Legal Question in Real Estate Law in California

driveway dispute

We bought our first home 5 years ago.We have a private gravel driveway on one side and a shared paved driveway on the other side. The survey marker goes up the middle of the driveway. The neighbor claims to have in her deed that the property between their land and ours is to be used in common with both parties.What is the land between our properties mean?We are supposed to have peaceful enjoyment of our property.They have been harrassing us for 5 years.Before we built a small barrier up the middle of the driveway, they used our property to purposely block our vehicles in.We need help.If anyone knows of anything we can do, can you please send us an idea by e-mail. Our deed shows of no easements or right of ways on any of our property. We are on wits end.They said it was a verbal agreement between past owners of our house and her father. We have full ownership of all of our property. Our deed tells us exactly where are boundaries are, and it has been newly surveyed.We are both at wits end. If we remove the barricade and allow them to use the property we will have no peace here. I do not want them any closer to my house. I have never come across people like that in my life.Please give us any idea of what we can do.Thank you.


Asked on 11/15/04, 7:55 am

2 Answers from Attorneys

Donald Holben Donald R. Holben & Associates, APC

Re: driveway dispute

You need to contact an attorney to investigate this matter and quiet title. Time is important. Time can provide your neighbor permanent rights with or without your approval, in fact, such right might already be theirs. Need more info to better counsel you. Call if you wish. Don Holben.

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Answered on 11/18/04, 3:59 pm
Bryan Whipple Bryan R. R. Whipple, Attorney at Law

Re: driveway dispute

First, I note that you have what appears to be a Canadian postal code. My answer is based upon California law, although the laws of other jurisdictions with roots in the English common law system are likely to be similar on this subject.

An oral agreement by one to allow some use of his land by another would probably be classified as a license, rather than an easement. Licenses are normally revocable at will, and since they are personal in nature, the sale of the property by the owner who made the oral agreement to you would ordinarily act to terminate the license.

The fact that the neighbor claims an oral agreement may actually work in your favor, since it negates the element of "hostility" that would have to be proven to establish a prescriptive easement. You should try to get the neighbor to put the claim of an oral agreement in writing, or get witnesses to him claiming an oral agreement, in case you have to prove there was one. Beware, however, the possibility that the license was terminated by your becoming the owners and that, upon purchase, the neighbor's use and/or possession became "hostile" due to lack of such an agreement with you.

In that event, the five-year ownership figure you mention may become critical. The limit for suit to recover possession of real property is five years in California. After that, adverse possession ripens into ownership and adverse use ripens into prescription, provided certain other conditions are met. If the fifth anniversary of your ownership hasn't occurred but is fast approaching, you should contact an experienced real property attorney at once.

Finally, in addition to reviewing your own deed and your title insurance for any references to an easement, you should review, or have a title searcher review, the neighbor's deed, which should be recorded at the county recorder's office.

Although negotiation is always preferable to suit in disputes between neighbors, this matter seems beyond easy resolution. You may have to resort to the courts. If and when you are reasonably satisfied that the neighbor has no rights in the disputed strip of property, you can sue for any or all of the following: (1) to quiet title in yourselves; (2) for trespass or ejectment; (3) for an injunction preventing future trespass or annoyance.

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Answered on 11/17/04, 12:13 pm


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