Buying or Selling a Home/Water rights

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Question
Ray,
We bought our property 19 years ago. The original owner allowed the two adjoining properties access to our water well.
We would like to legally request them to get their own water resource.
Are we responsible to continue providing them water?

Is it fair to give them one year to comply before we discontinue access?

Where can we obtain our legal standing in writing?

Thanks for your expertise.

Mike Hornbek

Answer
Hi Mike,

First off, I'm not an attorney and I would suggest that you talk to a local attorney because the laws might be different in each state.

That being said, you might have a little problem with an easement situation. Easements by prescription, also called prescriptive easements, are implied easements that give the easement holder a right to use another person's property for the purpose the easement holder has used the property for a certain number of years, which varies from state to state. Prescriptive easements are a type of implied easement, in that they arise even though they are not expressly created or recorded. Unlike other implied easements, however, prescriptive easements are hostile (i.e., without the consent of the true property owner). Prescriptive easements do not convey the title to the property in question, only the right to utilize the property for a particular purpose. They often require less strict requirements of proof than fee simple adverse possession.

Once they become legally binding, easements by prescription hold the same legal weight as written or implied easements. Before they become binding, they hold no legal weight and are broken if the true property owner acts to defend his ownership rights. Easement by prescription is typically found in legal systems based on common law, although other legal systems may also allow easement by prescription.

Laws and regulations vary among local and national governments, but some traits are common to most prescription laws. Generally, the use must be open (i.e. obvious to anyone), actual, continuous (i.e., uninterrupted for the entire required time period), and adverse to the rights of the true property owner. The use also generally must be hostile and notorious (i.e., known to others). Unlike fee simple adverse possession, prescriptive easements typically do not require exclusivity.

The period of continuous use for a prescriptive easement to become binding is generally between 5 and 30 years depending upon local laws (usually based on the statute of limitations on trespass). Generally, if the true property owner acts to defend his property rights at any time during the required time period the hostile use will end, claims on adverse possession rights are voided, and the continuous use time period resets to zero.

In some jurisdictions, if the use is not hostile but given actual or implied consent by the legal property owner, the prescriptive easement may become a regular or implied easement rather than a prescriptive easement and immediately becomes binding. In other jurisdictions, such permission immediately converts the easement into a terminable license, or restarts the time for obtaining a prescriptive easement.

If your state allows for prescriptive easements to become binding after 19 years or less, you might be bound to have to let the other property owners continue to use your well.

Hope this helps and best of luck,

Ray  

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Ray Beggs

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I have been a licensed real estate agent for over 20 years in California. I am available to answer any question you may have regarding buying a home or selling a home. I can also answer questions about the loan process. (Purchasing or refinance)

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Real estate sales and financing.

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