Steering through the red tape of official documents and formats can be challenging, particularly when one does not engage in that professionally.
Even selecting the appropriate format to obtain an Arizona Easement By Necessity can be labor-intensive, as it must be valid and precise to the last detail.
Nonetheless, you will need to invest significantly less time acquiring an appropriate format from a source you can trust.
Obtain the correct document in a few straightforward steps: Enter the title of the document in the search field. Locate the relevant Arizona Easement By Necessity in the list of results. Review the description of the template or view its preview. When the format suits your requirements, click Buy Now. Continue to select your subscription plan. Enter your email and create a password to establish an account at US Legal Forms. Choose a credit card or PayPal payment method. Save the template file on your device in your preferred format. US Legal Forms will conserve your time and energy determining if the document you found online is appropriate for your requirements. Set up an account and gain unlimited access to all the templates you need.
An easement by necessity is an easement that is created when the owner of a landlocked parcel has no access to a public right of way such as a street or highway.
The Court had laid down certain essentials for the easement such as: There must be an existence of a servient tenement and dominant tenement. Such an easement must have some dominant tenement. Different persons should be in the ownership of both the dominant and servient tenement.
Easement of NecessityGiving a landowner right-of-way over an adjoining parcel of land in order to access a public road is the most common example of an easement by necessity. Imagine a piece of farmland that has been divided in two. The first parcel lies along a county road and has a driveway leading up to a home.
In fact, less than one-half of Arizona land is privately held, so it is common that landowners may be landlocked and need an easement from state land. It is also possible that a private landowner will be landlocked and need an easement from a neighboring landowner.