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Every Thing Else Board
Legal rights of ways question
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<blockquote data-quote="greybeard" data-source="post: 1683502" data-attributes="member: 18945"><p>Kinda like that in my county too Kenny. Privacy rights are more important than public's need to know who owns what, tho you can, thru the Central Appraisal District's website, look up a LOT of property tax info without any subscription if you know the owner's name or the property ID#. </p><p></p><p>In 2006, I went to the appraisal district and the tax office to get a copy of a survey on this land and they printed me off a huge copy of it and all the surrounding properties for a couple of $. Probably included 15 different properties if not more. Now tho, you can only get a small copy and only of your own property and partial of those immediately adjoining your own land.</p><p></p><p>A survey copy of a parcel I sold a few years ago, shows a deeded easement. The title company held up closing about a week to make sure the egress/ingress easement was on the deed as well as it being a powerline easement as per written agreement with all previous owners. That easement is my emergency way out if my other road in the opposite direction is closed. </p><p>In layman's terms easements explained:</p><p>[URL unfurl="true"]https://tscra.org/accessing-landlocked-property/[/URL]</p><p></p><p>You can no longer transfer property in Texas if it landlocks someone in.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="greybeard, post: 1683502, member: 18945"] Kinda like that in my county too Kenny. Privacy rights are more important than public's need to know who owns what, tho you can, thru the Central Appraisal District's website, look up a LOT of property tax info without any subscription if you know the owner's name or the property ID#. In 2006, I went to the appraisal district and the tax office to get a copy of a survey on this land and they printed me off a huge copy of it and all the surrounding properties for a couple of $. Probably included 15 different properties if not more. Now tho, you can only get a small copy and only of your own property and partial of those immediately adjoining your own land. A survey copy of a parcel I sold a few years ago, shows a deeded easement. The title company held up closing about a week to make sure the egress/ingress easement was on the deed as well as it being a powerline easement as per written agreement with all previous owners. That easement is my emergency way out if my other road in the opposite direction is closed. In layman's terms easements explained: [URL unfurl="true"]https://tscra.org/accessing-landlocked-property/[/URL] You can no longer transfer property in Texas if it landlocks someone in. [/QUOTE]
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