154NH773;3290535]In this case, the dominant and servient tenants are the same people, so if everyone owing the road, and everone with rights on the road (meaning the same people) deeded the roadway to the town, then the town get all the rights.
can we just say; NO.
very simply put: a dominant tenant is the owner of the dominant tenement which was granted an easement across another person's property.
The servient tenant is the owner of the servient tenement across which the easement was granted to the dominant tenant.
The servient tenant cannot also be a dominant tenant because you cannot grant an easement to yourself across property you own.
On top of everything else, the OP is the servient tenant and what they have been presented shows there was an easement. Unless that easement was still intact it makes no sense for a title company (or whomever did) to make note of it.
and again, even if the dominant tenants signed a deed to their rights (which I believe they cannot actually do since the rights are inherent only by virtue of owning the dominant tenement), no rights greater than they had been granted can be conveyed. Since the easement was not exclusive, the OP as the servient tenant would continue to have the right to use the easement as they desire as long as they did not inhibit the dominant tenants from using it in any way the grant allows.
Then we come to paving; unless the grant allows for paving, that is generally considered an improvement beyond the rights afforded an easement.
The town cannot have "added" conditions to a deed, it had to be signed by those with the rights to sign and therefore they agreed to the conditions.
but with the OP being the dominant tenant, there can be no added rights unless the dominant tenant allows for them.
What I'm thinking is that the deed to the town was signed by ALL, and the previous conditions were extinguished by the new deed. That may not be what happened, but without examining all the relevant deeds it is impossible to know from this post. That's why I recommend a local attorney's review.
actually OP may have a less expensive avenue here. If they purchased buyers title insurance, this would be seen as a claim against the title and they title insurer would investigate the matter.
This is not an unusual situation. The dominent and servient tenants on my private road recently deeded over the roadway to the town and all previous easements were extinguished. The town now has complete control over the use, repair, and maintenance.
again, it does not appear the servient tenant signed over any rights here.