89R2393 DRS-F
 
  By: Middleton S.B. No. 1009
 
 
 
A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 
AN ACT
  relating to the adoption of the Uniform Easement Relocation Act.
         BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
         SECTION 1.  Chapter 5, Property Code, is amended by adding
  Subchapter H to read as follows:
  SUBCHAPTER H. UNIFORM EASEMENT RELOCATION ACT
         Sec. 5.251.  SHORT TITLE. This subchapter may be cited as
  the Uniform Easement Relocation Act.
         Sec. 5.252.  DEFINITIONS. In this subchapter:
               (1)  "Appurtenant easement" means an easement tied to
  or dependent on ownership or occupancy of a unit or a parcel of real
  property.
               (2)  "Conservation easement" means a nonpossessory
  property interest created for one or more of the following
  conservation purposes:
                     (A)  retaining or protecting the natural, scenic,
  wildlife, wildlife habitat, biological, ecological, or open space
  values of real property;
                     (B)  ensuring the availability of real property
  for agricultural, forest, outdoor recreational, or open space uses;
                     (C)  protecting natural resources, including
  wetlands, grasslands, and riparian areas;
                     (D)  maintaining or enhancing air or water
  quality;
                     (E)  preserving the historical, architectural,
  archeological, paleontological, or cultural aspects of real
  property; or
                     (F)  any other purpose under Chapter 183, Natural
  Resources Code.
               (3)  "Dominant estate" means an estate or interest in
  real property benefited by an appurtenant easement.
               (4)  "Easement" means a nonpossessory property
  interest that:
                     (A)  provides a right to enter, use, or enjoy real
  property owned by or in the possession of another; and
                     (B)  imposes on the owner or possessor a duty not
  to interfere with the entry, use, or enjoyment permitted by the
  instrument creating the easement or, in the case of an easement not
  established by express grant or reservation, the entry, use, or
  enjoyment authorized by law. A duty not to interfere can be
  inferred from the scope and nature of:
                           (i)  a grant or reservation; or
                           (ii)  the entry, use, or enjoyment
  authorized by law.
               (5)  "Easement holder" means:
                     (A)  in the case of an appurtenant easement, the
  dominant estate owner; or
                     (B)  in the case of an easement in gross, public
  utility easement, conservation easement, or negative easement, the
  grantee of the easement or a successor.
               (6)  "Easement in gross" means an easement not tied to
  or dependent on ownership or occupancy of a unit or a parcel of real
  property.
               (7)  "Lessee of record" means a person holding a
  lessee's interest under a recorded lease or memorandum of lease.
               (8)  "Negative easement" means a nonpossessory
  property interest whose primary purpose is to impose on a servient
  estate owner a duty not to engage in a specified use of the estate.
               (9)  "Person" means an individual, estate, business or
  nonprofit entity, public corporation, government or governmental
  subdivision, agency, or instrumentality, or other legal entity.
               (10)  "Public utility easement" means a nonpossessory
  property interest in which the easement holder is a publicly
  regulated or publicly owned utility under federal law or law of this
  state or a municipality. The term includes an easement benefiting
  an intrastate utility, an interstate utility, a utility
  cooperative, a common carrier pipeline, a county, a municipality,
  or any entity created or operating under:
                     (A)  Section 52, Article III, Texas Constitution;
                     (B)  Section 59, Article XVI, Texas Constitution;
                     (C)  Chapter 375, Local Government Code;
                     (D)  Chapter 431, Transportation Code; or
                     (E)  Chapter 49, Water Code.
               (11)  "Real property" means an estate or interest in,
  over, or under land, including structures, fixtures, and other
  things that by custom, usage, or law pass with a conveyance of land
  whether or not described or mentioned in the contract of sale or
  instrument of conveyance. The term includes the interest of a
  lessor and lessee and, unless the interest is personal property
  under law of this state other than this subchapter, an interest in a
  common-interest community.
               (12)  "Record," used as a noun, means information that
  is inscribed on a tangible medium or that is stored in an electronic
  or other medium and is retrievable in perceivable form.
               (13)  "Security instrument" means a mortgage, deed of
  trust, security deed, contract for deed, lease, or other record
  that creates or provides for an interest in real property to secure
  payment or performance of an obligation, whether by acquisition or
  retention of a lien, a lessor's interest under a lease, or title to
  the real property. The term includes:
                     (A)  a security instrument that also creates or
  provides for a security interest in personal property;
                     (B)  a modification or amendment of a security
  instrument; and
                     (C)  a record creating a lien on real property to
  secure an obligation under a covenant running with the real
  property or owed by a unit owner to a common-interest community
  association.
               (14)  "Security-interest holder of record" means a
  person holding an interest in real property created by a recorded
  security instrument.
               (15)  "Servient estate" means an estate or interest in
  real property that is burdened by an easement.
               (16)  "Unit" means a physical portion of a
  common-interest community designated for separate ownership or
  occupancy with boundaries described in a declaration establishing
  the common-interest community.
               (17)  "Utility cooperative" means a nonprofit entity
  whose purpose is to deliver a utility service, such as electricity,
  oil, natural gas, water, sanitary sewer, storm water, or
  telecommunications, to its customers or members and includes an
  electric cooperative, rural electric cooperative, rural water
  district, and rural water association.
         Sec. 5.253.  SCOPE; EXCLUSIONS. (a) Except as otherwise
  provided in Subsection (b), this subchapter applies to an easement
  established by express grant or reservation or by prescription,
  implication, necessity, estoppel, or other method.
         (b)  For purposes of this subchapter, any of the following
  changes or modifications is considered to be a relocation of an
  easement:
               (1)  a change to the physical location of an easement;
               (2)  a change to the dimensions of an easement; or
               (3)  the modification of a blanket, undefined, or
  general easement to define the specific physical location of the
  easement.
         (c)  This subchapter may not be used to relocate:
               (1)  a public utility easement, conservation easement,
  or negative easement; or
               (2)  an easement the proposed location of which would
  encroach on an area of an estate burdened by a conservation easement
  or would interfere with the use or enjoyment of a public utility
  easement or an easement appurtenant to a conservation easement.
         (d)  This subchapter does not apply to relocation of an
  easement by consent.
         Sec. 5.254.  RIGHT OF SERVIENT ESTATE OWNER TO RELOCATE
  EASEMENT. A servient estate owner may relocate an easement under
  this subchapter only if the relocation does not materially:
               (1)  lessen the utility of the easement;
               (2)  after the relocation, increase the burden on the
  easement holder in its reasonable use and enjoyment of the
  easement;
               (3)  impair an affirmative, easement-related purpose
  for which the easement was created;
               (4)  during or after the relocation, impair the safety
  of the easement holder or another entitled to use and enjoy the
  easement;
               (5)  during the relocation, disrupt the use and
  enjoyment of the easement by the easement holder or another
  entitled to use and enjoy the easement, unless the servient estate
  owner substantially mitigates the duration and nature of the
  disruption;
               (6)  impair the physical condition, use, or value of
  the dominant estate or improvements on the dominant estate; or
               (7)  impair the value of the collateral of a
  security-interest holder of record in the servient estate or
  dominant estate, impair a real property interest of a lessee of
  record in the dominant estate, or impair a recorded real property
  interest of any other person in the servient estate or dominant
  estate.
         Sec. 5.255.  COMMENCEMENT OF CIVIL ACTION. (a) To obtain an
  order to relocate an easement under this subchapter, a servient
  estate owner must commence a civil action.
         (b)  A servient estate owner that commences a civil action
  under Subsection (a):
               (1)  shall serve a summons and petition on:
                     (A)  the easement holder whose easement is the
  subject of the relocation;
                     (B)  a security-interest holder of record of an
  interest in the servient estate or dominant estate;
                     (C)  a lessee of record of an interest in the
  dominant estate; and
                     (D)  except as otherwise provided in Subdivision
  (2), any other owner of a recorded real property interest if the
  relocation would encroach on an area of the servient estate or
  dominant estate burdened by the interest; and
               (2)  is not required to serve a summons and petition on
  the owner of a recorded real property interest in oil, gas, or
  minerals unless the interest includes an easement to facilitate
  oil, gas, or mineral development.
         (c)  A petition under this section must state:
               (1)  the intent of the servient estate owner to seek the
  relocation;
               (2)  the nature, extent, and anticipated dates of
  commencement and completion of the proposed relocation;
               (3)  the current and proposed locations of the
  easement;
               (4)  the reason the easement is eligible for relocation
  under Section 5.253;
               (5)  the reason the proposed relocation satisfies the
  conditions for relocation under Section 5.254; and
               (6)  that the servient estate owner has made a
  reasonable attempt to notify the holders of any public utility
  easement, conservation easement, or negative easement on the
  servient estate or dominant estate of the proposed relocation.
         (d)  At any time before the court renders a final order in an
  action under Subsection (a), a person served under Subsection
  (b)(1)(B), (C), or (D) may file a document, in recordable form, that
  waives the person's rights to contest or obtain relief in
  connection with the relocation or subordinates the person's
  interests to the relocation.  On filing of the document, the court
  may order that the person is not required to answer or participate
  further in the action.
         Sec. 5.256.  REQUIRED FINDINGS; ORDER. (a) The court may
  not approve relocation of an easement under this subchapter unless
  the servient estate owner:
               (1)  establishes that the easement is eligible for
  relocation under Section 5.253; and
               (2)  satisfies the conditions for relocation under
  Section 5.254.
         (b)  An order under this subchapter approving relocation of
  an easement must:
               (1)  state that the order is issued in accordance with
  this subchapter;
               (2)  recite the recording data of the instrument
  creating the easement, if any, and any amendments;
               (3)  identify the immediately preceding location of the
  easement;
               (4)  describe in a legally sufficient manner the new
  location of the easement;
               (5)  describe mitigation required of the servient
  estate owner during relocation;
               (6)  refer in detail to the plans and specifications of
  improvements necessary for the easement holder to enter, use, and
  enjoy the easement in the new location;
               (7)  specify conditions to be satisfied by the servient
  estate owner to relocate the easement and construct improvements
  necessary for the easement holder to enter, use, and enjoy the
  easement in the new location;
               (8)  include a provision for payment by the servient
  estate owner of expenses under Section 5.257;
               (9)  include a provision for compliance by the parties
  with the obligation of good faith under Section 5.258; and
               (10)  instruct the servient estate owner to record an
  affidavit, if required under Section 5.259(a), when the servient
  estate owner substantially completes relocation.
         (c)  An order under Subsection (b) may include any other
  provision consistent with this subchapter for the fair and
  equitable relocation of the easement.
         (d)  Before a servient estate owner proceeds with relocation
  of an easement under this subchapter, the owner must record, in the
  real property records of each county where the servient estate is
  located, a certified copy of the order under Subsection (b).
         Sec. 5.257.  EXPENSES OF RELOCATION. A servient estate
  owner is responsible for reasonable expenses of relocation of an
  easement under this subchapter, including the expense of:
               (1)  constructing improvements on the servient estate
  or dominant estate in accordance with an order under Section 5.256;
               (2)  during the relocation, mitigating disruption in
  the use and enjoyment of the easement by the easement holder or
  another person entitled to use and enjoy the easement;
               (3)  obtaining a governmental approval or permit to
  relocate the easement and construct necessary improvements;
               (4)  preparing and recording the certified copy
  required by Section 5.256(d) and any other document required to be
  recorded;
               (5)  any title work required to complete the relocation
  or required by a party to the civil action as a result of the
  relocation;
               (6)  applicable premiums for title insurance related to
  the relocation;
               (7)  any expert necessary to review plans and
  specifications for an improvement to be constructed in the
  relocated easement or on the dominant estate and to confirm
  compliance with the plans and specifications referred to in the
  order under Section 5.256(b)(6);
               (8)  payment of any maintenance cost associated with
  the relocated easement that is greater than the maintenance cost
  associated with the easement before relocation; and
               (9)  obtaining any third-party consent required to
  relocate the easement.
         Sec. 5.258.  DUTY TO ACT IN GOOD FAITH. After the court,
  under Section 5.256, approves relocation of an easement and the
  servient estate owner commences the relocation, the servient estate
  owner, the easement holder, and other parties in the civil action
  shall act in good faith to facilitate the relocation in compliance
  with this subchapter.
         Sec. 5.259.  RELOCATION AFFIDAVIT. (a) If an order under
  Section 5.256 requires the construction of an improvement as a
  condition for relocation of an easement, relocation is
  substantially complete, and the easement holder is able to enter,
  use, and enjoy the easement in the new location, the servient estate
  owner shall:
               (1)  record, in the real property records of each
  county where the servient estate is located, an affidavit
  certifying that the easement has been relocated; and
               (2)  send, by certified mail, a copy of the recorded
  affidavit to the easement holder and parties to the civil action.
         (b)  Until an affidavit under Subsection (a) is recorded and
  sent, the easement holder may enter, use, and enjoy the easement in
  the current location, subject to the court's order under Section
  5.256 approving relocation.
         (c)  If an order under Section 5.256 does not require an
  improvement to be constructed as a condition of the relocation,
  recording the order under Section 5.256(d) constitutes relocation.
         Sec. 5.260.  LIMITED EFFECT OF RELOCATION. (a) Relocation
  of an easement under this subchapter:
               (1)  is not a new transfer or a new grant of an interest
  in the servient estate or the dominant estate;
               (2)  is not a breach or default of, and does not
  trigger, a due-on-sale clause or other transfer-restriction clause
  under a security instrument, except as otherwise determined by a
  court under law other than this subchapter;
               (3)  is not a breach or default of a lease, except as
  otherwise determined by a court under law other than this
  subchapter;
               (4)  is not a breach or default by the servient estate
  owner of a recorded document affected by the relocation, except as
  otherwise determined by a court under law other than this
  subchapter;
               (5)  does not affect the priority of the easement with
  respect to other recorded real property interests burdening the
  area of the servient estate where the easement was located before
  the relocation; and
               (6)  is not a fraudulent conveyance or voidable
  transaction under law.
         (b)  This subchapter does not affect any other method of
  relocating an easement permitted under law of this state other than
  this subchapter.
         Sec. 5.261.  NON-WAIVER. The right of a servient estate
  owner to relocate an easement under this subchapter may not be
  waived, excluded, or restricted by agreement even if:
               (1)  the instrument creating the easement prohibits
  relocation or contains a waiver, exclusion, or restriction of this
  subchapter;
               (2)  the instrument creating the easement requires
  consent of the easement holder to amend the terms of the easement;
  or
               (3)  the location of the easement is fixed by the
  instrument creating the easement, another agreement, previous
  conduct, acquiescence, estoppel, or implication.
         SECTION 2.  Subchapter H, Chapter 5, Property Code, as added
  by this Act, applies to an easement created before, on, or after the
  effective date of this Act.
         SECTION 3.  This Act takes effect September 1, 2025.