Freehold (law)

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In England and Wales and Scotland, a freehold is the ownership of real property, or land,[1] and all immovable structures attached to such land, as opposed to a leasehold in which the property reverts to the owner of the land after the lease period has expired.[2] Immovable property includes land and all that naturally goes with it, such as buildings, trees or underground resources, but not such things as vehicles or livestock.

Before the Law of Property Act 1925, a freehold estate transferable to the owner's "heirs and assigns" (successors by inheritance or "purchase" [including gift], respectively), was a "fee simple" estate. When transfer, by inheritance or otherwise, was limited to lineal descendants ("heirs of the body"/"heirs of the blood") of the first person to whom the estate was given, it was a "fee tail" estate. There were also freehold estates not of inheritance, such as an estate for life.

For an estate to be a freehold it must possess two qualities: immobility (property must be land or some interest issuing out of or annexed to land), and ownership of it must be of an indeterminate duration. If the time of ownership can be fixed and determined, it cannot be a freehold.

Notes

  1. Strictly speaking, all land in England, Wales and Scotland belongs to the Crown. Freehold is ownership of an estate in land rather than the land itself. This distinction dates back to the Middle Ages and makes relatively little difference nowadays, so legal authorities often do not bother to distinguish between ownership of the land and ownership of an estate.
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