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An easement once granted may be ended by a release in writing stating that the owner of the easement gives away all rights and remedies including the ability to sue under the easement.
By unity of ownership it is indicated that when one person becomes the owner of both the dominant and servient heritage then the right of easement terminates.
An easement is extinguished when the dominant owner releases it, expressly or impliedly, to the servient owner. Such release can be made only in the circumstances and to the extent in and to which the dominant owner can alienate the dominant heritage.
There are eight ways to terminate an easement: abandonment, merger, end of necessity, demolition, recording act, condemnation, adverse possession, and release.
They cannot be conveyed apart from dominant estate, but they can be extinguished by execution of a written release to the owner of the servient estate, or by implication via abandonment. Easements created by implication and by necessity are by nature appurtenant.