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  2. Personal property - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Personal_property

    Personal property, or possessions, includes "items intended for personal use" (e.g., one's toothbrush, clothes, and vehicles, and rarely, money). The owner has a distributive right to exclude others (i.e. the right to command a "fair share" of personal property). Private property is a social relationship between the owner and persons deprived ...

  3. Private property - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Private_property

    In Marxian economics and socialist politics, there is a distinction between "private property" and "personal property". The former is defined as the means of production about private ownership over an economic enterprise based on socialized production and wage labor whereas the latter is defined as consumer goods or goods produced by an individual.

  4. Real property - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Real_property

    t. e. In English common law, real property, real estate, immovable property or, solely in the US and Canada, realty, refers to parcels of land and any associated structures which are the property of a person. In order for a structure (also called an improvement or fixture) to be considered part of the real property, it must be integrated with ...

  5. Lost, mislaid, and abandoned property - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lost,_mislaid,_and...

    v. t. e. Lost, mislaid, and abandoned property are categories of the common law of property which deals with personal property or chattel which has left the possession of its rightful owner without having directly entered the possession of another person. Property can be considered lost, mislaid, or abandoned depending on the circumstances ...

  6. English personal property law - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_personal_property_law

    6) is distributable as personal property in the absence of a special occupant. Examples of property prima facie personal which is treated as real are fixtures, heirlooms, such as deeds and family portraits, and shares in some of the older companies, as the New River Company, which are real estate by statute. In ordinary cases shares in ...

  7. Self-ownership - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Self-ownership

    Self-ownership is the concept of property in one's own body, often expressed as the moral or natural right of a person to have bodily integrity meaning the exclusive right [1] to control one's own body including one's life, where 'control' means exerting any physical interference and 'exclusive' means having the right to install and enforce a ...

  8. Larceny - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Larceny

    Larceny is a crime involving the unlawful taking or theft of the personal property of another person or business. It was an offence under the common law of England and became an offence in jurisdictions which incorporated the common law of England into their own law (also statutory law), where in many cases it remains in force.

  9. Right to property - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Right_to_property

    The right to property, or the right to own property (cf. ownership), is often [how often?] classified as a human right for natural persons regarding their possessions.A general recognition of a right to private property is found [citation needed] more rarely and is typically heavily constrained insofar as property is owned by legal persons (i.e. corporations) and where it is used for ...