Los Gatos, California
Los Gatos real estate, neighborhoods, condos, houses, homes, market trends, history, events, lifestyle, parks, events, businesses, home, Mary Pope-Handy
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Sep. 25, 2009
The Los Gatos Town Council has decided to spend some of the proceeds from the Vasona land sale last year to acquire 2.7 acres of land along University Avenue, where a youth sports complex will be built, according to the San Jose Mercury News.
The Merc says that the council plans to hold hearings to get town input on how to use the land. Soccer fields (non regulation sized) are planned. No doubt the skatepark issue will resurface.
Mary's personal note: It always surprises me when a large purchase like this (or the decision to build a new library) comes without consultation of the Los Gatos residents/voters. Of course, our elected officials are supposed to make decisions on many things for us. I am not sure that I'm too comfortable with a multi-million dollar decision being made without input, though, or when input is only sought after the fact for how to use something purchased - not whether to make the purchase. Many will certainly be happy about the land, and it's agreed that we need more soccer fields.
Aug. 7, 2007
What's an easement? In a nutshell, it is the right to use someone else's property.
The most common types of easements are ones we can't easily escape: they are for power, water, perhaps phone lines. The utility companies have a right to go onto your land to get to the water pipes outside your home or to the power or telephone lines in your backyard. They have a right to go there and do not need your permission, generally speaking, if the need arises. (That said, they usually do give notice unless it's an emergency.)
Easments can be given by the landowner to the person or organization that wants to use it too. This can be done for charitable reasons or for payment and it can involve cash payment for the use of the land. For instance, the right to use a driveway from one parcel to access another might be a great convenience to the person who wants the easment (it might be a much shorter route home than another alternative).
As a charitable example, an easment might be granted by a property owner to the general public to have a shortcut to a park or trail. In this case, the landowner might close the access off once a year and also post a "right to pass by permission" type of notice so that this easement is as a temporary gift and not a permanent loss of rights of the landowner. (An interruption in the use of the easement.)
A "prescriptive easement" is one that happens by accident as far as the landowner is concerned. In this case, others openly and notoriously used the property owner's land without interruption (as a shortcut, a driveway, etc.) for a period of years without the owner objecting or preventing that use. Eventually, the right to use the land for those purposes can become permanent. To form a prescriptive easement, the use must be open, notorious, for a period of years, and uninterrupted.
To give a real-life example, there were two homes in Cambrian Park with fences and gates - we'll call them lots A and B. The the fence for Lot A extended further toward the street than that of Lot B. And the gate for Lot A opened not onto its own front yard, but onto the front yard of Lot B. (The gate was at a 90 degree angle to where it should have been.)
If the homeowner of Lot B did not object, but allowed the folks in Lot A to go through their gate and onto the land of Lot B for a period of time, it would become a prescriptive easement.
What to do? The only thing to do to prevent the prescriptive easement being formed is to object and to request (insist upon) the gate being rebuilt. Hopefully that would not require legal action. But to allow someone to cross your property without objection for a period of years is to invite the formation of a prescriptive easement.
When buying or selling a home, easments will be listed on the preliminary title report. Normally these are simply the utility easements. Not every easement is recorded, though, so do not rely on the preliminary title report for assurance that there are no easements. Home or landowners must pay attention to the use of the land and be aware of any risk of the formation of prescriptive easements. Homebuyers should check the land too and see if it appears that the property is being used by others.
Could anything be worse for a homeowner than a prescriptive easement?
Yes.
Adverse possession. We'll discuss that later this week.
Jun. 19, 2007
Categorized in: LG Lifestyle
Most days, I drive pretty close to the large old orchard that hugs Highway 17 on one side, Lark Avenue on another, and Los Gatos Boulevard on yet another. It is one of the few open spaces left which is privately owned.
It's big. It is a goldmine.
In a town where land is worth about a million dollars an acre (less if roads and services are needed or if the slope is steep), these 40 acres, the Yuki Farms property, are worth more than just a small fortune.
I've often wondered what is to become of them: housing? a strip mall? another high-end car dealership?
Apparently I'm not the only one wondering. The Los Gatos Observer reports that it could well become a conference center or a hotel. The current owner wants it somehow related to the hospitality industry.
Saratoga, our neighbor just to the north, has a Heritage Orchard Park as a commemoration of the area's orchard past. I would love to see at least part of these 40 acres set aside for something like this.
Now I just need to figure out how to let my voice be heard in Los Gatos....
How about you? How would you like to see this land be used?
Mar. 29, 2007
Categorized in: Los Gatos Events
Have you ever noticed the Verizon Building on Los Gatos Boulevard? It has an architectural style that screams "1960's" with apparently no windows facing the front but a strange sort of grille decorating the facade instead. It backs into one edge of Blossom Manor (a neighborhood in Los Gatos - well, mostly in the county but with a Los Gatos mailing address - that was once apricot orchards). Verizon, with its huge network (I'm assuming you've seen the ads), needed more space and wanted to do an expansion on the current site. The neighbors didn't agree that this was a good plan. The result: the Town of Los Gatos is going to buy the property from Verizon, for $3.2 million, and it may well become the new police headquarters. I'll keep you posted!
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