servitudes Flashcards

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1
Q

what are the forms of servitudes (5)

A

affirmative easements

negative easements

real covenants

equitable servitudes

reciprocal negative servitudes

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2
Q

For the five forms of servitudes explain the

(1) method of creation

(2) parties bound

(3) remedy

A

METHOD OF CREATION

affirmative easements
— prescription, implication, necessity, grant (PING)

negative easements
— writing signed by grantor

real covenants
– writing signed by grantor

equitable servitudes
– writing signed by grantor, unless implied by general scheme doctrine

reciprocal negative servitudes
– MAJ: in a subdivision, residential restrictions in prior deeds by common grantor bind subsequent grantees whose deeds don’t have the restriction if, at the start of the subdivision (1) grantor had common scheme and (2) unrestricted lot holders had notice
– MIN: not binding on subsequent grantees unless their lots are expressly restricted in writing
————————————–
PARTIES BOUND

affirmative easements
– easement appurtenant is transferred automatically with dominant tenement
– easement in gross for commercial purposes is assignable

negative easements

real covenants
– burden of promise runs to successor if writing, intent, touch and concern, H and V privity, notice
– Benefit of promise will run to successor of benefited lot if writing, intent, Touch and concern, and V privity

equitable servitudes
– successors bound if writing, intent, touch and concern, notice [no privity]

reciprocal negative servitudes
– where common scheme exists, subsequent purchasers with notice are bound
————————————–
REMEDY

affirmative easements
– injunction or damages

negative easements
– injunction or damages

real covenants
– damages

equitable servitudes
– damages? — but I think injunction can be sought

reciprocal negative servitudes
– injunction

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3
Q

what is an easement

A

a grant of a nonpossessory property interest that entitles its holder to some form of use or enjoyment of another’s land but not the right to possess

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4
Q

length of an easement

A

presumed to be of perpetual duration unless the grant specifically limits the interest

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5
Q

common examples of easements

A

right to lay utility lines on another’s land

right of way over another’s land

right to tap into a neighbor’s drain

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6
Q

types of easements

A

affirmative or negative

affirmative
– right to go onto and do something on servient land [right to use neighbor’s drain]

negative
– right to prevent servient landowner from doing something that would otherwise be permissible [LASS]
- Light, air, support, stream water from an artificial flow [ex: compel neighbor not to impede access to light or airflow etc.]
- MINORITY: some states allow negative easements for scenic view
——————————-
appurtenant or in gross

Appurtenant
– servient tenement (bears burden) benefits a dominant tenement
[Ex: A grants B right of way across A’s land. B’s is dominant, A is servient]

In gross
- confers some personal or pecuniary advantage that is not related to sue or enjoyment of the land
- servient land is burdened but there is no benefited or dominant tenement because the easement benefits the holder not the parcel

Ex:
right to place a billboard on another’s lot

right to swim in another’s pond

utility company’s right to lay power lines on another’s lot

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7
Q

ways to create an easement and acronym

A

PINGE

PRESCRIPTION [COAH]

(a) Continuous and uninterrupted use for the given statute’s period

(b) Open and notorious use [discoverable upon inspection]

(c) Actual use, but NEED NOT BE EXCLUSIVE

(d) hostile use / without consent

NOTE: permission defeats easement by prescription

Exception: no prescriptive easement in public land

IMPLICATION

[by operation of law] exception to statute of frauds requirement

(a) easement implied by existing use / quasi easement
For the court to imply an easement, the court has to find:

(1) the previous (prior to division) use on the servient part was apparent and continuous

AND

(2) the parties expected that the use would survive division because it is reasonably necessary to the dominant tenement’s use and enjoyment
.
.
.
(b) easement implied without any existing use

(1) subdivision plat
when lots are sold in a subdivision with reference to a recorded plat or map that shows streets leading to the lots, buyers of the lots have implied easements to use the streets to access their lots

OR

(2) profit a prendre
holder of a profit a prendre has implied easement to pass over the surface of the servient land and use it as reasonably necessary to extract form the servient property its minerals or some product of the servient property (timber, fish, game, etc.) as specified by terms of the profit

NECESSITY

[type of easement by implication]

Implied when a landowner coveys a portion of her land with no way out except over some part of the grantor’s remaining land

owner of the servient parcel has the right to locate the easement
—————————————————————————————————GRANT

Any easement must be memorialized in writing and signed by the holder of the servient tenement unless its duration is brief enough to be outside the coverage of a particular state’s Statute of Frauds. So, most commonly, this means that easements to endure for greater than one year must be in writing to be enforceable. That writing must comply with all the formal requisites of a deed [deed of easement]

EXPRESS RESERVATION

grantor conveys title to land but reserves the right to continue to use the tract for a special purpose

Maj. rule – easement can only be reserved for grantor, an attempt to reserve easement for anyone else is void

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8
Q

how to create negative easement

A

expressly, by a writing signed by the grantor

NO NATURAL OR AUTOMATIC RIGHT TO A NEGATIVE EASEMENT

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9
Q

explain transferability of easement appurtenant and easement in gross

when does benefit and burden pass and exceptions?

A

TRANSFERS OF APPURTENANT

– benefit passes automatically with transfers of the dominant tenement, regardless of whether it was mentioned in the conveyance

– burden passes automatically with the servient estate UNLESS new owner is a bona fide purchaser without notice of the easement

  • benefit of the easement appurtenant cannot be conveyed apart form the dominant tenement [you can’t convey the easement to someone else who is not on the benefited parcel because it is not personal] unless an exception applies:

exception to the “no transferring easements app. apart from dominant parcel” rule = it is permissible to convey the easement to the owner of the servient tenement to extinguish the easement

TRANSFERS OF EASEMENT IN GROSS

not transferable unless for commercial purposes

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10
Q

scope of an easement

  • what is it determined by?
  • who locates it?
  • May it’s location change?
A

DETERMINED BY: grant or conditions that created it

WHEN NOT SPECIFICALLY LOCATED ON SERVIENT TENEMENT ONCE CREATED: an easement of suffi- cient width, height, and direction for the intended use will be implied.

WHO MAY LOCATE LOCATION: servient owner may select location so long as selection is reasonable

MAY IT CHANGE? If there are no specific limitations in the grant, courts assume that an easement was intended to meet both present and future needs of the dominant tenement (so, for example, an easement may widen to accommodate new, wider cars).

EXCEPTION: If, however, the dominant parcel is subdivided, the lot owners will not succeed to the easement if to do so would unrea- sonably overburden the servient estate.

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11
Q

what happens when an easement is misused?

A

misuse does not terminate an easement – remedy is injunction against misuse

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12
Q

how can servient estate be used when there is an easement on it?

A

The servient owner generally may use her land in any way she wishes so long as her conduct does not interfere with the easement.

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13
Q

what happens when an easement needs a repair

A

If easement holder is the sole user, easement holder has the duty to make repairs to the easement

if both the easement holder and the servient owner are users, the court will apportion the repair costs.

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14
Q

How to terminate an easement + acronym

A

END CRAMPS

ESTOPPEL

normally, you need a written release to terminate an easement, or an oral release + actual abandonment.

BUT an oral expression of an intent to abandon an easement will terminate by estoppel IF:

servient owner materially changes their position in reasonable reliance on easement holder’s assurances or representations [suhc as that easement will no longer be enforced]

NECESSITY

expire as soon as the necessity ends, unless easement was reduced to an express grant

DESTRUCTION

destruction of servient land will terminate the easement UNLESS the destruction was the result of the willful conduct of the servient owner

voluntary destruction — will NOT terminate easement [tear down building]
involuntary destruction (fire, flood) - WILL terminate an easement
————————————————————————————–
CONDEMNATION

Condemnation of the servient estate by governmental eminent domain power will terminate the easement. Courts are split as to whether easement holders are entitled to compensation.

RELEASE

release given by the easement holder to the servient land owner will terminate the easement, even for easements in gross

release must be in writing

ABANDONMENT

How to show abandonment — there has been physical action that demonstrate an intent never to use the easement again

“physical action” = erecting something on the easement making it unusable

mere non use or words of abandonment ≠ abandonment

MERGER

An easement is extinguished when title to the easement and title to the servient land become vested in the same person

The unity must be complete (that is, the duration of the servient tenement must be equal to or longer than the duration of the dominant tenement with which it is combined).

conveyance of parcel A to Bob for life estate period and remainder to Jack and conveyance of parcel B to Bob in fee simple will NOT merge parcels A and B

PRESCRIPTION
[COAH]

servient owner may extinguish easement by interfering with it through adverse possession:

(1) continuous interference

(2) open and notorious

(3) actual [exclusivity not necessary]

(4) hostile to easement holder

Ex: chain link fence to prevent easement holder from using it

STATED CONDITIONS

original easement grant may specify when or under what conditions easement will terminate

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15
Q

how will courts treat a wall erected partly on the property of each of two adjoining landowners or a common driveway ?

A

(1) treat it as belonging to each owner to the extent it rests upon their land

and

(2) imply mutual cross-easements of support = each party can use the wall or driveway and neither party can unilaterally destroy it

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16
Q

how to create a cross easement of support [party wall or common driveway]

A

(1) written agreement [SoF]

or

(2) irrevocable license can arise from detrimental reliance on oral agreement

or

(3) implication

or

(4) prescription

17
Q

how do covenants run for party walls or common driveways?

A

If party wall or common driveway owners agree to be mutually responsible for maintaining the wall or driveway, the burdens and benefits of those promises (which are deemed covenants (see Module 9)) run to the successive owners of each parcel.