You can convey your interest in land by executing a deed that transfers your interest to a new owner. However, if you also signed a mortgage, conveying your interest in the land by deed will not affect your responsibility to pay the mortgage.
Air land? Generally, in the United States, the only way to obtain the ownership of land is by a deed from the owner that transfers ownership to you. If a person builds a home on land that belongs to someone else, that home will become part of the real estate and will become the property of the owner of the real estate. The person who built the home cannot devise the home to a beneficiary in a will.
Answer: By renting your land they are acknowledging that you are the owner. There would be no grounds for an adverse claim. Adverse possession arises when a person uses someone else's property without permission of the owner of the property. A landlord and tenant relationship clearly demonstrates that the property was used with the permission of the owner.
When you farm land belonging to someone else and share the resulting crop with the owner instead of paying rent.
When you farm land belonging to someone else and share the resulting crop with the owner instead of paying rent.
When you farm land belonging to someone else and share the resulting crop with the owner instead of paying rent.
Generally, an easement "runs with the land" unless the original grant specifies it will end when the grantee no longer owns the property.If A granted a right of way easement over their land to B then the ROW will become an appurtenant right attached to B's land. When B sells to a new owner, the new owner also will acquire the ROW. However, B cannot sell or transfer the ROW to any other land owner, for example, her neighbor, C.
It's legal if the traps are on land owned or rented by you or your family, in which case you could even take the traps and resell them. On public land you could move them if they are a hazard to you or your family, but it still counts as the trap owner's property. If the traps are on someone else's land entirely, it's at the discretion of the property owner.
Yes. Once a ROW is granted by the owner of the encumbered property, it runs with the benefitted land until the owner of that land releases all rights in the ROW. If the owner of the encumbered land ever acquires the parcel benefitted by the ROW then the title will merge and the ROW will disappear.
Introduce yourself to them, and ASK for permission to hunt on their land. It is illegal to go on someone else's land without their permission. It is also very poor manners.
Ownership of real property is transferred by a deed. The grantee on that deed is the new owner. If you want to own that same land you need to ask the owner to transfer it to you by a new deed listing you as the grantee. Property should never be purchased in someone else's name.
tenant
Also known as a lessee.