Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Necessity: If the easement was created by necessity and the necessity no longer exists; Estoppel: The easement is unused and the servient estate takes some action in reliance on the easement's termination; Prescription: The servient estate reclaims the easement with actual, open, hostile and continuous use of the easement
Wheeldon v Burrows (1879) LR 12 Ch D 31 is an English land law case confirming and governing a means of the implied grant or grants of easements — the implied grant of all continuous and apparent inchoate easements (quasi easements, that is they would be easements if the land were not before transfer in the unity of possession and title) to a transferee of part, unless expressly excluded.
The Alabama Civil Rights & Civil Liberties Law Review (ACRCL [1]) is a student-run law review published by the University of Alabama School of Law. [2] The journal is published two times per year and contains articles, essays, and book reviews concerning civil rights and liberties. [3] It is the largest civil rights law review in the Deep South.
This page was last edited on 13 October 2015, at 13:54 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
'Merger is the absorption of a lesser estate by a greater estate, and takes place when two distinct estates of greater and lesser rank meet in the same person or class of persons at the same time without any intermediate estate.' "[1] Similarly, a merger doctrine extinguishes an easement by necessity to a landlocked piece of property once that ...
Alabama law-related lists (11 P) A. Alabama state courts (2 C, 5 P) C. Capital punishment in Alabama (2 C, 13 P) Alabama state case law (4 P) Courthouses in Alabama ...
Dec. 19—Editor's Note: The Cullman Times is counting down the top stories of 2023. Here's No. 9. Thanks to statewide reform in sentencing for most Alabama inmates this year, Cullman County found ...
Pwllbach Colliery Co Ltd v Woodman; Court: Court of Appeal: Citation [1915] AC 634: Keywords; Easements; landlord and tenant; tenant subject to those "existing" at time of grant; possible easement to create coal dust (a nuisance); whether common intention of landlord and tenant; whether coal screener generating dust necessary for mining to continue; whether implied easements for use in general ...