Raul-02
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- Aug 23, 2021
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I did a case where the town was trying to force all the landowners to go on town water. The town lost. But in the people's republic of CA this might fly.
The cemetery across from my mother wanted to drill a well but the town wouldn't let them. Instead they have to tie into the town system which was just put in on the road which forms the other side of the tract. They still would have to bring the pipeline another 1000 feet.I did a case where the town was trying to force all the landowners to go on town water. The town lost. But in the people's republic of CA this might fly.
Municipalities and their Constitutionally ignorant elected officials are the Greasest things for young lawyers wanting to make a mark, get a case in the federal reporters, and maybe, get to argue before the Supreme Court.The cemetery across from my mother wanted to drill a well but the town wouldn't let them. Instead they have to tie into the town system which was just put in on the road which forms the other side of the tract. They still would have to bring the pipeline another 1000 feet.
Or you could use your house things as normal. Use your well for everything else. Maybe that garden. Wash that car. California is changing from the place to be, to the place to leave.The city could assume that if you aren't paying a water utility, you have a well. So it would be pretty easy to determine who has one to begin with.
And when there isn't any water because people have wasted too much on lawns and cars?Or you could use your house things as normal. Use your well for everything else. Maybe that garden. Wash that car.
Hey, if you have land, and water is under that land, it is your water. I wonder how your argument would be if they found oil on your land. Maybe even a vein of mineral? It'd probably be a little bit different I imagine.And when there isn't any water because people have wasted too much on lawns and cars?
At my last house I wish town water came down my road. Well water was awful, had a very "swampy" taste and odor. Neighbors all had the same issues, some had expensive filtration systems which made it less bad. It got so I'd go to a roadside spring a couple miles away for my drinking water.I did a case where the town was trying to force all the landowners to go on town water. The town lost. But in the people's republic of CA this might fly.
That depends on where you live. In many western states buying a piece of property doesn't necessarily convey water or mineral rights.Hey, if you have land, and water is under that land, it is your water. I wonder how your argument would be if they found oil on your land. Maybe even a vein of mineral? It'd probably be a little bit different I imagine.
I figure water rights would be surface water. I don't see how they could do sub terranian water. Though they do oil rights here. I'm right near the Haynesville Shale. Already oil wells everywhere, and one company just finished 613 more, and that's just one company. Lithium is here too, they get it out of bromine.That depends on where you live. In many western states buying a piece of property doesn't necessarily convey water or mineral rights.