What is tenancy?
Where
two or more persons take an estate or interest in land by means of an
application, transfer, mortgage, charge or lease that dealing must state
whether the persons are to hold as joint tenants or tenants in common.
If they hold as tenants in common the share of each person must also be
stated.[1]
What is tenancy in common?
A
tenancy held by two or more people, in equal or unequal shares, each
person having an equal right of possession over the entire property, but
no right of survivorship.[2]
According
to the Land Act of Kenya 2012 tenancy in common is a form of concurrent
ownership of land in which two or more persons possess the land
simultaneously where each person holds an individual, undivided interest
in the property and each party has the right to alienate, or transfer
their interest.[3]
Tenants
in common do not possess a right of survivorship and on their death
their interest passes according to the terms of their will.[4]
Tenant
in common holds an undivided share in the property and has unity of
possession meaning that; each tenant has a right to possession of the
property as a whole but none of them has a right to exclusive possession
of any part of the property. A tenant in common may do whatever it is
that they want to with their share of the property and this will not
affect the tenancy of the other co-tenants in their shares.
In
tenancy in common each tenant has a right to possess and use the entire
property. Either party may sell or transfer his or her share of the
property to any person, for any reason. If one of the tenants does sell
or transfer his or her share, then the buyer takes the seller’s place
and becomes a tenant-in-common with the party who did not sell his or
her share.[5]
For
a tenancy in common to be in existence the following must be observable
or in other words it must comprise the following. First an interest in
property owned concurrently by two or more persons under an agreement of
tenancy in common. Each or two or more of the tenants in common must
have an undivided interest in the whole property for the duration of the
tenancy (right of possession) and there has to be no right of
survivorship incident to a tenancy in common, but a remainder may be
created to vest ownership in the survivor of several persons who own as
tenants in common other preceding interests in the same property. [6]
All decisions to develop, mortgage, sell or use the property may only be
made collectively by all co owners.
Tenancy
in common has various advantages and these are, firstly that it allows
an unlimited number of people to co-own a property this therefore means
that in case of expensive property they can share the purchase price and
can benefit from the use of the property. Secondly the co-owners are
allowed to divide the property in any agreeable manner which is not the
case in a joint tenancy this means that for example in the case of three
co owners person X can own 50%, Y 30% and Z 20%.
Tenancy
in common has the advantage of the fact that each owner in a tenancy in
common has the right to designate an heir in her will. If an owner
passes away, her share of the property passes to the person listed in
the will, which allows you to provide a property inheritance, increasing
your heir's assets when you pass away. If the property produces income,
the heir will receive your portion of the income. This advantage
extends to persons who were married and had children in the previous
marriage they can inherit your share whilst still allowing your current
spouse or partner to live there for life.
The
fact that one of the features of a tenancy in common is undivided
interests this can be both an advantage and disadvantage. Undivided
interests refer to the interest in property owned by tenants whereby
each tenant has an equal right to enjoy the entire property. This is
because tenants to the property may have contributed different portions
towards acquiring the ownership of the property (X 50%, Y 30%, and Z
20%) but still have equal enjoyment to the property and in decision
making.
For
everything that has advantages disadvantages may inevitably also
accompany those advantages. One of the disadvantages of tenancy in
common is the potential for one owner's nonpayment of the mortgage,
upkeep expenses or repair costs to affect the other owners. If one owner
fails to make a payment, the other owners must cover the expenses,
although they may do so in the form of a loan to the nonpaying owner. If
the nonpayment cannot be resolved, the remaining owners typically must
resort to complex legal strategies, such as foreclosure or eviction.
The
other disadvantage of tenancy in common lies on its dissolution.
Dissolution of a tenancy in common can be a complex matter. If all
owners agree to sell the property, they divide the proceeds according to
ownership. However, if the owners do not agree to sell, one owner can
typically obtain a partition action, which is a court order forcing the
sale of the property. This can be a disadvantage if you want to keep the
property but another owner wants to sell.
There
are several ways in which a tenancy in common can come to an end. The
first and most obvious way is when the property is sold (with all the
shares) to another person. This means that when all the co-owners have
met an agreed to sell their share in the tenancy in common to another
person. A tenancy in common is not dissolved by death of a co-owner of
the tenancy in common.
The
tenancy in common may also come to an end when one owner acquires all
the share of the property. This simply means that the other co-owners
sell their shares or interests in the property to one person in the
tenancy in common. An example would be persons Y and Z who own 30% and
20% respectively of the property in the tenancy in common and sell their
shares to person X who owns 50% of the tenancy in common.
Dissolution
of a tenancy in common can also take place when the co-owners make an
agreement and change the form of tenancy. Having earlier stated that
concurrent ownership may take two forms, a joint tenancy and a tenancy
in common, the agreement that would lead to dissolution of the tenancy
in common by way of change of the form of tenancy, would then be an
agreement to become a beneficial joint tenancy.
Joint Tenancy
Joint
tenants, on the other hand, must obtain equal shares of the property
with the same deed, at the same time. The terms of either a joint
tenancy or tenancy in common are outlined in the deed, title, or other
legally binding property ownership document. The default ownership for
married couples is joint tenancy in some states, and tenancy in common
in others
Terminating Joint Tenancy vs. Tenancy in Common
A
joint tenancy can be broken if one of the co-owners transfers or sells
his or her interest to another person, thus changing the ownership
arrangement to a tenancy in common for all parties.
A tenancy in common can be broken if one of the following occurs:
One or more co-tenants buys out the others
The property is sold and the proceeds distributed amongst the owners
A
partition action is filed, which allows an heir to sell his or her
stake. At this point, former tenants in common can choose to enter into a
joint tenancy via written instrument if they so desire.
This
type of holding title is most common between husbands and wives and
among family members in general since it allows the property to pass to
the survivors without going through probate (saving time and money).
Right of Survivorship
One
of the main differences between the two types of shared ownership is
what happens to the property when one of the owners dies.
When
a property is owned by joint tenants, the interest of a deceased owner
gets transferred to the remaining surviving owners. For example, if
three joint tenants own a house and one of them dies, the two remaining
tenants each obtain a one-half share of the property. This is called the
right of survivorship.
Tenants in common have no rights of survivorship. Unless the deceased owner's will or other instrument specifies that their interest in the property is to be divided among the surviving owners, a deceased person's interest belongs to the estate.
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