Law/Judiciary
Right Of Easement
An easement is a right benefiting one parcel of
land, (known as the dominant tenement) that permits the rightful users of that land to perform specific actions over a neigbouring parcel of land (known as the servient tenement). The most widely known easement is the private right of way. A private right of way is anyone with a legitimate purpose for visiting the land, which could be the rightful owner, his immediate family who live the ere as servant or staff who work there, and also those visiting for social, business or duty reasons. This explains why a courier service provider for example may make use of the private right of way even though he does not own the dominant tenement. An easement may be created in a number of ways, one of such ways is by express grant. In which case there maybe a Deed of grant, that states the terms of easement, or the grant may take the form of a clause in a conveyance deed or a transfer deed.
If a parcel of land is sold together with an expressly granted easement, then that parcel of land becomes the dominant tenement, that has rights over neighbouring land. If there is a doubt as to whether or not an easement exist, the law tends to favour the existence of the easement. In Defacto Bakeries & Catering Ltd V. Ajilore & Ors (1974). All NLR Part II Pg. 385 at 392, the court defined an easement as “a right enjoyed over the property of another person and must be created by a grant (express, implied or presumed, or by statute).
Generally you may pass and repass along a right of way as long, as you do not stop and linger on the right of way. Note that a gate is not considered an obstruction of the right of way, provided that the users of the dominant tenement have the means of opening and unlocking the gate. Also the owner of the dominant tenement cannot expect the route to be widened, strengthened or given extra headroom just because his needs have changed, he is entitled only to the width, weight or headroom that was envisaged at the time of the grant of the right of way.
An easement can also be created by prescription. This happens when some carries out an act (that is capable of being an easement), repeatedly, openly and without the (potential servient) landowner’s permission for a period of at least twenty years. If the easement is created of necessity, the parcel of land will have a right of way of necessity over a road, track or path leading to it, if that route is the only means of access between the public highway and that parcel of land.
It is worthy of note that an easement is very difficult to extinguish and should be thought of as existing forever. The land of the servient tenement is burdened with the easement. The owner of the dominant tenement should not forget that the owner of the servient tenement has a right to the peacefull enjoyment of his land and the legitimate development of his land.
Therefore the performance of the easement should not interfere with the servient owner’s peace nor prevent him from exercising his right to develop his land (provided the development caters for easement).
An easement is said to “run with the land”, it cannot be sold separately from the land, but must be passed on with the land whenever the land is transferred to a new owner.
Nkechi Bright Ewere