Although “joint tenants” and “tenant in common” sound familiar and they refer to varieties of how you can hold title together, they do not mean the same thing. Joint tenants refer to equal interest on the property on the same property deed. Joint tenant agreement is broken when a person sells his or her own interest in another thing. There is a right of survivorship in joint tenants.
This means in the case of death of a party, the shares of the decedent party is transferred to the co-tenant. The surviving tenant gets the property. Tenant in common refers to the equal or different percentage, for instance, a 70 percent interest and 30 percent interest. There is no right of survivorship in the tenancy of common. In the case of the death of a party, the right of that party is transferred to the heir of the decedent tenant.