You can try asking him to move it, politely! If that doesn't work you might try contacting your local law enforcement agencies or an attorney to see what you can legally do about it.
They have no right to change the location of the access easement without written permission from the property owner.
It depends on what you mean by surveying your property. Most laws allow a surveyor to access abutting property as necessary in order to survey a common property line. Therefore, yes, a surveyor can survey your property line where it abuts your neighbor and make any calculations necessary to set a legal property line.
Yes, if you are blocking your neighbor's free access or causing any inconvenience. Even if you own the property you own it subject to your neighbor's right to use it. Neither one of you can park on the driveway so as to block the other party.
You need to examine the title to your property to determine if you have the right to access that easement. Otherwise you need to obtain that right from the owner of the land over which you need access.
Absolutely not. Those easements run with the land and the owner who blocked the access would be liable for damages in a lawsuit.
If the Secondlife grid is down or access is blocked by Linden Lab, the game cannot be accessed.
If the website is blocked on your end by some parental control software then you can boot you PC in safe mode wit networking and then access the blocked websites If the website is blocked on internet then you need to contact your ISP provider or website adminstrator.
draw a line on the driveway that equally separates the two sides
call their house Of course not ... why do you think you are blocked? THINK!!! Blocked means just that ... blocked for any kind of access.
Closing off access to something by placing obstacles in the path is called a blockade.
Closing off access to something by placing obstacles in the path is called a blockade.
It is the law in most (all?) states that the owner of a parcel of property that has no access to a public thoroughfare, cannot be blocked from gaining such access. If a right-of-way needs to be awarded, it is done through court action and though it may NOT be the property owners desired route, that access will generally be the most direct link to the nearest public road.