There’s no longer a necessity to squander time searching for legal documents to comply with your local state requirements. US Legal Forms has consolidated all of them in one location and made their access easier.
Our platform provides over 85k templates for any business and individual legal needs organized by state and area of application. All forms are properly drafted and confirmed for legitimacy, ensuring you can trust in obtaining a current Easement Without Deed.
If you are already acquainted with our service and possess an account, ensure your subscription is active before downloading any templates. Log In to your account, choose the document, and click Download. You can also revisit all obtained documents whenever necessary by accessing the My documents tab in your profile.
Print the form to fill it out manually or upload the document if you prefer to use an online editor. Completing formal documentation under federal and state laws and regulations is quick and straightforward with our platform. Try US Legal Forms today to keep your paperwork organized!
No, but a Texas landowner has options for obtaining legal right to access their landlocked property. Each of those options will be discussed in detail as a three-part series, with today's article addressing Part One.
The easiest way to gain access to a landlocked property is to obtain an express easement from the neighboring landowner. This easement should be in writing, signed by the grantor, specifically identify the property and details of the allowed easement use, and filed in the county deed records.
131 sets out the four essential characteristics of an easement which are as follows: There must be a dominant and servient tenement; The easement must accommodate the dominant tenement; The dominant and servient owners must be different people; The right must be capable of forming the subject matter of a grant.
If the easement either contains no language related to maintenance (or is not written at all), the default rule is that the dominant estate owner (meaning the person who was granted the easement) is required to adequately maintain the easement at no cost to the servient estate owner (the easement grantor).