seizure?
they can take away your property
It should not if it is properly recorded as a property easement.
The police have the duty to enforce the laws. If a particular law specifies what you may or may not do on your own property, then yes, the police have the right to tell you not to break that law, and arrest you if you do so.
R. S. Bhalla has written: 'Property relations in Kenyan constitutional law' -- subject(s): Right of property, Eminent domain 'The institution of property' -- subject(s): Property and socialism, Right of property, Property
Unalienable rights are the right given to every human being beginning from the day he/she was born. No one can take away those rights from you. They are permanent rights. In the Constitution, an example of an unalienable right would be the right to trial by jury.
A ROW does not automatically become extinguished when the burdened property is sold. The buyer's attorney should perform a title examination. The examination will enable the attorney to determine the legal status of the ROW.
Julius C. S. Pinckaers has written: 'From privacy toward a new intellectual property right in persona' -- subject(s): Intellectual property, Personality (Law), Privacy, Right of, Publicity (Law), Right of Privacy
I think the law is made by police thinks what you can get away with and what people cant get away with and what police think is right and what is wrong
In the UK it is marked on your property deeds, there is no law saying it is universally left or right.
Edward Keynes has written: 'Liberty, property, and privacy' -- subject(s): Civil rights, Due process of law, Liberty, Privacy, Right of, Right of Privacy, Right of property
Daniel H. Cole has written: 'Pollution and property' -- subject(s): Right of property, Law and legislation, Eminent domain, Environmental law, Pollution