What Do Real Estate Easements Affect

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usa, north america, world

Easements and encroachments affect your ownership of land. People may have been traveling across your land for years to gain access to adjacent property. Your neighbor may have placed a fence across fifteen feet of your property line. Benefits and burdens run with the land - what you obtained when you acquired the property from the previous owner passes to you. The easements and encroachments, whether they be benefits or burdens upon your land, which existed at the time that you acquired the land continue, while you own the land.

An easement is the right of a no owner to use your land for a designated purpose (e.g., accessing the beach in your case). A right of way is a form of easement granted by the property owner which gives the right to travel over your land and to have the reasonable use and enjoyment of your property to others, as long as it is not inconsistent with your use and enjoyment of the land. These principles had their origin in traditional common law which governed, for example, the free flow of water or allowed neighboring landowners to travel over another’s property (an informal "road system"). Although ownership rights of property are lessened by an easement, society at large benefits due to the additional freedom of movement.

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