Creation
Like an easement, profits can be created ''expressly'' by an agreement between the property owner and the owner of the profit, or by ''prescription'', where the owner of the profit has made "open and notorious" use of the land for a continuous and uninterrupted statutory period.Types
A profit can be ''appurtenant'' (owned by an adjacent landowner, and tied to the use of the adjacent land) or ''in gross''. Appurtenant. An appurtenant profit may ''only'' be used by the owner of the adjacent property. A properly recorded profit will remain even if the ownership of the land upon which the profit exists changes hands. In Gross. By contrast, a profit ''in gross'' can be assigned or otherwise transferred by its owner. Courts will construe a profit as being in gross unless the profit is expressly designated as being appurtenant. Therefore, profits by prescription will virtually always be profits in gross. Like a commercial easement in gross, a profit in gross is completely alienable. Profits can also be ''exclusive'' (guaranteeing the owner of the profit that no other person will be given the right to collect the specified resources on the land).Termination
Termination of a profit can occur by a number of means, including: * '' merger'' - if the owner of the profit acquires the land to which it applies, there is no longer any need for a separate right to take resources off it. * '' release'' - the owner of the profit can execute a contract to surrender the profit to the owner of the land. * '' abandonment'' - the owner of the profit ceases to make use of it for a sufficient length of time to lead a reasonable owner to believe that it will no longer be used. * '' misuse'' - if a profit is used in such a way that it places a burden on the servient estate, then it will be terminated.England and Wales
Creation
In English law, as a general rule, ''profits à prendre'' may be created in five different ways: express grant, reservation, implied grant, prescription, and by statute. Depending on the type of ''profit à prendre'' in question, there may be restrictions as to which methods of creation may be used.Express grant and reservation
= Express grant
= The owner of an estate in land may expressly grant a ''profit à prendre'' over their estate.= Reservation
= Where the owner of an estate in land sells part of their estate, but retains the other part, a ''profit-à-prendre'' may be created by reservation. This is actually a re-grant made by the purchaser of the newly created estate in land from which the owner of the original estate in land may benefit. This process is commonly referred to as ''reservation'' because the owner of the original estate in land has effectively reserved some of the rights they had previously enjoyed as owner of what is now part of the newly created estate in land. For example, the owner of= Formalities
= In order for a ''profit à prendre'' created by express grant or reservation to take effect at law, it must be created by deed. In order for a deed to be valid, the formalities set out in section 1 of the Law of Property (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1989 must be satisfied. If a deed is not used, or if it is not valid, the ''profit à prendre'' may only take effect in equity.Implied grant
= Law of Property Act 1925
= ''Profits à prendre'' may be impliedly granted under section 62 of the= Necessity
= If it can be shown that without a ''profit à prendre'', the dominant tenement will be incapable of enjoyment, an implied grant of such a profit may be found by the courts. In practice, this is unlikely to succeed.= Common intention
= If it can be shown that the parties intended for one to grant a ''profit à prendre'' from which other could benefit, but that for some reason a deed to that effect was not executed, an implied grant of such a profit may be found by the courts.= ''Wheeldon v Burrows''
= UnlikePrescription
= Common law prescription
= For a ''profit à prendre'' to be created through prescription at common law, the claimant must show that the profit has been in continuous use since time immemorial, which was defined as 1189 by the= Prescription Act 1832
= Section 1 of the= Lost modern grant
= Generally, under doctrine of the lost modern grant, if a claimant shown a ''profit à prendre'' has been in use for 20 years, it will be presumed that there was an express grant of such a profit, but that the deed has since been lost. This presumption is not rebuttable. The doctrine of the lost modern grant is an example of aStatute
''Profits à prendre'' may be expressly created by statute.Enforcement
The beneficiary of a ''profit à prendre'' may enforce their rights throughExtinguishment
Express release
Owners of a ''profit à prendre'' may expressly release the servient tenement from the burden of the ''profit à prendre''. In order for express release to take effect at law, a deed must be executed by all of the beneficiaries; where a deed is not used, express release may only take effect in equity.Statute
''Profits à prendre'' may be extinguished by statute, either expressly or impliedly. Express statutory extinguishment occurs where a statute expressly provides that a ''profit à prendre'' is to be extinguished. Implied statutory extinguishment occurs where a statute does not expressly provide that a ''profit-à-prendre'' is extinguished, but does contain express provisions inconsistent with a continued existence of a ''profit à prendre''.Unity of seisin
Where the freehold estates in both the dominant and servient land come into the ownership of the same person, there will be unity of ownership. Unity of ownership is not sufficient on its own to bring about the extinguishment of a ''profit à prendre''. Where the same person is in occupation of both the dominant land and servient land, there will be unity of possession. Unity of occupation is not sufficient on its own to bring about the extinguishment of a ''profit à prendre''. Where the freehold estates in both the dominant and servient land come into both the ownership and possession of the same person, there is unity of seisin. Where there is unity of seisin, any ''profits à prendre'' the dominant tenement enjoys over the servient tenement will be extinguished.Merger
Where the servient tenement is a freehold reversion, and the dominate tenement a leasehold, if the owner of the leasehold becomes the owner of the freehold reversion, a ''profit à prendre'' over the freehold reversion annexed to the leasehold will become extinguished through merger.Abandonment
''Profits à prendre'' cannot be extinguished through mere non-use for a long period of time; there must also be intention on the part of the beneficiary for their rights to be abandoned. Intention may be express or implied.Exhaustion
It is possible for the servient tenement to become exhausted of the ''fructus naturales'' the beneficiary of a profit may take. If the ''fructus naturales'' are not capable of replenishment, the ''profit à prendre'' will be extinguished through exhaustion. If the ''fructus naturales'' are capable of replenishment, the profit will merely be suspended until such a time that the ''fructus naturales'' have replenished.Excessive use
Excessive use by a beneficiary is not capable of extinguishing a ''profit à prendre'', but it is capable of causing the beneficiary's rights to exercise it to be suspended until the excessive use ceases.Exclusivity
Several profits
Several profits, also referred to as sole profits, grant the beneficiary (or beneficiaries, provided each person is identifiable from the moment of its creation) an exclusive right to enjoy the benefits over the servient tenement. The extent of the exclusivity is such that the owner of the servient tenement will be prohibited from collecting the specified ''fructus naturales'' from their own land, unless the right to do so has been reserved. The owner of the servient tenement will also be unable to grant the same profit to another person. Where the type of ''profit à prendre'' is not specified, it will not usually be presumed by the courts to be a several profit, except in the case of a right to fish, which is presumed to be an exclusive right. Several profits may be rights of common if over common land. There is no statutory definition for rights of common.Profits in common
Profits in common grant a number of persons, including the owner of the servient tenement, the right to enjoy the benefits over the servient tenement. All profits in common are rights of common.Types
Profits appurtenant
The benefits of profits appurtenant are annexed to a dominant tenement. In order for a ''profit à prendre'' to be classified as a profit appurtenant, the four requirements set out by the= Registration
= Profits appurtenant created over a registered servient tenement on or after 13 October 2003 (the date on which the relevant provisions of theProfits appendant
In feudal England, when a lord of the manor granted an= Restrictions on creation
= '' Quia Emptores'', an act of the English Parliament dating back to 1290, continues to prevent the creation of new profits appendant.= Registration
= ''Profits à prendre'' deemed to be rights of common are incapable of substantive registration with HM Land Registry. Consequently, there are no profits appendant registered within the land registration system.Profits ''in gross''
Profits ''in gross'' are ''profits à prendre'' created for the benefit of a person or persons, not for the benefit of a dominant tenement. Profits ''in gross'', unlike profits appurtenant, may be expressed to be unlimited.= Restrictions on creation
= The lack of a dominant tenement means profits ''in gross'' cannot be created by prescription under the Prescription Act 1832. For the same reason, it is not possible for a profit ''in gross'' to be created by necessity.= Registration
= Provided that the servient tenement is a freehold or leasehold with more than seven years remaining, profits ''in gross'' created over that registered servient tenement on or after 13 October 2003 must be substantively registered with HM Land Registry in order to take effect at law. Unless and until substantive registration is completed, any such profit ''in gross'' may take effect in equity only. A profit ''in gross'' under these circumstances may be registered with its own title. Profits ''in gross'' created over a registered servient tenement on or after 13 October 2003, where the servient tenement is a leasehold of seven years or less, must also be substantively registered with HM Land Registry. Such profits, however, cannot be registered with its own title; instead, the burden of the profit will be entered into the charges register (part of the title register) for the servient tenement. Profits ''in gross'' created on or after 13 October 2003 over an unregistered servient tenement need not be substantively registered with HM Land Registry in order to take effect at law. Such a profit may, however, be voluntarily registered, provided it is over a freehold estate or over a leasehold estate with more than seven years remaining. Where a profit ''in gross'' is a right of common, it cannot be registered within the land registry system, but will instead fall within the remit of the commons registration system.Profits ''pur cause de vicinage''
Profits ''pur cause de vicinage'' ( Norman French for “because of vicinity”) is a ''profit à prendre'' concerning the grazing of cattle on commons of pasture. Profits ''pur cause de vicinage'' arise where two commons of pasture are immediately adjacent and open to each other (i.e., not fenced off from each other), and cattle grazing on one common of pasture have been able to stray onto the other common of pasture. The Law Commission does not consider profits ''pur cause de vicinage'' to be profits proper, given they can only arise where there is a common of pasture, and that there is no grant by the owner of the servient tenement (the owner of the common of pasture). Nevertheless, some sources do consider profits ''pur cause de vicinage'' to be rights of common proper.= Registration
= Profits ''pur cause de vicinage'' cannot be substantively registered with HM Land Registry. The Commons Commissioners, who were responsible for settling disputes as to the registration of rights of common under the Commons Registration Act 1965, have generally held that profits ''pur cause de vicinage'' cannot be registered as rights of common either.Ireland
Notes
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