ADMS 2610 Lecture Notes - Lecture 10: Life Insurance, Fide

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Joint tenancy: if one person died, the other(s) get(s) 100% of property. Comes with joint and several liabilities (occupiers" liability). Could involve tax consequence when starting into a joint tenancy, or when one party dies and the property involved is neither party"s principal residence and has increased in value. Tenancy in common: could be any division of ownership: 80%-20%, 55-45, 65: is attractive entry to owning property, but has longer-term potential to be tricky. One person could sell their percentage interest to a third party and move out or stay and pay rent or move in with the third party. When an owner dies, his or her beneficiary inherits their interest and can sell it to a current owner or a stranger. The chief distinction between joint tenancy and tenancy-in-common is the right of survivorship. Condominium owners have exclusive rights of ownership to units, and are tenants-in-common in the remainder of the building.

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