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2.3 Regulation of Real Property Interests
- 19 Dec, 2025
- Com 0
βοΈ Regulation of Real Property Interests
Ownership rights are powerful β but they are never absolute. In this topic you’ll learn who can limit your bundle of rights, and how.
π― Learning Objectives
- Identify the four governmental powers that limit private ownership (P.E.T.E.)
- Distinguish police power from eminent domain β especially who gets paid
- Recognize private and judicial limits on property rights
Why Ownership Is Never Absolute
When you own real property, you hold the full bundle of rights β to use, possess, exclude, encumber, and dispose. But every one of those rights operates inside a framework of limits. Those limits come from three directions: government regulation, private agreements, and court decisions. A licensee who understands these limits can explain to a buyer why “it’s my land, I can do what I want” is never entirely true.
The Four Governmental Powers β P.E.T.E.
Memorize this acronym. It appears on the exam constantly.
| Power | What It Means | Compensation? |
|---|---|---|
| Police Power | The state’s authority to regulate for public health, safety, and welfare β zoning ordinances, building codes, environmental rules. Passed to cities through enabling acts. | NO β regulation is not a taking |
| Eminent Domain | The government’s right to take private property for public use. The taking process is called condemnation. | YES β “just compensation” is constitutionally required |
| Taxation | Charging property to fund government. Unpaid property taxes become a lien with the highest priority. | N/A |
| Escheat | When an owner dies with no will and no findable heirs, title passes to the state β so property never becomes ownerless. | N/A |
π Exam trap: Police power and eminent domain both limit owners β the difference is compensation. Zoning that lowers your property’s value pays you nothing. A taking by eminent domain must pay fair value.
Private Limits on Ownership
Owners and developers can also restrict property rights by agreement:
- Deed restrictions and CC&Rs β covenants, conditions, and restrictions written into deeds or recorded for an entire subdivision. They “run with the land,” binding future owners.
- Homeowners associations (HOAs) β enforce community standards through recorded governing documents, with the power to fine and lien.
- Easements and licenses β rights granted to others to use portions of the property (covered in depth in Lesson 5).
Judicial Limits
Courts shape ownership too. A judge may order a partition of co-owned land, quiet a disputed title, enforce or strike down a restriction, or foreclose a lien. Court decisions interpreting zoning, takings, and covenants form part of the practical boundary around every owner’s rights.
π Key Takeaways
- Ownership rights are held subject to government, private, and judicial limits
- P.E.T.E. = Police power, Eminent domain, Taxation, Escheat
- Police power regulates without compensation; eminent domain takes with compensation
- Escheat exists so property never becomes ownerless




