It is frustrating how Bar Review courses do not even try to cater to visual learners. Your videos are a life-saver in this regard. Also, you explain differences in simple English--such as why an Easement by Prescription is not just called an Easement by Adv. Possession (which I was wondering and is hard to nail down in simple terms)--which would take a while to find in most course review materials.
As a first year law student cramming for my property exam... you deserve a medal for this video, fam. Took by far the most difficult & convoluted part of property law and made it a piece of cake. Thank you!
If you can make every course completely eligible prepare for BAR Exam, you will be the best Bar review course ever, & may charge a very elegant fees. Because your animation make studying & learning interesting. Thanks for your very precious creative ideas + knowledge + time + great effort to make others understand the law.
Just wanted to drop a massive shoutout and say thanks for your awesome videos! I'm a foreign LLM student, and your content has been an absolute lifesaver. I've tackled some of the toughest property law stuff, all thanks to your clear explanations. You're making a real difference! 🙌
Current 1L in Texas and this video just saved my life! My professor has been confusing me for weeks and now it all makes sense and came together. Not all heroes wear capes!
Thank you thank you thank you! The graphics haven't aged well in my opinion, but, as a visual learner, they'll ultimately be helpful. Can't wait to watch all of you videos!
As a bootstrap home builder I cannot thank you enough for the hard work you are doing by sharing these videos! It is so enlightening to see these legal theorems posited in visual diagrams. I'm trained as a landscape architect and wished that this was some sort of a requirement during our university years. I think you are doing such a wonderful service for the online community. Thank you for a great product! You are my legal angel!
Wow! I am studying for the bar at the moment and this is the most helpful video I have seen, hands down. Thank you very much for making these videos, I'll definitely be checking out the other ones.
Thank you sooo much USLR for making Real Property simple for visual learners. I wish all law school professors did more visual examples for us to master complex concepts. I always remember the little cartoon examples and characters in each story. Thank you for helping me study and pass exams!
These videos are the absolute best and the team at USLR is so wonderful & responds so quickly to messages. Property is my lowest performing subject other than K. If it weren't for these amazing videos I would be such a lost soul. I cannot thank USLR enough for all of the hard work and thought they put into these videos. I've learned more in these videos than from my law review lectures through BARBRI & from trying to read Kaplan books. I can only expect even greater things to come from USLR. Thank you a million.
WOW. This helps tremendously. Thank you. This lecture helped clear up many points that were very poorly taught in my property class. I am now a lot more prepared for this final!
This was superb! Thank you for taking the time to make these nifty animations and simple explanations. I don't know why Property wasn't taught as clearly in law school.
Thank you for the high compliment!!! The videos are the ideal source for understanding what the law is, but the flashcards are the best tool for memorizing the material. www.uslawreview.com/supplements/ Good luck with your studies!
This has helped me tremendously as I am studying for the Bar Exam now. I lowkey want my money back from my law school for my Property Class. You are truly amazing. Thank you for the visual aid!!
This was absolutely the best video ive ever watched for property. do you have any other law school subject videos like contracts or torts? also, do you have a seperate wesbite from youtube
Thank you for the high compliment. USLR is hard at work creating content on other mainstream topics of law. Thus, a video on common interest communities is not possible at this time, but hopefully later this year.
Thank you for your comment! Your inquiry is well founded since the majority of courts effectively do not enforce exclusivity (i.e. exclusive use) as a requirement in creating a prescriptive easement. This is why there is a strong argument for it to be eliminated. See Dena Cohen, Exclusiveness in the Law of Prescription, 8 Cardozo L. Rev. 611 (1987). But while jurisdictions differ to the extent (or effect) that they require the element of exclusivity, most still technically require it. See Dukeminier et al., Property 699 (6th ed. 2006).
+Sanch Gapro An equitable servitude is an interest in land within the meaning of the Statute of Frauds and therefore it must be in writing. However, it may be implied out of equity under certain circumstances; e.g. see minute 44:33 of this lecture.
+www.uslawreview.com If it can be implied, then writing is not a requirement, it merely augments a finding of it. Read Tulk v. Moxhay. It clearly explains the law.
+Sanch Gapro Thank you. Yes, Tulk does clearly explain the law in England (1848). It is such a landmark case. To your point, your logic makes sense but it is not practicable in the real world. If courts were to apply your interpretation (“If it can be implied, then writing is not a requirement […]”), then most laws and their associated legal requirements would be overcome since there is an abundance of exceptions, exemptions, variances, immunities, etc. While the law is plagued with a plethora of exceptions and continues to add more, they are a necessary evil. Good luck with your studies.
As helpful as this video is, I find the visuals unnecessarily misogynistic. Overall the visuals give frat boy vibes. I guess evoking a little anger/frustration in your audience is helpful for remembering this stuff though...Evoking emotions does lead to better memory retention.