Access to an easement is usually provided in the document that granted the easement. There would be no point in granting an easement right that cannot be used.
First, your right to use their easement must be recited in your deed. Next, you should contact the attorney who represented you when you purchased the property and explain the problem with your...
(in the US) Yes, I believe that it is universally accepted as a matter of law in all 50 states (Easement by Necessity) that you cannot 'landlock' someone's access to/from the nearest public...
An easement is a right to do something on the land (real estate) of someone else, such as using a driveway across someone's property to get to a garage on an adjacent parcel. Other commonly used...
No. The dominant estate is the property that owns the right to use an easement over another person's land (the servient estate). The dominant estate has no right to shift the location of the...