Community land trusts and land banking are examples of efforts to rearrange the bundle of rights. This is typically done by dividing the responsibilities of ownership and management from the rights to use the property. A typical community land trust strategy is to hold ownership over the land and sell the structural improvements (residential or other buildings) to low-income homebuyers. This allows people to buy a home at a price far below the market rate and to realize the benefits of their property value improving.
Real Estate Investment Trusts divide up the bundle of rights in order to allow commercial investments in real property. These legal structures are becoming more common throughout the developed world.
Squatting presents a non-economic way for people to transfer parts of the bundle of rights. Depending on the applicable laws, a squatter can acquire property rights by simply occupying vacant land for an extended period of time. Areas with high concentrations of squatters are sometimes thought of as
informal settlements. Squatters face great instability due to their lack of title and governmental efforts at "
blight removal". "Squatting" can result in "
adverse possession", that in
common law, is the process by which
title to another's
real property is acquired without
compensation, by holding the property in a manner that conflicts with the true
owner's
rights for a specified period of time. Circumstances of the adverse possession determine the type of title acquired by the adverse possessor, which may be fee simple title, mineral rights, or another interest in real property.
Examples of component rights This table breaks down some of the various rights involved in real property ownership. Several of these rights can be transferred between different parties through sale or trade. Third parties can obtain the rights to access and profit from several of the
public use rights without the consent of the title owner. This is often the case with resource extraction companies such as mines. For example, a husband and wife can be owners (technically,
title owners) of
real property that is also encumbered by a
mortgage and a
mechanics lien. Their neighbor may have an
easement for a utility line, and a
license for entry and exit to a nearby plot of land. Airplanes have the right to fly through their airspace. Constitutionally, the state and federal governments always hold the right to
condemnation, also called
eminent domain, and the government at multiple levels retains various regulatory rights such as
environmental regulation,
zoning, and
building code enforcement. ==See also==