Puerto Rico Quitclaim Deed Termination or Terminating Easement

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Multi-State
Control #:
US-00992BG
Format:
Word; 
Rich Text
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Description

A quitclaim deed transfers whatever interest, if any, a grantor may have in the property, without specifying the interest in any way. No warranty of ownership is given. A quitclaim therefore can be used to terminate an easement. This form is a generic example that may be referred to when preparing such a form for your particular state.

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FAQ

Under the common law doctrine of merger, an easement will be extinguished when the easement holder becomes the fee title owner of the property subject to the easement. The applicability of the doctrine of merger to conservation easements, however, is a matter of state law and will vary by jurisdiction.

Extinguishing Methods: There are several legal methods to extinguish an easement, including release, merger, destruction, abandonment, and adverse use.

An easement may terminate for numerous reasons. The most common include: impossibility of purpose, merger, elimination of necessity, abandonment, adverse possession, eminent domain, and the express terms of the easement itself.

General Warranty Deed A general warranty deed is the gold standard of property transfers. This type of deed is overwhelmingly used in residential purchases. Most lenders require a warranty deed for properties they finance. It offers buyers the greatest possible protection from future claims against the title.

A quitclaim deed conveys whatever interest the grantor has in the property, as distinguished from a grant of the fee or other estate with warranty of title. The grantee takes the title "as is." A quitclaim deed is sometimes called a release deed.

A practical example is the case of an easement on one of the properties (the servient) for the benefit of the other property (the dominant). The easement is terminated when the same person acquires both the dominant and servient estates.

Merger of Title An easement appurtenant is automatically extinguished if, at any point, the same person comes to own the dominant tenement and the servient tenement at the same time. Even if the ownership is later split along the same borders of the original properties, the original easement is extinguished.

These methods of termination are abandonment, merger, prescription, end of necessity, demolition or destruction, marketable title statutes, misuse, estoppel, and death of the holder of an easement in gross.

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Puerto Rico Quitclaim Deed Termination or Terminating Easement