What is an easement and how are they created and used?

Imagine a farmhouse landlocked on all sides by fields, half a mile from the nearest road. The farmhouse and the fields are in separate ownership. How does the owner of the farmhouse get to the road? The answer to be found in the law of easements.

An easement is the right of one landowner to make use of another nearby piece of land for the benefit of his own land. An easement may take many forms, however the most commonly encountered easements are as follows:

The classic case of Re: Ellenborough Park [1956] Ch. 131 sets out the four essential characteristics of an easement which are as follows:

So, what does all that mean? First, it will be noted that the concept of dominant and servient land is central to the existence of an easement. The dominant land is the land owned by the owner of the right – the farmhouse in our above example. The easement is described as “appurtenant” to the dominant land. The servient land is the land which bears the burden of the easement, and in our example would be the fields running down to the road. The dominant and servient owners must be different people.

When it is said that the easement must “accommodate” the dominant land, this means that there must be some direct beneficial impact on the land itself – the easement should not exist only for the personal benefit of the owner. This generally means that the dominant land will be situated next to to the servient land. In Hill v Tupper (1863) 159 ER 51 it was held that an exclusive right to put pleasure boats on a canal was not an easement – the right did not “accommodate” the land, rather it only benefitted the business of the owner of the right.

Finally, the easement must be capable of forming the subject matter of a grant. This is because an easement is a registrable property right, and therefore must be capable of being granted by deed, even if it has not been so granted. Therefore, all of the necessary legal formalities must be capable of being complied with, for example:

There are a number of ways in which an easement can be created. The first is by an express grant by the servient owner to the dominant owner, or by the express reservation of the right when the dominant owner sells part of his land to the servient owner. An expressly granted or reserved easement will only be a legal interest in land if it is created by deed and, in respect of registered land, completed by registration.

In some cases, an easement may be created by implication. An easement will only be implied if: