enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Civil Code of the Philippines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Civil_Code_of_the_Philippines

    The Civil Code of the Philippines is the product of the codification of private law in the Philippines. It is the general law that governs family and property relations in the Philippines. It was enacted in 1950, and remains in force to date with some significant amendments. [citation needed]

  3. Lateral and subjacent support - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lateral_and_subjacent_support

    If the landowner owns everything beneath the ground on his property, he may convey to another party the rights to mineral deposits under the land and other things requiring excavation, such as easements for buried conduits or for water wells. However, such a conveyance requires the recipient to prevent any damage to the surface of the land ...

  4. Easement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Easement

    An easement is a nonpossessory right to use and/or enter onto the real property of another without possessing it. It is "best typified in the right of way which one landowner, A, may enjoy over the land of another, B". [1]

  5. Right of way - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Right_of_way

    Right of way drawing of U.S. Route 25E for widening project, 1981 Right of way highway marker in Athens, Georgia Julington-Durbin Peninsula Powerline Right of Way. A right of way (also right-of-way) is a transportation corridor along which people, animals, vehicles, watercraft, or utility lines travel, or the legal status that gives them the right to do so.

  6. Adverse possession - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adverse_possession

    Adverse possession in common law, and the related civil law concept of usucaption (also acquisitive prescription or prescriptive acquisition), are legal mechanisms under which a person who does not have legal title to a piece of property, usually real property, may acquire legal ownership based on continuous possession or occupation without the permission of its legal owner.

  7. Usufruct - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Usufruct

    Usufruct (/ ˈ j uː z j uː f r ʌ k t /) [1] is a limited real right (or in rem right) found in civil law and mixed jurisdictions that unites the two property interests of usus and fructus:

  8. Philippine legal codes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philippine_legal_codes

    Since 1946, the laws passed by the Congress, including legal codes, have been titled Republic Acts. [b] While Philippine legal codes are, strictly speaking, also Republic Acts, they may be differentiated in that the former represents a more comprehensive effort in embodying all aspects of a general area of law into just one legislative act.

  9. Squatting in the Philippines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Squatting_in_the_Philippines

    The Philippine Statistics Authority defines a squatter, or alternatively "informal dwellers", as "One who settles on the land of another without title or right or without the owner's consent whether in urban or rural areas". [1] Squatting is criminalized by the Urban Development and Housing Act of 1992 (RA 7279), also known as the Lina Law.