Government Rights: Taxes, Eminent Domain, and Escheat

Private property ownership in the United States is fundamentally an illusion of absolute control. When your client receives the deed to a house at closing, they are not acquiring total sovereignty over the dirt beneath their feet. Instead, they are purchasing a bundle of legal rights that remains perpetually subordinate to a higher authority. This invisible leash on private property ensures that the broader needs of society can, when necessary, override the individual owner.

To understand real estate, you must understand the government's enduring grip on it. The four fundamental government powers over private real estate are represented by the acronym PETE.

PETE stands for:

  • Police Power
  • Eminent Domain
  • Taxation
  • Escheat

While Police Power covers zoning, building codes, and broad environmental regulations, the other three forces—Taxation, Eminent Domain, and Escheat—deal directly with the government's ability to extract value from, seize, or inherit private land. As a real estate professional, you will encounter these concepts not as abstract legal theories, but as deal-making or deal-breaking realities in your daily transactions.


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