The Law That Lets You Legally Steal Houses

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 9 фев 2025
  • Start using Dashlane to stay safe online for free at Dashlane.com/HAI
    Get 10% off upgrading to premium by using the code, "HAI" at checkout
    Get a Half as Interesting t-shirt: standard.tv/co...
    Suggest a video and get a free t-shirt if we use it: halfasinteresti...
    Follow Sam from Half as Interesting on Instagram: / sam.from.wendover
    Follow Half as Interesting on Twitter: / halfinteresting
    Discuss this video on Reddit: / halfasinteresting
    Check out my other channel: / wendoverproductions
    Episode written by Adam Chase
    Music by Epidemic Sound

Комментарии • 3,6 тыс.

  • @halfasinteresting
    @halfasinteresting  5 лет назад +1115

    Gimme those topic suggestions here so I can spend more time researching outdated memes: docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSdMAoo9CfGxr5OvZdz3qCCEkeQSVJpak3YYTHQFLRwXOyTOXA/viewform
    If I use your suggestion, I'll send you a free HAI t-shirt

    • @MinePlayersPE
      @MinePlayersPE 5 лет назад +3

      -first-

    • @georgeceuca8994
      @georgeceuca8994 5 лет назад +7

      Why you gotta do my mans the crj like that

    • @AMDXplusplus
      @AMDXplusplus 5 лет назад +1

      Outdated memes are 2000s tech. 1980s is cassette age, 1990s is CD age, 2000s is iTunes age, and 2010s is RADIO AGE!!! LOL

    • @ramirotorres7191
      @ramirotorres7191 5 лет назад +3

      It's fine though I have a firm stance against pickles too

    • @georgeceuca8994
      @georgeceuca8994 5 лет назад +2

      @@ramirotorres7191 agreed

  • @rheenusthebeanus
    @rheenusthebeanus 5 лет назад +6777

    In court:
    *Tresspasser:* "I own your house now, I've been there for 5 years now"
    *Me:* "But I have a welcome mat."
    *Judge:* "Oh shit he has a point."

    • @danielauen7790
      @danielauen7790 5 лет назад +387

      Aah, but I have a receipt for that welcome mat.

    • @YG-os5uu
      @YG-os5uu 5 лет назад +44

      Daniel Auen 😂

    • @thepip3599
      @thepip3599 5 лет назад +257

      But welcome mats leave you susceptible to vampire attacks.

    • @bantikat4890
      @bantikat4890 5 лет назад +72

      Now I really want to buy a welcome mat lol

    • @firedup692
      @firedup692 5 лет назад +66

      But I came from the back entrance. No mat there

  • @someoneinparticular6458
    @someoneinparticular6458 4 года назад +955

    "Put a welcome sign so nobody could claim it"
    Simple spell but quite unbreakable

    • @benjaminlynch9958
      @benjaminlynch9958 4 года назад +21

      Could the squatters not just take down the sign and claim that it wasn’t there when they showed up? 🤷🏼‍♂️

    • @latishacroissant2238
      @latishacroissant2238 4 года назад +13

      Benjamin Lynch If you’ve ever had guests over to the property before you would have witnesses and people usually take pictures of their rentals beforehand so you’d have more proof.

    • @Neumini.s
      @Neumini.s 4 года назад +29

      but then you allow the vampires to enter it too

    • @masondipperpines5009
      @masondipperpines5009 3 года назад +1

      Remove the mat

    • @Artyshell53
      @Artyshell53 2 года назад +1

      🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @walterbrown8694
    @walterbrown8694 4 года назад +309

    There is generally an important caveat in Adverse Possession cases - The adverse possession must be uncontested during the period of possession.

    • @MmeHyraelle
      @MmeHyraelle 3 года назад +14

      I believe he mentionned it.

    • @wesleytillman9774
      @wesleytillman9774 2 года назад +3

      Thanks for emphasizing that point. The law works for people who take care of their property.

    • @Helladamnleet
      @Helladamnleet 2 года назад +9

      Counter point: If the actual property owner tries to make the squatter leave there's a chance that property owner will have to reimburse the squatter for all repairs and taxes paid on the property, so say as a squatter you paid $8,000/year for 4 years, plus did another $18,000 worth of repairs, the actual owner may be faced with shelling out $50k PLUS legal fees for a property they didn't even care about for several years.

    • @JamieTransNyc
      @JamieTransNyc 2 года назад +4

      Open, Notorious, Uninterrupted, and Uncontested.

    • @abdirahmanidris290
      @abdirahmanidris290 2 года назад +1

      @@Helladamnleet thats unfair unless the squatter was given permission

  • @ryant2568
    @ryant2568 4 года назад +696

    This actually happened to my Father-in-law in Uraguay. when he came over here to Australia he allowed his brother to live in his house back in Uraguay rent-free since the value of the property at the time was insignificant. Fast forward 30 years and he is now retired and decided to sell the house back in Uraguay only for his brother to claim possession stating that he has acted as the owner of the property for the last 30 years.
    My Father-in-law eventually won but he did have to go back to Uraguay to fight the case in person.

    • @navinchouhan255
      @navinchouhan255 4 года назад +76

      If your father in law home was in India his grand children will go to court and still judgement will not came

    • @pauloshea3741
      @pauloshea3741 4 года назад +13

      My ex brother did something similar to me!

    • @cashconnolly1877
      @cashconnolly1877 3 года назад +46

      I mean, wouldn't it not apply as they did allow them to live there, "he allowed his brother to live in his house"

    • @ryant2568
      @ryant2568 3 года назад +55

      @@cashconnolly1877 Every country has slightly different laws on this but the gist of it is that if someone is living in a property rent-free they are not considered a tenant.
      If they have been living there for long enough, paying for the upkeep of the property ect.... they can claim that they have a right to ownership.

    • @tuanngnt
      @tuanngnt 3 года назад +19

      People from other countries always think that the one lived in USA are rich so they think they have the right to own the house.

  • @ctoacu6188
    @ctoacu6188 5 лет назад +778

    This is the "If the teacher dosent show up for 15 minutes we can leave" argument in the world of house ownership.

    • @nathanfortier9559
      @nathanfortier9559 2 года назад +1

      it is just a litel bit longuer

    • @CraftingTableMC
      @CraftingTableMC 2 года назад

      LOL

    • @Optim40
      @Optim40 Год назад

      Mmm, that would be the actual opposite of that.

    • @1993Delicious
      @1993Delicious Год назад +6

      More like, if the teacher doesn't show up, you now inherit their job

    • @deidrabrey4043
      @deidrabrey4043 Год назад

      More like you get 12 statements from students saying the teacher hasn't been there all semester and take over the classroom. And lock her out.

  • @karnickel-s33d16
    @karnickel-s33d16 3 года назад +133

    This reminds me of the story of how my uncle got his house for free. My uncle had taken out a loan to get the house, but he couldn't pay the loan, because he had more important things to spend money on like heroin. So the bank decided to take the house, since it was bought with their money. However, my uncle had left the house in such a state of disrepair that the bank decided to let my uncle keep the house and write it off as charity.

    • @martiandoritos777yt3
      @martiandoritos777yt3 2 года назад +16

      Holy shit, this better be real XD

    • @gentleasa5728
      @gentleasa5728 2 года назад +2

      I need a home badly, Er but not that badly!

    • @richardarriaga6271
      @richardarriaga6271 2 года назад +16

      A bank would only do that if the tax write off for depreciation was worth more than the damaged property itself.

    • @chriss9809
      @chriss9809 2 года назад +1

      @@richardarriaga6271 Very likely if it was a mobile home without the land that the trailer sits on top of.

    • @giovannicorraliza4393
      @giovannicorraliza4393 2 года назад +3

      @@martiandoritos777yt3 please dont say holy like that

  • @swoovey
    @swoovey 5 лет назад +587

    "What do you do for a living?"
    HAI: *I teach kids how to steal houses on RUclips*

    • @kshitijsharma759
      @kshitijsharma759 4 года назад +17

      *legally

    • @dontidentify8645
      @dontidentify8645 3 года назад +5

      Yes legally

    • @gerryatrick
      @gerryatrick 3 года назад +1

      It may be regarded as legal, but morally it's wrong and still theft. But thieves will always be thieves. Corrupt people always look for a way to steal other things people have paid for.

    • @dariusel8713
      @dariusel8713 3 года назад

      @@gerryatrick then guess america as a whole should be charged with theft right?

    • @gerryatrick
      @gerryatrick 3 года назад

      @@dariusel8713 Well yes, if they are thieves, maybe they should be. Start at the top with the president and his corrupt thieving buddies in government, and work your way down. You know if you take a pen or paper clip from work without the owner's permission, you're a thief.

  • @leaderofthelewishpeople6382
    @leaderofthelewishpeople6382 5 лет назад +2319

    House: Exists.
    Squatter: Hippity hoppity, this land is now my property!

    • @punnequraq
      @punnequraq 5 лет назад +17

      Real creative. It’s totally not like you stole this comment.

    • @saoirsedeltufo7436
      @saoirsedeltufo7436 5 лет назад +9

      I’ve never seen you outside of the Yogscast RUclips comments

    • @samcavanagh7993
      @samcavanagh7993 5 лет назад +6

      WHAPOON!

    • @benkogenko
      @benkogenko 5 лет назад +6

      Greetings, fellow yognaught

    • @1973Washu
      @1973Washu 5 лет назад +2

      @@punnequraq This is my comment now

  • @alphainfinitum3445
    @alphainfinitum3445 2 года назад +46

    I own 4 and a half acres of land in a wooded area of Florence, South Carolina. But as most of you know, I usually travel to Jamaica twice a year. When covid came in 2020, I was in Jamaica, then the borders were closed and I ended up staying in Jamaica for a full year. When I came back to the states, I decided to pay a visit to my property and to my greatest surprise, I saw that some one had built a hiking trail and cultivated crops on it. I followed the trail and saw a small camper parked up the hill on the property. I decided to go check it out. While I was heading there, I saw another guy who was hiking, and I asked him if he was from around, and said yes. I asked him how long he had lived in the area, and he said for about a year. I asked him if he knew the place well enough to show me around, and he said he knew it well, but that at the moment, he just wanted to play it by the ear. I asked him what that meant, and he asked me to hike with him a bit while we talked. He told me that he gets up in the morning, sits outside of his camper to watch the sunrise while drinking a glass or two of beer, and smoking some grass. Then he works on the garden till midday, by which time he goes back into the camper for his afternoon nap. He gets up later in the day and cleans around, then goes for a hike. He returns from the hike and sits in front of the camper to watch the sunset, with a glass or two of beer while playing it by the ear all along. At this point I felt like I was being violated and I told him that the property was mine, and that he needed to pack up and leave immediately. He asked if he could give me a little money so that he could stay till his crops mature, that way he doesn't lose his harvest. Long story short, we are in 2022, and he is still on the land, but that's because I let him stay and take care of the land while I was away. I made him sign a document that clearly stated why he was there. I have not had any issues with him since.

    • @adog3129
      @adog3129 Год назад +19

      why would we know that you travel to jamaica twice a year

    • @alphainfinitum3445
      @alphainfinitum3445 Год назад +1

      @@adog3129 it's just because many people in Jamaica know me very well. I am an advocate for healthy living. I believe that the earth has given us all what we need to succeed in this life. We only need to listen to the ground. Last year I ate baked grass freshly harvested from the side of the back country road after it had enjoyed some wavy breeze from cars going fast on that road. If you don't believe me, just drive behind another fast car on a road that has grass on its side. Observe how the breeze from that car causes a wavy pattern on the grass. At that point it's up to you to tap into that wonder of nature and enjoy it while it's freshly baked and straight from the oven.

    • @ottertree
      @ottertree 10 месяцев назад

      @@alphainfinitum3445 Most people haven't been to Jamaica, and forgive me if I'm wrong, as I'm assuming, but you don't advertise your random youtube to people?

    • @StoicRageTV
      @StoicRageTV 10 месяцев назад +4

      @@adog3129inflated ego lol he has one follower. Nobody knows you on here my guy! Lol

  • @shunyat9023
    @shunyat9023 5 лет назад +852

    Wendover Production: Detailed analysis of the logistics of ISS.
    Half as Interesting: hey uh so did u know that u can steal other ppl houses without getting caught

    • @ChristopherTurcotte
      @ChristopherTurcotte 5 лет назад +97

      So how long would someone need to occupy the ISS before it becomes theirs? Asking for a friend

    • @sirrhynus4280
      @sirrhynus4280 5 лет назад +25

      @@ChristopherTurcotte I would say about half a year to a year. I've you managed to not starve in that period of time then congratulations, the ISS is yours.

    • @turtle-balloon
      @turtle-balloon 5 лет назад +16

      Read that as logistics of ISIS

    • @Mr8lacklp
      @Mr8lacklp 5 лет назад +8

      Actually you basically have to get caught, jsut not by the owner.

    • @kelvinpang438
      @kelvinpang438 5 лет назад +1

      While you have to do it without getting caught by the owner.

  • @dersps5905
    @dersps5905 5 лет назад +2852

    Man, does that work in Monopoly?

    • @johnfrancisdoe1563
      @johnfrancisdoe1563 5 лет назад +56

      Der SPS How do you avoid rolling the dice and having to move at least one stop each time?

    • @TheMcstevester
      @TheMcstevester 4 года назад +142

      Can finally say I own a real prison!

    • @KappaChiino
      @KappaChiino 4 года назад +14

      200 iq

    • @turtlelizard1531
      @turtlelizard1531 4 года назад +19

      @@TheMcstevester dangit, you stole my punchline lol

    • @turtlelizard1531
      @turtlelizard1531 4 года назад +4

      @@johnfrancisdoe1563 Lemme spell it out... I-T I-S A J-O-K-E

  • @nemonada3501
    @nemonada3501 4 года назад +59

    Adverse possession doesn't work in Australia anymore, those laws have been patched up by other laws. I think it was just last year a police officer over here was sent to jail for running an adverse possession racket to bolster her own portfolio.

    • @Sir_toaster
      @Sir_toaster 3 года назад +7

      Hmm I heard it's the same in areas of Canada I have a feeling the Chinese are the common feature in this reversal of adverse possession

    • @MaLiArtworks186
      @MaLiArtworks186 3 года назад +2

      So after Australia stole an entire country from the poor Aboriginals, they stopped other thieves from stealing the stolen property from them, the original thieves?!!!

    • @nemonada3501
      @nemonada3501 3 года назад +1

      @@MaLiArtworks186 Yes. Once the rich had everything they wanted and control of the majority of property in the country they locked everyone else out of it.

    • @MaLiArtworks186
      @MaLiArtworks186 3 года назад +1

      @@nemonada3501 Exactly!

    • @3rdalbum
      @3rdalbum 2 года назад +6

      Adverse possession does indeed work in Australia and there have been recent cases involving laneways and such, where the squatter has won the case.
      The police officer abused her power and her information access in order to find vacant properties to target. She tried to claim squatters rights by putting paying tenants into those properties before she had title, which isn't how Adverse Possession works. She actively tried to hide her activities from the rightful owners so Adverse Possession wouldn't have worked for her. And finally, she was a police officer trespassing on private property without a lawful reason. As a public officer she abused her position and engaged in corruption and didn't even do Adverse Possession correctly, and that's why she was jailed.

  • @crabbiethecrab7393
    @crabbiethecrab7393 5 лет назад +1671

    “When stealing is legal, go for it!”
    *Picture of Wall Street in the background*

    • @johnc916
      @johnc916 4 года назад +6

      Crabbie The Crab lmao

    • @inferno7997
      @inferno7997 4 года назад +20

      There's so many legal robbery in wall street actually

    • @JohnyScissors
      @JohnyScissors 4 года назад +9

      Yes that is indeed the joke

    • @JohnyScissors
      @JohnyScissors 4 года назад +19

      @@William0271 I mean come on. They're not exactly incentivized to not rip people off

    • @crabbiethecrab7393
      @crabbiethecrab7393 4 года назад +7

      @@William0271 have you heard of a joke?

  • @Baxiel
    @Baxiel 5 лет назад +683

    >But when stealing is legal...
    >wall st sign
    10/10

  • @brickbot2.038
    @brickbot2.038 4 года назад +14

    Neighbor: *Takes care of half my yard for eight years*
    Me: *Strolling over to my neighbor mowing* "Good morning, nice day out!"
    Neighbor: "Great, now I have to start all over again!"

  • @exdeegaming4872
    @exdeegaming4872 5 лет назад +647

    Someone: commits adverse possession
    Wait, that's *legal!*

    • @Datch18
      @Datch18 5 лет назад +5

      Ex Dee Gaming or rather “my lord, is that legal”

    • @CaptainM792
      @CaptainM792 5 лет назад +3

      The Senate: I will make it legal!

    • @vanukas8783
      @vanukas8783 5 лет назад

      Ex Dee Gaming this comment is bugged for me

    • @triplej755
      @triplej755 5 лет назад

      This is *legal* you know.

    • @RealNovgorod
      @RealNovgorod 5 лет назад

      Wait, I thought that's property tax.

  • @justaregulartoaster
    @justaregulartoaster 5 лет назад +4043

    How you can legally steal a house
    ...by trespassing, which is a crime

    • @r_streit9527
      @r_streit9527 5 лет назад +318

      Because you made it clear and apparent that you were trespassing. If for 5 years, the owner would have been able to tell you were trespassing and didn’t do anything about it, just think about it. 5 years of abandonment.... I think if someone abandons one of their properties for 5 years and is able to tell someone is trespassing on it for 5 YEARS, yet for some odd reason never tries to get said trespasser to vacate the premises, I think it’s safe to say they probably don’t want it. There are obviously going to be exceptions. I’d imagine such exceptions to be incarceration, hospitalization, institutionalization. Anything that would prevent the original owner from being able to tell if someone is trespassing on the lot or not, would nullify adverse possession. Obviously if you file a lawsuit to remove said squatter, or you are asking them to leave the premises, or you return and use the house as the homeowner would, and it would nullify adverse possession. Given the circumstances, at least in my opinion, it seems fair.

    • @justaregulartoaster
      @justaregulartoaster 5 лет назад +72

      @@r_streit9527, you're completely right. I was just making fun of the title of the video.

    • @photios4779
      @photios4779 5 лет назад +38

      @@r_streit9527 Yeah, I would imagine the exceptions due to incarceration, hospitalization, institutionalization are very rare. If someone is confined for so long they have no knowledge of what is happening on their property, either a family member will manage the property on their behalf (and keep out potential squatters) or they will abandon it to such an extent that they will no longer pay their property tax or mortgage. So it's far more likely that the local tax authority or the mortgage holder will gain possession through foreclosure than a squatter through adverse possession. It seems to me that adverse possession probably would mostly affect large corporations that own a lot of land and are unable or unwilling to manage it all. For example, when the 2008 financial crisis hit, some foreclosed homes were so run down the bank didn't even bother trying to sell them, but basically just abandoned those properties. If an impoverished homeless squatter moved in to a derelict house and made that his home, there would be a fairness question if the bank were to try to evict him a decade later.

    • @olstar18
      @olstar18 5 лет назад +1

      @Picolas CageIs that the $16 house story.

    • @deontaetrott5752
      @deontaetrott5752 5 лет назад +15

      r_streit twitch still my fucking property that i bought though

  • @Pasonia
    @Pasonia 4 года назад +10

    Just realised that the guy shifted every word in "mending the fences, taking out the trash, mowing/weeding the lawn, watering the hedges" and added windows just to confuse everyone.

  • @retardalpha813
    @retardalpha813 5 лет назад +630

    1. Find mansion
    2. Find owner(s)
    3. Challenge them to live anywhere else for however long you need (Prize of course)
    4. Live in their mansion, and tell everyone, but in a joking way
    5. They haven’t entered the mansion in years while you have and cannot claim they didn’t know
    6. You own the mansion
    7. Sell mansion
    8. Use money to cover legal costs and pay the original owners their prize

    • @minepose98
      @minepose98 5 лет назад +65

      So you spent all the money you gained, now what

    • @hououinkyouma77
      @hououinkyouma77 5 лет назад +16

      minepose98 whoosh

    • @NoelFallstrom
      @NoelFallstrom 5 лет назад +39

      What wasn't explained in the video is what happens when there is still a mortgage. The original owner wouldn't want to continue making payments and the bank would do their best to get the home as that was the security part of the secured loan.
      Perhaps it only works when things are owned out right... And if you pull this off can the city come after you for 2+ years of back taxes?

    • @johnfrancisdoe1563
      @johnfrancisdoe1563 5 лет назад +24

      Noel Fallstrom Paying those taxes would be part of "acting as if you owned the place".

    • @cleandiverge
      @cleandiverge 5 лет назад

      STONKS

  • @ShakeItLittleTina
    @ShakeItLittleTina 5 лет назад +747

    “Reading the trash”
    Also known as browsing Twitter

  • @c1bav
    @c1bav 4 года назад +175

    if someone did that to my house he would go missing quickly

  • @Danymok
    @Danymok 5 лет назад +146

    It's 3:00 am. The perfect time to watch this video!

    • @jimmysavile69
      @jimmysavile69 3 года назад +1

      EY BRUV

    • @Perririri
      @Perririri 3 года назад +2

      Normie

    • @GigieLBSXclusive
      @GigieLBSXclusive 3 года назад +3

      Is 3 am 1 yr later and I happen to watch this for the first time

    • @shawntw1556
      @shawntw1556 3 года назад +2

      I just checked the clock and I am offended by how accurate this is

    • @Xander_DeWitt
      @Xander_DeWitt 3 года назад

      I disagree! 4:30am is much better!!

  • @simulping4371
    @simulping4371 5 лет назад +786

    So that means..
    if a homeless man has been living in an abandoned house for years no one has bought yet..
    *I T S A F R E E R E A L E S T A T E*

    • @the72ndalexandrian
      @the72ndalexandrian 5 лет назад +29

      Rafie_ArsyadYT that’s kinda the point

    • @ghostbirdofprey
      @ghostbirdofprey 5 лет назад +20

      Pretty much, but if nobody has bought it yet, it puts the value of the property into question anyway, though someone trying to actively sell it would probably drop by once and a while. But, again, if nobody cares about it, the value becomes questionable.

    • @aceofspades1217
      @aceofspades1217 5 лет назад +8

      He also can’t be hiding. He needs to put up a no trespassing sign or a maintain the fence.

    • @Robertperezshow1
      @Robertperezshow1 5 лет назад +1

      I was told recently by a lawyer that what this video says no longer works.

    • @simulping4371
      @simulping4371 5 лет назад

      @@Robertperezshow1 thats a bummer

  • @ckl9390
    @ckl9390 2 года назад +3

    This is why estate managers exist. To do the rounds of properties once every few months and take note of any signs of occupation or potential damage. If someone wants to be generous they can offer a $1 lease renewable annually upon owner's discretion. Then the occupants are tenants and not squatters. Something that is quite common locally is for people to offer someone the task of "land manager" in exchange for tenancy. Which both excludes others from squatting and firmly classifies them as tenants.
    Not sure if this only counts for the "house" or the whole property, which in some jurisdictions are treated as separate entities. In which case the owner of the property can demand that the house and it's occupants (new owners) is removed, which is a prohibitively expensive endeavour in and of itself.
    I'm fairly sure that some jurisdictions require a fair attempt to notify the owner of your occupation. Such as when you file with the court the owner then has to be found and notified by the court, at which point they can file an eviction notice. If they can't be found, then the house is treated as an unowned asset or something like that.
    Also, I wonder if this can be used to settle indigenous land claims. If the government or no one of settler descent wants to use the land then an indigenous governmental organisation could try to occupy it and claim it back. Then again, with out record of how we treated indigenous people, it's likely that we would ignore even our own law and forcibly evict them.

  • @samjordan8800
    @samjordan8800 4 года назад +54

    A real estate lawyer told me decades ago how to easily and inexpensively beat a squatter out of winning any adverse possession claim - without hiring an attorney!
    He said if someone is on your property and trying to get it under adverse possession laws all you have to do is write them a letter giving them permission to stay there and have them served with a copy of the letter.
    It's the complete opposite of going to court and fighting yet removes that "hostile" and "without permission" first hurdle required for them to win.

    • @torgranael
      @torgranael 2 года назад +5

      Even more fun, you don't have to make sure they receive the letter. Just make sure you have a paper trail that says it was sent, then never actually send the letter, and you're good to go.
      I'm not even kidding. There have been real estate companies in Australia who would forge the dates on eviction notices, to circumvent the mandatory notice period for years before getting caught. There rumors that this still occurs, but not a lot of proof. By the time it's legally proven, it doesn't really matter as the former tenant is long gone.

  • @devin1234
    @devin1234 5 лет назад +68

    HAI: *releases this video*
    Squatters: It's free real estate!*
    *Terms and Conditions apply

  • @rccola6779
    @rccola6779 4 года назад +7

    In Panamá they're an entire town named Casco Viejo full of squatters where the owners usually just buy them a house someplace else.

  • @matthewharris4966
    @matthewharris4966 4 года назад +434

    You might want to mention the case in the USA when someone won a Vacant Possession in court after a lengthy legal battle. The very next day the original owner went to the house and blew new owners head out with a shot gun. His only words were " I'm dying of cancer, you arn't getting my kids inheritance property and know this, I'll get the health care i cannot afford in jail too."

    • @robellyosief8820
      @robellyosief8820 4 года назад +33

      matthew harris damn where’d you hear that? Sounds wild!!

    • @WraithLK
      @WraithLK 4 года назад +99

      This is one of those “only in America” comments

    • @camposjorge9126
      @camposjorge9126 4 года назад +22

      Where can I read more about it?

    • @Shadow79XXX
      @Shadow79XXX 4 года назад +18

      blah blah blah america everything about america where people are as proven by this comment and everything else as reterds

    • @splashpit
      @splashpit 4 года назад +18

      Did he say that before or after he blew his head off ?

  • @Snapmare_
    @Snapmare_ 5 лет назад +56

    **Swiper sees the law**
    _Swiper steals the entire neighborhood_

    • @mosesracal6758
      @mosesracal6758 5 лет назад

      *SWIPER NO S W I P I N G*

    • @nettart4924
      @nettart4924 5 лет назад

      Swiper no swiping
      Swiper no swiping
      SWIPER NO SWIPING
      SWIPER NO SWIPING
      SWIPER NO SWIPING
      SWIPER NO SWIPING
      *SWIPER NO SWIPING*
      *SWIPER NO SWIPING*

    • @mickryan2450
      @mickryan2450 4 года назад

      No good doing it to me i have this chainsaw fetish at all hrs

  • @MrPauljowett
    @MrPauljowett 4 года назад +23

    Finally, now I can start my own business, all I need is 5 years and the courage to live in that abandoned factory in the city.

  • @zackeeu
    @zackeeu 5 лет назад +97

    Came for the click bait...stayed for the legitimately interesting content. Nice job!

  • @bbgun061
    @bbgun061 5 лет назад +68

    I think these laws were intended for when someone died (or moved West) and left a house behind. Not so much for today. Although if a property owner really doesn't come home in five years or more, they don't really need that house.

    • @hackman669
      @hackman669 2 года назад +3

      That would make perfect sense. Also someone or group taking over an abandoned, unused, house or building would not be a big deal. Say for instance there was an unused shack in a desert property. The place is abandoned and in the middle of nowhere. The person then upgrades the shack that would otherwise turn to dust.

  • @jeehoichan8043
    @jeehoichan8043 3 года назад +11

    I like how smoothly he moves to the sponsor

  • @TheNinjaDC
    @TheNinjaDC 4 года назад +189

    For those confused by the wit:
    In adverse possession countries, land/property rights work like trademarks. As in, you need to use them and defend them, or you lose them. In both cases, the idea is to prevent waste and rights hording.

    • @AnimMouse
      @AnimMouse 4 года назад +2

      That makes sense.

    • @blackcow1111
      @blackcow1111 3 года назад +3

      yeah the only right squatters have is the right to get shot. anyone enters my property and tries to squat ill kill them, their family and their dog, black bag em and feed em to the pigs. as anyone should do to anyone who tries this bullshit

    • @safeforwork8546
      @safeforwork8546 3 года назад +9

      @@blackcow1111 it looks like you are trying to....honestly I don't even know I can't give help

    • @blackcow1111
      @blackcow1111 3 года назад +1

      @@safeforwork8546 looks like im trying to advocate for the murder of every squatter, yes. Thats exactly what im trying to do. Squatters deserve to be 6ft under. Who thinks someone can just steal your livlihood away for any reason...yeah a 7 cent bullet is gonna put an end to that

    • @angolin9352
      @angolin9352 3 года назад +16

      @@blackcow1111 Either you completely missed the point or you're a really unfunny troll. Nobody can just move in for 2 weeks into a furnished home and claim adverse possession. In most US states, you have to file papers with the county and then live there for 15-25 years. All without the owner coming back and seeing that their land is occupied, because all it takes is an eviction notice and the squatter's plot is foiled. If someone never visits their land in two decades, without making provisions for their absence, they absolutely don't need it and probably won't notice that it's even gone.

  • @NaenaeGaming
    @NaenaeGaming 5 лет назад +202

    0:30 WOHA WOAH WHAT! HOW DARE YOU BE AGAINST THE CRJ 200! ITS LIKE MY 27TH FAVOURITE AIRCRAFT

  • @Damntima
    @Damntima 3 года назад +12

    Can we just take a moment to appreciate how they slid in that advertisement 😭

  • @p11111
    @p11111 5 лет назад +886

    This isn't completely crazy. It's about implicitly relinquishing your property by abandonment.

    • @Exarian
      @Exarian 5 лет назад +99

      That and it can be a great counter to Absentee Ownership of a property if laws surrounding it were to have more teeth. ESPECIALLY if it's combined with Right of First Refusal.
      A large part of the housing shortage in some cities is people buying up property not to use it or rent it out, but because they believe the land values under the property will increase in time and be able to be quickly sold for a profit. If you have people living in those properties, that asset becomes far less liquid as tenancy laws kick in and you cant just evict the people living there because you wanna sell it.
      So the upshot is, quite literally, homelessness spiking in the same place that has plenty of empty, unused residential properties, because those properties are now treated as a commodity instead of, like, homes.

    • @jasonpeng5798
      @jasonpeng5798 5 лет назад +41

      Yeah, but let's assume you're selling a multi-million dollar home. You can't get it to sell for 5 years, then somebody just takes it after you paid millions for it
      That's kinda fucked up.

    • @jasonpeng5798
      @jasonpeng5798 5 лет назад +34

      @@Exarian homes are property. you have to pay for it and work for it. It's not the frontier anymore. Homelessness is not a home owners problem, and one family moving into somebody else's home isn't gonna solve anything.

    • @guy_5108
      @guy_5108 5 лет назад +51

      @@jasonpeng5798 but its the problem of the state which does actually does own the land you live on. There is a limited amount of space and for it be bought without being used especially in crowded urban areas is a waste of space of resources that could be used to house people and stimulate the economy .
      You can't use shares in a practical way unlike houses. If you buy gold it won't cause any problems to not use it and if it did you would probably forced to sell it or have laws to incentivise using it.
      It's not like it's an easy process to do anyway and to not have this happen to you just rent out the house or visit the house once in the time frame which is really simple.

    • @hedgehog3180
      @hedgehog3180 5 лет назад +40

      @@jasonpeng5798 Okay so in this scenario the owner of this multi-million dollar home hasn't done any maintenance whatsoever in the last 5 years? Because if that's the case then that house quickly stops being multi-million dollar and becomes unsalable instead. In that situation the owner is just sitting on a piece of land that is probably quite valuable and it will never be used for any actually practical purpose, it would be better in that case that someone else takes it over and then repairs it. And I mean it's only fair that the person who repairs the house sees some sort of return on their investment and for society as a whole it's better too to not have an abandoned house sitting around.

  • @HarshRajAlwaysfree
    @HarshRajAlwaysfree 5 лет назад +565

    Why own a house when u can claim a whole city ?
    Hint : Chernobyl

    • @Abdega
      @Abdega 5 лет назад +53

      5 headed squatters: *IT’S FREE REAL ESTATE*

    • @johnfrancisdoe1563
      @johnfrancisdoe1563 5 лет назад +11

      Harsh Raj Always free Unfortunately there is some official monitoring. But given the collapse of the USSR and it's ban on land ownership during the early part of the exclusion period, the few returned Pripyat inhabitants may or may not have claims, though the Ukraine probably has very specific laws for the exclusion zone, or maybe not given that it's an inherited problem from before their first real independence in centuries (obviously not counting pseudo-independence during German occupation in WW2).

    • @disloyal
      @disloyal 5 лет назад +1

      Hundreds of people still live in Chernobyl (it is Pripyat that is abandoned, not Chernobyl) and most continue to work at or around the decommissioned Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant site.

    • @allalevona3980
      @allalevona3980 5 лет назад

      Start your own race of nation at it

    • @zeqi
      @zeqi 5 лет назад +1

      And when you realise that this law only applies to the US. Hint: Chernobyl isn't in the US and it also is my owned by anyone but the government so yeah

  • @miaunicorn8654
    @miaunicorn8654 4 года назад +40

    Im going to go steal an entire mountain now, thanks✌
    Edit: Arizona is only 2 years, that makes it so much easier

    • @relogiodeprata6413
      @relogiodeprata6413 3 года назад +5

      9 months already, keep going!

    • @Amit_Pirate
      @Amit_Pirate 3 года назад

      Hey

    • @Amit_Pirate
      @Amit_Pirate 3 года назад

      Are you successful?

    • @miaunicorn8654
      @miaunicorn8654 3 года назад +4

      I cant steal it just yet, its still under my grandfathers name who lives there, once he dies and it goes to my brother(who doesnt care for it) I will steal my mountain

    • @thetableofelements4472
      @thetableofelements4472 3 года назад

      @@miaunicorn8654 update us XD

  • @JadeyCatgirl99
    @JadeyCatgirl99 5 лет назад +386

    Trespasser: "I claim adverse possession."
    Homeowner: "I am okay with him being on my land for one-second out of every year"
    Judge: "Sorry, no hostility"

    • @arandombard1197
      @arandombard1197 4 года назад +13

      Except that doesn't make any sense. Future permission is irrelevant once adverse possession has been claimed.

    • @scarleteyes4418
      @scarleteyes4418 4 года назад +5

      @@arandombard1197 do you know what a joke is?

    • @arandombard1197
      @arandombard1197 4 года назад +25

      @@scarleteyes4418 Yes. It was just a shitty joke that didn't make any sense.

    • @scarleteyes4418
      @scarleteyes4418 4 года назад +5

      @@arandombard1197 Nah, you are just unfunny

    • @arandombard1197
      @arandombard1197 4 года назад +11

      @@scarleteyes4418 Except I never said any jokes. This was just a shitty joke.
      Be honest, did you laugh when you read it? Like actually laughing out loud and think to yourself "god damn, that was fucking hilarious. How do these random commenters come up with such funny material"

  • @justaregulartoaster
    @justaregulartoaster 5 лет назад +125

    Man, i love the infograp-
    ...wait a second,
    This isn't the infographics show! This is only half as interesting!

    • @deontaetrott5752
      @deontaetrott5752 5 лет назад +4

      Just A Regular Toaster good one normie

    • @Rah003
      @Rah003 4 года назад +2

      Ba dum tssst

  • @DrYeet2704
    @DrYeet2704 3 года назад +6

    Oh nice! Now I can legally invade that massive mansion with an abandoned nuclear silo that is just at the end of my street. I’ve always wanted a nuclear silo or bunker.

  • @isiranonymous251
    @isiranonymous251 5 лет назад +67

    *HAI:* Shows me how to steal a house.
    *Me:* Steals HAI's house.
    *HAI:* D:

    • @triplej755
      @triplej755 5 лет назад +2

      *Surprised Pikachu image*

  • @YourFoxFriendYT
    @YourFoxFriendYT 2 года назад +10

    This should always be legal, I see abandoned buildings all the time where I live and nobody’s coming there.

    • @miraclek4656
      @miraclek4656 2 года назад +1

      where you live??? Let's make some money!

    • @jakesoros2376
      @jakesoros2376 Год назад

      ​@Nick Gerz Forget that, if someone wants to own a house to rent to hunters or use as a summer house, that's fine. At least they're using the house unlike these Chinese who buy up condominiums in America, NZ, Britain, and Canada just to secure their money from inflation in China without even living there.

  • @jamessudlow
    @jamessudlow 5 лет назад +31

    I know someone who did that in the UK. A corner of there house was actually on someone else's property. They realized with about a year to go before they could claim it and because they didn't want to give up there washing up machine space didn't tell there neighbors. They then claimed the area later without there neighbors ever knowing.

    • @Dave_Sisson
      @Dave_Sisson 5 лет назад +7

      Someone got adverse possession of a section of a dead end laneway in my area of Melbourne. No one used the laneway so they fenced it off and a couple of decades later it was legally theirs. Land is worth about $6,000 a square metre in that suburb, so it was quite a valuable gain for them.

    • @3rdalbum
      @3rdalbum 2 года назад +2

      @@Dave_Sisson I heard about one where they took care of some land that legally belonged to their neighbours, but the neighbours didn't realise it. Eventually the neighbour's land was sold to a new couple, who realised some other guy had fenced off part of the land described on the Certificate of Title but it was too late - squatters rights had kicked in by then.

    • @Dave_Sisson
      @Dave_Sisson 2 года назад +1

      @@3rdalbum Last week I heard a lawyer discussing this on the radio. A neighbour had inadvertantly occupied a strip of land for a few decades that belonged to the lawyers client. The neighbour then sold the house, the new owners did a survey and found out about the extra land and made enquiries about getting ownership through adverse possesion. But to do that the former owner had to "sell" their squatters rights to the new owner. However the lawyers client who was about to lose their land was still friends with the former owner, so they approached the former owner who sold their adverse possesion claim to the rightful owner of the land for a token one dollar, which thwarted the new owners plans to get the land. That appears to the law in the state of Victoria, Australia, although it may be different in other jurisdictions.

  • @coteleacarlo7574
    @coteleacarlo7574 5 лет назад +62

    Me: Kidnapps neighbour
    Also me: It's free real estate

  • @dchall8
    @dchall8 3 года назад

    I used to work in the county appraisal district office in a rural county in Texas. We saw adverse possession at least once a year. It turns out back in the 1920s, land developers put together plots of land about the size of a generous tent camping site, say 25 feet by 100 feet, and sold those plots to Yankees wishing to build a retirement home in Texas. These neighborhoods numbered at least 10,000 individual lots in many counties. As the Yankee retirement influx failed to materialize, and as children and grandchildren inheritors failed to follow up, the abandoned lots have been picked up for free by adjacent neighbors. Our county judge would ask all the neighbors if any of them objected to the adverse possession. If anyone did he game everyone a chance to come to terms before approving the deal. Once the judge approves it, the new owner had 100% clear title with no recourse for anyone to try and reclaim it. In two counties I know of entire ranches are comprised of these abandoned lots.

  • @leaderofthelewishpeople6382
    @leaderofthelewishpeople6382 5 лет назад +174

    Owner: I own this property.
    Adverse Possession Law: I'm about to end this man's whole career.

    • @kaidatong1704
      @kaidatong1704 5 лет назад +2

      I don’t get it. Why “whole man’s career”?

    • @toodsf1
      @toodsf1 5 лет назад

      *man’s whole career

    • @toodsf1
      @toodsf1 5 лет назад

      Kaida Tong Ain’t my comment bruh

    • @kaidatong1704
      @kaidatong1704 5 лет назад

      Alexander how did you know it wasn’t part of the joke
      en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Three-Fifths_Compromise

    • @DiThi
      @DiThi 5 лет назад +3

      If someone owned a property and didn't use it for years, they _deserved_ that. That owner was the actual _squatter_ by not using a perfectly good house.
      Edit: In my country the period is 30 years. In my opinion it should be like 3 years or so. A regular person with an unused property should be able to visit it at least once a year.

  • @HallowedWeasel
    @HallowedWeasel 5 лет назад +14

    One additional item some states in the US have to make adverse possession harder: the squatter must be paying the property taxes as well.

    • @3rdalbum
      @3rdalbum 2 года назад

      Same in Australia.

    • @traceystock7352
      @traceystock7352 Год назад +1

      It's an awesome caveat to this Roman Empire era law and one that makes sense in an era of modern land survey and titling techniques. Sadly only a handful of states actually require the taxes be paid by the adverse possessor like Florida for example.

    • @FC-qe1wl
      @FC-qe1wl 11 месяцев назад

      @@traceystock7352 So I could say Iam squatting and not have to pay property taxes ? Cool

    • @traceystock7352
      @traceystock7352 11 месяцев назад

      @@FC-qe1wl I don't think you understood my comment. I am saying that states should adopt the law that requires adverse possessors to pay property taxes while continuously and in a hostile fashion, possessing someone ese's property in order to gain legal title for that land after the prescribed number of years. Obviously that's if the true, record owner doesn't eject them or charge them with trespass first. Or give them written permission to be there with a lease or license. If you are an owner, no you cannot simply say you are a squatter and skip out on taxes.

  • @son_guhun
    @son_guhun 3 года назад +7

    Damn, this idea to have the same key for all your locks and not needing to carry a keychain is genius.

    • @ajam4u
      @ajam4u 2 года назад

      First, that is an ad for Dash Lane. Second, that's not what the ad said. It asks the question, why would you use a single key for all your houses.

    • @son_guhun
      @son_guhun 2 года назад

      @@ajam4u The joke is: my answer to the question of "why use the same password (key) for all your accounts (houses)?" is that using a single key would actually be genius, because I would not need a keychain (Dashlane). Of course, this is a silly idea, and that is where the humor comes from. It's also funny because many people do use the same password for everything, and comparing that to the real world shows how absurd it is.

    • @son_guhun
      @son_guhun 2 года назад

      @@ajam4u I.e. instead of changing my mind about using a password manager, the ad made me change the way I use my IRL keys instead, to mirror the way I would treat my passwords (a much less secure method). The joke being that I drew the exact opposite of the intended conclusion from the ad. Of course, now that I had to explain it, it's automatically not funny anymore. Bummer.

  • @lecozelio9483
    @lecozelio9483 4 года назад +31

    In France, we have the same rule. It is called "possession utile" or "possession trentenaire" and it takes 30 years.

    • @falandrion2870
      @falandrion2870 4 года назад +2

      Most jurisdictions have it, as it is based on a roman law principle (usucapio / praescriptio). However, does it still apply to land under modern french law? Most countries with a land register abandoned the principle for land, as the register provides an easy way to establish who the legal owner is. (I assume that's why it is still applied to land in common law jurisdictions as their land registers are generally less developed than those in civil law jurisdictions.)

  • @leaderofthelewishpeople6382
    @leaderofthelewishpeople6382 5 лет назад +44

    Half as Interesting: You can steal someone's house legally.
    Squatters in the third world: Wait, you guys can do that?

    • @highcc
      @highcc 5 лет назад +2

      It's derived from the Roman law of usucapio. As most legal systems in the world are based either on common law Roman law, that law (adverse possession or usucapio) exists in most of the world, even undeveloped.

  • @3rdalbum
    @3rdalbum 2 года назад +1

    Trespass for 8 years, pretending to be the owner before being discovered: Criminal.
    Trespass for 9 years pretending to be the owner before being discovered: Legal.
    The law is wonderfully weird.

  • @crai-crai
    @crai-crai 4 года назад +50

    Family who just paid off mortgage: We've been living here continuously and exclusively for 20 years.
    Bank: But you can't prove it was hostile so we're stealing your house
    Court: Rules in favor of the bank

    • @delighteddino9363
      @delighteddino9363 3 года назад +5

      thats not even adverse possesion, the bank would have to live in the house or own the house, and by the time the mortgage was paid off, it is in full the families,also the bank doesnt own the house anyway, until they go through with foreclosure

  • @zuko1569
    @zuko1569 5 лет назад +1232

    Time to gather forces of homeless people and invade the rich neighbourhood
    _sounds like a Clash of Clans rip-off_

    • @neeneko
      @neeneko 5 лет назад +107

      People are actually doing this. After the foreclosure mess of 2008, people have been selling 'packets' on how to claim all the unoccupied multimilliondollar homes floating around. it generally does not work.

    • @zuko1569
      @zuko1569 5 лет назад +28

      @@neeneko Wow, that sounds really wild.

    • @neptune4358
      @neptune4358 5 лет назад +9

      This is the plot of Insurgent

    • @neeneko
      @neeneko 5 лет назад +18

      @@zuko1569 After people figured out they could profit off suggesting it to other people without doing anything technically illegal themselves, it really took off. though fake leases (i.e. someone renting a home to someone even though the landlord does not own it) are still the more common form.

    • @neeneko
      @neeneko 5 лет назад +1

      @Cambing Roadgeek club! Yep, there is that mechanic too.

  • @kateallen7675
    @kateallen7675 2 года назад +1

    It can also be used when you're in the right! I bought my cabin on land contract, I paid it off
    and did the paper work. 30 years later I go to sell it and they can't find land contract sign off,
    realtor gone, original owner dead. I had to file adverse possession to clear title.

  • @cecar77
    @cecar77 5 лет назад +25

    I got halfway through this video and remembered *SHIT* I need to water my window

  • @saltywhale0167
    @saltywhale0167 5 лет назад +35

    Wife: WHERE ARE YOU
    husband: in the house
    Wife: HONEY, THE HOUSE IS GONE

  • @WhoBobWhatPants
    @WhoBobWhatPants 3 года назад +6

    time to steal buckingham palace

  • @ThisisBarris
    @ThisisBarris 5 лет назад +170

    Having squatters take over my house while I'm on holiday is probably one of my biggest fears.

    • @mosesracal6758
      @mosesracal6758 5 лет назад +57

      Well going on vacation for 20+ continuous years is now out of the books

    • @jessejisk9918
      @jessejisk9918 3 года назад +16

      hey its been two years so this is fitting
      im not a squatter but i am an anarchist (we like squatting), squatters only target houses that have been empty for more than about 1 or 2 years
      because if you come back and find us in there then we'll be in a lot of trouble, squatters want to be left alone (as anyone would)

    • @starlite556
      @starlite556 2 года назад +3

      Have a sign outside with a picture of a huge dog that says no trespassing. Also, have a doorbell that when pushed you hear the sound of a huge dog.

    • @relevation0
      @relevation0 2 года назад

      @Eric Johnson just shoot them. EZ

    • @Posh910
      @Posh910 2 года назад

      Ill house sit for you and I have my own house so I dont need yours but I will squat for you till you get back!!! Quack Quack !!! :)

  • @captainwafflez3630
    @captainwafflez3630 4 года назад +181

    "When stealing is legal..."
    *Shows Wall Street*

  • @AnadolununAslan
    @AnadolununAslan 5 лет назад +5

    IIRC, there was a squatter in Sydney who stayed in one of those old Victorian terraces (for those who don't know, they look crappy and rundown mostly, but they're expensive af since they're historical buildings). He ended up with a $20million terrace

  • @basilkatakuzinos659
    @basilkatakuzinos659 5 лет назад +5

    Mowing The fences, watering the window, taking out the lawn, reading the trash... I love it

  • @IRSoutreach
    @IRSoutreach 4 года назад +3

    Some states also require you to pay property tax on it for a certain amount of time before it’s yours.

    • @nannettefreeman7331
      @nannettefreeman7331 3 года назад +2

      I (a resident of California, one of those States) was going to say this. Having said that, I actually KNOW someone who took a house this way. I also know someone who moved into, made improvements to, & paid the property tax for his deceased grandmother's house for 4 years before his uncle, executing the will of the old lady which stated the property should be sold & the profits divided amongst her children, up & sold the property to the business next door, who promptly bulldozed it & turned it into a parking lot. It's a risky undertaking. It can go either way. And finding a property where you can get by with all of this for a number of years, is no easy task.

  • @money1133ful
    @money1133ful 5 лет назад +10

    HAI: Here at Half as Interesting, we take a firm stance against assult, arson, kidnapping, adults napping on subway benches, *pickles*...
    Me: Okay, now you've taken it too far.

  • @DRGTLSSNDR
    @DRGTLSSNDR 5 лет назад +7

    In Italy there's a similar institution called "usucapione". The criteria are similar and for you to acquire complete ownership of the house you must live there for 20 continuous years.

    • @ManuelReynamanuelmreyna
      @ManuelReynamanuelmreyna 5 лет назад +1

      In Argentina it is similar, though the legal procedure is called "usucapión". And if you do it in good faith you need 10 years instead of 20.

    • @DRGTLSSNDR
      @DRGTLSSNDR 5 лет назад +1

      @@ManuelReynamanuelmreyna Same.
      20 years with "mala fede" (bad faith) and 10 with "buona fede" (good faith).
      The same applies for cars, trucks, boats and all the movable assets which are legally registered.

    • @FOLIPE
      @FOLIPE 5 лет назад

      Usucapião in Portuguese.

    • @highcc
      @highcc 5 лет назад

      It's all derived from the usucapio in Roman law. Every Roman law based legal system has it

    • @DRGTLSSNDR
      @DRGTLSSNDR 5 лет назад +1

      @@highcc Yep. That's why so many words and institution are still written in their original latin form, such as "strictu sensu" (strictly speaking) or "prius tempore potior iure" (the recent, the stronger).

  • @thes3xcichef
    @thes3xcichef Год назад +1

    13 years a squatter
    Deed was acquired after 7 years, provided you have kept up with paying the taxes AND have ANY documents, such as bills etc. with YOUR name AND THAT/THOSE address(es).

  • @bobtagacphoto
    @bobtagacphoto 5 лет назад +68

    Me: How could he possibly insert an aircraft joke in this
    HAI: ... Bombardier CRJ200
    Smooth as f

  • @tallyhorizzla3330
    @tallyhorizzla3330 4 года назад +4

    A guy did that here in Melbourne l think. Moved in to a vacant house,lived there and did renovations and improvements over like 20 years,paid the council rates and eventually he ended up owning the place,much to the annoyance of relatives of the deceased previous owner.(apparently they didn't know he owned the house until the legal process started and by then the squatters law meant it belonged to him now.) Sold the place for close to a million dollars.(it was in a very desirable suburb.)

    • @3rdalbum
      @3rdalbum 2 года назад +2

      Well then, the law worked perfectly well. A property that would have otherwise been abandoned and fallen into disrepair with no known owner, was taken over by somebody who cared for it. Deaths of owners is one of the reasons why squatters rights still exists.

  • @stevearmstrong4561
    @stevearmstrong4561 4 года назад +1

    Homes get stolen every day through property tax foreclosures.I was once employed by the county.They would seek out the elderly and the gullible who would not put up a fight.They jacked up their property taxes so high that they were forced to sell their homes at a loss while one of their friends would scoop up this property for almost nothing. Now that they jacked up the price of the property through the Central appraisal district they would flip that property and or house for thousands of dollars.Those who could not meet their property tax obligation lost their homes as the county made sure that the fines,interest and late fees along with their county lawyers fees ensured that these property owners could not pay their bill and the county would get the property for free and the money that the owner attempted to pay to save his home.

  • @justanormalsponge1801
    @justanormalsponge1801 5 лет назад +91

    Go to minecraft, find a village and sleep on their house. easy

  • @editid0
    @editid0 5 лет назад +38

    3:05
    Mowing the fences
    Watering the windows
    Taking out the lawn
    Completely normal stuff

    • @groug5770
      @groug5770 4 года назад +1

      Shit, didn't notice till I read this

    • @jofx4051
      @jofx4051 4 года назад

      Hmmm... No one notice that hmm...

    • @ipadair7345
      @ipadair7345 4 года назад

      weeding the trash

    • @scottowens398
      @scottowens398 4 года назад

      Mending the hedges...

  • @C0lon0
    @C0lon0 2 года назад

    In Brazil it's is called "Usu Capião" and i'm actually registering my house via this law, because the last owner, that i bought the house from, had some legal problems and now, after 5 years, the house is completely in my name, and this works even if you have an Buy and Sell Contract of the land.

  • @jamessudlow
    @jamessudlow 5 лет назад +7

    In morocco a similar but I believe more shady tactiv is used. People will create a small garden area in front of there house. They'll fill it with plants for a few years. Then they set up a wall in front of the garden. They then get rid of the garden and add that area into the courtyard. Rince and repeat every few years. This means that things like electricity polls are sometimes within peoples courtyard even though they started on the streets.

    • @kamX-rz4uy
      @kamX-rz4uy 5 лет назад +1

      Hmmm... *looking at the woods behind my house*

    • @PongoXBongo
      @PongoXBongo 5 лет назад

      Doesn't your property just extend to the street already anyways (minus sidewalks/curbs, of course)?

    • @jamessudlow
      @jamessudlow 5 лет назад

      @@PongoXBongo They are doing this with alleyways/streets (mainly alleyways). I don' think you can just build your house on the alleyway in front of you. Does that answer your question?

    • @PongoXBongo
      @PongoXBongo 5 лет назад

      @@jamessudlow So they are expanding out into the streets/alleyways? They must not mind cars driving through their yards then.

    • @jamessudlow
      @jamessudlow 5 лет назад

      @@PongoXBongo Alleyways you can't drive a car up (because they are relatively narrow and not paved for it, they are pedestrian/motorbike areas so that you reach the houses that aren't on a main road) or in more extreme cases the sidewalks.

  • @UsaSatsui
    @UsaSatsui 5 лет назад +7

    Adverse possession is less of a way to "legally steal" land and more a way for you to claim abandoned or neglected property - it is very unlikely you're going to be able to openly live on someone's land for 5-20 years without someone connected to them stopping by unless they either don't care or somehow are prevented from doing so. It's a huge risk too - you have to take the chance that you put a ton of work into a home and a place to live for nothing if the owner does stop by after a 4 year vacation and tells you to get out. As the video said, it's mostly relevant for property disputes and mistakes involving fences and the like - if you've accidentally controlled property for long enough, you don't have to give it back when the mistake is discovered.
    Should also be noted that "squatter's rights" is not the same thing - though if the owner did show up after said 4 year vacation and try to kick you out, they would apply then.

  • @alphonsobutlakiv789
    @alphonsobutlakiv789 4 года назад +1

    I don't live on it, but I stole a brush hill in my village center, cleared it, planted, put in a driveway and put up a monument. It's been almost 2 years, I may start adding sheds

  • @MarkRVillano
    @MarkRVillano 4 года назад +44

    They're practicing this in Seattle right now.

    • @joenuts1709
      @joenuts1709 4 года назад +3

      @@margaretalexander5223 tf

    • @safeforwork8546
      @safeforwork8546 3 года назад +2

      @@margaretalexander5223 it looks like you are trying to have a stroke would you like help?

  • @zhuolixie5922
    @zhuolixie5922 5 лет назад +27

    HAI:*Talk about stealing and legal loopholes*
    Me: wait did he just sneaked in planes?
    Wendover Productions:*triggered*

  • @REACTSHENANIGANS
    @REACTSHENANIGANS 4 года назад +5

    "Taking out the lawn & reading the trash etc." 🤣🤣🤣

    • @ratoim
      @ratoim 3 года назад

      *stops video, turns on closed captioning, rewinds, watches again*
      Yep, that's what he said.

  • @lachlankeddie7
    @lachlankeddie7 5 лет назад +31

    I'll have you know that the Bombardier CRJ-200 is a FINE aircraft thank you very much...
    Just a little cramped, that's all..

  • @furn2313
    @furn2313 4 года назад +15

    Finally a tutorial I've been waiting for

    • @NitroPunksMightHeads
      @NitroPunksMightHeads 3 года назад

      Can someone help me with this please? I'm trying to do this tutorial to steal a house in California but after I completed step 3, my name accidentally got changed to "Brfxxccxxmnpcccclllmmnprxvclmnckssqlbb11116". Is this supposed to happen?

    • @WWG1WWGA
      @WWG1WWGA 3 года назад

      😂😂😂

  • @mikkelnpetersen
    @mikkelnpetersen 2 месяца назад

    THIS is one of the reasons why a company I worked for have a security guard inspect all their properties (in this case a warehouse no longer in use, they were trying to sell it, but no buyers) every 6 months, this way NOBODY could claim it abbandoned.

  • @Hadrexus
    @Hadrexus 5 лет назад +10

    Here in Brazil my great grandfather lost a property he planned on sharing with all the heirs (3 children who would then divide it to 6 children of theirs) because some people were living there in a shack for years. Disgusting really, land is expensive and now my family lost a major backup plan if things go wrong.

    • @arandombard1197
      @arandombard1197 4 года назад +1

      Good. Land isn't supposed to be left unusued and unmaintained. This is exactly what the law is for.

    • @Hadrexus
      @Hadrexus 4 года назад +6

      @@arandombard1197 Oh yes, good indeed. My great grandfather came from Italy with only his clothes on him, after working his entire life in a factory he made enough money to buy land to pass on to his family and now it's someone else's because they built a wooden shack in there. Sounds very fair. I would agree if the landowner is a multi millionaire who has so much land he doesn't know what to do with it, but small private owners? It's just ridiculous.

    • @Asiliea
      @Asiliea 4 года назад +1

      @@Hadrexus All it would've taken is someone from the family to go check in on the place once a year at most, and keep records of each visit. Also would've seen the signs of other people living there and gotten police involved to remove them for trespassing.
      If it was that precious to the family, why was it ignored for years on end?
      As Random Ashe said, the law is to prevent people owning land and leaving that unused and/or completely unmaintained. Fairly reasonable that you have to check in on a building you own at least once every half-decade to maintain ownership.
      All that being said, it definitely seems like you could have a legal case here? Have you contacted your lawyers about it all, or is this all settled now?

    • @yaradagloria4940
      @yaradagloria4940 3 года назад

      A woman rented my big home. She decided to make a sort of bed&Breakfast and explore the property for 20 years during which I went through a painful divorce due to chold molestation. After all was done this woman took advantage from the family big distress and came up with a reason to steal our house from our 5 children.
      Yes, this also was in Brazil where socialism like to help thieves with OTHERS people's money !!😠

  • @DigitalvideotoolsOrg
    @DigitalvideotoolsOrg 5 лет назад +5

    I love the sales pitches at the end. Nicely integrated with video's content.

  • @TS_Mind_Swept
    @TS_Mind_Swept 4 года назад +3

    3:08 taking out the lawn and weeding the trash 😂😂

  • @drfabriciomnogueira
    @drfabriciomnogueira 5 лет назад +10

    In Brazil, this call Usucapião, based on usucapio, an old roman law institute. To formally declaration of new owner, a legal process was needed 😉

  • @Entropic_Alloy
    @Entropic_Alloy 5 лет назад +15

    I thought you were going to talk about eminent domain. This works too.

    • @mosesracal6758
      @mosesracal6758 5 лет назад

      Is that premium subscription on squarespace?

    • @Liam-qr7zn
      @Liam-qr7zn 5 лет назад +1

      You've been watching too many libertarian videos, haven't you? 😁

    • @Ledabot
      @Ledabot 5 лет назад

      Or anti liberal videos

  • @PeterSFam
    @PeterSFam 4 года назад +1

    In Egypt it used to be you paid the the taxes on the property you ended up owning it by default.

  • @TheJaironman99
    @TheJaironman99 5 лет назад +6

    It might be interesting to mention the fact that adverse possession comes from even further back in time: in the Roman law there was its equivalent called "usus capionis" which stated pretty much what you said.
    I know it because in modern italian law it's still called that way... and is still valid!

    • @hawkproductions7674
      @hawkproductions7674 5 лет назад +1

      it is actually a law from the Jewish Torah but in there it is a set number of 3 years

  • @mercertvofficial
    @mercertvofficial 5 лет назад +4

    Someone opens door : Hello who are you
    Me: Whaz up I'm here to steal your house LEGALLY

  • @Keldren.
    @Keldren. 4 года назад +1

    wow i've had a really bad month and basically found no interest in anything i normally love and been just watching random youtube essentially in the complete despair that anything could ever shake me from my existential crisis.. until 3:41 of this video that is... and i almost fell out of my chair... thank you. as random as it was, this video really cheered me up for a minute =)

  • @45shfifty
    @45shfifty 4 года назад +8

    In Wisconsin the squatter needs to be in possession of the property unchallenged for 20 years and have valid proof of such before squatters rights can even be taken before a court.

    • @traceystock7352
      @traceystock7352 Год назад

      Read some of the recent case law out of Wisconsin. I just talked with a guy who lost art of his residential property to a greedy neighbor and one supreme court cases where similarly little evidence was resented to received the title of the property in question. It's not that someone is on the land for 20 years in front of the owner. It's that they said they were....... or the previous owner said they were for 12 years and now you say you did it for 8 years. There's lot of unfairness to true owners as these laws get applied by judges.

  • @rajesh240976
    @rajesh240976 5 лет назад +10

    Collab with Wendover Productions pls, you two will have great chemistry!

    • @hawkproductions7674
      @hawkproductions7674 5 лет назад

      How do you do a collaboration with your self

    • @jasondashney
      @jasondashney 5 лет назад +1

      @@hawkproductions7674 I successfully collaborated with myself last night on an unfilmed pornography project.

  • @Cheshire_Cat_
    @Cheshire_Cat_ Год назад

    a couple years ago, my grandpa had to leave for a few months, so he paid a woman to housesit/catsit while he was away. When he returned, she refused to leave, and used a ton of laws just like this as threats. He had to pay her a frankly outrageous amount of money together to leave, on top of everything else (her fee for housesitting, the food she ate, damages to the house). These laws have uses sometimes but they can also do a lot of damage to innocent homeowners.

  • @lovescolororange
    @lovescolororange 5 лет назад +14

    3:06 "mending the hedges, mowing the fences, watering the windows, taking out the lawn, weeding the trash, the normal stuff."
    What the heck? Why would you do this? Why?

    • @kylekissack4633
      @kylekissack4633 5 лет назад +2

      Stealing my comments are you..that doesn't fit here only where I left it in high impact vlogs channel ❤️ flattering tho

  • @icepoop20
    @icepoop20 5 лет назад +44

    Your obviously not a sailor if you condone wind under 15mph.

  • @brickbot2.038
    @brickbot2.038 4 года назад

    The Order of the Phoenix gangster until they realize that Kreacher legally owns their headquarters.
    Assuming that the wizarding world has this law.

  • @ecpeze
    @ecpeze 5 лет назад +19

    Almost on million
    *CONGRATULATIONS*

  • @travisnorton9288
    @travisnorton9288 4 года назад +4

    I have a camp out in the Everglades that the park service can’t take because it’s considered a pioneer camp and it’s protected under squatters rights