California Title and Easement Dispute Lawyer: Strategic Use of Civ Code § 1102.13 in San Diego
California Title and Easement Dispute Lawyer Leeran S. Barzilai handles quiet title, boundary, and prescriptive easement claims in San Diego Superior Court. Strategic use of Civ Code § 1102.13. Free consult.
“Key Takeaways”
- TDS Is Not a Contract: Under Batta v. Hunt (2024), statements in a Transfer Disclosure Statement are informational only—not contractual warranties . However, Civil Code § 1102.13 provides liability for actual damages caused by willful or negligent failures to disclose .
- Anti-SLAPP Exposure: Slander of title claims based on statements made in furtherance of public interest missions—including to city councils and in judicial proceedings—may trigger anti-SLAPP motions under CCP § 425.16 .
- Implied Easements: Under Romero v. Shih (2024), easements may be created by implication based on the parties’ intent at the time of severance—and judicial clarification of existing rights does not constitute a taking .
- Prescriptive Easements: A prescriptive easement requires 5 years of continuous, hostile, open, and notorious use under Civil Code § 1008. Permission defeats prescription entirely.
- Quiet Title Statute: Quiet title actions are governed by CCP § 760.010 et seq. and require naming all adverse claimants with detailed property descriptions.
- San Diego Venues: Unlimited civil cases ($35,000+) file at the Hall of Justice (330 W Broadway) . Boundary and easement disputes often require licensed land surveys and expert testimony.
Full Pillar Page
Why Title and Easement Disputes Require Specialized Knowledge
A California Title and Easement Dispute Lawyer must navigate a complex web of recorded documents, historical use evidence, statutory requirements, and recent appellate decisions that can make or break a case. Unlike general real estate litigation, these disputes often hinge on events that occurred decades ago—long before the current owners acquired their property.
At Leeran S. Barzilai, A Prof. Law Corp. , we maintain our office at 4501 Mission Bay Dr. #3c—minutes from the Hall of Justice. When a boundary dispute arises or a neighbor claims an easement across your land, we immediately order title reports, obtain licensed surveys, and analyze the chain of title dating back to the original severance.
The Local Knowledge Advantage
| San Diego Courthouse | Address | What We File There |
|---|---|---|
| Hall of Justice (Central) | 330 W Broadway, San Diego, CA 92101 | Unlimited quiet title actions, easement disputes, slander of title claims |
| Madge Bradley Building | 1409 4th Ave, San Diego, CA 92101 | Limited civil real estate cases ($35,000 or less) |
| San Diego County Recorder’s Office | 1600 Pacific Highway, San Diego, CA 92101 | Recording lis pendens, retrieving historical deeds |
The Transfer Disclosure Statement Trap: Batta v. Hunt
In Batta v. Hunt (October 2024), Division 8 of the Second District Court of Appeal addressed a critical question: Does a real estate transfer disclosure statement create contractual obligations regarding easements and property conditions?
The Facts
The purchaser of an apartment building sought to quiet title for its continuous use of parking spaces and a garbage receptacle on the seller’s neighboring property. In the TDS, the seller “described an easement for parking and trash bins.” At trial, the seller argued: (i) that the TDS was inadmissible parol evidence that could not be used to contradict the sales contract which did not provide for an easement; and (ii) the “TDS was insufficient to constitute a separate agreement to grant an easement” .
The Holding
The appellate court agreed with the seller, holding that the TDS was merely informational . The court reasoned:
- The seller’s signature did not convert the TDS into a binding contract or offer
- Rather, the seller’s signature reflects the statement that the information in the TDS was true and correct, nothing more
- The buyer’s signature simply reflects receipt of the document
This holding is consistent with the statutory language of Civil Code § 1102.6, which requires the TDS to state in all capital letters: “THIS STATEMENT IS A DISCLOSURE OF THE CONDITION OF THE ABOVE DESCRIBED PROPERTY IN COMPLIANCE WITH § 1102 OF THE CIVIL CODE AS OF (DATE) _________. IT IS NOT A WARRANTY OF ANY KIND BY THE SELLER(S)” .
Similarly, Section II of the TDS form provides in bold capital letters: “THIS INFORMATION IS A DISCLOSURE AND IS NOT INTENDED TO BE PART OF ANY CONTRACT BETWEEN THE BUYER AND SELLER” .
The Statutory Remedy: Civil Code § 1102.13
Importantly, Batta does not render the TDS legally toothless. Under Civil Code § 1102.13, “any person who willfully or negligently violates or fails to perform any duty prescribed by any provision of this article shall be liable in the amount of actual damages suffered by a transferee” .
Case law is replete with examples of sellers who suffered liability for failure to honestly or accurately comply with the statute’s requirements—it is just that a claim for breach of contract is not among the available remedies .
Strategic note for buyers: If a seller misrepresents or fails to disclose material facts in the TDS, you have a statutory damages claim under § 1102.13—not a breach of contract claim. We structure complaints accordingly, avoiding demurrers that would doom a contract theory.
Strategic note for sellers: The TDS is not a warranty, but it must be truthful. Willful or negligent misrepresentations expose you to actual damages. We counsel sellers on accurate disclosure and defend against claims that improperly seek contract remedies.
The CAR RPA and Paragraph 11
The standard California Association of Realtors Residential Purchase Agreement (RPA) contains Paragraph 11, which contractually requires the seller to provide the TDS as specified in § 1102 et seq. . However, as the Batta court implicitly recognized, this paragraph is nothing more than a reiteration of statutory requirements. Contractually addressing a disclosure mandated by law does not convert that disclosure item into a contract term .
Anti-SLAPP Exposure in Slander of Title Cases: Gearing v. Coastside Land Trust
In Gearing v. Coastside Land Trust (January 2026), the California Court of Appeal addressed whether statements made by a nonprofit organization about property values constitute protected activity under the anti-SLAPP statute .
The Facts
Coastside Land Trust (CLT) is a non-profit organization with a mission to preserve and protect open space environment in Half Moon Bay. Gearing owned several undeveloped parcels and alleged that CLT conspired with the City to diminish the value of his property through false statements suggesting the lots “were not legally recognized and were essentially valueless,” including statements that the lots were “paper” lots, subject to “accelerated bluff erosion,” “on or near unstable soil,” “not entitled to a water permit,” and located in an “Environmentally Sensitive Habitat” .
Gearing sued for slander of title based on statements made in court proceedings, “to the HMB city council,” and in “private” conversations with CLT’s sponsors and donors and other Half Moon Bay residents .
The Anti-SLAPP Analysis
The trial court granted CLT’s anti-SLAPP motion, and the Court of Appeal affirmed . The court found the statements constituted protected activity under three subdivisions of CCP § 425.16(e) :
| Subdivision | Application |
|---|---|
| (e)(1) | Statements made before a legislative, executive, or judicial proceeding |
| (e)(3) | Statements made in a place open to the public or a public forum |
| (e)(4) | Conduct in furtherance of constitutional rights in connection with a public issue (catchall) |
Strategic note: Property owners considering slander of title claims must analyze whether the allegedly defamatory statements relate to matters of public interest or were made in connection with litigation or government proceedings. If so, you face an anti-SLAPP motion requiring early proof of probability of prevailing—and potential mandatory fee awards if you lose.
The Probability of Prevailing Burden
If the defendant shows the claim arises from protected activity, the burden shifts to you to demonstrate a probability of prevailing on the merits. This requires:
- Substantive evidence supporting each element of your claim
- Declarations, documents, and admissible evidence
- Legal arguments showing your claim has “minimal merit”
Strategic note: At Leeran S. Barzilai, A Prof. Law Corp. , we analyze every slander of title claim for anti-SLAPP exposure before filing. If your claim involves protected activity, we either plead around the protected activity or prepare the evidentiary showing required to survive the motion.
Implied Easements and Judicial Takings: Romero v. Shih
In Romero v. Shih (February 2024), the California Supreme Court addressed two critical issues in easement litigation: the standard for implied easements and whether judicial clarification of easement rights constitutes a taking .
Implied Easement Standard
The court held that easements may be created by implication, and “if there is clear evidence that the parties to the 1986 sale intended for the neighboring parcel’s preexisting use of the area to continue after separation of title, the law obligates courts to give effect to that intent” .
Under Civil Code § 1104, an implied easement passes at the time of the transfer that divides the grantor’s estate. The court remanded for evidentiary findings on the parties’ intent at the time of severance .
The Judicial Taking Argument Rejected
The property owner argued that the trial court’s finding of an implied easement worked a judicial taking. The California Supreme Court disagreed, holding:
- The trial court’s finding did not create new property rights; it instead clarified the respective rights of the neighbors as determined by the intentions of the parties at the time the two adjacent parcels were severed and sold to third parties
- Under Stop the Beach Renourishment, Inc. v. Florida Dept. of Environmental Protection (2010), when courts merely clarify and elaborate property entitlements that were previously unclear, they cannot be said to have taken an established property right
Strategic note: This decision provides a powerful defense against takings claims in easement litigation—but only if properly raised. In Romero, the property owner forfeited the argument by failing to raise it below .
Prescriptive Easements: The Five-Year Rule
Under Civil Code § 1008, a prescriptive easement requires five years of continuous, hostile, open, and notorious use . Key elements:
- Continuous: Use without interruption for the statutory period
- Hostile: Use without the owner’s permission
- Open and notorious: Use that would put a reasonable owner on notice
Strategic note: Permission defeats prescription entirely. If the owner grants permission—even orally—the use is no longer hostile, and the prescriptive clock resets.
The Batta Inconsistency Trap
As Batta illustrates, a prescriptive easement requires adverse use without permission, while an easement by implication or oral grant necessitates a finding that the owner gave permission . Pleading both inconsistently can doom your case.
Strategic note: We analyze the facts carefully before filing. If the evidence shows permission, we pursue implied or oral grant theories. If the evidence shows adverse use without permission, we pursue prescriptive easement claims. Never both.
Quiet Title Actions: Procedural Requirements
Quiet title actions are governed by Code of Civil Procedure § 760.010 et seq. Key requirements include:
- Verified complaint: Must be verified
- Property description: Full legal description of the property
- Adverse claims: Identification of all adverse claimants
- Lis pendens: Recording of notice of pendency of action
- Service: Personal service on all known adverse claimants
Strategic note: For unknown claimants, service by publication may be available under CCP § 763.010 after diligent search.
Slander of Title: Elements and Privileges
Slander of title requires:
- Publication: Communication to third persons
- Falsity: The statement was false
- Malice: The statement was made with malice
- Damage: Resulting pecuniary loss
Litigation Privilege
Under Civil Code § 47(b) , statements made in judicial proceedings are absolutely privileged. In Gearing, statements made in a declaration filed in the eminent domain action were protected under this privilege .
Common Interest Privilege
Statements made to persons with a common interest may be protected under Civil Code § 47(c) .
Strategic note: We analyze all applicable privileges before filing slander of title claims. If the statements are absolutely privileged, the claim fails as a matter of law.
The Litigation Timeline: From Dispute to Resolution
1. Pre-Filing Investigation (Days 1-45)
- Title search: Order preliminary title report from San Diego County Recorder’s Office
- Survey: Obtain licensed land survey for boundary disputes
- Historical use investigation: Gather affidavits, photographs, and documentary evidence of use
- Statute of limitations audit: Determine applicable limitations period
- Anti-SLAPP analysis: Evaluate whether statements involve protected activity
2. Drafting the Complaint (Days 30-60)
A title or easement complaint must allege:
- Property description: Legal description sufficient to identify the property
- Plaintiff’s interest: The plaintiff’s ownership or other interest
- Defendant’s adverse claim: The basis for dispute
- Facts supporting easement: For prescriptive claims: dates, nature, and continuity of use
- Prayer for relief: Quiet title, damages, declaratory relief, injunctive relief
3. Filing and Lis Pendens (Days 45-75)
- e-Filing: File at Hall of Justice (unlimited) or Madge Bradley (limited)
- Lis pendens: Record notice of pendency of action—only after filing complaint
- Service: Personal service on all known adverse claimants
4. Responsive Pleadings and Motions (Days 75-120)
Defendant has 30 days to respond. Common responses include:
- Demurrer: Challenges legal sufficiency
- Anti-SLAPP motion: If claim targets protected activity, within 60 days—stays discovery
- Answer: Admits or denies, raises affirmative defenses (statute of limitations, laches, estoppel)
5. Discovery (Months 4-12)
| Discovery Method | Scope |
|---|---|
| Interrogatories | Identify use, permission, knowledge, witnesses |
| Document demands | Deeds, contracts, correspondence, photographs |
| Depositions | Parties, neighbors, surveyors, historical witnesses |
| Expert discovery | Surveyors, appraisers, title experts |
6. Dispositive Motions (Months 8-18)
- Summary judgment based on statute of limitations
- Summary adjudication of easement elements
- Motions to expunge lis pendens
7. Trial and Beyond (Months 12-30)
- Trial: Bench trial at Hall of Justice
- Post-judgment enforcement: Recording of judgment, lien enforcement
Damages in Title and Easement Disputes
Compensatory Damages
| Claim Type | Damages Available |
|---|---|
| Slander of title | Pecuniary loss resulting from disparagement |
| Trespass | Damage to property, loss of use |
| Loss of use | Rental value during period of exclusion |
| Diminution in value | If easement or cloud permanently affects value |
Severance Damages
When an easement or title defect affects only part of a property, you may recover severance damages for injury to the remaining portion. These claims require before-and-after valuation analysis.
Pre-Judgment Interest
Under Civil Code § 3287, you’re entitled to 10% per annum interest on liquidated damages from the date they were due.
Example calculation:
- Lost rental income: $25,000
- Date of loss: January 1, 2025
- Judgment date: January 1, 2026
- Pre-judgment interest: $25,000 × 10% = $2,500
Costs of Suit
Under CCP § 1033.5, recoverable costs include:
- Filing fees
- Service of process fees
- Deposition costs
- Survey costs (with court approval)
- Expert witness fees (with court approval)
Attorney’s Fees
Generally not available absent contract or statute. However, if a contract (such as an easement agreement) includes an attorney’s fees clause, fees may be recoverable under Civil Code § 1717.
FAQ Section
Answer: A prescriptive easement requires 5 years of continuous, hostile, open, and notorious use under Civil Code § 1008. The claim accrues at the end of the 5-year period, giving the user the right to file a quiet title action.
Answer: No. Under Batta v. Hunt (2024), the TDS is informational only—not a contract or warranty . However, under Civil Code § 1102.13, you may recover actual damages for willful or negligent failures to disclose.
Answer: Possibly, but you face anti-SLAPP exposure. Under Gearing v. Coastside Land Trust (2026), statements made to government bodies in furtherance of public interest missions constitute protected activity under CCP § 425.16 .
Answer: No. Under Romero v. Shih (2024), when courts merely clarify property entitlements that were previously unclear—determining the parties’ intent at the time of severance—they do not take established property rights .
Answer: A prescriptive easement requires adverse use without permission for five years. An easement by implication requires proof that the parties intended the use to continue at the time of severance—which inherently involves permission .
Answer: Unlimited quiet title actions (over $35,000) file at the Hall of Justice (330 W Broadway) . Limited civil cases ($35,000 or less) file at the Madge Bradley Building (1409 4th Ave) .
Answer: You must prove continuous, hostile, open, and notorious use for five years. Permission defeats hostility entirely. Evidence may include affidavits, photographs, and testimony from neighbors and witnesses.
Answer: Yes. You may recover severance damages for injury to the remaining portion of your property. These claims require before-and-after valuation analysis by qualified appraisers.
Answer: Slander of title has a 1-year statute of limitations under CCP § 340(c) for defamation. The claim accrues upon publication of the false statement.
Answer: Almost always. Licensed land surveys are essential evidence in boundary disputes. We work with experienced San Diego surveyors to establish true property lines.
Contact Our Office
Leeran S. Barzilai, A Prof. Law Corp.
4501 Mission Bay Dr. #3c
San Diego, CA 92109
(619) 436-7544
San Diego property owners deserve a California Title and Easement Dispute Lawyer who understands the Batta TDS trap, anti-SLAPP exposure, and every local rule at the Hall of Justice. Whether you’re facing a neighbor’s prescriptive easement claim, a slander of title lawsuit, or a quiet title action, we provide the local knowledge and litigation experience your case requires.
Your free consultation includes:
- 30-minute phone or video meeting with a San Diego-based attorney
- Review of your deeds, surveys, and dispute documentation
- Title search and chain of title analysis
- Prescriptive use investigation
- Anti-SLAPP exposure assessment
- Clear explanation of San Diego Superior Court procedures as outlined in the San Diego Superior Court Local Rules
- Answers to all your questions—no pressure, no obligation
Call today or visit our Mission Bay office—minutes from the Hall of Justice—to discuss how we can protect your property rights.
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California Title and Easement Dispute Lawyer Subpages
ENGLISH PAGES (Primary)
1. California Quiet Title Litigation Lawyer
URL: /california-quiet-title-litigation-lawyer-san-diego
We file quiet title actions to resolve disputes over property ownership, eliminating adverse claims, forged deeds, and competing interests through court determination under CCP § 760.010 et seq. Our quiet title complaints include detailed legal descriptions, name all adverse claimants, and seek to extinguish invalid claims, with cases filed at the Hall of Justice and lis pendens recorded with the San Diego County Recorder’s Office.
Contact: Leeran S. Barzilai, A Prof. Law Corp. | (619) 436-7544 | 4501 Mission Bay Dr. #3c, San Diego, CA 92109
2. California Easement Establishment Lawyer
URL: /california-easement-establishment-lawyer-san-diego
We establish easements by express grant, implication, necessity, or prescription, proving the legal requirements for each type of easement under California law. Our easement establishment cases include analysis of historical use, intent at severance under Romero v. Shih, and the five-year prescriptive period for adverse use claims.
Contact: Leeran S. Barzilai, A Prof. Law Corp. | (619) 436-7544 | 4501 Mission Bay Dr. #3c, San Diego, CA 92109
3. California Easement Termination Lawyer
URL: /california-easement-termination-lawyer-san-diego
We terminate easements through abandonment, merger, prescription, or court action when the easement is no longer necessary or has been misused. Our termination practice includes proving non-use coupled with intent to abandon, challenging easements that exceed their original scope, and recording termination documents with the San Diego County Recorder’s Office.
Contact: Leeran S. Barzilai, A Prof. Law Corp. | (619) 436-7544 | 4501 Mission Bay Dr. #3c, San Diego, CA 92109
4. California Prescriptive Easement Lawyer
URL: /california-prescriptive-easement-lawyer-san-diego
We establish or defend prescriptive easement claims requiring five years of continuous, hostile, open, and notorious use without permission under Civil Code § 1008. Our prescriptive easement practice includes gathering affidavits, photographs, and witness testimony to prove adverse use, or defending property owners by demonstrating permission that defeats hostility.
Contact: Leeran S. Barzilai, A Prof. Law Corp. | (619) 436-7544 | 4501 Mission Bay Dr. #3c, San Diego, CA 92109
5. California Boundary Line Agreement Lawyer
URL: /california-boundary-line-agreement-lawyer-san-diego
We draft and record boundary line agreements to resolve uncertainties between adjoining landowners, establishing permanent property lines through mutual agreement. Our boundary agreement practice includes surveying, title review, and preparation of documents for recording with the San Diego County Recorder’s Office to prevent future disputes.
Contact: Leeran S. Barzilai, A Prof. Law Corp. | (619) 436-7544 | 4501 Mission Bay Dr. #3c, San Diego, CA 92109
6. California Encroachment Removal Lawyer
URL: /california-encroachment-removal-lawyer-san-diego
We pursue encroachment removal actions against neighbors whose structures, fences, or improvements intrude onto your property, seeking injunctive relief and damages. Our encroachment cases include survey evidence, prescriptive rights analysis for longstanding encroachments, and negotiation of boundary adjustments or removal agreements.
Contact: Leeran S. Barzilai, A Prof. Law Corp. | (619) 436-7544 | 4501 Mission Bay Dr. #3c, San Diego, CA 92109
7. California Dedication Lawyer
URL: /california-dedication-lawyer-san-diego
We handle dedication disputes involving offers to dedicate property for public use, acceptance or rejection by public entities, and revocation of unused dedications. Our dedication practice includes analysis of subdivision maps, public improvement plans, and quiet title actions to clear abandoned dedications from title.
Contact: Leeran S. Barzilai, A Prof. Law Corp. | (619) 436-7544 | 4501 Mission Bay Dr. #3c, San Diego, CA 92109
8. California Riparian Rights Lawyer
URL: /california-riparian-rights-lawyer-san-diego
We protect riparian rights for property owners adjacent to natural watercourses, including rights to reasonable use of water for beneficial purposes. Our riparian rights practice includes disputes over water diversion, upstream interference, and reasonable use determinations under California’s complex water rights system.
Contact: Leeran S. Barzilai, A Prof. Law Corp. | (619) 436-7544 | 4501 Mission Bay Dr. #3c, San Diego, CA 92109
9. California Littoral Rights Lawyer
URL: /california-littoral-rights-lawyer-san-diego
We protect littoral rights for property owners adjacent to lakes and oceans, including rights to access, use, and reasonable enjoyment of shoreline property. Our littoral rights practice includes disputes over public access, shoreline erosion, and regulatory takings claims affecting waterfront property.
Contact: Leeran S. Barzilai, A Prof. Law Corp. | (619) 436-7544 | 4501 Mission Bay Dr. #3c, San Diego, CA 92109
10. California Right of Way Lawyer
URL: /california-right-way-lawyer-san-diego
We establish, enforce, and terminate rights of way for access across another’s property, including road access, utility corridors, and driveway easements. Our right of way practice includes analysis of recorded documents, historical use evidence, and litigation over scope, maintenance obligations, and interference with access rights.
Contact: Leeran S. Barzilai, A Prof. Law Corp. | (619) 436-7544 | 4501 Mission Bay Dr. #3c, San Diego, CA 92109
中文页面 (CHINESE PAGES)
圣地亚哥产权与地役权纠纷中文律师服务
1. 加州 quiet title 诉讼律师
URL: /chinese-california-quiet-title-litigation-lawyer-san-diego
我们提起 quiet title 诉讼解决财产所有权争议,根据 CCP § 760.010 等消除 adverse 索赔、伪造契约和 competing 利益。我们的 quiet title 诉状包括详细的法律描述,列出所有 adverse 索赔人,并寻求使无效索赔,案件在正义宫提起,lis pendens 在圣地亚哥县记录办公室记录。
联系我们: Leeran S. Barzilai, A Prof. Law Corp. | (619) 436-7544 | 4501 Mission Bay Dr. #3c, San Diego, CA 92109
2. 加州地役权设立律师
URL: /chinese-california-easement-establishment-lawyer-san-diego
我们通过 express grant、implication、necessity 或 prescription 设立地役权,根据加州法律证明每种地役权的法律要求。我们的地役权设立案件包括分析历史使用、根据 Romero v. Shih 的 severance 时 intent 以及 adverse 使用索赔的五年 prescriptive 期限。
联系我们: Leeran S. Barzilai, A Prof. Law Corp. | (619) 436-7544 | 4501 Mission Bay Dr. #3c, San Diego, CA 92109
3. 加州地役权终止律师
URL: /chinese-california-easement-termination-lawyer-san-diego
我们通过 abandonment、merger、prescription 或法院行动终止地役权,当地役权不再必要或被滥用时。我们的终止实践包括证明非使用 coupled 与放弃意图,挑战超出原始范围的地役权,并在圣地亚哥县记录办公室记录终止文件。
联系我们: Leeran S. Barzilai, A Prof. Law Corp. | (619) 436-7544 | 4501 Mission Bay Dr. #3c, San Diego, CA 92109
4. 加州 prescriptive 地役权律师
URL: /chinese-california-prescriptive-easement-lawyer-san-diego
我们根据民法典§ 1008 设立或辩护 prescriptive 地役权索赔,要求连续、敌对、公开和 notorious 使用五年未经许可。我们的 prescriptive 地役权实践包括收集宣誓书、照片和证人证词以证明 adverse 使用,或通过证明许可来辩护业主 defeating hostility。
联系我们: Leeran S. Barzilai, A Prof. Law Corp. | (619) 436-7544 | 4501 Mission Bay Dr. #3c, San Diego, CA 92109
5. 加州边界线协议律师
URL: /chinese-california-boundary-line-agreement-lawyer-san-diego
我们起草和记录边界线协议,解决相邻土地所有者之间的不确定性,通过 mutual 协议建立永久产权线。我们的边界协议实践包括调查、产权审查以及准备文件在圣地亚哥县记录办公室记录,以防止 future 纠纷。
联系我们: Leeran S. Barzilai, A Prof. Law Corp. | (619) 436-7544 | 4501 Mission Bay Dr. #3c, San Diego, CA 92109
6. 加州 encroachment 移除律师
URL: /chinese-california-encroachment-removal-lawyer-san-diego
我们对邻居的建筑物、围栏或设施侵入您财产的 encroachment 提起移除诉讼,寻求禁令救济和损害赔偿。我们的 encroachment 案件包括调查证据、对长期 encroachment 的 prescriptive 权利分析以及边界调整或移除协议的谈判。
联系我们: Leeran S. Barzilai, A Prof. Law Corp. | (619) 436-7544 | 4501 Mission Bay Dr. #3c, San Diego, CA 92109
7. 加州 dedication 律师
URL: /chinese-california-dedication-lawyer-san-diego
我们处理涉及为公共使用 dedication 财产、公共实体的接受或拒绝以及未使用 dedications 的 revocation 的 dedication 纠纷。我们的 dedication 实践包括分析 subdivision 地图、公共改善计划以及从产权中清除 abandoned dedications 的 quiet title 诉讼。
联系我们: Leeran S. Barzilai, A Prof. Law Corp. | (619) 436-7544 | 4501 Mission Bay Dr. #3c, San Diego, CA 92109
8. 加州 riparian 权利律师
URL: /chinese-california-riparian-rights-lawyer-san-diego
我们保护毗邻自然水道的业主的 riparian 权利,包括为有益目的合理使用水的权利。我们的 riparian 权利实践包括水 diversion 纠纷、上游 interference 以及根据加州复杂水权制度的合理使用确定。
联系我们: Leeran S. Barzilai, A Prof. Law Corp. | (619) 436-7544 | 4501 Mission Bay Dr. #3c, San Diego, CA 92109
9. 加州 littoral 权利律师
URL: /chinese-california-littoral-rights-lawyer-san-diego
我们保护毗邻湖泊和海洋的业主的 littoral 权利,包括访问、使用和合理享受 shoreline 财产的权利。我们的 littoral 权利实践包括公共访问争议、shoreline 侵蚀以及影响 waterfront 财产的监管征收索赔。
联系我们: Leeran S. Barzilai, A Prof. Law Corp. | (619) 436-7544 | 4501 Mission Bay Dr. #3c, San Diego, CA 92109
10. 加州通行权律师
URL: /chinese-california-right-way-lawyer-san-diego
我们设立、执行和终止跨越他人财产访问的通行权,包括道路访问、utility 走廊和车道地役权。我们的通行权实践包括分析记录文件、历史使用证据以及关于范围、维护义务和干扰访问权利的诉讼。
联系我们: Leeran S. Barzilai, A Prof. Law Corp. | (619) 436-7544 | 4501 Mission Bay Dr. #3c, San Diego, CA 92109
עמודים בעברית (HEBREW PAGES)
עורך דין סכסוכי בעלות וזכויות שימוש בקליפורניה בעברית
1. עורך דין ליטיגציית הבהרת בעלות בקליפורניה
URL: /hebrew-california-quiet-title-litigation-lawyer-san-diego
אנו מגישים תביעות הבהרת בעלות ליישוב סכסוכי בעלות, סילוק תביעות נוגדות ושטרות מזויפים. כתבי התביעה כוללים תיאור משפטי מפורט ומבקשים לבטל תביעות לא תקפות.
צור קשר: Leeran S. Barzilai, A Prof. Law Corp. | (619) 436-7544 | 4501 Mission Bay Dr. #3c, San Diego, CA 92109
2. עורך דין קביעת זכויות שימוש בקליפורניה
URL: /hebrew-california-easement-establishment-lawyer-san-diego
אנו קובעים זכויות שימוש במתנה מפורשת, מכוח הכרח, מכוח ההסכמה או מכוח התיישנות. התיקים כוללים ניתוח שימוש היסטורי וכוונת הצדדים בזמן הפרדת הבעלות.
צור קשר: Leeran S. Barzilai, A Prof. Law Corp. | (619) 436-7544 | 4501 Mission Bay Dr. #3c, San Diego, CA 92109
3. עורך דין סיום זכויות שימוש בקליפורניה
URL: /hebrew-california-easement-termination-lawyer-san-diego
אנו מסיימים זכויות שימוש באמצעות נטישה, מיזוג, התיישנות או הליך משפטי. הפרקטיקה כוללת הוכחת אי-שימוש בצירוף כוונה לנטוש ואתגור זכויות החורגות מההיקף המקורי.
צור קשר: Leeran S. Barzilai, A Prof. Law Corp. | (619) 436-7544 | 4501 Mission Bay Dr. #3c, San Diego, CA 92109
4. עורך דין זכויות שימוש מכוח התיישנות בקליפורניה
URL: /hebrew-california-prescriptive-easement-lawyer-san-diego
אנו קובעים או מגינים על תביעות זכויות שימוש מכוח התיישנות הדורשות שימוש רציף, עוין, גלוי וידוע למשך חמש שנים. הפרקטיקה כוללת איסוף תצהירים ועדויות להוכחת שימוש עוין.
צור קשר: Leeran S. Barzilai, A Prof. Law Corp. | (619) 436-7544 | 4501 Mission Bay Dr. #3c, San Diego, CA 92109
5. עורך דין הסכמי קווי גבול בקליפורניה
URL: /hebrew-california-boundary-line-agreement-lawyer-san-diego
אנו עורכים ורושמים הסכמי קווי גבול ליישוב אי-ודאויות בין בעלי נכסים שכנים. הפרקטיקה כוללת סקרים, בדיקת בעלות והכנת מסמכים לרישום.
צור קשר: Leeran S. Barzilai, A Prof. Law Corp. | (619) 436-7544 | 4501 Mission Bay Dr. #3c, San Diego, CA 92109
6. עורך דין סילוק הסגת גבול בקליפורניה
URL: /hebrew-california-encroachment-removal-lawyer-san-diego
אנו תובעים סילוק הסגת גבול כאשר מבנים או גדרות פולשים לנכס שלך, תובעים סעדים מצווים ופיצויים. התיקים כוללים ניתוח זכויות מכוח התיישנות להסגות גבול ארוכות טווח.
צור קשר: Leeran S. Barzilai, A Prof. Law Corp. | (619) 436-7544 | 4501 Mission Bay Dr. #3c, San Diego, CA 92109
7. עורך דין הקדשת מקרקעין בקליפורניה
URL: /hebrew-california-dedication-lawyer-san-diego
אנו מטפלים בסכסוכי הקדשת מקרקעין הכוללים הצעות להקדשה לשימוש ציבורי. הפרקטיקה כוללת ניתוח מפות חלוקה ותביעות הבהרת בעלות לסילוק הקדשות נטושות.
צור קשר: Leeran S. Barzilai, A Prof. Law Corp. | (619) 436-7544 | 4501 Mission Bay Dr. #3c, San Diego, CA 92109
8. עורך דין זכויות נחלים בקליפורניה
URL: /hebrew-california-riparian-rights-lawyer-san-diego
אנו מגינים על זכויות נחלים לבעלי נכסים הצמודים לנתיבי מים טבעיים. הפרקטיקה כוללת סכסוכי הסחת מים וקביעות שימוש סביר.
צור קשר: Leeran S. Barzilai, A Prof. Law Corp. | (619) 436-7544 | 4501 Mission Bay Dr. #3c, San Diego, CA 92109
9. עורך דין זכויות חופים בקליפורניה
URL: /hebrew-california-littoral-rights-lawyer-san-diego
אנו מגינים על זכויות חופים לבעלי נכסים הצמודים לאגמים ואוקיינוסים. הפרקטיקה כוללת סכסוכי גישה ציבורית ושחיקת קו חוף.
צור קשר: Leeran S. Barzilai, A Prof. Law Corp. | (619) 436-7544 | 4501 Mission Bay Dr. #3c, San Diego, CA 92109
10. עורך דין זכויות מעבר בקליפורניה
URL: /hebrew-california-right-way-lawyer-san-diego
אנו קובעים, אוכפים ומסיימים זכויות מעבר לגישה דרך נכס של אחר. הפרקטיקה כוללת ניתוח מסמכים רשומים וראיות שימוש היסטורי.
צור קשר: Leeran S. Barzilai, A Prof. Law Corp. | (619) 436-7544 | 4501 Mission Bay Dr. #3c, San Diego, CA 92109
Main Office Contact (All Pages)
Leeran S. Barzilai, A Prof. Law Corp.
4501 Mission Bay Dr. #3c | San Diego, CA 92109
(619) 436-7544
English: California Title and Easement Dispute Lawyer — Serving San Diego Property Owners at the Hall of Justice
中文: 加州产权与地役权纠纷律师 — 在正义宫为圣地亚哥业主提供服务
עברית: עורך דין סכסוכי בעלות וזכויות שימוש בקליפורניה — משרת בעלי נכסים בסן דייגו בהיכל הצדק











