Minnesota Statutes 500.11 – Future Estates; Inclusiveness
Subdivision 1.Common law remainders.
When a future estate is dependent upon a precedent estate, it may be termed a remainder, and may be created and transferred by that name.
Terms Used In Minnesota Statutes 500.11
- Dependent: A person dependent for support upon another.
- Precedent: A court decision in an earlier case with facts and law similar to a dispute currently before a court. Precedent will ordinarily govern the decision of a later similar case, unless a party can show that it was wrongly decided or that it differed in some significant way.
- Remainder: An interest in property that takes effect in the future at a specified time or after the occurrence of some event, such as the death of a life tenant.
When a remainder on an estate for life or for years is not limited on a contingency defeating or avoiding such precedent estate, it shall be construed as intended to take effect only on the death of the first taker, or at the expiration, by lapse of time, of such term of years.
Subd. 2.Conditional limitations; shifting interests.
A remainder may be limited on a contingency which, in case it should happen, will operate to abridge or determine the precedent estate; and every such remainder shall be construed a conditional limitation, and have the same effect as such limitation would have by law.
Subd. 3.Springing interests.
Subject to the rules established in this chapter, a freehold estate, as well as a chattel real, may be created to commence at a future day; an estate for life may be created in a term of years, and a remainder limited thereon.