Adverse Possession.... (?)
Posted: Thu Oct 06, 2011 11:03 pm
I have a property question regarding adverse possession... If you can help please message me, it would be super appreciated!
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What's the question?couscous2389 wrote:I have a property question regarding adverse possession... If you can help please message me, it would be super appreciated!
No idea. But the answer is probably open, obvious, and continuous.ph14 wrote:What's the question?couscous2389 wrote:I have a property question regarding adverse possession... If you can help please message me, it would be super appreciated!
i believe notice is open, notorious and hostile use of the land/property as a normal/reasonable land owner would. you don't send the owner notice, you simply openly use the land without permission as a normal land owner in that area would. it is up to the owner to notice your use on his land before the statutory period is up.couscous2389 wrote:Haha. The question is what constitutes actual notice to the original owner under the open and notorious requirement. If you send the original owner an email informing them of the adverse possession but it goes to their spam mail does this count as actual notice? Would you also have to have some physical manifestation of use to satisfy the notice requirement or does that fall into the category of the actual requirement?
Right, I know that those types of constructive notice satisfy the requirement but would sending an email count as actual notice? It does vary between jurisdictions. I'm referring to a specific case where the rule states that if the owner does have actual notice up until the statute expires, that satisfies the open and notorious requirement. I'm wondering if actual notice has to consist in a physical manifestation of one's use of the property or whether sending an email would satisfy it even if the email goes to a spam folder.Lasers wrote:i believe notice is open, notorious and hostile use of the land/property as a normal/reasonable land owner would. you don't send the owner notice, you simply openly use the land without permission as a normal land owner in that area would. it is up to the owner to notice your use on his land before the statutory period is up.couscous2389 wrote:Haha. The question is what constitutes actual notice to the original owner under the open and notorious requirement. If you send the original owner an email informing them of the adverse possession but it goes to their spam mail does this count as actual notice? Would you also have to have some physical manifestation of use to satisfy the notice requirement or does that fall into the category of the actual requirement?
I believe "actual" notice means that they had actual knowledge. So sending an email that only goes to spam and they never saw it wouldn't count as actual notice.couscous2389 wrote:Right, I know that those types of constructive notice satisfy the requirement but would sending an email count as actual notice? It does vary between jurisdictions. I'm referring to a specific case where the rule states that if the owner does have actual notice up until the statute expires, that satisfies the open and notorious requirement. I'm wondering if actual notice has to consist in a physical manifestation of one's use of the property or whether sending an email would satisfy it even if the email goes to a spam folder.Lasers wrote:i believe notice is open, notorious and hostile use of the land/property as a normal/reasonable land owner would. you don't send the owner notice, you simply openly use the land without permission as a normal land owner in that area would. it is up to the owner to notice your use on his land before the statutory period is up.couscous2389 wrote:Haha. The question is what constitutes actual notice to the original owner under the open and notorious requirement. If you send the original owner an email informing them of the adverse possession but it goes to their spam mail does this count as actual notice? Would you also have to have some physical manifestation of use to satisfy the notice requirement or does that fall into the category of the actual requirement?
If the question is what constitutes "actual notice," then actual notice means actual notice--as in the original owner actually knows the adverse possessor is there. So, if you send an email that the original owner never reads, there's no "actual" notice, since the original owner is unaware. However, there might be constructive notice, if any reasonable landowner would check their spam box from time to time to make sure no important notices went unread.couscous2389 wrote:Haha. The question is what constitutes actual notice to the original owner under the open and notorious requirement. If you send the original owner an email informing them of the adverse possession but it goes to their spam mail does this count as actual notice? Would you also have to have some physical manifestation of use to satisfy the notice requirement or does that fall into the category of the actual requirement?
this.Renzo wrote:If the question is what constitutes "actual notice," then actual notice means actual notice--as in the original owner actually knows the adverse possessor is there. So, if you send an email that the original owner never reads, there's no "actual" notice, since the original owner is unaware. However, there might be constructive notice, if any reasonable landowner would check their spam box from time to time to make sure no important notices went unread.couscous2389 wrote:Haha. The question is what constitutes actual notice to the original owner under the open and notorious requirement. If you send the original owner an email informing them of the adverse possession but it goes to their spam mail does this count as actual notice? Would you also have to have some physical manifestation of use to satisfy the notice requirement or does that fall into the category of the actual requirement?
Thank you for the input! I guess the only clarification I'm still looking for is whether in notice the two elements, as someone indicated, are: 1) hostility, giving notice to the world at large and; 2) open and notorious; giving notice to the original owner? Does the open and notorious requirement not entail actual use and a physical demonstration of utilizing the land, while the hostility requirement does make this necessary?Lasers wrote:this.Renzo wrote:If the question is what constitutes "actual notice," then actual notice means actual notice--as in the original owner actually knows the adverse possessor is there. So, if you send an email that the original owner never reads, there's no "actual" notice, since the original owner is unaware. However, there might be constructive notice, if any reasonable landowner would check their spam box from time to time to make sure no important notices went unread.couscous2389 wrote:Haha. The question is what constitutes actual notice to the original owner under the open and notorious requirement. If you send the original owner an email informing them of the adverse possession but it goes to their spam mail does this count as actual notice? Would you also have to have some physical manifestation of use to satisfy the notice requirement or does that fall into the category of the actual requirement?
if e-mail was un-read, then no actual notice.
Hostile has to do with intent. For example, imagine a person builds a driveway over some land that belongs to his neighbor; if he does it knowing that the land is not his, but he intends to take it anyways, that is hostile. If he does it by accident, thinking the land is actually his, it's not hostile. Jurisdictions vary on whether hostile possession is required. But in both cases it's both open and notorious, as a reasonably diligent homeowner should notice if someone paves a driveway across their land and parks cars on it.couscous2389 wrote:Thank you for the input! I guess the only clarification I'm still looking for is whether in notice the two elements, as someone indicated, are: 1) hostility, giving notice to the world at large and; 2) open and notorious; giving notice to the original owner? Does the open and notorious requirement not entail actual use and a physical demonstration of utilizing the land, while the hostility requirement does make this necessary?Lasers wrote:this.Renzo wrote:If the question is what constitutes "actual notice," then actual notice means actual notice--as in the original owner actually knows the adverse possessor is there. So, if you send an email that the original owner never reads, there's no "actual" notice, since the original owner is unaware. However, there might be constructive notice, if any reasonable landowner would check their spam box from time to time to make sure no important notices went unread.couscous2389 wrote:Haha. The question is what constitutes actual notice to the original owner under the open and notorious requirement. If you send the original owner an email informing them of the adverse possession but it goes to their spam mail does this count as actual notice? Would you also have to have some physical manifestation of use to satisfy the notice requirement or does that fall into the category of the actual requirement?
if e-mail was un-read, then no actual notice.
Renzo is spot-on as usual.Renzo wrote:Hostile has to do with intent. For example, imagine a person builds a driveway over some land that belongs to his neighbor if he does it knowing that the land is not his, but he intends to take it anyways, that is hostile. If he does it by accident, thinking the land is actually his, it's not hostile. Jurisdictions vary on whether hostile possession is required. But in both cases it's both open and notorious, as a reasonably diligent homeowner should notice if someone paves a driveway across their land and parks cars on it.
Except for the typos...vanwinkle wrote:Renzo is spot-on as usual.Renzo wrote:Hostile has to do with intent. For example, imagine a person builds a driveway over some land that belongs to his neighbor if he does it knowing that the land is not his, but he intends to take it anyways, that is hostile. If he does it by accident, thinking the land is actually his, it's not hostile. Jurisdictions vary on whether hostile possession is required. But in both cases it's both open and notorious, as a reasonably diligent homeowner should notice if someone paves a driveway across their land and parks cars on it.
Clarifying question: I thought hostile merely meant it was not with the permission of the owner (pretty much redundant with the "adverse" requirement)? Isn't the objective test (state of mind of the possessor is irrelevant) and subjective test (with some states requiring good faith and some requiring bad faith) a different requirement?Renzo wrote:Hostile has to do with intent. For example, imagine a person builds a driveway over some land that belongs to his neighbor; if he does it knowing that the land is not his, but he intends to take it anyways, that is hostile. If he does it by accident, thinking the land is actually his, it's not hostile. Jurisdictions vary on whether hostile possession is required. But in both cases it's both open and notorious, as a reasonably diligent homeowner should notice if someone paves a driveway across their land and parks cars on it.couscous2389 wrote:Thank you for the input! I guess the only clarification I'm still looking for is whether in notice the two elements, as someone indicated, are: 1) hostility, giving notice to the world at large and; 2) open and notorious; giving notice to the original owner? Does the open and notorious requirement not entail actual use and a physical demonstration of utilizing the land, while the hostility requirement does make this necessary?Lasers wrote:this.Renzo wrote:
If the question is what constitutes "actual notice," then actual notice means actual notice--as in the original owner actually knows the adverse possessor is there. So, if you send an email that the original owner never reads, there's no "actual" notice, since the original owner is unaware. However, there might be constructive notice, if any reasonable landowner would check their spam box from time to time to make sure no important notices went unread.
if e-mail was un-read, then no actual notice.
i agree.ph14 wrote:Clarifying question: I thought hostile merely meant it was not with the permission of the owner (pretty much redundant with the "adverse" requirement)? Isn't the objective test (state of mind of the possessor is irrelevant) and subjective test (with some states requiring good faith and some requiring bad faith) a different requirement?couscous2389 wrote:
Hostile has to do with intent. For example, imagine a person builds a driveway over some land that belongs to his neighbor; if he does it knowing that the land is not his, but he intends to take it anyways, that is hostile. If he does it by accident, thinking the land is actually his, it's not hostile. Jurisdictions vary on whether hostile possession is required. But in both cases it's both open and notorious, as a reasonably diligent homeowner should notice if someone paves a driveway across their land and parks cars on it.
We just finished AP in property class but doesn't it vary based on jurisdiction on whether there's a good faith/bad faith/no faith requirement for the adverse possession.Renzo wrote: Hostile has to do with intent. For example, imagine a person builds a driveway over some land that belongs to his neighbor; if he does it knowing that the land is not his, but he intends to take it anyways, that is hostile. If he does it by accident, thinking the land is actually his, it's not hostile. Jurisdictions vary on whether hostile possession is required. But in both cases it's both open and notorious, as a reasonably diligent homeowner should notice if someone paves a driveway across their land and parks cars on it.
yeah, it varies.Flips88 wrote:We just finished AP in property class but doesn't it vary based on jurisdiction on whether there's a good faith/bad faith/no faith requirement for the adverse possession.Renzo wrote: Hostile has to do with intent. For example, imagine a person builds a driveway over some land that belongs to his neighbor; if he does it knowing that the land is not his, but he intends to take it anyways, that is hostile. If he does it by accident, thinking the land is actually his, it's not hostile. Jurisdictions vary on whether hostile possession is required. But in both cases it's both open and notorious, as a reasonably diligent homeowner should notice if someone paves a driveway across their land and parks cars on it.
Also, isn't it whether the owner knows or should have known for open and notorious. If they sent an email that went to the spam filter but also built a big house blatantly on their land, then shouldn't the owner have known. I think open and notorious only seems to be at issue when it's a small encroachment on the land.