The language in the document that created the easement must be reviewed by a legal professional. For this type of situation you need to consult with an attorney who can review the situation and explain your rights and options. It is likely that you will need to, at least, have a letter sent from an attorney to the property owners if you find they are violating your easement rights.
The language in the document that created the easement must be reviewed by a legal professional. For this type of situation you need to consult with an attorney who can review the situation and explain your rights and options. It is likely that you will need to, at least, have a letter sent from an attorney to the property owners if you find they are violating your easement rights.
The language in the document that created the easement must be reviewed by a legal professional. For this type of situation you need to consult with an attorney who can review the situation and explain your rights and options. It is likely that you will need to, at least, have a letter sent from an attorney to the property owners if you find they are violating your easement rights.
The language in the document that created the easement must be reviewed by a legal professional. For this type of situation you need to consult with an attorney who can review the situation and explain your rights and options. It is likely that you will need to, at least, have a letter sent from an attorney to the property owners if you find they are violating your easement rights.
The language in the document that created the easement must be reviewed by a legal professional. For this type of situation you need to consult with an attorney who can review the situation and explain your rights and options. It is likely that you will need to, at least, have a letter sent from an attorney to the property owners if you find they are violating your easement rights.
Depends where in the world you are.
In the UK and Australia the servient tenant has a much better hand than servient tenants in the USA where the common law has developed differently.
No. All fee owners must consent in order for the easement rights to be valid.
A county easement is a provision in the property deed that permits the county some form of access to some or all of the property without having to ask permission of the property owner.
They have no right to change the location of the access easement without written permission from the property owner.
Presumptive easement occurs when the access or easement has been used for so many years it has become an established easement. The owners permission is not necessary if they allowed it to go for years without complaint.
It really depends on the nature of the easement. And the nature of the easement depends on the terms of the easement. Appart from state law which generally defines an easement, the terms of the individual easement usually limit the usage of the easement property...or rather subject the holder of the rest of the property and what is left after the use of the easement to what can and cannot be done on/with/to the land/sky/land beneath the easement. (It is convenient to see an easement as an area with clear boundries, most of the time; however, easements are really rights to use the area a certain way in opposition to the holder of all the other rights to do with it as he pleases.) You really have to know the terms of the easement.
If the telephone company has a recorded easement against your property, they may install telephone lines to the extent allowed by the easement. You can find out whether there is such an easement against your property by looking in the title insurance policy you received when you bought your property. If you see a telephone easement listed, you can get a copy of it at your county courthouse. If you don't see any telephone easements in the policy, or have questions about the extent of such easements, call the title insurance company.
No, you will your parents' consent.
Prescriptive easements are similar to the concept of adverse possession. A prescriptive easement can only be created if the other party is using your property without your consent, that use is continuous, and it is "open and notorious" and adverse to your claim of perfect title for the statutory period, which varies from state to state but is usually at least a few years. Then the other party would have to sue to quiet the title to the easement in their favor. So, all that mumbo-jumbo aside, just don't let a neighbor use your property. Let them know if they are using your property and you are unhappy with it. If you are civil, most folks are willing to be amicable. If the use continues, consult an attorney about your best course of action.
Trespassing.
You can only encumber your own interest in the property. You cannot affect the co-tenant's interest in the property without their consent.
Yes you can.
Both have to be at least 18yo.
International copywrite law prevents unauthorised transmission of any intellectual property without written consent - this consent is rarely provided without royalties being paid to the owner of the property.