Section 2 Unit 1 Flashcards
encumbrance
*non-possessory interests limiting the legal owner’s rights
an interest in and right to real property that limits the legal owner’s freehold interest.
In effect, an encumbrance is another’s right to use or take possession of a legal owner’s property, or to prevent the legal owner from enjoying the full bundle of rights in the estate.
An encumbrance does not include:
the right of possession and is therefore a lesser interest than the owner’s freehold interest. For that reason, encumbrances are not considered estates. However, an encumbrance can lead to the owner’s loss of ownership of the property.
What are the two most common encumbrances?
Easements and liens
What is an easement? Ex. utility easement
*a right to use portions of another’s property
enables others to use the property, regardless of the owner’s desires.
an interest in real property that gives the holder the right to use portions of the legal owner’s real property in a defined way. Easement rights may apply to a property’s surface, subsurface, or airspace, but the affected area must be defined.
What is a lien? Ex. tax lien
can be placed on the property’s title, thereby restricting the owner’s ability to transfer clear title to another party.
The two general types of encumbrance are:
those that affect the property’s use and those that affect legal ownership, value and transfer.
Restrictions on Owner’s Use by Others’ Rights to Use are:
easements
encroachments
licenses
deed restrictions
Restrictions on Ownership, Value and Transfer are:
liens
deed conditions
The receiver of the easement right is:
the benefited party
The giver of the easement right is:
the burdened party
Essential characteristics of easements include:
Must involve the owner of the land over which the easement runs, and another, non-owning party.
Pertains to a specified physical area within the property boundaries.
May be affirmative or negative usage.
Affirmative
allowing a use, such as a right-of-way.
Negative
prohibiting a use, such as an airspace easement that prohibits one property owner from obstructing another’s ocean view.
The two basic types of easement are:
appurtenant and gross.
Easement appurtenant
*dominant tenement’s right to use or restrict adjacent servient tenement; attaches to the real estate
easement by necessity: granted by necessity, e.g. to landlocked owners
party wall: negative easement in a shared structure
gives a property owner a right of usage to portions of an adjoining property owned by another party.
The term appurtenant means “attaching to.”
The property enjoying the usage right is called the dominant tenement, or dominant estate.
The property containing the physical easement itself is the servient tenement, since it must serve the easement use.
An easement appurtenant attaches to the estate and transfers:
with it unless specifically stated otherwise in the transaction documents.
The easement attaches as a beneficial interest to the dominant estate, and as an encumbrance to the servient estate.
The easement appurtenant then becomes part of the dominant estate’s bundle of rights and the servient estate’s obligation, or encumbrance.
Easement appurtenant rights and obligations automatically transfer with the property upon:
transfer of either the dominant or servient estate, whether mentioned in the deed or not.
For example, John grants Mary the right to share his driveway at any time over a five-year period, and the grant is duly recorded. If Mary sells her property in two years, the easement right transfers to the buyer as part of the estate.
The servient tenement, as well as the dominant tenement, may use the easement area, provided:
the use does not unreasonably obstruct the dominant use.
An easement by necessity is:
an easement appurtenant granted by a court of law to a property owner because of a circumstance of necessity, most commonly the need for access to a property.
Landlocked
without legal access to a public thoroughfare.
Since property cannot be legally landlocked a court will grant an owner of a landlocked property an easement by:
by necessity over an adjoining property that has access to a thoroughfare.
The landlocked party becomes the dominant tenement, and the property containing the easement is the servient tenement.
A party wall is a common wall shared by two separate structures along a property boundary.
Party wall agreements generally provide for severalty ownership of half of the wall by each owner. Other structures that are subject to party agreements are common fences, driveways, and walkways.
The agreement grants a negative easement appurtenant to each owner in the other’s wall. This is to prevent unlimited use of the wall includes establishing responsibilities and obligations for maintenance and repair of the wall.
An easement in gross is a personal right:
- a right to use property that does not attach to the real estate
personal: not revocable or transferrable; ends upon death of easement holder
commercial: granted to businesses; transferrable
one party grants to another to use the grantor’s real property. An easement in gross may be personal or commercial.
The right does not attach to the grantor’s estate. It involves only one property and does not benefit any property owned by the easement owner.
There are no dominant or servient estates in an easement in gross.
An easement may be created by:
voluntary action, by necessary or prescriptive operation of law, and by government power of eminent domain.