Legal Question in Real Estate Law in California
real estate ''prescriptive easement''
A vacant lot next door to me is for sale and I'm interested in buying it. However, on the other side of the lot lives a realtor who has parked on the lot for years and put up a chain link fence two years ago that is about 20 feet inside the lot's boundary. She now claims she has a ''prescritpive easement'' to forever continue to use the lot for parking and as her fenced yard/dog run. Does she? If she does not, what is the process to move her fence and trailer/junky (but registered) vehicles? The seller is not doing anything and said the buyer could deal with her.
1 Answer from Attorneys
Re: real estate ''prescriptive easement''
The realtor is stretching her luck by trying to assert a prescriptive easement on the closed-in area. More likely than not, a court would reject her claim to an easement by prescription to the enclosed 20 feet, because an easement requiring enclosure for dog-run purposes is tentamount to a taking of the fee, and courts are inclined to hold that such takings require the more stringent standards for adverse possession be met.
However, she is more likely to be granted an easement for parking, but even that, if it is continuous for long periods of time and tends to deprive the lot owner of shared use of some of the property, could perhaps be defeated in court with a proper factual showing and strong legal argument.
Bottom line is that you might be able to kick her off completely, and probably could kick her out of the dog run area, but the necessity of bringing a lawsuit to eject her and clarify your rights will substantially affect the net value of the lot to you on a "beforehand" basis. You will be assuming some risks as to the outcome, and for sure some litigation costs. My advice would be to keep this in mind in deciding what to offer and/or to use it as a negotiation tool.
The process involves bringing a lawsuit called 'ejectment' to ask a court to tell the sheriff to remove her and declare your rights against her. Other causes of action should also be pleaded in the same suit, e.g. quiet title.