EASEMENTS
Read the
WARNING! first.

An “easement” is a legal
right to use land for a specific purpose. It is the right of one
person to go onto the land of another person and make a limited use of the
land. There are certain rules which relate to the creation of
easements, to the termination of easements and to the scope of easements.
Easements are usually
classified as "Easements Appurtenant" and as "Easements in Gross."
An easement is appurtenant when in the creation of the easement it is
attached to a piece of land and benefits the owner of such land in his/her
use and enjoyment of the land. An "Easement in Gross" is one when in
the creation of the easement is intended to benefit a person rather than
the owner or possessor of land.
To understand easements,
one must understand "Dominant Tenements" and "Servient Tenements." A
"Dominant Tenement" is the land whose owner is benefited by the easement.
A "Servient Tenement" is the land whose owner is burdened by the easement.
Easements may be "implied"
or "express." An "express" easement is one which is created in a
writing which meets certain statutory requirements. An easement may
be "implied" if at the time of a conveyance one part of the land is being
used for the benefit of another part of the land and the use is apparent
and the use is continuous for a certain period of time and the use is
reasonably necessary to the enjoyment of the dominant parcel of land.
An easement by prescription
arises when a parcel of land is used for a certain purpose for a certain
period of time and the use is "open, hostile, notorious and continuous" as
those words have been defined in "adverse possession" cases by Arizona
courts.
An easement may be
extinguished (terminated) in several different ways. An easement may
be extinguished intentionally or unintentionally. Thus, a conveyance
of land may have the effect of terminating an easement when the person
making the conveyance did not intend to do so.
If you need assistance with
an Arizona easement,
contact us. |