User Contributed Dictionary
Noun
easements- Plural of easement
Extensive Definition
''For railroad track easement see Track
transition curve.
An easement is the right or freedom to do
something or the right to prevent someone else from doing something
over the real
property of another. At common law, an
easement came to be treated as a property right in itself and is
still treated as a kind of property by most jurisdictions. In some
jurisdictions, another term for easement is equitable
servitude, although easements do not have their origin in
equity.
The right is often described as the right to use
the land of another for a special purpose. Unlike a lease, an easement does not give
the holder a right of "possession" of the property, only a right of
use. It is distinguished from a licence that only gives one a
personal privilege to do something even more limited on the land of
another. An example of a license is the right to park a car in a
parking lot with the consent of the parking lot owner. Licences in
general can be terminated by the property owner much more easily
than easements. This is similar to but not the same as a wayleave.
Easements also differ from licences in that most easements
("easements appurtenant") are attached to and benefit another
parcel of land, not a specific person. This means that a property
that enjoys an easement over another will continue to enjoy the
easement even if the property gets transferred to a different
owner. Other easements ("easements in gross") benefit a specific
person.
Easement concepts differ substantially from
country to country, and in the U.S. from state to state.
Historically, it was limited to the right-of-way and rights over
flowing waters, although this is no longer true. Traditionally, it
was a right that could only attach to an adjacent land and was for
the benefit of all, not a specific person; this is also no longer
true in many jurisdictions.
Classification of easements
Public easements versus private easements
Easements may be considered public or private. A
private easement is limited to specific individuals or entities
such as the owner of an adjoining land. A public easement is one
that grants the right to a large group of individuals or to the
public in general, such as the easement on public streets and
highways or of the right to navigate a river.
Appurtenant easements compared to easements in gross
In the U.S., an easement appurtenant is one that
benefits the dominant tenement (i.e. attached to adjoining land),
as compared to an easement in gross that is personal to holder of
the easement and does not pass automatically to another person when
the easement holder's property is sold and bought.
An easement in gross is one that is attached to
an individual person or legal entity rather than a parcel of real
estate served by the easement. This easement can be personal (like
an easement to use one's boat ramp) or commercial (like an easement
given to a railway company to build and maintain a rail line across
one's property) in nature. In earlier times, easements in gross
were considered neither assignable nor inheritable, but today, most
courts hold that commercially oriented easements in fee are freely
alienable. This is not true in England
and Wales where easements cannot be in gross. See also Profit-a-Prendre.
Floating easements
A floating easement is when there does not exist
any fixed location,
route, method or limit to
the right of
way. For example, a right of way may cross a field, without any
visible path, or allow egress through another building for fire safety
purposes. A floating easement may be public or private, appurtenant
or in gross.
One case defined it as: "(an) easement defined in
general terms, without a definite location or description, is
called a floating or roving easement...." Furthermore, "a floating
easement becomes fixed after construction and cannot thereafter be
changed."
Dominant tenement versus servient tenement
Where an easement is appurtenant (in England and
Wales, all easements), it will typically require the existence of
two parcels of land, known as tenements. There is the dominant
tenement, which is the plot of land to which the benefit an
appurtenant easement is attached. Second, there is the servient
tenement, which is the plot of land which bears the burden of the
easement.
For example, where a driveway is owned by house
A, but the owners of house B are permitted to drive over it to gain
access to their house, there is an easement of way, with house B
the dominant tenement and house A the servient tenement.
Profits
A profit (or profit à prendre) is a right to take something off another person's land. At common law it was treated differently from an easement, something that is still the case in English law. In other jurisdictions a profit is treated as a special type of easement.Examples of profits include the right to come
onto the property of another and remove fruits, vegetables, and
"fugacious minerals" (minerals that tend to be movable) such as gas
or oil; by comparison, coal, which does not move, would not be
considered a fugacious mineral. The rights of the profit-holder
depend on the nature of the profit.
Creation of easements
Easements may be created in a number of ways. In
most of the United States, using someone else's property, for
example, for ingress and egress over a certain number of years,
regularly and without the consent of the property owner, can give
the user the right to continue using the property for the same
purpose for as long as the user wishes. This method of acquiring an
easement is called a "prescriptive easement" or "easement by
prescription."
In most of the United States, "prescriptive
easement" cannot be used to acquire the right to protect a view
over a neighboring property no matter how long a property owner has
had a view over the neighbor's property. This concept, known as
"ancient
lights" in some common law jurisdictions, has recently been
recognized in California.
Prescriptive easements can be contrasted with
adverse
possession, which involves the taking of complete title to land
rather than just taking the right to use the property.
In England and Wales, much the same result is
achieved but in a different way: if you are able to show that the
easement has been used, as of right, for a period of 20 years, the
law assumes that the right to use the easement must have been
granted - either long in the past (since time immemorial) or more
recently where the evidence has been lost (lost modern grant). This
can be disproved, for example by showing that the owner of the land
was incapable of consenting. This distinguishes this from adverse
possession (by which the ownership of the land itself can be
acquired by long user) which does not rely on the fiction of a
supposed grant but instead on the fact of the use/possession of the
land.
Implied easements versus express easements
An easement may be implied or express. An express
easement may be "granted" or "reserved" and is typically included
in a document such as a deed or other officially recorded
document, or incorporated by reference to a subdivision plan by
"dedication", or in restrictive covenants in an owners' association
agreement. For example, a "paper street" shown on an approved and
recorded subdivision plan, but never improved to become an actual
street, creates an express "easement by estoppel" whereby the
grantor and abutters of the way cannot later deny the existence of
the way or its potential benefits to others in the subdivision
(e.g., for an underground drainage line). Moreover, courts
typically refer to the intent of the parties in prescribing an
easement based on prior use.
Easement by necessity
Similarly, parcels without access to a public way
may have an easement of access over adjacent land, if crossing that
land is absolutely necessary to reach the landlocked parcel. There
is an implied easement arising from the original subdivision of the
land for continuous and obvious use of the adjacent parcel (e.g.,
for access to a road, or to a source of water). This easement is
extinguished upon termination of the necessity (for example, if a
new public road is built adjacent to the landlocked tenement). An
easement by necessity is distinguished from an easement by
implication in that the former easement arises only when "strictly
necessary," whereas the latter can arise when "reasonably
necessary."
However, the landlocked owner might be required
to obtain a license for a new commercial use or to cause damage
during access (e.g., a logging road or blazed trails). Some states,
also, frown on granting easements by necessity when the need was
created by the owner's own actions, say, by selling off plots of
land resulting in a landlocked parcel.
Some U.S. state statutes grant a permanent
easement of access to any descendant of a person buried in a
cemetery on private property.
Easement by prescription
Easements by prescription, also called
prescriptive easements, are implied easements that give the
easement holder a right to use another person's property for the
purpose the easement holder has used the property for a certain
number of years, which varies from state to state. Prescriptive
easement is not the same as adverse possession, which allows a
party to acquire title to real property by asserting possession
over it for the statutory period. Requirements vary among states to
successfully claim adverse possession. In California, for example,
an adverse possessor is required to assert possession of the
property AND pay all property taxes for at least five years.
Prescriptive easements are a type of implied easement, in that they
arise even though they are not expressly created or recorded.
Unlike other implied easements, however, prescriptive easements are
hostile (i.e., without the consent of the true property owner).
Prescriptive easements do not convey the title to the property in
question, only the right to utilize the property for a particular
purpose. They often require less strict requirements of proof than
fee
simple adverse possession.
Once they become legally binding, easements by
prescription hold the same legal weight as written or implied
easements. Before they become binding, they hold no legal weight
and are broken if the true property owner acts to defend his
ownership rights. Easement by prescription is typically found in
legal systems based on common law,
although other legal systems may also allow easement by
prescription.
Laws and regulations vary among local and
national governments, but some traits are common to most
prescription laws. Generally, the use must be open (i.e. obvious to
anyone), actual, continuous (i.e., uninterrupted for the entire
required time period), and adverse to the rights of the true
property owner. The use also generally must be hostile and
notorious (i.e., known to others). Unlike fee simple adverse
possession, prescriptive easements typically do not require
exclusivity.
The period of continuous use for a prescriptive
easement to become binding is generally between 5 and 30 years
depending upon local laws (usually based on the statute
of limitations on trespass). Generally, if the true property
owner acts to defend his property rights at any time during the
required time period the hostile use will end, claims on adverse
possession rights are voided, and the continuous use time period
resets to zero.
In some jurisdictions, if the use is not hostile
but given actual or implied consent by the legal property owner,
the prescriptive easement may become a regular or implied easement
rather than a prescriptive easement and immediately becomes
binding. In other jurisdictions, such permission immediately
converts the easement into a terminable license, or restarts the
time for obtaining a prescriptive easement.
Government owned property held for common use is
generally immune from prescriptive easement in most cases, but some
other types of government owned property may be subject to
prescription in certain instances.
Prescription may also be used to end an existing
legal easement. For example, if a servient tenement holder were to
erect a fence blocking a legally deeded right-of-way easement, the
dominant tenement holder would have to act to defend his easement
rights during the statutory period or the easement might cease to
have legal force, even though it would remain a deeded
document.
Right-of-way for access is among the most common
easement by prescription.
Easements taken by the government
In the United
States, easements may be acquired by the government using its
power of "eminent
domain" in a "condemnation" proceeding in
the courts. Note that in the U.S., in accordance with the
Fifth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, property cannot
simply be taken by the government unless the property owner is
compensated for the fair market value of what is taken. This is
true whether the government acquires full ownership of the property
("fee title") or a lesser property interest, such as an
easement.
A similar right to property would appear to exist
in the law of England and Wales following the 1998 incorporation of
the European Convention on Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms
1950 into English law, in that any deprivation of the rights of the
owner of property must be "in accordance with law" as well as
"necessary in a democratic society" and "proportionate". This means
that any act of a public authority to compulsorily purchase or
otherwise take property would be incompatible with the Convention,
and thereby unlawful.
Termination of easements
Generally, mere non-use does not end an easement.
One or more of the following factors may also have to be
present:
- Agreement to terminate by grantor and the grantee of the easement
- Expiration of the time allowed for the easement
- Abandonment or expressed intent to discontinue use of the easement
- Merger where one person buys both dominant and servient tenement
- End of necessity which gave rise to easement by necessity
- Estoppel, where a holder of the easement stops making use of the easement and a third party detrimentally relied on the stopped use
- Prescription where a holder of the easement uses someone else to use the easement for a period of statute of limitations
- Condemnation where the government terminates easement through eminent domain
Examples of easements
Easements include:
- Right to light. The right to receive a minimum quantity of light in favour of a window or other aperture in a building which is primarily designed to admit light.
- Aviation easement. The right to use the airspace above a specified altitude for aviation purposes. Also known as avigation easement, where needed for low-altitude spraying of adjacent agricultural property.
- Railroad easement.
- Utility
easements including:
- Storm drain easements. These carry rainwater to a river or other body of water.
- Sanitary sewer easements. These carry used water to a sewage treatment plant.
- Electrical power line easements.
- Telephone line easements.
- Fuel gas pipe easements.
- Sidewalk easements. Usually sidewalks are in the public right-of-way, but sometimes they are on the lot.
- Solar easements. Prevents someone from blocking the sunlight.
- View easements. Prevents someone from blocking the view of the easement owner, or permits the owner to cut the blocking vegetation on the land of another.
- Driveway easements, also known as easement of access. Some lots do not border a road, so an easement through another lot must be provided for access. Sometimes adjacent lots have "mutual" driveways that both lot owners share to access garages in the backyard. The houses are so close together that there can only be a single driveway to both backyards. The same can also be the case for walkways to the backyard: the houses are so close together that there is only a single walkway between the houses and the walkway is shared. Even when the walkway is wide enough, easements may exist to allow for access to the roof and other parts of the house close to a lot boundary. To avoid disputes, such easements should be recorded in each property deed.
- Beach access. Some jurisdictions permit residents to access a public lake or beach by crossing adjacent private property. Similarly, there may be a private easement to cross a private lake to reach a remote private property, or an easement to cross private property during high tide to reach remote beach property on foot.
- Dead end easement. Sets aside a path for pedestrians on a dead-end street to access the next public way. Could be contained in covenants of a homeowner association, notes in a subdivision plan, or directly in the deeds of the affected properties.
- Recreational easements. Some U.S. states offer tax incentives to larger landowners if they grant permission to the public to use their undeveloped land for recreational use (not including motorized vehicles). If the landowner posts the land (i.e., "No Trespassing") or prevents the public from using the easement, the tax abatement is revoked and a penalty may be assessed. Recreational easements also include such easements as equestrian, fishing, hunting, hiking, biking (e.g., Indiana's Calumet Trail) and other such uses.
- Conservation easements. Grants rights to a land trust to limit development in order to protect the environment.
- Historic Preservation Easement. Similar to the conservation easement, typically grants rights to a historic preservation organization to enforce restrictions on alteration of a historic building's exterior.
- Easement of lateral and subjacent support. Prohibits an adjoining land owner from digging too deep on his lot or in any manner depriving his neighbor of vertical or horizontal support on the latter's structures e.g. buildings, fences, etc.
- Communications Easement.This easement can be used for wireless communications towers, cable lines, and other communications services. This is a private easement and the rights granted by the property owner are for the specific use of wirecommunications.
Trespass upon easement
Blocking access to someone who has an easement is a trespass upon the right of easement and creates a cause of action for civil suit. For example, putting up a fence across a long-used public path through private property may be a trespass and a court may order the obstacle removed. Turning off the water supply to a downhill neighbor may similarly trespass on the neighbor's water easement.Open and continuous trespassing upon an easement
can lead to the extinguishment of an easement by prescription (see
below), if no action is taken to cure the limitation over an
extended period.
Adverse possession
Adverse
possession can result in a grant of rights in adversely
possessed property which are 'taken' by the adverse possesser. For
example, it is possible to adversely possess an easement, under the
legal doctrine of
prescription. This must also be done openly but need not be
exclusive, and must outlast the same required statutory eviction
period.
For example, given a deeded easement to use
someone else's driveway to reach a garage, if a fence or
permanently locked gate is established by the user of the easement
that prevents access to the easement area by the property owner
(and in some states if the user of the easement pays the property
taxes on the area covered by the easement), and nothing is done to
remove or circumvent the obstacle, and the statutory period
expires; then the property included in the easement can be forfeit
by the owner and accrue to the benefit of the adverse
possessor.
Restrictive easement
Restrictive easements are also called "negative easements," as their "use" is normally prohibitive, such as a common "vehicular non-access" (sometimes mislabeled "non-vehicular access") easement as shown along a main thoroughfare where the governmental entity needs to restrict access. Therefore a restrictive easement is a condition placed on land by its owner or by government that in some way limits its use, usually regarding the types of structures which may be built there or what may be done with the ground itself. For instance, if a leased piece of land is not precluded by zoning laws (probably because it is not in a township) from having people inhabit it, and the government feels that for some reason living there would be especially unsafe, it may place a restrictive easement on the property stating that no one may live there. Restrictive easements are also frequently placed on wetlands (i.e., a conservation easement) to prevent them from being destroyed by development.Prescriptive easements for view, or the right to
prevent a neighboring property owner from blocking the view across
the property from a neighboring property, are not recognized in any
U.S. state. This type of easement is referred to as "ancient
lights" in some non-U.S. jurisdictions. An easement for view can be
obtained by grant or reservation in most U.S. jurisdictions when
property is conveyed.
Another type of restrictive easement is an
historic preservation easement in which the owner of a historic
structure agrees not to change specified historic elements of the
facade.
The primary difference between location
preservation ordinances and historic preservation easements is that
local ordinances are discretionary and can be removed and a
historic preservation easement runs with the property
forever.
The value of easements imposed on historic
properties already protected by local ordinances has recently been
the subject of discussion by some people who have claimed that
“where the subject property is located in a local historic district
in which there are existing restrictions, regulations and controls,
the terms of the easement are substantially redundant.”
Easement-encumbered properties within local
historic districts should sell at a penalty relative to
unencumbered properties in such districts because the easement
typically imposes stricter controls than those contained in the
usual preservation ordinance.
Easements often prohibit changes in property use
or changes to significant architectural features while ordinances
may permit such changes, subject to review and approval by a board
of architectural review.
Further, unlike preservation ordinances, the
easement typically contains no relief for "economic hardship"
commonly found in governmental regulation of land use.
Easements are granted in perpetuity while
historic district ordinances and local zoning practices change over
time to reflect the dynamics of a changing political and/or
economic interests of a community. An easement on a historic urban
property is generally intended to preserve and conserve the
historic, architectural, scenic and cultural values of a certified
historic structure.
An easement donation reduces the basis in
subsequent years by a fraction equal to the ratio of the value of
the easement donation divided by the value of the property just
before the easement donation takes place. This Basis Adjustment
will cause a reduction from the owner’s depreciation schedule and
or increase one’s capital gain upon sale of subject property.
Easements provide for judicial extinguishment in
the event the historic structure is destroyed. The proceeds from
the extinguishment are prorated at a fraction equal to the ratio of
the value of the easement donation divided by the value of the
property just before the easement donation takes place, and paid to
the easement holding organization (not the landlord).
In the case of properties located in registered
historic districts, the easement will also protect the historic
district through limitations on uses that might jeopardize the
architectural scale, style and sense of cultural identity of the
district. The easement does this by restricting alteration and
modification of the property in ways that would change its historic
appearance or remove or replace historic building fabric. Such an
easement typically contains provisions:
1) Prohibiting demolition.
2) Prohibiting or severely limiting
subdivision.
3) Prohibiting or limiting further construction
or development. Depending upon the property, the easement may also
prohibit or limit use changes.
4) Prohibiting changes to exteriors (and on
occasion interiors) of historically or architecturally significant
buildings depending upon their significance, barring changes to
facades visible from public ways or prohibiting changes without
prior review by the holding organization.
5) Typically, easements on significant historic
buildings will regulate changes to all facades, regulate how
historic materials are replaced or repaired, prohibit or regulate
placement of commercial or other signs and prohibit changes
inconsistent with the building's historic character.
6) Requiring maintenance in conformity with
agreed standards, typically those set by the US Department of
Interior, to protect the historic structure.
7) Maintenance in excess of that ordinarily
anticipated for comparable structures is typically required.
8) The cost of conducting "interruptive
maintenance" out of the ordinary building maintenance cycle to
correct what, in economic terms, are relatively minor defects (such
as repainting or repair of deteriorated brickwork, cornices or
window elements more frequently than would be required by market
conditions) must be considered.
9) Requiring the owner to keep the property fully
insured against casualty loss and to reconstruct improvements if
they are destroyed. Again, not all preservation easements require
the owner to insure the property or to replace it in the event of
casualty. 10) Prohibiting dumping of trash.
11) Allowing for certain rights held by the
holding organization, including periodic inspection, review and
enforcement rights. 12) On structures within historic districts
provide that any replacement structure must be constructed
according to design plans approved by the easement holder.
Torrens title registration
Under the Torrens title registration system of land ownership registration, easements and mortgages are recorded on the titles kept in the central land registration or cadastre. Any unrecorded easement is extinguished and no easement by prescription or implication may be claimed.England and Wales
In England and Wales there are four requirements for an easement:- there must be a dominant and servient tenement
- the easement must confer a benefit (or "accommodate") the dominant tenement
- the dominant and servient tenements must not be owned and occupied by the same person
- the easement must be capable of forming the subject matter of a grant
Thus an easement is always linked to a specific
property and can never be in gross, nor can an easement be for the
benefit of the general public. Separate laws, such as the law of
public rights of way, or customary rights, governs rights for the
public in general.
Prescription
An easement may be prescribed where the easement has been used as if the owner of the dominant tenement were entitled to it (known technically as "user as of right"). There are now four ways that an easement may be prescribed:- immemorial user
- long user
- lost modern grant
- under the Prescription Act
There are three conditions for a user as of right
to exist, which follows the Roman Law
doctrine of nec vi, nec clam, nec precario (without force, without
secrecy, without permission).
The question of how far the owner of the servient
tenement may prevent prescription by giving a blanket permission to
use the easement is uncertain. It was suggested by Warner J Rafique
v The Trustees of The Walton Estate (1993) 65 P. & C.R. 356,
that the owners of an easement of way could prevent the possibility
of the acquisition of prescriptive rights by displaying a notice on
the road in question stating that anybody using the road did so
"only be permission of the Trustees and that that permission might
be withdrawn at anytime."
See also
- right of light
- air rights
- Countryside and Rights of Way Act 2000 (in the UK)
- crown land (see "logging and mineral rights" under Canada)
- fair use, an analogous concept in copyright law
- land rights
- prior appropriation water rights
- right of public access to the wilderness
- riparian water rights
- title (property)
- Structural encroachment - which some attorneys classify as a type of easement
External links
- http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/data/constitution/amendment05/16.html (Legal Cases regarding Real Estate Taking and Easements)
- Easements and servitudes in South Africa
- Deed Of Easement Documents (UK) Deed documents outlining easements for UK properties
References
easements in Danish: Servitut
easements in German: Grunddienstbarkeit
easements in Spanish: Servidumbre
easements in French: Servitude (droit)
easements in Italian: Servitù
easements in Dutch: Servituut
easements in Norwegian: Servitutt
easements in Norwegian Nynorsk: Servitutt
easements in Polish: Służebność
easements in Swedish: Servitut
easements in Chinese: 地役权