Yes, a right of way can be removed from a property through a legal process such as a court order or by mutual agreement between the parties involved.
In 1978
Yes, in fact an obstruction to a right of way MUST be removed as it is a trespass on the right, and failure to take action to have it removed will start the statute of limitations (trespass), after which the right is lost.
The area covered by the right of way should be described in the instrument that created the right of way. Anyone who has the right to use the right of way cannot drive outside the limits of the right of way and encroach onto your property to turn around. Ingress and egress is the right to enter and exit from a property.
Your property needs to be removed prior to the sale. Once the property has been sold you have no right to enter.
No, it is called a right of way because people have a legal unfettered right of way
You must remove your personal property prior to the foreclosure sale. Once the property has been transferred you have no right to enter. Your property will be removed by a team of professionals and dumped.
No. It might just mean that the property owner over whose property the ROW runs might not want his animals escaping. As long as you have access, the unlocked gate signifies nothing. BTW: You are not granted EXCLUSIVE USE of the property over which the ROW runs, only that your ROW cannot be withheld from you, or removed.
Once you are evicted the landlord has the right to have any property that you left behind removed and they are not required to make any arrangements for its storage. It is likely that your property will be on its way to the dump within a day after you were evicted.
It's the same as if he's stealing the car. If the landlord wants a car removed from the property he must do so the right way: with a towing service that will tow and bill the owner for it.
It depends on how your property was subdivided and sold. In some cases the land is owned by you but subject to a permanent right of way for a street , alley or public utilities, etc. The area of land that is subject to a public right of way is usually considered in determining the assessed value of the property. As such you you not be directly paying taxes on the property subject to the right of way. In other cases your property abuts or is adjacent to the right of way but you do not own it. You can not acquire public land through adverse possession in most states.
It is true that many of the new state constitutions removed the property qualifications for voting. In 1790 in the United States, the only people who had the right to vote were white adult males who owned property.
By definition, a landlocked property does not have access and there is therefore no right-of-way to plow, so towns have no responsibility to plow non-existent rights-of-way.