Joe Potter
Member
Thanks LdiJ, and Zigner, We understand your concerns because those kinds of extensive rights are not common, but they are legal.
A Portion of California Civil Code 801
This is what is listed in CA Civil Code 801. This is not a list of types of easements, but things that may become easements. "The following land burdens, or servitudes upon land, may be attached to property as incidents or appurtenances, and are then called easements whether by grant or prescription":
The right of pasture
The right of fishing or hunting
The right of taking game
The right-of-way
The right of taking water, wood, minerals, and other things
The right of transacting business upon land
The right of conducting lawful sports upon land
The right of receiving air, light, or heat from or over, or discharging the same upon or over land
The right of receiving water from or discharging the same upon land
The right of flooding land
The right of having water flow without diminution or disturbance of any kind
The right of using a wall as a party wall
The right of receiving more than natural support from adjacent land or things affixed thereto
The right of having the whole of a division fence maintained by a coterminous owner
The right of having public conveyances stopped, or of stopping the same on land
The right of a seat in church
The right of burial
The right of receiving sunlight upon or over land as specified in Section 801.5
(A) totally understands the difference between prescriptive rights to do certain things on the land, and having the same rights as the fee simple owner. (A) doesn't make any claim that stops the owner from using the land. that would be adverse possession, which requires the payment of property taxes. B always paid the taxes so that is not possible in this case. Also, it is not true that (A) offered 1/3 of the market price. (A) offered the going price per acre in the area at the time. no one has ever paid the amount F paid for a lot here.
Based on the above list, do you think that (A)'s prescriptive easements reduce the value of lot 1? if so how much?
A Portion of California Civil Code 801
This is what is listed in CA Civil Code 801. This is not a list of types of easements, but things that may become easements. "The following land burdens, or servitudes upon land, may be attached to property as incidents or appurtenances, and are then called easements whether by grant or prescription":
The right of pasture
The right of fishing or hunting
The right of taking game
The right-of-way
The right of taking water, wood, minerals, and other things
The right of transacting business upon land
The right of conducting lawful sports upon land
The right of receiving air, light, or heat from or over, or discharging the same upon or over land
The right of receiving water from or discharging the same upon land
The right of flooding land
The right of having water flow without diminution or disturbance of any kind
The right of using a wall as a party wall
The right of receiving more than natural support from adjacent land or things affixed thereto
The right of having the whole of a division fence maintained by a coterminous owner
The right of having public conveyances stopped, or of stopping the same on land
The right of a seat in church
The right of burial
The right of receiving sunlight upon or over land as specified in Section 801.5
(A) totally understands the difference between prescriptive rights to do certain things on the land, and having the same rights as the fee simple owner. (A) doesn't make any claim that stops the owner from using the land. that would be adverse possession, which requires the payment of property taxes. B always paid the taxes so that is not possible in this case. Also, it is not true that (A) offered 1/3 of the market price. (A) offered the going price per acre in the area at the time. no one has ever paid the amount F paid for a lot here.
Based on the above list, do you think that (A)'s prescriptive easements reduce the value of lot 1? if so how much?