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A common area is, in real estate or real property law, the 'area which is available for use by more than one person...' The common areas are those that are available for common use by all tenants, (or) groups of tenants and their invitees. In Texas and other parts of the United States, it is 'An area inside a housing development that is owned by all residents or by an overall management structure which charges each tenant for maintenance and upkeep.'a person who permits others to have 'joint access or control for most purposes ... assume the risk that might permit the common area to be searched.' 415 U.S., at 171, n. 7; see also Frazier v. Cupp, 394 U.S. 731, 740 (1969) (holding that defendant who left a duffel bag at another's house and allowed joint use of the bag 'assumed the risk that would allow someone else to look inside'). As the Court's assumption-of-risk analysis makes clear, third-party consent limits a person's ability to challenge the reasonableness of the search only because that person voluntarily has relinquished some of his expectation of privacy by sharing access or control over his property with another person. A common area is, in real estate or real property law, the 'area which is available for use by more than one person...' The common areas are those that are available for common use by all tenants, (or) groups of tenants and their invitees. In Texas and other parts of the United States, it is 'An area inside a housing development that is owned by all residents or by an overall management structure which charges each tenant for maintenance and upkeep.' Common areas often exist in apartments, gated communities, condominiums, cooperatives and shopping malls. In any situation where there is a tenancy in common, all the tenants in common collectively own the common areas, meaning that any one individual owner does not possess more control over the land than any other owner. This differs from a commons or common land, as used in English law, which is owned by one person, but which may be used by a group of persons.

[ "Electrical engineering", "Dielectric", "Physical chemistry", "Composite material" ]
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