Fulton Georgia Boundary Line Agreement

State:
Multi-State
County:
Fulton
Control #:
US-00440
Format:
Word; 
Rich Text
Instant download

Description

This Boundary Line Agreement is used for parties who have disputed over the boundaries of a piece of real estate. The parties agree that by execution of this Agreement, they are quitclaiming their respective interests to the appropriate party on the other side of the dividing line. A surveyor's drawing of the disputed land and relative tracts of all parties should be attached for clarification.
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FAQ

In order to be recordable, an easement deed must be signed by the grantor and must contain two witnesses, one of whom must be the notary with his seal attached. If one of the witnesses is not a notary, then there must be an acknowledgment by a notary attached to the deed ( 44-2-21 and 44-2-14).

As per the Limitation Act 1963, the statutory period of limitation that is allowed for possession of immovable property or any interest is 12 years in the case of private property and 30 years for public property, from the date the trespasser occupies the property.

Property owners can search the Georgia Department of Revenue's property records page to find information about their home. Homeowners can also search land records via plat and real estate indexes of the Georgia Superior Court Clerks' Cooperative Authority (GSCCCA), also online.

Foremost among these is proving you have had factual possession of the land and that you had the intention to possess said land. There must be a sufficient degree of exclusive physical control over the land and it is generally considered to show such control you must exclude all others.

In summary, most personal property is considered abandoned after five years of non-action by the owner toward the property. You can use this as the mark to gauge abandonment according to the property abandonment laws in Georgia.

Georgia adverse possession laws require 20 years of occupation in order to claim title. Adverse possession laws are commonly referred to as "squatters' rights" laws, since they often are invoked by squatters who inhabit land or structures otherwise left unused.

A legal easement must be registered against the dominant and servient land ("tenements"), if their titles are registered, to take effect. The benefit of legal easements pass automatically on the transfer of the dominant tenement or part of the dominant tenement.

An express easement is expressed to be so by deed and in the case of registered land is referred to in the A Section of the Title Register for the dominant tenement (the land having the benefit of the easement) and in the C Section of the Title Register for the servient tenement (the land burdened by it).

State law in Georgia (O.C.G.A. § 44-5-160) defines adverse possession (also known as title by prescription) as the right to property which a possessor acquires by reason of the continuance of his possession for a period of time fixed by law, either 7 years or 20 years depending on the circumstances.

Johnson. Kenya Johnson currently serves as the Chief Judge of the Probate Court of Fulton County.

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Fulton Georgia Boundary Line Agreement