§ 1 Rent Increase Notice Requirement
The law requires landlords to give homeowners written notice at least 90 days before raising the rent.
The law requires landlords to give homeowners written notice at least 90 days before raising the rent.
This law tells people where to get help with registration, vehicle titles, and tax questions.
This law explains the five basic ways someone can become the legal owner of property.
This law lets a property owner take a small right of way across someone else's land to install utilities like water, gas, or electricity, but only if strict conditions are met.
This law lets a property owner temporarily use a neighbor’s land to fix or rebuild their own property, but only if certain conditions are met and a court approves.
Living in a place gives you some rights against others, but you can't use that to sue to clear the title unless you have actually earned full ownership through long possession.
This law says you cannot gain ownership of public land, utilities, or other property just by using it for the legally required time; public property stays owned by the government no matter how long someone occupies it.
This law stops people from getting a legal right to use someone else's land just because they used it for a long time, as long as the owner puts a specific sign.
This law lets private land owners let the public use their land for recreation, but the public can't automatically get a permanent right unless the owner gives a written offer of dedication; otherwise, a right can only develop after five years of continuous use without the owner stopping it.
If you attach something to someone else's land without permission to take it away, it becomes the landowner's property unless they let you keep it or you have a special removal right.