Trusts and Estates Part Seven: Future Interests and the Rule Against Perpetuities: Temporal Limits on the Dead Hand

Trusts and Estates Part Seven: Future Interests and the Rule Against Perpetuities: Temporal Limits on the Dead Hand

Author: The Law School of America March 8, 2026 Duration: 55:01

The Law of "Mine": 5 Surprising Realities About Property


Property law is a complex riddle, less intuitive than commonly believed. It is not about objects but about the invisible legal relationships defining who can use and transfer assets.


1. Property Isn’t a Thing—It’s a Relationship

Ownership is a three-way social relationship: owner to thing, others to thing, and owner to others. Property is the legally-backed power to exclude others, not merely the object itself.


2. Why Chasing the Fox Isn’t Enough (The Rule of Capture)

The rule from Pierson v. Post mandates Actual Possession (physical seizure) for ownership of a wild animal, not mere pursuit. This clear rule prioritizes certainty and peace over rewarding labor alone.


3. Finders Keepers? (The Doctrine of Relativity of Title)

The principle is "First-in-Time, First-in-Right." In Armory v. Delamirie, the court established the Relativity of Title: a possessor has a better right to an object than a stranger, though inferior to the True Owner. This stability is necessary for commerce.


4. The Floor Matters: The Weird Logic of "Lost" vs. "Mislaid"

The locus in quo (place of finding) determines title. Lost Property (unintentionally dropped) generally belongs to the finder. Mislaid Property (intentionally placed, then forgotten) goes to the premises owner. This distinction aims to facilitate the item's return to the True Owner.


5. The "Snooze and Lose" Rule (Adverse Possession)

This provocative doctrine allows a trespasser to gain title by using the land for a statutory period. It punishes the "sleeping" owner and rewards the productive user, ultimately serving to "quiet titles" and cure conveyancing errors.


Conclusion

Property law is a dynamic field constantly adapting. As assets become abstract (digital/genetic data), the ancient logic of capture and possession faces new challenges in the 21st century.



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