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Video Guide on Legal Easement Agreements management

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Commonly Asked Questions about Legal Easement Agreements

An easement is where a landowner gives another a limited right to use their land most often for reasonable access to things like roads, trails, parks or beaches. It is not an ownership right in the land, it is the mere right to use anothers land for limited purposes.
An easement is the right to cross or use someone elses land for a specific purpose. The owner of the easement does not own the land, just the right to use it. The owner of the land may also use the area covered by the easement as long as they do not interfere unreasonably with the purpose of the easement.
An easement is a right to access, use, and/or enter the property of another. A number of unwritten easements exist under Idaho law, which are as legal and valid as a signed written easement in the eyes of the law.
In most cases, property owners cannot block an easement as it is a legal right granted to another party. However, there may be specific circumstances where restrictions can be placed on the easements use.
There are two types of easements in Idaho: appurtenant and in gross. An appurtenant easement is a right to use a certain amount of land (servient estate) to benefit other land (dominant estate), such as a shared driveway, or road to access other property.
An easement is a right to cross or otherwise use someone elses land for a specified purpose, for example, to: lay electricity or telephone cables. maintain water, drainage and gas supplies. walk or drive across the land to get access to other land.
The owners of the dominant and servient tenements must be different persons : An easement cannot exist where the dominant and servient land owners are in common ownership and possession i.e you cannot have an easement over your own land.
An easement is a right in the owner of one parcel of land, by reason of such ownership, to use the land of another for a special purpose not inconsistent with the general property in the owner. It is an interest in land owned and possessed by another, permitting its limited use or enjoyment without actual occupancy.