Easements Flashcards

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1
Q

What is an Easement?

A

An Incorporeal property right which runs with land rather than person

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2
Q

How is an Easement described as a Servitude?

A
  • Having control of someone’s land but NO freedom over it.
  • ‘Profit a Pendre’ = making money off someone’s land
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3
Q

What are the 2 types of Tenement?

A

Dominant and Servient

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4
Q

What is a Dominant Tenement?

A

land that enjoys the benefit of that right

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5
Q

What is a Servient tenement

A

the land that gives the right for another landowner to use in particular way

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6
Q

How can Easements become established?

A
  1. By express agreements
  2. Created by statute
  3. Implied by Common Law
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7
Q

What is expressing agreement on landowners?

A
  • Owners of adjacent property can agree to create an easement
  • Easement does not belong to person but rather RUNS with land –> continues to exist no matter who owns the land
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8
Q

What is created by Statute?

A

–> Things such as sewerage, electricity connections etc
–> ‘Easements in Gross’ b/c no dominant tenement who specfically benefits from the eastment, rather the benefit is more broadly distributed

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9
Q

What is Implied by Common Law?

A

–> Recognition b/w land owners even if not created by agreement

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10
Q

What are the 2 steps for determining an Easement?

A
  1. Identifying whether an arrangement meets the 4 requirements of an easement
  2. If it meets these 4 requirements –> has it been VALIDLY created?
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11
Q

What are the 4 essential requirements?

A
  1. Must be dominant and servient tenement
  2. Must be owned by separate people
  3. Right must accomodate the dominant tenement (BENEFIT the land, not the owner)
  4. The right must be ‘capable of being the subject matter of a grant’ (must be capable of an easement)
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12
Q

When something must be ‘capable of being the subject matter of a grant,’ what does it mean?

A
  1. Must not be a mere right of recreation which carries no utility or benefit to the dominant tenement
  2. Must not be too vague or wide
  3. Must not be inconsistent w the ownership or possession of the servient land
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13
Q

How can Easements be validly created?

A

Implied or Express Eaesments?

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14
Q

What are the diff types of Express Easements?

A
  • Documents
  • GLL = made by document
  • Torren’s = deed + folio of register may contain a record of easement, though, it is NOT invalid if you fail to do so (s42 TLA)
  • ‘Express Reservation’ = subdivide a plot of land –> enables new plots to be sold w easements alr created so responsibility does NOT need to fall on new purchasers
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15
Q

What are the diff types of Implied Easements?

A
  • Easement by necessity = landlocked plot
  • Common Intention Easement = implied where there is clear mutual intention for an easement to exist e.g. right of way through the common area or access maintenance services
  • Wheeldon v Burrows Easement = Implied where two adjacent plots are owned by the same person (but NOT via subdivision) -> owner has been using the plots as though an easement exists b/w them -> and then the owner sells one plot to anohte rperson  easement can officially come into being same person –>
  • s12(2) Subdivision Act 1988 = expressly create if you subdivide a plot
  • A Long Use Easement = easement implied where there has been open and uninterrupted use of a right for 20 yrs, and servient owner has acquired
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16
Q

How can Easements be removed?

A
  1. Abandonment = if owner of DT makes clear that successors will NOT make use of easement –> can be considered abandoned.
  2. Express Release –> parties affeted by easement may expressly agree to terminate easement
  3. Unity of DT/ST –> easement becomes suspended if under same owner
  4. Statutory Extinguishment under s73 –> easements may be removed if NOT needed