Preserving Heirs' Property

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Heirs’ property is the term used for land owned by numerous family members who received it as an inheritance, after their ancestor has died without a will. Most common amongst African Americans living in the South, heirs’ property results in part from inadequate access to estate planning resources and tools including sound legal advice and well-drafted wills.

After generations of land transfer through intestacy, numerous descendants may have a fractional interest in the property. These multiple interests result in tenancies in common. Tenancies in common provide each owner an undivided interest with the right to use and possess the property. A tenant in common, however, may sell or transfer their interest any time during their life or at death without consulting their fellow tenants. This is true regardless of how small or large the interest held.

When a tenant transfers their interest to someone outside the family it is likely a partition action will soon follow.

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Press Coverage Archive:
  • Thursday, October 1, 2009
    The Peacemaker
    Heirs' property is a leading cause of the loss of black land ownership in the South.
  • Tuesday, September 29, 2009
    Heir's Property Workshop Set for Oct. 10
    SCSJ and Land Loss Prevention Project will host a workshop on Heirs' Property on October 10th.
  • Thursday, June 25, 2009
    The Story with Dick Gordon
    A legal conundrum is pending over who owns a particular piece of beach. The case goes back 150 years in history, and it involves land that was originally purchased by a former slave.
  • Friday, May 1, 2009
    American Bar Association Journal
    A loophole in real estate law pits families against developers and each other. Some say there’s more than money at stake.
  • Sunday, February 15, 2009
    WRAL
    Thousands of North Carolinians attend the 3rd annual HKonJ march in Raleigh to demand progressive changes in state and national policy.