Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
However, this can be done only if the abutter does not object.
Begin layering it with slices of bread and abutter."
However, the courts will objectively consider a proper case brought by an abutter whose rights have been arguably under-appreciated.
An abutter is a person (or entity) whose property is adjacent to the property of another.
In land use regulations, concerns of an abutter may be given special attention, being the one most likely to suffer specific harm from a hasty, uninformed decision.
Regulations may also provide an abutter with the right to be heard at the hearing, unlike others who must request permission to be heard, at the discretion of the board.
Such action will make it simpler to convey the interest to others in a definitive manner, and also serves as notice that there is a new owner of record, which may be a prerequisite to benefits such as equity loans or judicial standing as an abutter.
Contrarily, regulations may define "abutter" to include only those people who hold record title to an adjacent parcel, thus undermining the rights of tenants, associations and partial owners (e.g., mineral rights and easement owners) to be notified, let alone heard on a proposal.