Too
often the term property is used to refer to things that belong to someone. It
is common for people to refer to property as a tangible thing. But in law,
property denotes the relationship existing between a person and a thing. It is
the bundle of rights that one has over something. As was stated by the court in
Yanner
versus Eaton (1999) 201 CLR 351;
The word "property" is often used to refer to
something that belongs to another. But in the law, "property" does
not refer to a thing; it is a description of a legal relationship with a thing.
It refers to a degree of power that is recognised in law as power permissibly
exercised over the thing. The concept of "property" may be elusive.
Usually it is treated as a "bundle of rights". But even this may have
its limits as an analytical tool or accurate description, and it may be that
"the ultimate fact about property is that it does not really exist:
it is mere illusion". Considering whether, or to what extent, there can be
property in knowledge or information or property in human tissue may illustrate
some of the difficulties in deciding what is meant by "property" in a
subject matter. So too, identifying the apparent circularity of reasoning from
the availability of specific performance in protection of property rights in a
chattel to the conclusion that the rights protected are proprietary may
illustrate some of the limits to the use of "property" as an
analytical tool. No doubt the examples could be multiplied.
Property consists primarily in
control over access. Much of our false thinking about property stems from the
residual perception that 'property' is itself a thing or resource rather than a
legally endorsed concentration of power over things and resources. There is a
huge difference between property and possession. one of the property interests
that one m2ay have is ownership, it consist of legal rights that one has over a
thing, possession on the other hand denotes physical control over a thing.
Possession is often times controlled and limited by ownership.
"Property" is a term that
can be, and is, applied to many different kinds of relationship with a subject
matter. It is not "a monolithic notion of standard content and invariable
intensity". That is why, in the context of a testator's will,
"property" has been said to be "the most comprehensive of all
the terms which can be used, inasmuch as it is indicative and descriptive of
every possible interest which the party can have". Because
"property" is a comprehensive term it can be used to describe all or
any of very many different kinds of relationship between a person and a subject
matter. To say that person A has property in item B invites the question what
is the interest that A has in B? The statement that A has property in B will
usually provoke further questions of classification. Is the interest real or
personal? Is the item tangible or intangible? Is the interest legal or
equitable?
Ownership" connotes a legal
right to have and to dispose of possession and enjoyment of the subject matter.
As Holmes J said in Missouri v Holland “possession is the beginning of
ownership." Property comprised legal relations not things, and those sets
of legal relations need not be absolute or fixed.
In Yanner
versus Eaton (1999) 201 CLR 351 Hohfeld
said this of "property”:
"Sometimes it is employed to indicate the physical
object to which various legal rights, privileges, etc., relate; then again -
with far greater discrimination and accuracy - the word is used to denote the
legal interest (or aggregate of legal relations) appertaining to such physical
object. Frequently there is a rapid and fallacious shift from the one meaning
to the other. At times, also, the term is used in such a 'blended' sense as to
convey no definite meaning whatever."
The absolute property that one can have
in a good is ownership. Ownership gives one the right to deal with the good as
he so wishes in exclusion of all others. The principles of ownership include;
- · Control over the use of the good
- · Right to take any benefit from the good
- · Right to transfer or sell the good
- · Right to exclude others
Possession is also a form of property
that one has over a good, though it is limited. It is a de facto relationship; it denotes physical control over a good and
not legal right over it. Possession can easily be defeated by a claim of a de jure relationship.
In a contract, the rights that one gets
over a good depend on the agreement between the parties and the terms of the
contract. While for example, a sale of goods contract is intended to eventually
transfer property absolutely to the buyer, Retention of Title Clause may reduce
the right that the buyer gets to merely possessory until a certain condition be
fulfilled.
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