Things attached to real property or, by their nature, belonging with real property; e g , an easement or a right of way
Those rights, privileges, and improvements that belong to and pass with the transfer of real property but are not necessarily a part of the property, such as rights-of-way, easements, water rights, and property improvements
rights that go along with ownership of a particular piece of property, such as air rights or mineral rights; they are ordinarily transferred with the property, but may, in some cases, be sold separately
the rights attached to real property In medieval times, it included grazing rights, payment of fines, a pew in church, etc
Those rights, privileges and improvements that belong to and pass with the transfer of real property but are not necessarily a part of the property, such as right of ways, easements, and property improvements
Somethimg which is outside the real propety itself, but belongs to the land and is joined thereto It adds to greater enjoyment of the land A right-of-way is an appurtenance
An accessory connected to a primary property used in conjunction with the primary property; usually permanently affixed (i e a crane on a ship) [ITDS] anything attached to the land and therefore part of the property and subject to being passed to a new owner if the property is sold An appurtenance may be something tangible, such as a barn, garage, driveway or septic system, or abstract, such as an easement [OTS]
Something annexed to another thing which may be transferred incident to it That which belongs to another thing as a barn, dwelling, garage, or orchard, is incident to the land to which it is attached
That which belongs to something else and thus passes with the property Examples would include riparian rights, easements, barns and other outbuildings, gardens and orchards
Something that, although detached, stands as part of another thing An attachment or appendage to something else Used often in a real estate context where an "appurtenance" may be, for example, a right-of-way over water, which, although physically detached, is part of the legal rights of the owner of another property
- A right or privilege that is a part of the ownership of property, such as a right of way to a highway across the land of another Water right are also an example
A right or entitlement which forms part of the ownership of a property and which passes to a new owner when title passes (i e an easement or right of way over another property)
Something annexed to another thing which may be transferred incident to it That which belongs to another thing, as a barn, dwelling, garage, or orchard is incident to the land to which it is attached
Something belonging to something else, either attached or not, such as a barn to a house, or an easement to land The appurtenance is part of the property and passes with it upon sale or other transfer
Anything which is a part of, or annexed to real property, either attached or not, such as a building, or an easement, that it will pass as part of the property upon sale
Something which is outside the property itself, but belongs to the land and is joined thereto; eg a road over another's land providing an access (right-of-way) is an appurtenance
Any right or privilege which belongs to and passes with land Anything so annexed to land or used with it that it will pass with the conveyance of the land, such as a barn, garage or easement
Anything that becomes your property because it is attached or closely related to your land upon purchase It may be a structure, such as a well, barn or garage; or it might be a right or interest enjoyed by the previous owner, such as an easement (See Easement)
A right or privilege that is a part of the ownership of property, such as a right of way to a highway across the land of another Water rights are also an example
Improvements, rights and privileges which are not necessarily a part of the actual real property, but which are normally conveyed with the real property, i e , buildings, rights of way, easements
That which belongs to something else; an adjunct; an appendage; an accessory; something annexed to another thing more worthy; in common parlance and legal acceptation, something belonging to another thing as principal, and which passes as incident to it, as a right of way, or other easement to land; a right of common to pasture, an outhouse, barn, garden, or orchard, to a house or messuage