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COMMUNITY PROPERTY |
JOINT TENANCY |
TENANCY IN COMMON |
TENANCY IN PARTNERSHIP |
TITLE HOLDING TRUST |
PARTIES |
Only husband and wife |
Any number of persons (can be husband and wife) |
Any number of persons (can be husband and wife) |
Only partners (any number) |
Individuals, groups of persons, partnerships or corporations, a living trust |
DIVISION |
Ownership and managerial interests are equal except control of business is solely with managing spouse |
Ownership interests must be equal |
Ownership can be divided into any number of interests equal or unequal |
Ownership interest is in relation to interest in partnership |
Ownership is a personal property interest and can be divided into any number of interests |
TITLE |
Title is in the "community." Each interest is separate but management is unified |
Sale by joint tenant severs joint tenancy |
Each co-owner has a separate legal title to his/her undivided interest |
Title is in the "partnership" |
Legal and equitable title is held by the trustee |
POSSESSION |
Both co-owners have equal management and control |
Equal right of possession |
Equal right of possession |
Equal right of possession, but only for partnership purposes |
Right of possession as specified in the trust provisions |
CONVEYANCE |
Personal property (except "necessaries") may be conveyed for valuable consideration without consent of other spouse; real property requires written consent of other spouse, and separate interest cannot be conveyed except upon death |
Conveyance by one co-owner without the others breaks the joint tenancy |
Each co-owner’s interest may be conveyed separately by its owner |
Any authorized partner may convey whole partnership property for partnership purposes |
Designated parties within the trust agreement authorize the trustee to convey property. Also, a beneficiary’s interest in the trust may be transferred. |
PURCHASER'S STATUS |
Purchaser can only acquire whole title of community; cannot acquire a part of it |
Purchaser will become a tenant in common with the other co-owners in the property |
Purchaser will become a tenant in common with the other co-owners in the property |
Purchaser can only acquire the whole title |
A purchaser may obtain a beneficiaries interest by assignment or may obtain legal and equitable title from the trust |
DEATH |
On co-owner’s death, ½ belongs to survivor in severalty. ½ goes by will to descendants devisee or by succession to survivor |
On co-owner’s death his/her interest ends and cannot be disposed of by will. Survivor owns the property by survivorship |
On co-owner’s death his/her interest passes by will to devisee or heirs. No survivorship rights. |
On partner's death, his/her partnership interest passes to the surviving partner pending liquidation of the partnership. Share of deceased partner then goes to his/her estate |
Successor beneficiaries may be named in the trust agreement, eliminating the need for probate. |
SUCCESSOR'S STATUS |
If passing by will, tenancy in common between devisee and survivor results. |
Last survivor owns property |
Devisee or heirs become tenants in common |
Heirs or devisee have rights in partnership interest but not specific property |
Defined by the trust agreement, generally the successor becomes the beneficiary and the trust continues |
CREDITOR'S RIGHTS |
Property of community is liable for debts of either spouse, which are made before or after marriage. Whole property may be sold on execution sale to satisfy creditor |
Co-owner’s interest may be sold on execution sale to satisfy creditor. Joint tenancy is broken. Creditor becomes a tenant in common |
Co-owner’s interest may be sold on execution sale to satisfy his/her creditor. Creditor becomes a tenant in common |
Partner's interest cannot be seized or sold separately by his/her personal creditor but his/her share of profits may be obtained by a personal creditor. Whole property may be sold on execution sale to satisfy partnership creditor |
Creditor may seek an order for execution sale of the beneficial interest or may seek an order that the trust estate be liquidated and the proceeds distributed |
PRESUMPTION |
Strong presumption that property acquired by husband and wife is community |
Must be expressly stated |
Favored in doubtful cases except husband and wife case |
Arise only by virtue of partnership status in property placed in partnership |
A trust is expressly created by an executed trust agreement |