Free: Contests & Raffles.
Quote from: pianoman9701 on February 01, 2017, 09:54:11 AMUnless he can find evidence of an easement, he's going to be out $585. It sucks but throwing it out without that evidence endangers landowner rights. I hope he wins. If there is no easement across the private land then he would be trespassing. However, why is the trail marked as a forest service trail on the map, seems like something is missing in this story?
Unless he can find evidence of an easement, he's going to be out $585. It sucks but throwing it out without that evidence endangers landowner rights. I hope he wins.
It doesn't quite seem right that he gets a ticket when the trail is on the map!
Quote from: bearpaw on February 01, 2017, 10:22:28 AM It doesn't quite seem right that he gets a ticket when the trail is on the map! Then there is this from the story above....."Blocking and posting no trespassing signs at the head of Trail 115/136 prompted Yellowstone District ranger Alex Sienkiewicz to organize a trail clearing and marking trip this past summer."That would beg the question, did the people in the trail clearing party and the Ranger get charged with trespassing?
I know in our state that if there is a trail on your property that kids have been using to get to school (example) you cannot fence or block it off. I know this from a nearby land owner and seen the issue come up before.There is no written easement, but the use over a long period of time negates the need.Not all that different from the law of adverse possession, and if I'm not mistaken adverse possession isn't allowed against government compared to private party confrontations.I know there was a discussion about this with the Mount Vernon City parks, where adjacent land owners would attempt to incroach on the park land. Despite any time length they had to remove structures such as fences.
I had to google this, I wasn't sure what it meant:Quotehttp://legal-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/prescriptive+easementprescriptive easementn. an easement upon another's real property acquired by continued use without permission of the owner for a period provided by state law to establish the easement. The problems with prescriptive easements are that they do not show up on title reports, and the exact location and/or use of the easement is not always clear and occasionally moves by practice or erosion. (See: prescription, easement)I have on many occasions checked with the USFS to ascertain if an easement existed to avoid landowner problems that I suspected might occur. Even after checking with USFS I have had landowners try to tell me there is no access, I refer them to the USFS or invite them to call the sheriff, that is usually the end of the argument. Since this trail is on the map I think the guy may win the case, it will be interesting to see what happens. It doesn't quite seem right that he gets a ticket when the trail is on the map!
http://legal-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/prescriptive+easementprescriptive easementn. an easement upon another's real property acquired by continued use without permission of the owner for a period provided by state law to establish the easement. The problems with prescriptive easements are that they do not show up on title reports, and the exact location and/or use of the easement is not always clear and occasionally moves by practice or erosion. (See: prescription, easement)
More than 8,000 acres of forest land in the Crazy Mountains is only accessible by crossing at the corners of where the parcels meet, the legality of which has yet to be tested in court.