1 / 13

Land Law

Land Law. Large Group 6 Easements. 1. What is an easement?. Positive or negative Better than a licence As of right, not with permission. 2. Essential characteristics of an easement. A dominant and a servient tenement The easement must “accommodate” the dominant tenement

almira
Télécharger la présentation

Land Law

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Land Law Large Group 6 Easements

  2. 1. What is an easement? • Positive or negative • Better than a licence • As of right, not with permission

  3. 2. Essential characteristics of an easement • A dominant and a servient tenement • The easement must “accommodate” the dominant tenement • The dominant and servient tenements must not be owned and occupied by the same person • The right over the land must be capable of forming the subject matter of the grant

  4. 2. Essential characteristics of an easement • A dominant and a servient tenement • The easement must “accommodate” the dominant tenement • The dominant and servient tenements must not be owned and occupied by the same person • The right over the land must be capable of forming the subject matter of the grant

  5. 3. Three ways to create an easement • Express grant or reservation • Implied grant or reservation on a sale of part • Prescription

  6. 3.1 Expressly created legal easements • Created by deed (s.52 LPA 1925) • With correct formalities • Granted forever or for a fixed period of time • Registered against both titles

  7. 3.2 Implied grant or reservation on a sale of part • Strict necessity • Common intention • Wheeldon v Burrows 1879 • S.62 LPA 1925

  8. User “as of right” • Nec vi – without force • Nec clam – without secrecy • Nec precario – without permission

  9. s.2 Prescription Act 1832 • Non-light easements • 20/40 years use immediately before the application to court • 20 – all common law conditions apply

  10. s.2 Prescription Act 1832 • 40 – defeated by written consent at the startof the use, but not by written consent given during the use • 40 – servient land can be tenanted for part of the time

  11. s.3 Prescription Act • Rights of light • Doesn’t have to be “as of right” • Oral consent won’t defeat the claim • 20 years only

More Related