servitude de passage de réseaux

English translation: utility servitude

05:42 Jun 24, 2020
French to English translations [PRO]
Law/Patents - Real Estate
French term or phrase: servitude de passage de réseaux
Acte authentique de vente

"Aux termes dudit acte a été constituée une servitude de passage de réseaux sur une largeur de 4,5 mètres :
- grevant les parcelles cadastrées section CH numéros 000 et 000
- au profit de la parcelle cadastrée section CH numéro 000 objet des présentes.
Les conditions d'exercice de la servitude sont ci-dessous littéralement reproduites :
ETABLISSEMENT DE LA SERVITUDE - CONDITIONS D'EXERCICE.
Servitude de passage de divers réseaux
A titre de servitude réelle et perpétue/le, le propriétaire du fonds servant constitue au profit du fonds dominant et de ses propriétaires successifs un droit de passage perpétuel en tréfonds de toutes canalisations tant d'alimentation en eau que d'évacuation des eaux usées, et de toutes lignes souterraines.
Ce droit de passage profitera aux propriétaires successifs du fonds dominant, à leur famille, ayants-droit et préposés, pour leurs besoins personnels et le cas échéant pour le besoin de leurs activités.
Ce droit de passage s'exercera exclusivement sur une bande d'une largeur de 4,50 mètres."

"networks right of way"? Scant evidence that this is how it is expressed in EN...
Mpoma
United Kingdom
Local time: 14:35
English translation:utility servitude
Explanation:
I don’t entirely disagree with 'easement' BUT French law in this area is strongly based on Roman foundations. Easements are the product of common law and are only broadly equivalent. Any English language legal dictionary will contain 'servitude' so it should be used here imo.

The 'réseaux' fall into water, gas, electricity, telephone etc supply routes.

--------------------------------------------------
Note added at 7 hrs (2020-06-24 13:19:39 GMT)
--------------------------------------------------

I suggest servitude not as a Scottish law twr per Adrian MM, but as the straight translation inro English of the Civil Law term.

The term servitude is also used in PROPERTY LAW. In this context, servitude is used with the term easement, a right of some benefit or beneficial use out of, in, or over the land of another. Although the terms servitude and easement are sometimes used as synonyms, the two concepts differ. A servitude relates to the servient estate or the burdened land, whereas an EASEMENT refers to the dominant estate, which is the land benefited by the right. Not all servitudes are easements because they are not all attached to other land as APPURTENANCES (an appurtenance is an appendage or that which belongs to something else).

Read more: Servitude - Servitudes, Estate, Benefit, and Easement - JRank Articles https://law.jrank.org/pages/10172/Servitude.html#ixzz6QHxzcW...



At CIVIL LAW, real servitudes are divided into two types: rural and urban. Rural servitudes are established for the benefit of a landed estate; examples include a right of way over a servient tenement and a right of access to a spring, sandpit, or coal mine. Urban servitudes are established for the benefit of one building over another; some examples are a right of support, a right to a view, and a right to light. Despite the name urban servitude, the buildings do not have to be in a city.

Servitudes are also classified as positive and negative. A positive servitude requires the owner of the servient estate to permit something to be done on her property by another. A negative servitude does not bind the servient owner in this manner but merely restrains her from using the property in a manner that would impair the easement enjoyed by the owner of the dominant estate.

Read more: Servitude - Servitudes, Estate, Benefit, and Easement - JRank Articles https://law.jrank.org/pages/10172/Servitude.html#ixzz6QHw67L...
Selected response from:

AllegroTrans
United Kingdom
Local time: 14:35
Grading comment
Thanks. Helpful explanations about servitude.
4 KudoZ points were awarded for this answer



Summary of answers provided
3 +4utility easement
SafeTex
4 +2utility servitude
AllegroTrans
4 -1wayleave
Adrian MM.
4 -1right of way (or servitude)
Katarina Peters


  

Answers


42 mins   confidence: Answerer confidence 3/5Answerer confidence 3/5 peer agreement (net): +4
utility easement


Explanation:
Hello Mpoma

Maybe something like this


    https://ghhllc.com/blog/civil-engineering-bid-263835-what-is-a-utility-easement
    https://www.woodardcurran.com/blog/maintaining-utility-easements
SafeTex
France
Local time: 15:35
Works in field
Native speaker of: Native in EnglishEnglish
PRO pts in category: 34

Peer comments on this answer (and responses from the answerer)
agree  Shabelula
1 hr
  -> Thanks

agree  philgoddard: Wayleave is fine too.
1 hr
  -> Thanks

agree  Eliza Hall: This is exactly right. PS to Phil Goddard: "Wayleave" is a UK term; we say "right of way."
9 hrs

agree  Ben Gaia
1 day 15 hrs
  -> Thanks
Login to enter a peer comment (or grade)

1 hr   confidence: Answerer confidence 4/5Answerer confidence 4/5 peer agreement (net): -1
wayleave


Explanation:
'When in doubt, call it a wayleave'.

No need to add utilities - the electric pylons, telephone lines, gas and water connections are implied throughout the EN-speaking world.


    Reference: http://www.proz.com/kudoz/english-to-french/petroleum-eng-sc...
    Reference: http://www.openreach.com/help-and-support/obtaining-wayleave...
Adrian MM.
Austria
Specializes in field
Native speaker of: Native in EnglishEnglish
PRO pts in category: 74

Peer comments on this answer (and responses from the answerer)
neutral  Daryo: "la servitude" could be for any type of beneficiary, like a neighbour with no access to their own land directly from a public highway, not only utilities. It's not ALWAYS "obvious by implication".
3 hrs
  -> Another muddled and biased comment that does not properly analyse a wayleave, plus servitude, as I keep writing, is a Scots law term for easement in E&W. // Anyway, you seem to have learned a new word, even if you don't fully understand the term.

disagree  Eliza Hall: Much too broad ("right-of-way" is the US term and would be wrong for the same reason). This is specifically a utility easement, not a general right to cross land. https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/wayleave
8 hrs
  -> Another muddled and biased comment that does not properly analyse a wayleave, plus servitude, as I keep writing, is a Scots law term for easement in E&W. // Even so, you again seem to have learned a new ÜK land law term.
Login to enter a peer comment (or grade)

3 hrs   confidence: Answerer confidence 4/5Answerer confidence 4/5 peer agreement (net): +2
utility servitude


Explanation:
I don’t entirely disagree with 'easement' BUT French law in this area is strongly based on Roman foundations. Easements are the product of common law and are only broadly equivalent. Any English language legal dictionary will contain 'servitude' so it should be used here imo.

The 'réseaux' fall into water, gas, electricity, telephone etc supply routes.

--------------------------------------------------
Note added at 7 hrs (2020-06-24 13:19:39 GMT)
--------------------------------------------------

I suggest servitude not as a Scottish law twr per Adrian MM, but as the straight translation inro English of the Civil Law term.

The term servitude is also used in PROPERTY LAW. In this context, servitude is used with the term easement, a right of some benefit or beneficial use out of, in, or over the land of another. Although the terms servitude and easement are sometimes used as synonyms, the two concepts differ. A servitude relates to the servient estate or the burdened land, whereas an EASEMENT refers to the dominant estate, which is the land benefited by the right. Not all servitudes are easements because they are not all attached to other land as APPURTENANCES (an appurtenance is an appendage or that which belongs to something else).

Read more: Servitude - Servitudes, Estate, Benefit, and Easement - JRank Articles https://law.jrank.org/pages/10172/Servitude.html#ixzz6QHxzcW...



At CIVIL LAW, real servitudes are divided into two types: rural and urban. Rural servitudes are established for the benefit of a landed estate; examples include a right of way over a servient tenement and a right of access to a spring, sandpit, or coal mine. Urban servitudes are established for the benefit of one building over another; some examples are a right of support, a right to a view, and a right to light. Despite the name urban servitude, the buildings do not have to be in a city.

Servitudes are also classified as positive and negative. A positive servitude requires the owner of the servient estate to permit something to be done on her property by another. A negative servitude does not bind the servient owner in this manner but merely restrains her from using the property in a manner that would impair the easement enjoyed by the owner of the dominant estate.

Read more: Servitude - Servitudes, Estate, Benefit, and Easement - JRank Articles https://law.jrank.org/pages/10172/Servitude.html#ixzz6QHw67L...


AllegroTrans
United Kingdom
Local time: 14:35
Specializes in field
Native speaker of: Native in EnglishEnglish
PRO pts in category: 247
1 corroborated select project
in this pair and field What is ProZ.com Project History(SM)?
Grading comment
Thanks. Helpful explanations about servitude.

Peer comments on this answer (and responses from the answerer)
agree  Daryo
1 hr
  -> thanks

agree  Eliza Hall: That works too, though I prefer "easement" as SafeTex said.
6 hrs
  -> thanks but even in the US there is a distinction, please see above where the difference is explained
Login to enter a peer comment (or grade)

8 hrs   confidence: Answerer confidence 4/5Answerer confidence 4/5 peer agreement (net): -1
right of way (or servitude)


Explanation:
as used in Quebec

Katarina Peters
Canada
Local time: 10:35
Native speaker of: Native in HungarianHungarian, Native in EnglishEnglish
PRO pts in category: 23

Peer comments on this answer (and responses from the answerer)
agree  Libby Cohen: Absolutely. Term used in Quebec/Canada on power and telecom installation projects.
15 mins
  -> Thank you, Libby!

disagree  Eliza Hall: Much too broad. Same problem as Adrian's answer. This is a specific type of easement/servitude, not a general right-of-way.
1 hr

disagree  AllegroTrans: No this is not a simple right of way, it involves public utitlities
1 day 21 hrs
Login to enter a peer comment (or grade)



Login or register (free and only takes a few minutes) to participate in this question.

You will also have access to many other tools and opportunities designed for those who have language-related jobs (or are passionate about them). Participation is free and the site has a strict confidentiality policy.

KudoZ™ translation help

The KudoZ network provides a framework for translators and others to assist each other with translations or explanations of terms and short phrases.


See also:
Term search
  • All of ProZ.com
  • Term search
  • Jobs
  • Forums
  • Multiple search