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The Basics of Co-ownership en English law

Eylem APAYDIN

1. Introduction

The aim of this article is to establish an essential background about basics of co-ownership with reference to the specific regulations in English law in order to provide a preliminary acquaintance with the author’s book.1

Co-ownership is a way of holding title in a property. It is observed that many legal systems recognise two common concepts of concurrent ownership even though they differ in details. The main distinction between these two general types of co-ownerships2 lies in how the legal systems perceive ‘the concept of share’. In this regard, generally while co-owners do not own any share in co-owned properties in the first type, co-owners hold an undivided share in the second type.3

Accordingly, two types of co-ownership are observed in English and Turkish law, which correspond to the previous descriptions. Firstly, in English law, joint tenancy is a type of co-ownership where all co-owners hold the whole property as a single entity. A joint tenant as an individual owns nothing, but as an entity, they own the whole property. Secondly, in a tenancy in common, each tenant in common owns an undivided share in the co-owned property. In English law, in fact, there were four different methods by which land could be owned which were joint tenancies, tenancies in common, tenancies by entireties, and coparcenary.4 However, only the former two categories remain important, as the 1925 legislation abolished the two latter forms of co-ownership, which were related to husband and wife and if the heirs were female. Therefore, the author of this paper legitimately prefers to analyse joint tenancy and tenancy in common.