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executory interest

The “Dead Hand”: Understanding the Rule Against Perpetuities

Meta Description: The Rule Against Perpetuities (RAP) is a notorious law preventing property control from beyond the grave. Learn what ‘lives in being plus 21 years’ means, how it impacts trusts and wills, and why modern law is changing this ancient rule. The Rule Against Perpetuities: A Guide to the Property Law that Fights the […]

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Simplifying the Rule Against Perpetuities: A Modern Guide

Meta Overview: The Dead Hand Principle The Rule Against Perpetuities (RAP) is a centuries-old property law concept designed to prevent landowners from controlling the ownership of their assets for an unreasonably long time after their death—a concept often called the “dead hand” of the grantor. It ensures property remains alienable and transferable, rather than being

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The Rule Against Perpetuities: A Guide for Estate Planning

Meta Description: The Rule Against Perpetuities (RAP) prevents long-term ‘dead hand’ control over property. Learn the traditional ‘life in being plus 21 years’ rule, the future interests it affects, and modern reforms like the USRAP’s 90-year ‘wait-and-see’ approach essential for estate planning and trusts. Understanding the Rule Against Perpetuities (RAP) The Rule Against Perpetuities (RAP)

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The Rule Against Perpetuities: Limits on Property Control

Meta Description: The Rule Against Perpetuities (RAP) is a foundational principle in property law designed to prevent property from being tied up indefinitely. Learn the common law’s “lives in being plus 21 years” formula and how modern statutes like the Uniform Statutory Rule Against Perpetuities (USRAP) have reformed this complex doctrine. The concept of property

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Navigating Future Interests in Property Law

Understand future interests in property law, including how they are created, the key types (reversions, remainders, executory interests), and their role in estate planning and real estate. In the complex world of property and estate law, not all rights to ownership are immediate. A “future interest” represents a legal right to a property that you

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