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  Results 1-11 of 11  
"Don't Fence Me In"
(Fambrough) No. 1130, Tierra Grande reprint, 2pp. (11/16/2009)
publication imageA 1995 Texas law may alter the state's land-locked property. This article reviews previous law and explains why the latest statute may be ruled unconstitutional.
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"Whose Line is It Anyway?"
(Fambrough) No. 1833, Tierra Grande reprint, 2pp. (10/22/2007)
publication imageThe author of Proverbs 22:28 had real estate in mind when writing, "Remove not the ancient landmark, which thy fathers have set." Today's boundary line discrepancies, however, need not be litigated if landowners agree to simple, less formal resolution alternatives.
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"Zwahr Wars, Episode II: Pipeline Corridors Revisited"
(Fambrough) No. 1603, Tierra Grande reprint (1/15/2003)
publication imageLandowners negotiating pipeline easements can benefit from the lessons of litigation dealing with separate economic pipeline units and condemnation of property for easements.
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"Land Locked: Controversial Conservation Easements Last Forever"
(Gilliland) No. 1545, Tierra Grande reprint (1/17/2002)
publication imageSome landowners who want to preserve their lands for future generations are turning to conservation easements, which prohibit the land from ever being used for anything other than its current use.
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"Overlapping Easements"
(Fambrough) No. 1511, Tierra Grande reprint, 1pp. (7/18/2001)
publication imageTexas legislators foresaw a problem occuring with public utilities and statutorily allowed overlapping or stacking of easements.
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"Pipeline Corridors, Economic Units and Condemnation"
(Fambrough) No. 1510, Tierra Grande reprint, 2pp. (7/18/2001)
publication image"Pipeline corridors" resulted from a novel court decisions related to the evaluation of new pipelines being placed in existing easements.
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Easements in Texas
(Fambrough) No. 422, Special report, 24pp. (Revised 5/3/2001)
publication imageA comprehensive examination of private and public easements with details of how they are formed and terminated.
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"Country Road Take Me Home"
(Fambrough) No. 1220, Letter of the Law reprint, 3pp. (11/26/1997)
publication imageAs more Texans move to rural areas, the use of county roads increases. Prospective buyers and rural homeowners encounter unique issues concerning road use.
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"Easements in a Rut"
(Fambrough) No. 1199, Tierra Grande reprint, 2pp. (7/26/1997)
publication imageRural Texas is developing, and new problems are sprouting like weeds. Traffic causes a problem, especially where vehicles divert around culverts and outside the easement boundaries.
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"Easement Primer"
(Fambrough) No. 1170, Tierra Grande reprint, 2pp. (3/27/1997)
publication imageComing and going made easier by new legislation.
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"Landlocked Property"
(Fambrough) No. 947, Letter of the Law reprint, 3pp. (4/26/1996)
publication imageIf property does not touch a public roadway, then access can be gained only by crossing another's land. Permission via an easement must be negotiated. This article describes five private right-of-way easements.
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Results 1-11 of 11
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