Servitudes and Adverse Possession Flashcards
Forms of Servitude
- Affirmative Easements
- Negative Easements
- Real Covenants
- Equitable Servitudes
- Reciprocal Negative Servitudes
Affirmative Easements (PING)
May be created by:
- Prescription
- Implication
- Necessity
- Grant
Easement Defined
- The grant of a nonpossessory property interest that entitles its holder to some form of use or enjoyment of another’s land, called the servient tenament.
- affirmative or negative
- Appurtenant or in gross
Affirmative Easements
- Affirmative = the right to do something on servient tenament. (most easements are affirmative)
Negative Easements
- Negative = entitles holder to prevent servient landowner from doing something that would otherwise be permissible.
- Can only be created expressly, by writing, signed by grantor. No natural/automatic right to a negative easement.
- ONLY 4 categories:
- Light
- Air
- Support (action prohibited would erode subjacent support)
- Stream water from an artificial flow
- In a minority of states (e.g. CA), 5th category = scenic view
Easement Appurtenant to land
- appurtenant easment benefits its holder in his physical use or enjoyment of his property.
- TWO parcels of land must be involved
- Easement will always be appurtenant to the **dominant tenement **b/c confers benefit linked to owner of the DT’s use and enjoyment of his own land.
Easement in gross
- easement in gross confers upon its holder only some personal or pecuniary advantage that is not related to his use or enjoyment of his land
- servient land is burdened
- but there is no dominant tenement
- Common examples
- Right to place billboard on another’s land
- Right to fish or swim in another’s pond
- Power Co’s right to lay power lines on another’s land.
Transferability of Easements
in gross vs. appurtenant
- Easement appurtenant passes automatically with the dominant tenement, regardless of mention in conveyance
- Easement in gross is not transferable* *unless it is for commercial purposes.
- e.g. fishing co’s easemetn to use B’s lake to fish for bait = commercial
Creation of Affirmative Easements
(4 ways - PING)
By Grant: Most common method - to last more than 1 year must be in writing that complies with the formal elements of a deed (i.e. deed of easement).
By Implication: The use must be 1) apparent and 2) the parties expected that the use would continue because 3) it is reasonably necessary to the use and enjoyment of the dominant land.
By Necessity: (usually, landlocked) Easement of right of way will be implied by necessity if grantor conveys a portion of his land with no way out except over some part of grantor’s remaining land.
By Prescription: easement may be acquired by *adverse use (like adverse possession but doesn’t require exclusive possession, only use) *(continuous for statutory period; open and notorious; actual use; hostile - w/o servient owner’s consent)
Scope of Easement
Determined by the terms of the grant or the conditions which created it
Holder of easement may not unilaterally expand its scope.
Termination of an Easement
(8 ways)
- Estoppel
- Necessity
- Destrution of Servient Land
- Condemnation
- Release
- Abandonment
- Merger
- Prescription
Easement Termination by Estoppel
When the servient owner 1) materially changes his position 2) in reasonable reliance on the easement holder’s assurances that the easement will not be enforced, the holder is estopped from enforcing it.
Easement Termination by Necessity
- Easements created by necessity expire as soon as the need ends.
- However, if the easement was created by express grant, even if because of necessity, it does NOT end just because necessity ends.
Termination of Easements by
Destruction or Condemnation
- If servient land destroyed, other than by willful conduct of the servient owner, the easement ends.
- If servient estate is condemned through the use of eminent domain, the easement ends.
Termination of Easement by Release
A written release, given by the easement holder to the serviant owner ends the easement.