Bill
LC 4091
Generally revise property laws
LC 4091 aimed to broadly revise property laws; no text released, and the draft died in process by May 2025, with potential future reintroduction.
Bill
LC 4091
LC 4091 aimed to broadly revise property laws; no text released, and the draft died in process by May 2025, with potential future reintroduction.
If a draft labeled “Generally revise property laws” follows common legislative patterns, it might touch several broad areas. These are typical areas in property-law revision efforts and are provided for context only:
- Definitions and scope of property ownership, interests, and real property versus personal property
- Real estate transactions, conveyancing, and transfer procedures
- Property recording, recording fees, and public records access
- Leases, landlord-tenant obligations, and eviction or remedies
- Liens, encumbrances, mortgage priorities, foreclosure procedures
- Property taxation and assessments (where intersecting with property law)
- Procedures for condemnation or eminent domain (where applicable)
- Public health, safety, or environmental considerations tied to property use
Note: The above are potential topics often addressed in broad property-law revisions and are not confirmed provisions of LC 4091.
LC 4091 appears to have been a broad effort to revise property laws, but the full text was not published. As of May 2025, the draft has died in process. Interested readers should monitor for potential reintroduction or successor measures in future sessions.
Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.
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