Property Ownership
A prescriptive easement in Vermont is created by:
AA written agreement between neighbors
BLong-term open, notorious, hostile, and continuous use of another's land for the required period✓ Correct
CA court order granting emergency access
DRecording a notice with the town clerk
Explanation
A prescriptive easement arises through long-term use of another's property that is open, notorious, hostile (without permission), continuous, and for the statutory period — similar to adverse possession but for a right-of-way rather than full ownership.
Related Vermont Property Ownership Questions
- Vermont's 'avulsion' differs from accretion in that it involves:
- In Vermont, adverse possession requires continuous, open, hostile, and exclusive use for:
- Vermont defines personal property (personalty) as:
- Vermont's use value appraisal (current use) program requires that land remain in the program for at least how many years to avoid a land use change tax?
- Vermont's recording statute protects:
- A Vermont 'landlocked' parcel that has no road access to a public highway may gain access through:
- A life estate in Vermont grants the life tenant:
- A riparian rights owner in Vermont has the right to:
Practice More Vermont Real Estate Questions
1,500+ questions covering all exam topics. Start free — no signup required.
Take the Free Vermont Quiz →