Friday, March 21, 2014

March 21, 2014 Focus Activity

Marti purchased a new textbook from a bookstore for one of her classes. Before the semester started, she decided to drop the class and take it the next semester instead. She rented the book to her friend Adrian for this semester. During this semester, Adrian might let a classmate have it to study for an exam. Can all three students claim the book as their property?

35 comments:

  1. Marti owns the textbook and gets rights over Adrian who has rights over a friend. Marti and Adrian can call it their property since they are paying for it.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Buying
      Dying
      Gifted
      Founding
      Dedication

      Delete
  2. The book would only be Marti's because she purchased the book. When she decides to rent it out, it remains her property, so Adrian and his classmate can't claim it as their property.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. -Marriage
      -Gifting
      -Buying
      -Dedication
      -Building it
      -Inheriting it
      -Live in it for 10 years

      Delete
  3. Marti owns the text book because she paid the full price at the store. Therefore it is her property.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. One can gain property by buy it or inherit it. It can be transferred by dedicating it

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  4. Only Marti can call it her textbook because she was the one that paid for the book. When she rents it to her friend Adrian, it remains Marti's property. Therefore only Marti can claim it as her property.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Inherit (dying), Give away, finding it, dedicating it, buying the property

      Delete
  5. No, all three cannot claim the book as their property. Technically it is Marti's because she purchased it and is only renting it to her friend and her friend is only letting her use it to study. The book belongs to Marti.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. This comment has been removed by the author.

      Delete
    2. 1) Death
      2) Marriage
      3) Donated
      4) Live there for 10 years
      5) Handed down (Family Business)
      6) Buy
      7) Inherit
      8) Divorce
      9) Find it

      Delete
  6. It is Marti's textbook because she purchased it. Adrian and his classmate do not have complete ownership over the book because they are simply borrowing it.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Inheriting propery. Buying property. Giving property. Making property.

      Delete
  7. Marti owns the book, making it his property anbd not the other two people

    ReplyDelete
  8. Marti is the only one who can call her property because she is the one who paid for the book and when she decides to let a friend rent it out it still remains Marti's property.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. marriage, divorce, death, inheritance, live in for 10 years, given, buy.

      Delete
  9. its only marti's property because she paid for it in her name with her money there for its not the other 2 peoples property

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. 1) inherit it
      2) steal it
      3) buy it
      4) find it
      5) live in it for 10 years
      6

      Delete
  10. No, they cannot claim the book as their property because Marti was the one who purchased the book in the first place.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Property can be gained through inheritance upon death, through a divorce based on the legal agreement to share property, and through the means of eminent domain.

      Delete
  11. No, because Marti owns the book, but she is renting it out to her friends. They do not own anything because if something were to happen to the book under there care they would have to replace it without question.

    ReplyDelete
  12. No they cant. Only Marti can claim it as her property since she is the only one that bought it.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. 1. marriage
      2. widowing
      3. find property
      4. given to you
      5.buy
      6.stay in house for 10 yrs
      7. divorce

      Delete
  13. Marti is the only one who can call the book her property. She may rent it out to people but it remains as her property.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Buying, inheritance, and giving.

      Delete
  14. Technically all three students can call the textbook theirs, Marti actually owns it, and she then rents it to Adrian for the semester, at this point the book is Adrian's responsibility. Then Adrian lends it to another classmate.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. -someone can pass it down to you
      - it can be in someone's will
      - you find something and no one claims it
      - you live in an abandoned building, an not in secret after 10 years the property becomes yours

      Delete
  15. No, They can not all claim the book. The book is originally Marti's. Marti bought the book with her money therefor the book is Marti's.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. inherit, steal it, buy it, find it, live in it for 10 years

      Delete
  16. This property belongs to Marti because she paid for it, so Adrian cant claim it even if she rents it because she is still using it. If they borrowed it they cant damage the property or that damage will be on her.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. They can claim it but they cant own it.

      Delete
  17. Yes they can claim it as their property but as being the owner of the book so can put a time limit on how long they can have it but she cant interrupt their study time while they are in tittle to the book. but the property belongs to Marti because she spend her own money for that book.

    ReplyDelete
  18. No, Because Marti payed for the book in full and has the receipt for it she rented it to Adrian for a small amount not the full price meaning it doesn't matter if she gave it to another person its still Marti's book

    ReplyDelete
  19. No, Because Marti bought the book himself so he is the owner. Adrian is just renting, renting is not owning because he has to pay Marti for the book. The classmate is borrowing, and all borrowed things must be returned. Marti is the only one who can do whatever he wants with his book and not have to answer to anybody about it.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Dedication
      Gifted
      Inherited
      Marriage
      Adverse Possession

      Delete