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Summary Co-Ownership -- Express Trusts

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A compilation document looking at co-ownership, more specifically express trusts.

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June 22, 2023
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2022/2023
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Co-Ownership — Express Trusts
What is co-ownership?
Concurrent/simultaneous.
NOT successive.

Two or more parties own a property at the same time.




Concurrent:
Same estate in land (freehold or leasehold)

At the same time.

A, B, and C own the freehold of Greenacre at the same time.

NOT - A sells to B who sells to C: Successive.
A owns the freehold and B owns the leasehold.



Statutory Trust of Land
Trust: A device under which the legal and beneficial interest are held separately.

Co-ownership - Trust will arise.




Key Statutes:
Law of Property Act 1925 (LPA 1925)

Trusts of Land and Appointment of Trustees Act 1996 (TOLATA or TLATA).



Trusts - Terminology

Trustee - Holder of the legal title.
The 'manager'.

Beneficiary - Holder of the equitable interest.
Enjoys the benefit of ownership of the land.



Every instance of co-ownership, two questions considered:

How the land is held at law?

, Examples:

Example 1

A, B, C, D & E purchase property together.
Agree to hold property as Joint Tenants in Equity.

Law: A, B, C, D (JTs)

Equity: A, B, C, D, E (JTs)



Example 2

A, B, C, D & E purchase a property together.
B is aged 16 at the date of purchase.

Expressly agree to hold the property and joint tenants in equity.

B is under age of 18, cannot legally own land.

Law: A, C, D, E (JTs)

Equity: A, B, C, D, E (JTs)




N.B. Legal owners are trustees - Enables them to carry out duties and obligations towards

Legal ownership has no economic value in itself; the value of land lies in equitable ow

Limitation of four - Trustees required to sign relevant documentation on sale of the prop


Position in Equity

Co-ownership in equity more flexible:

Joint Tenant and Tenant in Common.

Joint Tenancy can be severed to create a Tenancy in Common.

No limitation on numbers.

Capacity not a requirement.



Legal title can only be held as Joint Tenants - LPA.

Equitable owners can be either Joint Tenants or Tenants in Common - Equitable interest is

Joint Tenancy

Four unities required - A.G. Securities v Vaughan [1988] 3 WLR 1025
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