or labor & new materials
Doctrine of Accession- the group of legal doctrines that awards ownership to the most prominent thing in the field of view; adding ownership on to existing ownership
Increase almost always operates as an accession-type analysis
i.e. you give me a cow, which gives birth to a calf, you own both the cow and calf
Accession generally not applied to land b/c difficult to figure out unit of measurement
Labor Added Rule: usually owner of raw material will be awarded final product, unless the improver’s efforts have sufficiently increased its value to make doing so unfair
Wetherby v. Green- who owns the wood btw original owner and improver; Held- accession applies
if finding of accession- improver takes from owner and pays that person the value of what they took (at time of taking); liability rule, recognizing entitlement, Calabresi framework
if no accession (property rule), prior owner keeps it and improver has to negotiate w/owner
factors court considers in deciding whether to use accession doctrine:
mental state of improver (good-faith?)- if bad-faith, no accession treatment
degree of transformation – question of degree
just desserts (req. high deg. transformation) vs. personhood/lockean view (rel’ship btw improved thing and improver makes it more/ less their’s)
relative value contributed by orig. owner compared to value contributed by the improver; factor of degree
Ad Coelum Rule (if own soil, also own to sky and depths)
see Hinman- airplane overflights
Resources under the surface (minerals, oil, caves)
Edwards v. Sims- cave under neighboring lands, Edwards made it a tourist site, entrance on his land; Held- person who owns the surface has legal title to that below (accession approach); Dissent- possession approach
Accession vs. Confusion Accession- labor/creation and transfer; liability rule; Calabresi framework; accession operates to take a piece of property and transfer it to another via liability rule
Confusion- mistake and mixing/co-mingling; both parties usually get their property right enforced by a liability rule
Accretion Doctrine- operates like accession
accretion vs. avulsion; 2 different rules regarding land boundaries:
Established doctrine: Accretion- land that is added to an owner’s land becomes his property (slow movement of soil)
Avulsion- location of the old river bed constitutes a permanent, fixed boundary (typical where river completely/ rapidly changes its bed)
Nebraska v. Iowa- dispute over boundary btw 2 states; argued avulsion should apply b/c Missouri River is constantly changing; Held- court continues to treat it through established doctrine of accretion
Real Estate Fixtures Strain v. Green- Greens sell home to Strains; when they move out, take several items (mirrors, chandelier, water tank); Held- gap-filling approach (take what everyone wants and provide for it)- law of fixtures, if attached, should be considered part of house gap-filling rule (most ppl get what they want w/o having to ask) vs. info-forcing rule (coerces ppl into speaking more clearly upfront)
Adverse Possession Basic elements: one person has title to land; another lays claim to it w/o having title, after period of time, the land is granted to the possessor/claimant
Requirements: possession must be:
actual – physical occupation (i.e. fence, building, farming)
exclusive (exclusive control)
open and notorious
continuous
adverse/ hostile under a claim of right – non-permissive use
Theoretical approaches Lockean – focused on dessert; person mixing labor/ doing work, deserves ownership
Hegelian- person who values the land the most/ has utilized the land deserves it (look at rel’ship btw person and the asset- whether it’s tight); use partly defines formation of the person, not partaking in property = lack of acknowledgement in that tradition
Utilitarian- efficiency-based; AP makes most use of the land; gatekeeper is allowing others to make best use of property while cutting out transaction costs (dealing w/others)
Lessee of Ewing v. Burnet- Δ maintained the property, granting rights/exclusions to it; Π, in 21 yrs., never brought a claim of right against Δ; Held- acts of visible and notorious ownership (taking of soil/gravel) for 21 years sufficient to demonstrate AP
Rule: neither actual occupation, cultivation, nor residence is necessary to constitute actual possession
Minority- requirement of good faith of adverse possessor Carpenter v. Ruperto- Π puts land to higher use though aware property is not her’s; Held- no claim of right b/c she acted in bad faith
Majority- objective non-permission interpretation of adverse under a claim of right
Tacking- periods of possession by different people may be added together but requires privity Howard v.Kunto- descriptions in deeds didn’t fit land deed holders were occupying; Held- continuity measured by what is the community norm for that property (summer home- every summer counts as continuous); tacking also allowed when there is privity
SOL/ Disability Songbyrd, Inc. v. Estate of Grossman- adverse possession claim- co. produces album of Byrd’s music from recordings w/o consent; Held- Songbyrd failed to commence action w/in SOL; court applies time of conversion rule
Demand Rule- SOL odes not begin to run until true owner makes demand for return of property and return is refused (favors true owner, more time for recovery)
Sequential Possession Found Property Armory v. Delamirie- boy finds jewel, takes it to jewelry shop; shop’s apprentice took out stones and gave boy back socket; Rule- finder has unqualified property right against the world, excluding the original owner (who has the ultimate right)
Clark v. Maloney- finder 1 vs. finder 2; Rule- first finder wins; benefits- bright-line, allows 1st person to invest, more likely to be found by true owner
Anderson v. Gouldberg- two converters of pine logs; Rule: first converter wins; benefits: true owner more likely to find 1st converter, want to disincentivize serial taking
Lost (falls out of pocket) vs. mislaid (placed somewhere, forgotten about) property; courts generally give lost property to finder and mislaid property to the owner of the land
Competing Principles of Original Acquisition Fisher v. Steward- Π’s told Δ about the beehive they found on his land; Held: Πs lose- claim of property by occupancy would allow trespass; true ownership of beehive based on accession Ways to resolve: 1. accession-test- if on the land, it goes w/it; 2. ratione sole- he who possesses the property owns what is found on the land (English test)
Hannah v. Peel- Peel’s house requisitioned by gov’t, soldier finds brooch; Held- soldier prevails b/c Peel never moved into the house/ took phys. possession of it; 1st possession instead of accession counts here; another way to resolve: trespass, soldier there lawfully
Values Subject to Ownership Personhood Regents of California v. Moore- patient w/leukemia’s organ removed and used for science; issue: body parts property?; Held- no conversion, abandonment applies different approaches to body parts as property: 1. no conversion, but may present some due process claims; 2. it’s property but only backed up by right to excluded, not transferable; 3. bundle of rights approach
conversion- someone takes your property, you don’t want it back, want $ damages
Moakley v. Eastwick- Held: Church allowed to take down an artist’s mural, despite a statute regarding art preservation b/c statute is to be applied prospectively; issue: protecting artists’ reputation, which will affect perception of his body of work
United States v. Corrow- Navajo artifact being sold; Held- cultural patrimony and may not be sold (b/c NOT personal property) if the object 1. is not owned by an individual Nat. Am.; 2. could not be alienated/transferred by an individual; 3. has ongoing cultural significance
Margaret Radin (Hegelian)- pay attn to impact on personhood; 2 levels of property (personal and fungible); the more connected w/personhood, the stronger the entitlement; buying/selling of things (i.e. body parts) can diminish human dignity and value of human life; some goods should be inalienable, to prevent markets which distort worth of human beings
Public Rights – should certain resources be regarded as “inherently public”?
Navigable Waters right to freely navigate water; Congress’ auth. based on Commerce Clause; Gibbons- Congress may legislate commercial navigation; Congress- navigable waters remain open to public navigation
English law- water is freely navigable b/c land beneath the water owned by Crown (right to fish also public right)
Public Trust Doctrine Illinois Central Railroad Co. v. Illinois- IL gave RR access to harbor and took it away, RR claims rights in property; Held- harbor waters/land beneath held in trust by the gov’t for ppl of the state, andthe trust cannot be alienated/ transferred; RR never had a property interest
state may only transfer trust lands if selling small parcels (& if benefitting public)
State of Oregon ex rel. Thornton v. Hay- state obtains prescriptive easement over beach land b/c of custom of area being used recreationally by public
Owner Sovereignty and Its Limits Right to Exclude Trespass- unprivileged, intentional intrusion on property possessed by another
Trespass to Land (intentional tort)
Compare Jacque v. Steenberg Homes, Inc.- Steenburg delivering mobile home, easiest route across Jacque’s land; plowed path; Held- actual harm not in damage done to land, but loss of individual’s right to exclude others, large damage award reasonable as deterrent
risk- people will game the system; okay to trespass as long as you pay a fine?
with Hinman v. Pacific Air Transport- Δ airlines operated aircraft thru airspace over Π’s property; Held- rejects ad coelum doctrine (if own soil, also sky to depths); trespass requires actual, substantial harm; inefficient to force negotiation of flyovers (hold-out issue, markets won’t work), law should step in
Repeated Trespass Baker v. Howard County Hunt- Bakers own a farm, repeated trespass by hunt club’s hounds; Held- injunction granted b/c trespass is repeated, intentional, and seriously interferes w/owner’s peaceful enjoyment of his property
illustrates problem of liability rule treatment (sue me, I’ll pay damages each time and continue trespassing)
successful claims usually involve repeat nature and intentional nature
Building Encroachments Pile v. Pedrick- stone factory wall projected into Πs land 1 3/8” below surface; Held- wall must be torn down b/c Δs won’t allow Πs on their land to remove encroachment; judge divided costs of doing so
Golden Press v. Rylands- bldg foundation/footings extend onto Πs land; Held- encroachment in good faith, so court should balance equities, not act oppressively; requiring removal would be unconscionable b/c of hardship (Kieff- encroachment not in good faith, ct. should’ve gone other way)
Criminal Laws People v. Olivo- issue: ability to charge someone w/shoplifting if they haven’t left store w/item? Held- goal is protection of private property; customer must exercise control inconsistent w/rights of owner (furtive glance not enough)
Tate v. Shaft- Δs entered private property to aid migrant workers working/living there, refused to depart at demand of owner; Held- no trespass; protection of human values for disenfranchised supersedes right to exclude (relevant categories: health, educ. legal aid, relig.); other option- treat workers as tenants, who have right to have guests
Hamidi v. Intel- former employee, Hamidi, sends emails to Intel’s employees over its comp. system; Rule: trespass to chattel requires injury/interference to personal property; Held- no injury here
Self-Help Rule- okay if no danger of violence
Byrd v. Wiley- property owner, who rents to restaurant owner, locks out rest. owner after dispute; Held- self-help not okay (esp. when preventing his livelihood), possibility of violence, even when cops were present
Ford Motor Credit Co.- divorce, wife gets car, husband stops making payments, car repossessed; Held- this form of self-help okay b/c no threat of violence
Differences btw 2 cases: relationship btw transaction cost and overall value in property closer in the real estate, personal property more movable, alternative (legal) in restaurant case