Silence_Dogood
Junior Member
What is the name of your state (only U.S. law)? FLORIDA
I own a piece of rural property in Florida. A road runs along one edge of the property, and is 100% on my property as verified by recent survey.
My plan is to close the road and give a key to each of the property owners who have no other way to reach their properties. Each of the affected properties are rural with no homes, but they are registered as "agriculture" for the exemption based on a sketchy claim of planted pine.
1) Assuming the legal owners are given a key to the gate, will they still have standing to sue for the gate's removal entirely?
2) Several of the registered owners are dead. I plan on identifying the personal representative (executor) of each of their estates and providing them with a key. Will heirs to the estate have standing to sue, assuming the personal representative does not provide them with a copy of the key?
3) Is there any way to prevent them from simply opening the gate and leaving it open?
I own a piece of rural property in Florida. A road runs along one edge of the property, and is 100% on my property as verified by recent survey.
My plan is to close the road and give a key to each of the property owners who have no other way to reach their properties. Each of the affected properties are rural with no homes, but they are registered as "agriculture" for the exemption based on a sketchy claim of planted pine.
1) Assuming the legal owners are given a key to the gate, will they still have standing to sue for the gate's removal entirely?
2) Several of the registered owners are dead. I plan on identifying the personal representative (executor) of each of their estates and providing them with a key. Will heirs to the estate have standing to sue, assuming the personal representative does not provide them with a copy of the key?
3) Is there any way to prevent them from simply opening the gate and leaving it open?
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