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First, an heir is not an heir until a benefactor dies. Therefore, the person you refer to as the heir has no right to the owner's property while the owner is living.

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Q: Does an heir have rights to use of easement while the owner is still living?
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What rights do you have to your deceased grandma's property?

If all her children are still living you have no rights in her property unless she left a share to you in her Will.If all her children are still living you have no rights in her property unless she left a share to you in her Will.If all her children are still living you have no rights in her property unless she left a share to you in her Will.If all her children are still living you have no rights in her property unless she left a share to you in her Will.


What kind of real estate ownership is an easement?

An easement is a right of one owner of land to make beneficial and lawful use of the land of another owner. Most easements are created by a deed or written agreement and some are created by operation of law. Most easements run with the land and pass to subsequent owners. Some are extinguished by the death of the owner or when that owner transfers the property to a new owner. An easement is a right in another person's property. It is not a fee interest. An easement is an appurtenance to the land it benefits. How long it lasts sometimes depends on the language that created it. If you have a right of way over Harry's land to reach your own and it's your only means of access then it will last forever as a benefit to your land. However, you can't sell that right to another neighboring landowner. Further, all you can do with the right of way is use it for access, you can't fence it in or park your cars on it or install a gate across the entrance unless those additional rights were granted in the original deed of easement.


If you sign a Temporary Construction Easement but don't cash the check, is the Temporary Easement still binding?

No


Can dominant owner pave non-exclusive easement?

With few eceptions an easement works in this way.Under US law, property cannot be blocked from access by the property of another. Say property owner 1, let's call him Bob owns a 39 acre parcel on a 40 acre block. At the center of the block, property owner 2, Tom, owns an acre. Bob must allow easement (passage or access) to Tom. Bob still owns the land on which Tom accesses that center acre, but Tom has free access to and from his property.As the owner, Bob may improve or not the easement as he sees fit. He may even be required to improve it and maintain it.Another PerspectiveThe owners of the dominant estate should review the document that created the easement to determine if there are any provisions that create additional rights, restrictions, obligations or responsibilities in the parties. Some grants are very simple and some are very detailed- creating obligations and responsibilities for one or both parties.The dominant estate is the land that is benefittedby the easement. The servient estate is the land burdened by the easement. It is important to review the document that created the easement to determine if the dominant estate has any right to pave the right of way since they do not own it. The owner of the right to use the right of way cannot take more rights than were originally granted. The ROW can only be used in the specified manner. However, a new ROW agreement could be drafted by the parties (and recorded in the land records) that gives the benefitted land the right to pave and maintain the ROW, if the parties can agree on those terms.See related link.


What rights as human beings did slaves have?

The only right a slave had was living. But it still means NO RIGHTS.


What must the government provide to a property owner if it needs to take his property for government use?

If the government needs private property for its own use, they should give fair market value to the owner of the property. The property owner can also give the government an easement agreement to the property and still retain ownership.


What is the rights of a teen parent that is still living at home with their parents in Pennsylvania?

what right does a parent or guardianhave when a 18 year old is still living at home in pennsylvania


Does the executor of a will have rights to distribute the estate before the mom dies?

They certainly do not have the rights. The executor has no power while the testator is still living.


If a land owner gives an easement to you and then the ownership changes hands does the easement still exist?

The easement lasts as long as the grantee owns the property in your case or until it is extinguished by a court judgment. You need to hire an attorney to petition the court to extinguish the easement. It sounds like you have enough factors in your favor to obtain a favorable judgment. Your request is reasonable and your neighbors are being unreasonable. The legal remedy probably won't cost as much as the improvements you offered to your neighbor. Your neighbors may not want to spend the money necessary to defend a weak position. Do not block the easement as suggested. That would place you in the unfavorable position as a defendant. By proceeding correctly, the facts are in your favor as a plaintiff so do it right.


Can they come in your backyard and put in private cables?

If there is an easement in your property description, then they can. You'd have to check your title. Many properties have an easement for just such things. I have a 30 foot easement on the south side of my property for cables. The property is still yours, but they have a right to place cables in the ground.


What rights does a family executor have while the parent is still living?

They have absolutely no rights. An executor does not obtain any power until appointed by the court.


Does the town own your property if you give them an easement?

When you grant an easement in your property you are granting the other party the right to use a portion of your property for some specific purpose. You still own the property. The other party owns a right in your property. You should review the document that created the easement for details.