
Running With the Land
"Running with the land" refers to the rights and covenants in a real estate deed that remain with the land regardless of ownership. The rights are tied to the property (land) and not to the owner and move from deed to deed as the land is transferred from one owner to another. For example, if the owner of a piece of land discovered an oil deposit on their property, they might grant drilling rights to an oil company that owned a neighboring piece of land. If the property owner later sells their land, the drilling rights granted to the oil company would run with the land. There are two types of covenants that run with the land: affirmative, something that the owner is obligated to do, and restrictive, something that property owners must refrain from doing.

What Is Running With the Land?
"Running with the land" refers to the rights and covenants in a real estate deed that remain with the land regardless of ownership. When rights and covenants run with the land when the property changes hands. The rights are tied to the property (land) and not to the owner and move from deed to deed as the land is transferred from one owner to another.



Understanding Running With the Land
There are two types of covenants that are said to run with the land: affirmative and restrictive. An affirmative covenant sets out something that the property owners are obligated to do while a restrictive covenant outlines something that the property owners must refrain from doing. Owners are described as "burdened" by affirmative covenants and they must "enforce" restrictive covenants.
An example of an affirmative covenant that would run with the land is one that requires all homes on the land to be at least a specified square footage. An example of a restrictive covenant that would run with the land might be that no livestock is permitted on the property. Covenants that run with the land are intended to guide orderly land development.
The granting of rights under easements, where an owner allows a party to use a piece of their property in some way, typically does not transfer. An appurtenant easement can be granted in certain circumstances allowing those rights to run with the land.
For example, if the owner of a piece of land discovered an oil deposit on their property, they might grant drilling rights to an oil company that owned a neighboring piece of land. If the property owner later sells their land, the drilling rights granted to the oil company would run with the land.
Appurtenant easements are typically only legal when granted by a property owner to the owner of an adjacent property.
Running With the Land Rights With Easements and Privity
The enforcement or burden of covenants that run with the land can be governed by terms of privity and can come into play with certain easements.
There are cases wherein adjacent lands held by different owners establish covenants that run with the land. This usually is the case when an owner with two adjacent pieces of property sells one parcel to a new owner. The original owner may come to an agreement with the new owner of the second parcel as to how the land can be used in the future. Such a relationship is called horizontal privity, and the agreed-upon covenants would also run with the land for future owners of the second parcel.
In a comparable example, if the owner of two adjacent properties leased one parcel to a tenant and they agreed upon rights and covenants regarding its usage, this would also constitute horizontal privity. The covenants they establish would again run with the land for the second parcel.
For estates and property that is inherited or passed down directly to new owners, this is known as vertical privity. Covenants established by the prior owner could run with the land upon transfer to future owners.
Related terms:
Appurtenance
Appurtenance denotes the attachment of a right or property to a more worthy principal and occurs when the attachment becomes part of the property. read more
Assignee
An assignee is a person, company or entity granted the transfer of property, liabilities, title, or rights from a contract. read more
Covenant
A covenant is a commitment in a bond or other formal debt agreement that certain activities will or will not be undertaken. read more
Deed
A deed is a signed legal document that transfers the title of an asset to a new holder, granting them the privilege of ownership. read more
Easement
An easement in real estate is the right of one party to use the property of another party by paying a fee to the property owner. read more
Encumbrance
An encumbrance is a claim against a property, often impacting its transferability or restricting its use, by a party that is not the owner. read more
Land Trust
A land trust is a legal entity that takes ownership of, or authority over, a piece of property at the behest of the property owner. read more
Landlocked
The real estate term "landlocked" refers to a piece of property totally inaccessible via public thoroughfare, except through an adjacent lot. read more
Privity
Privity is a doctrine of contract law that says contracts are only binding on the parties signing the contract. read more
Right of Egress
The right of egress is the legal right to exit or leave a property and is usually applied in conjunction with the right of ingress. read more