Road easement 2025

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Not everyone wants to buy property with an easement on it, so the property with the easement may take longer to sell. Likewise, if the utility company has an easement to poles or power lines, your property value could take a nosedive.
Easements have been used for years to grant governments, utilities and conservation organizations certain specific but limited property rights. An easement grants the holder certain rights for specified purposes while the ownership of land remains with the property owner.
1. An easement is a nonpossessory interest in land differing from an estate in which the holder can possess and occupy the entire land. An easement holder may use the land within the scope of the easement only.
Essentially, the Act provides rights owners can travel across anothers land to docHub a location or for another specified purpose, and are allowed to continue to assert those rights so long as (a) the rights were specified in a recorded instrument on or after January 1, 1960, (b) the rights were specified in an
Owners are generally prohibited from building over or too close to an easement or must obtain approval from the authority who owns the easement to do so. If a structure is built over an easement without permission or where permission is denied, then the owner will be legally required to remove the structure.
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The property subject to the easement is still owned by the landowner, but the party who holds the easement (the dominant tenement) has a right to use the land for a specific purpose. Easements can be granted to individuals, companies (like utility companies), or even government entities.
An easement is the right to use anothers real property without owning it. The term Easement commonly refers to pathways across one property to another, and can also refer to rights to use a property, such as the right to park in an area. Easements may grant or deny rights, and may benefit or burden a property.
An easement allows public and private utilities to do work on approximately 10 feet either side of the property line without seeking permission from the property owner. The only difference between an easement and the right of way is the easement is private rather than public property.

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