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  2. California HOME Act - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/California_HOME_Act

    2021 California Senate Bill 9 (SB 9), [1] titled the California Housing Opportunity and More Efficiency (HOME) Act, is a 2021 California state law which creates a legal process by which owners of certain single-family homes in single-family zoned areas may build or split homes on their property, and prohibits all cities and counties from directly interfering with those who wish to build such ...

  3. California quietly ended single family zoning, allowing four ...

    www.aol.com/news/california-quietly-ended-single...

    As reported earlier this year by the Wall Street Journal, fewer than 500 homes have been built since a 2021 law, SB 9, was passed allowing owners to split their single family home lots in two, and ...

  4. Nollan v. California Coastal Commission - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nollan_v._California...

    Nollan v. California Coastal Commission, 483 U.S. 825 (1987), is a United States Supreme Court decision that ruled a California Coastal Commission regulation which required private homeowners to dedicate a public easement along valuable beachfront property as a condition of approval for a construction permit to renovate their beach bungalow unconstitutional.

  5. Easement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Easement

    Implied easements are more complex and are determined by the courts based on the use of a property and the intention of the original parties, who can be private or public/government entities. Implied easements are not recorded or explicitly stated until a court decides a dispute, but reflect the practices and customs of use for a property.

  6. How to deal with neighbors that encroach on your property - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/2008-10-15-how-to-deal-with...

    An easement is a right of access that has been agreed-upon by the property owner, in writing, or mandated by a government decision. Perhaps the first owner of your house granted your neighbor ...

  7. Covenant (law) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Covenant_(law)

    Horizontal privity is found if, at the time the original parties enter into the agreement, those parties share some interest in the subject land independent of the covenant (e.g., landlord and tenant, mortgagee and mortgagor, or holders of mutual easements). Individual state statutes can alter the requirements of horizontal privity of estate ...

  8. What happens if I find an unregistered easement running ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/finance/happens-unregistered...

    It’s not his fault that he didn’t know about the easement, either — it allegedly wasn’t properly recorded, so it didn’t come up in a title search when he’d purchased the home 14 years ago.

  9. Equitable servitude - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equitable_servitude

    An equitable servitude is a term used in the law of real property to describe a nonpossessory interest in land that operates much like a covenant running with the land. [1] In England and Wales the term is defunct and in Scotland it has very long been a sub-type of the Scottish legal version of servitudes, which are what English law calls easements.