Yeah, community water well is a deal breaker. Can't drill your own well, deal breaker. When it comes to a necessity like water, never be dependent on the generosity of others, they will let you down every time.
New Mexico's government is an absolute disgrace. They're underfunded, and the funds they do have ARE WASTED on REALLY bad things... Like a visiting center in th e middle of nowhere that nobody visits. (It closed down)
you have (conflicting) documents that provide you rights to drill a well -- pursue that and sue the county and developer for enforcing only the methods that are preventing residents ANY rights to water -- either thru the Munez well or thru drilling. If that doesn't work, the home should be declared inhabitable and you should fight to have your mortgage cancelled. Perhaps when the bank risks the mortgages being paid, they will even jump in to help fund the lawsuit against the county. Just get a good lawyer and file a civil suit and a suit for damages - because it's costing you every time you have to drive 50miles to get water and pursue punitive damages for how it's risking your health and well-being to live like you are.
Simple solution.... the developer pays for the drilling of individual wells. With all the conflicting paperwork im sure there are plenry of sympathetic judges who will give at least a partial wlaward to the property owners for reinbursement/contracting of the well.
Depends on who owns the water rights. The developer didn't have the water rights. So who does. I think the county or the state does or even the feds. No judge will touch that. I have homestead water rights. They are primary water rights. We've been sued by the state to take them. Federal judge won't touch that because it would nullify every existing Fed homestead contact of which their are hundreds of thousands.
"Neighbors are now trying to figure out what their next move will be..." Um, sue the developer? It's their fault the residents don't have water access, ignores all attempts to communicate with them, and tho contractually obligated to do so isn't providing water.
Yep, sue them. However there will be very little chance of winning even if the law is on their side. Half of those will be dead before there is any result, if you have enough money you can drag it through the courts for years
Yeah, no drilling, but I'll let you use mine, as long as I like you, that is! But who buys a house with no running water, anyway? I wouldn't even think about it!
My wife and I were looking at moving to AZ/NM/TX areas until I started noticing that the majority of the properties required water the be delivered or you had to buy a water tank on a trailer and go get it filled up. We ended up in ID and couldn’t be happier.
Make developer pay for high end filtering system (contract covers that on having water rights) and developer drill new community wells or hold all payments in court like a renters can (thru court) , bank will side with you to get it done so they can get their money. Please post how this comes out!
Quick and simple temporary fix hire someone to haul in a semi tanker of water a couple of times a week and fill everyone's tank. its cheaper then hauling it your self. Truck pulls up every one waits with their tank and the company can come out 1 to 3 times a week or how ever works best but then everyone does not have to drive the 100 miles round trip
Who would object if they drill their own well? Who would file legal objections? If the developer. then how could he defend when he reneged on his promise to make water available. The county could unilaterally decide not to abide by the agreement with the developer and permit the drilling of additional wells.
state of NM needs to prevet this company from doing business here in NM ever again. Sure wish someone knew where developer lived then could shut off his water see how he likes.
We have a saying in Montana. Whiskey is for drinkin, water is for fighting over. We have 3 Wells and a creek under federal homestead water rights. This doesn't stop out of state and in state people sueing us to get water rights. Costs us thousands of dollars every year in attorney fees. People try to sue so they can sell them to someone else. People are evil.
Simple. Tear up the document stating they can't drill thier own wells and give them a property tax credit in the amount it costs to drill a well. Additionally, hold the developer accountable for a reasonable monetary amount for guaranteeing contracts they couldn't guarantee. The slap on the wrist and fines will keep them from doing it again. The exact amounts to each participant in the case can be worked out by the courts. If New Mexico's state and local governments weren't such a shit show, this could all be fixed in about a week.
There must be a bunch of information missing from this. From what is presented here, it seems that the Developer owned the land the well is on, then sold that land to Muniz , while retaining the right (transferable) to access the well on the property that Muniz now owns. If the developer owned the right to access the well, and transferred that right of access to the homeowners in the subdivision, then it seems like the homeowners have a legal right to access the well. There must be more to the story.
The last contract filed with the county - which states the property owners must provide their own water (i.e. drill their own wells) - should take precedent. After drilling, they should all collectively sue the developer for breach of contract.
They could even do what was done in 1974 in the East Mountains: All the homeowners get together and raise the funds for a single well, with a windmill or solar to power the pump. Much cheaper to dig one community well, especially as they are already used to filling the water tanks. Then sue the developer to reimburse.
Just drill your own well. Force them to take you to court, I they don’t your problem is solved. If they do then file a counter suite fo contract violations for not providing the water. The court will either allow you to drill for the water or enforce the contract that they provide the water.
The folks with the rain catchment and swimming pool, that pool just needs a clear dome on it, with a catchment ring on the inside to gather distilled water. Then store that water in a cool dark place. Lots of options, just takes years of research.
@@diannevaldez8670 LOL, I mean it's taken myself years of research. Making a integrated sustainably expanding system with less than 10k a year, has taken forever, fortunately as I learn little things, some of the big things need to be changed, or relocated. I have really only committed to a few things, so my overall plan has changed as I learn about the environment and it's potential and problems. Really though, if you can maintain a healthy supply of fresh water, your all ready ahead of the game compared to anyone relying on utilities services.
@@forcesightknight I don't know what you will think of this but I follow off grid with doug and stacy. They lived without running water in their house, on their land for years until stacy said she was going to go on strike if doug didn't remedy the situation. His procrastination was due to not knowing where to start. Well, he had friends with different systems and have Amish neighbors. He took what he thought was best for them and got to work. Their system is completely rain water fed. It works fabulously. They didn't spend a lot of money back then on anything. There are a lot of other people who have turned deserts into oasis with just a modest amount of rain water. I live in the desert and have been collecting the materials I need and probably have everything I need but I have back issues that have been holding me back. If you want the names of others that have done this let me know. But for now I hope you visit doug and stacy's RUclips.
I would drill a water well and sue the developer for the cost of it. And I don’t care what the county says if you can or cannot drill a well on your property.
They purchased land with no water rights doesn't matter if the developer was shady you can't drill for water legally without water rights when you buy property in New Mexico.
@@sandysamuelman9205 The county documents indicated they have water rights, but the developer's deeds indicated none. I'd say the county documents trump all.
@@unclesmrgol probably because the developer either leased or sold the water rights to someone other than the people who bought the land. The man who locked the gate had water rights others had access to his well.
My husband and I get phone calls regularly for our pre 1902 water rights for our house we have owned for almost 40 years usually someone like Intel is trying to buy more water in our area. Sad to think you can own the land but maybe not the water. Makes no sense if you don't have an alternative water source.
An army of armed property owners will solve that problem overnight. The well owner will have a bigger concern than theft and property damage. Faster resolution than years of court litigation. You can bet that if the gov't was denied access, the problem would go away overnight.
This is why you never buy property with any covenant restrictions such as a homeowners association property. Number 2, Always have all of your paperwork and closing documents gone over by an attorney.
its an easy fix, after they refuse one time you get it in writing then then get tougher with your neighbors to dig your own well then sew the developer and the land owner for the cost of the new well. Its far better to take actions into your own hands as a "no drilling" contract gets thrown out the moment they stopped holding up there own end of the contract.
I was thinking the same thing.... nearly 70% of homes on the various reservations don't have potable water. Either wells have been contaminated by uranium drilling, or wells ran dry when corporate agriculture dug deeper wells, or the federal government failed to ever deliver on the treaty to begin with.
If it says "no drilling" then its time to start digging. It's not against the law to dig a hole. I got no water rights, and the people up stream divert all the water in the summer. It's ok, the water table wasn't that deep, near the creek.
@@LM-wz9yw that is a deep hole for sure. I would still be digging. When I sighted my land though, I used my desert survival training to spot the place to dig, North slope, bottom of a sand dune with trees already present. It doesn't hurt that the creek is forced to work it's way around a finger of sandstone as it finds its way downstream, in a way creating it's own water table in my valley.
Why dont you contact Mike Reynolds in Taos on water collection and filtration systems. You can catch 400 gallons a year with this process. And you can make distilled water with his water and solar oven sysrem. Happy off grid living to you all.
I smell a class action lawsuit coming. Or if there isn't an HOA, form one and try to use it to pressure the neighbor to let them have access to the well.
They can drink the rain water if they run it through Berkey Filters! OR they can build their own filtration system. It wouldn't be that big a deal to me to survive up there with all that water in the swimming pool. Only $120 investment in 2 filters that would clean and purify about 6,000 gals of water. Definitely more affordable than trying to drill a well. You could tap pipes into the earth, but at 70 years old, that would be near impossible. I offer these filters on my website. It's not our main focus, but we are all about water and "Water Is Life... Every Drop Counts!" www.TheDropOfWater.com
@C Not true. Jesus IS God's Son and worshipping Jesus/GOd is the ONLY true faith. But yes, all other religions are secretly worshipping Lucifer. If you knew the bible book, Daniel, you'd know that eventually EVEN Babylonian King Nebuchadnezzar accepted the One True God, rejecting his pagan gods and is now in Heaven.
Joe Hess unless the HOA power is limited to comunity property (pool park roads etc), or every "home" is timeshare condo etc where multiple people own most units or buildings and almost no individual lives there year round... There is no reason for an HOA.
Shared wells are fairly common. The land owner who locked the gate has that right. This is all about the developer and the county. Bad deal for those people
Sounds like the land owner was ok with it at first. They were getting water from the well for 2 years. Then someone started stealing his stuff so he locked the gate.
They are not that uncommon, my girlfriend owns a house in a subdivision with a community well. When the subdivision was developed (1980's) it was just a little beyond the extent of city Sewer and water, so it was built with a community well and a community septic system. The Septic system failed before she bought her house, and the property owners had to pay to have city sewer extended to the subdivision. The community well continued in service for a while, but eventually the city extends municipal water service to the subdivision.
Learn to pick locks. Take the lock to a locksmith and have keys made. Make sure everyone has a key. Be sure to put the lock back in place after you're done.
They should seek advice as to the validity of the restriction on building personal wells now the company isn't honouring the provision of water. It may well be possible to have the restriction legally lifted, or the current well owners forced to pay to pipe water to a location outside of his property.
Cut the lock and chain...with bolt cutters.. this is New Mexico for ya... Water shortages.. people move here from Florida or what?!? Insect issues In Florida .. flooding issues in Florida... Water issues in New Mexico..no insect issues.. gotta understand the issues and prepare for the state you live.. also Montana and Wyoming.. much more water out there than New Mexico as well..
Sure, as long as you don't have a problem with a neighbor turning his property into a junk yard or deciding to raise swine, all of which would be permissible in any unincorporated area in New Mexico.
@@davmar9923i think the guy that has the water wants their land and cheap. the HOA said no drilling wells because water was being supplied. but now its not so that should cancel everything HOA out. then i would have built a big junk yard even if i never sold a single part.
@@MadsWorld34 Uninformed speculation on the matter is of no value to anyone. This is clearly an issue that can only be solved by a court. In theory, the HOA would bear the cost of legal action, which would in turn be born by all members of the HOA equally.
Plenty. Water rights are serious business in the west. If they don't have the legal right to drill a well, and they drill anyway, whomever owns the rights to that water *will* object.
It's called an easement in rural areas the are not uncommon. If you buy rural property one of the things you should do is check for easements listed on the deed.
@@steven4315 this was not an easement but access to the well. When the property sold the access ended. Nothing was in writing. Should have checked Their own property for water before they bought it.
It would not be tresspassing. A person would first have to be "tresspassed", in writing, from the property, by the property owner. Amd with the agrrement document that states access is granted to that well, any such tresspass order would not hold up in court.
Why don't they all pool their money and drill another community well. Obviously one of them did something to piss off the landowner/waterowner that he suddenly locks the gate after 2 years.
Not that all Americans are the most charming honest people, but, I think American land should only be sold to Americans. It's crazy to sell to non Americans. Makes no sense.
Wow I feel lucky that in my country access to clean and treated drinking water from your tap is a basic human right and every house must be connected to the system and under no circumstances can the water ever be turned off.
oh, theyll turn our water off without thought. electricty? natural gas in the middle of winter? oh yeah, in a heartbeat theyll throw that switch. the wealthiest third world nation in the history of this earth.
+Litigious Society Where i live we have the water rights and it just comes out the ground. When it rained and filled up the Laguna some people from the state came and sucked the water out.
Owner sells a 20 by 20 feet land to the neighbors for a $1 and the neighbors to them and drill a water well original contract out the window on that no drilling for a well. But still have to pay for the drilling.
You can't sell something they don't own. they don't own the right to drill a well on property they own. If they don't own the right to drill a well, they can't sell the right to drill a well to someone else.
well then put in a pipeline from the next avalible watersource and simply send the bill to Timberlands... really simple... if They dont pay they go bankrupt....
the rights were not granted by anyone authorised to do so, or joined with other documents granting them. It's like me writing a contract to your neighbour to use your bathtub, since I don't own the tub of have any legal right for access or assignment of rights I need a paper from you or an authority to keep it from being meaningless.
Some of these wells are 3000 foot deep and drilling does not guarantee water. But you have to pay for their work and equipment. They charge by the foot. It is not as easy as just drilling.
@@basspig it depends on a lot of things. Water tables are different. I had a girl friend who tried twice. Almost 30 thousand dollars and got a little bit of water. But not impressive. Its hit and miss situation
In some places the water rights were sold to cities so the city's could pull more water out of the ground or out of the Colorado River. Depends on the size of the water shed. New Mexico is allowed to pull so many acre feet out of the Colorado River but they can't pull more than their water shed so the state and cities bought up water rights all over the place. Bought them from counties. Can't drill if someone else owns the water rights. Don't buy land if you don't get mineral and water rights. The guy that owns the wells probably has homestead water rights which pretty much trumps all. It is a contract with the Feds so no federal judge will take those rights away. It would void any contract under homestead law. We have homestead water rights and the state of Montana tried that with us. Judge wouldn't even hear the case. We have a saying in Montana. Whiskey is for drinkin, water is for fightin over. I feel for the people but fine print is there for a reason.
The minute you see a 'no drilling of water well' proviso in your purchase agreement is when you walk away.
yep
or an hoa
Yeah, community water well is a deal breaker. Can't drill your own well, deal breaker. When it comes to a necessity like water, never be dependent on the generosity of others, they will let you down every time.
I’d drill, water is a god given right.
My contract is off if they don’t provide me with water as promised.
Enjoy getting everything taken from you
If you literally see “ no drill” don’t buy the land.
i would have drilled my own well anyway
That'$ a piss poor way to do business! Now you know why so much of New Mexico looks like a ghost town!!
POStOLFRONT at least ghost towns happened because of gold mining. 😂
New Mexico's government is an absolute disgrace. They're underfunded, and the funds they do have ARE WASTED on REALLY bad things... Like a visiting center in th e middle of nowhere that nobody visits. (It closed down)
It sounds like the county officials’ palms were greased by the developer.
you have (conflicting) documents that provide you rights to drill a well -- pursue that and sue the county and developer for enforcing only the methods that are preventing residents ANY rights to water -- either thru the Munez well or thru drilling. If that doesn't work, the home should be declared inhabitable and you should fight to have your mortgage cancelled. Perhaps when the bank risks the mortgages being paid, they will even jump in to help fund the lawsuit against the county. Just get a good lawyer and file a civil suit and a suit for damages - because it's costing you every time you have to drive 50miles to get water and pursue punitive damages for how it's risking your health and well-being to live like you are.
Simple solution.... the developer pays for the drilling of individual wells. With all the conflicting paperwork im sure there are plenry of sympathetic judges who will give at least a partial wlaward to the property owners for reinbursement/contracting of the well.
Depends on who owns the water rights. The developer didn't have the water rights. So who does. I think the county or the state does or even the feds. No judge will touch that. I have homestead water rights. They are primary water rights. We've been sued by the state to take them. Federal judge won't touch that because it would nullify every existing Fed homestead contact of which their are hundreds of thousands.
@@haveraygunwilltravel what state wants to take them away?
Socialism will save you! Government take over the well and rations it out to all who bow to it, or at least pays under the table for it.
"Neighbors are now trying to figure out what their next move will be..." Um, sue the developer? It's their fault the residents don't have water access, ignores all attempts to communicate with them, and tho contractually obligated to do so isn't providing water.
Breach of contract and possibly fraud. SUE the developer and get the right to drill your own well.
Yep, sue them. However there will be very little chance of winning even if the law is on their side. Half of those will be dead before there is any result, if you have enough money you can drag it through the courts for years
Typical
Yeah, no drilling, but I'll let you use mine, as long as I like you, that is! But who buys a house with no running water, anyway? I wouldn't even think about it!
My wife and I were looking at moving to AZ/NM/TX areas until I started noticing that the majority of the properties required water the be delivered or you had to buy a water tank on a trailer and go get it filled up. We ended up in ID and couldn’t be happier.
Make developer pay for high end filtering system (contract covers that on having water rights) and developer drill new community wells or hold all payments in court like a renters can (thru court) , bank will side with you to get it done so they can get their money. Please post how this comes out!
Quick and simple temporary fix hire someone to haul in a semi tanker of water a couple of times a week and fill everyone's tank. its cheaper then hauling it your self. Truck pulls up every one waits with their tank and the company can come out 1 to 3 times a week or how ever works best but then everyone does not have to drive the 100 miles round trip
Man you're a genius! I bet they NEVER thought of this! Call guiness!
Who would object if they drill their own well? Who would file legal objections? If the developer. then how could he defend when he reneged on his promise to make water available. The county could unilaterally decide not to abide by the agreement with the developer and permit the drilling of additional wells.
state of NM needs to prevet this company from doing business here in NM ever again. Sure wish someone knew where developer lived then could shut off his water see how he likes.
if they brake the contract then they should be able to drill wells
We have a saying in Montana. Whiskey is for drinkin, water is for fighting over. We have 3 Wells and a creek under federal homestead water rights. This doesn't stop out of state and in state people sueing us to get water rights. Costs us thousands of dollars every year in attorney fees. People try to sue so they can sell them to someone else. People are evil.
Simple. Tear up the document stating they can't drill thier own wells and give them a property tax credit in the amount it costs to drill a well. Additionally, hold the developer accountable for a reasonable monetary amount for guaranteeing contracts they couldn't guarantee. The slap on the wrist and fines will keep them from doing it again. The exact amounts to each participant in the case can be worked out by the courts. If New Mexico's state and local governments weren't such a shit show, this could all be fixed in about a week.
There must be a bunch of information missing from this. From what is presented here, it seems that the Developer owned the land the well is on, then sold that land to Muniz , while retaining the right (transferable) to access the well on the property that Muniz now owns. If the developer owned the right to access the well, and transferred that right of access to the homeowners in the subdivision, then it seems like the homeowners have a legal right to access the well. There must be more to the story.
I have a solution, don't live in a Desert
Or just know what the definition of an "easement" is...
This guy lol
The last contract filed with the county - which states the property owners must provide their own water (i.e. drill their own wells) - should take precedent.
After drilling, they should all collectively sue the developer for breach of contract.
They could even do what was done in 1974 in the East Mountains:
All the homeowners get together and raise the funds for a single well, with a windmill or solar to power the pump.
Much cheaper to dig one community well, especially as they are already used to filling the water tanks.
Then sue the developer to reimburse.
Just drill your own well. Force them to take you to court, I they don’t your problem is solved. If they do then file a counter suite fo contract violations for not providing the water. The court will either allow you to drill for the water or enforce the contract that they provide the water.
These people don't have the money for that. They're using a plastic folding table as a living room table. You think they have 4-5k for a well?
The folks with the rain catchment and swimming pool, that pool just needs a clear dome on it, with a catchment ring on the inside to gather distilled water. Then store that water in a cool dark place.
Lots of options, just takes years of research.
It should not take years of research.
@@diannevaldez8670 LOL, I mean it's taken myself years of research. Making a integrated sustainably expanding system with less than 10k a year, has taken forever, fortunately as I learn little things, some of the big things need to be changed, or relocated. I have really only committed to a few things, so my overall plan has changed as I learn about the environment and it's potential and problems.
Really though, if you can maintain a healthy supply of fresh water, your all ready ahead of the game compared to anyone relying on utilities services.
@@forcesightknight I don't know what you will think of this but I follow off grid with doug and stacy. They lived without running water in their house, on their land for years until stacy said she was going to go on strike if doug didn't remedy the situation. His procrastination was due to not knowing where to start. Well, he had friends with different systems and have Amish neighbors. He took what he thought was best for them and got to work. Their system is completely rain water fed. It works fabulously. They didn't spend a lot of money back then on anything. There are a lot of other people who have turned deserts into oasis with just a modest amount of rain water. I live in the desert and have been collecting the materials I need and probably have everything I need but I have back issues that have been holding me back. If you want the names of others that have done this let me know. But for now I hope you visit doug and stacy's RUclips.
Conflict of contracts mean a void contract. Everybody’s entitled to remedy and the remedy is drill your own well.
if it isn't in the deed, it isn't at all.
I wouldn't care and drill my well hahaha
It's his property there for its his water!!! Point blank
I would never allow a verbal promise. I would demand everything in writing.
I would drill a water well and sue the developer for the cost of it. And I don’t care what the county says if you can or cannot drill a well on your property.
Smart.
The moment they denied access to the water was the moment the covenants preventing drilling should have legally vanished.
They purchased land with no water rights doesn't matter if the developer was shady you can't drill for water legally without water rights when you buy property in New Mexico.
@@sandysamuelman9205 The county documents indicated they have water rights, but the developer's deeds indicated none. I'd say the county documents trump all.
@@unclesmrgol probably because the developer either leased or sold the water rights to someone other than the people who bought the land. The man who locked the gate had water rights others had access to his well.
My husband and I get phone calls regularly for our pre 1902 water rights for our house we have owned for almost 40 years usually someone like Intel is trying to buy more water in our area. Sad to think you can own the land but maybe not the water. Makes no sense if you don't have an alternative water source.
If they breeched the contract then i would also and drill a well
An army of armed property owners will solve that problem overnight. The well owner will have a bigger concern than theft and property damage. Faster resolution than years of court litigation.
You can bet that if the gov't was denied access, the problem would go away overnight.
If you own the property you should be able to drill a well furthermore I thought there was artesian wells all over out there.
Just drill your own well & wait to be sued which very likely will NOT happen
Their first clue there might be a problem is a developer/seller that lives in Montana.
Sue them .
This is why you never buy property with any covenant restrictions such as a homeowners association property. Number 2, Always have all of your paperwork and closing documents gone over by an attorney.
It's been five years. What were the results?
its an easy fix, after they refuse one time you get it in writing then then get tougher with your neighbors to dig your own well then sew the developer and the land owner for the cost of the new well. Its far better to take actions into your own hands as a "no drilling" contract gets thrown out the moment they stopped holding up there own end of the contract.
The county is in on it!!!!
Now they know how the native americans feel
I was thinking the same thing.... nearly 70% of homes on the various reservations don't have potable water.
Either wells have been contaminated by uranium drilling, or wells ran dry when corporate agriculture dug deeper wells, or the federal government failed to ever deliver on the treaty to begin with.
Sounds like a law suit over water rights. Pain in the neck but worth it.
If it says "no drilling" then its time to start digging. It's not against the law to dig a hole. I got no water rights, and the people up stream divert all the water in the summer. It's ok, the water table wasn't that deep, near the creek.
I dont know where you live, but in the southwest, drilling for a well means 600 to 1000 ft deep.
@@LM-wz9yw that is a deep hole for sure. I would still be digging. When I sighted my land though, I used my desert survival training to spot the place to dig, North slope, bottom of a sand dune with trees already present. It doesn't hurt that the creek is forced to work it's way around a finger of sandstone as it finds its way downstream, in a way creating it's own water table in my valley.
Why dont you contact Mike Reynolds in Taos on water collection and filtration systems. You can catch 400 gallons a year with this process. And you can make distilled water with his water and solar oven sysrem. Happy off grid living to you all.
Cut the lock and go in and get your water.
I can relate about not wanting to work with people any longer, that is why I retired also.
Frack it and pull the source to another location. Pool your funds to get it done and apply for government grants for such endeavors.
I smell a class action lawsuit coming. Or if there isn't an HOA, form one and try to use it to pressure the neighbor to let them have access to the well.
Fault for not inspecting all legal documents before buying the property.
When buying property you don’t go off promises you get everything down on paper
Wow thats fraid cheating retirees, post go fund me to get money for a new well, or brake his locks off the gate and take the water its your right
That doesn't fly in Canada If you subdivide you must 1. Road, Electricity, sewer and WATER before you can sub divide
Wan’t the Milagro Beanfield War also over water?
Book reference.
and it's in the Canyon Milagro Subdivision, maybe John Nichols is a prophet
If there isn’t community water reliable. Then you definitely can drill a well. I have one and they are expensive but worth it
They can drink the rain water if they run it through Berkey Filters! OR they can build their own filtration system. It wouldn't be that big a deal to me to survive up there with all that water in the swimming pool. Only $120 investment in 2 filters that would clean and purify about 6,000 gals of water. Definitely more affordable than trying to drill a well. You could tap pipes into the earth, but at 70 years old, that would be near impossible.
I offer these filters on my website. It's not our main focus, but we are all about water and "Water Is Life... Every Drop Counts!"
www.TheDropOfWater.com
Freemason games from the developer.
@C Not true. Jesus IS God's Son and worshipping Jesus/GOd is the ONLY true faith. But yes, all other religions are secretly worshipping Lucifer. If you knew the bible book, Daniel, you'd know that eventually EVEN Babylonian King Nebuchadnezzar accepted the One True God, rejecting his pagan gods and is now in Heaven.
New Mexico. Land of HOA
No thanks
Joe Hess unless the HOA power is limited to comunity property (pool park roads etc), or every "home" is timeshare condo etc where multiple people own most units or buildings and almost no individual lives there year round...
There is no reason for an HOA.
The letter of the document.. no drilling. No worries, drive a stem down. No drilling involved.
Sounds fishy, the officials, developer and person with water rights are in cahoots.
I've never heard of such a thing as shared water well.
Shared wells are fairly common. The land owner who locked the gate has that right. This is all about the developer and the county. Bad deal for those people
Sounds like the land owner was ok with it at first. They were getting water from the well for 2 years. Then someone started stealing his stuff so he locked the gate.
They are not that uncommon, my girlfriend owns a house in a subdivision with a community well. When the subdivision was developed (1980's) it was just a little beyond the extent of city Sewer and water, so it was built with a community well and a community septic system. The Septic system failed before she bought her house, and the property owners had to pay to have city sewer extended to the subdivision. The community well continued in service for a while, but eventually the city extends municipal water service to the subdivision.
Learn to pick locks. Take the lock to a locksmith and have keys made. Make sure everyone has a key.
Be sure to put the lock back in place after you're done.
Was the well and road maintenance association ever set up?
Sue them
Its time for the government to step in to help
I smell class action lawsuit
Have your neighbor drill the water well and call it his or hers...
And do the same thing on their property!!
Oh that's a great idea!
They should seek advice as to the validity of the restriction on building personal wells now the company isn't honouring the provision of water. It may well be possible to have the restriction legally lifted, or the current well owners forced to pay to pipe water to a location outside of his property.
Cut the lock and chain...with bolt cutters.. this is New Mexico for ya... Water shortages.. people move here from Florida or what?!? Insect issues In Florida .. flooding issues in Florida... Water issues in New Mexico..no insect issues.. gotta understand the issues and prepare for the state you live.. also Montana and Wyoming.. much more water out there than New Mexico as well..
Adverse possession and use. Cut the fence make a fence gate and restablish use over a period of time and the water is yours.
That’s also how to go to jail when the owner is legitimately watching you from his porch
never buy something with HOA or restrictions on it, if you see either one on the deed walk away.
Sure, as long as you don't have a problem with a neighbor turning his property into a junk yard or deciding to raise swine, all of which would be permissible in any unincorporated area in New Mexico.
@@davmar9923i think the guy that has the water wants their land and cheap. the HOA said no drilling wells because water was being supplied. but now its not so that should cancel everything HOA out. then i would have built a big junk yard even if i never sold a single part.
@@MadsWorld34 Uninformed speculation on the matter is of no value to anyone. This is clearly an issue that can only be solved by a court. In theory, the HOA would bear the cost of legal action, which would in turn be born by all members of the HOA equally.
Sue get the governor involved
💁♂️ Any updates on this?? 🤷♂️
They need to sue the developer for a new wells
How is Ramah NM as far as that goes?
Really, how much trouble would they be in if the people hired a well driller and had a well drilled?
Plenty. Water rights are serious business in the west. If they don't have the legal right to drill a well, and they drill anyway, whomever owns the rights to that water *will* object.
50 miles to get water??
Get the water straight out of the air.
Just figure out the developer's home address and handle it out of court ☠️
Is there an update??
I wonder why there is a stipulation that they can't drill their own well -
You cannot gaurenteed access to property YOU DO NOT OWN.
It's called an easement in rural areas the are not uncommon. If you buy rural property one of the things you should do is check for easements listed on the deed.
@@steven4315 this was not an easement but access to the well. When the property sold the access ended. Nothing was in writing. Should have checked Their own property for water before they bought it.
God damnit I hate my state
So the husband is a retired pharmacist and sick of dealing with people? Which one is it?
or you could just cut the lock and get your water......
Can't do that: it would be trespassing.
You do that dumb as
signed by someone that doesnt own the land the well is on, hence they cant grant access to the well or anything else on that mans property
It would not be tresspassing. A person would first have to be "tresspassed", in writing, from the property, by the property owner. Amd with the agrrement document that states access is granted to that well, any such tresspass order would not hold up in court.
Why don't they all pool their money and drill another community well.
Obviously one of them did something to piss off the landowner/waterowner that he suddenly locks the gate after 2 years.
Not that all Americans are the most charming honest people, but, I think American land should only be sold to Americans. It's crazy to sell to non Americans. Makes no sense.
Ear Kitty Take a look at what Saudi did to Arizona...type Water Saudi Arizona
Wow I feel lucky that in my country access to clean and treated drinking water from your tap is a basic human right and every house must be connected to the system and under no circumstances can the water ever be turned off.
oh, theyll turn our water off without thought. electricty? natural gas in the middle of winter? oh yeah, in a heartbeat theyll throw that switch. the wealthiest third world nation in the history of this earth.
There is no country where everyone has access to common water, except maybe city-states like Monaco.
+Litigious Society Where i live we have the water rights and it just comes out the ground. When it rained and filled up the Laguna some people from the state came and sucked the water out.
@@domusdebellum3042 Take a look at the power shut down in California recently. Santa Ana winds blow until December.
@martin I wish I could live in your fake reality.
Then drill an "oil well" and if it accidently produces water then use it and shut up!
This is suspiciously like a tyrannical HOA....
Of course buy land, that says no drilling
Cut the lock
Owner sells a 20 by 20 feet land to the neighbors for a $1 and the neighbors to them and drill a water well original contract out the window on that no drilling for a well. But still have to pay for the drilling.
You can't sell something they don't own. they don't own the right to drill a well on property they own. If they don't own the right to drill a well, they can't sell the right to drill a well to someone else.
@@andrewalexander9492 got it. Its a shame how people take advantage of everything they can and leave those people without water should be a crime
@@jorgemat8080 Yeah, they were led to believe that they had access to water.
well then put in a pipeline from the next avalible watersource and simply send the bill to Timberlands... really simple... if They dont pay they go bankrupt....
If they have the rights to the water, in writing, cut the lock and use the well. Expect armed resistance, be ready for it.
the rights were not granted by anyone authorised to do so, or joined with other documents granting them. It's like me writing a contract to your neighbour to use your bathtub, since I don't own the tub of have any legal right for access or assignment of rights I need a paper from you or an authority to keep it from being meaningless.
All of these people should drill their own wells and send the bill to the county.
Some of these wells are 3000 foot deep and drilling does not guarantee water.
But you have to pay for their work and equipment.
They charge by the foot. It is not as easy as just drilling.
@@vm722 3000'?? At that depth you'd probably hit oil! I only drilled to 220', but hit water at 6' at my mountaintop property.
@@basspig it depends on a lot of things.
Water tables are different. I had a girl friend who tried twice. Almost 30 thousand dollars and got a little bit of water. But not impressive. Its hit and miss situation
@@vm722 Must be drilling in the desert. Not a suitable place to live at all.
In some places the water rights were sold to cities so the city's could pull more water out of the ground or out of the Colorado River. Depends on the size of the water shed. New Mexico is allowed to pull so many acre feet out of the Colorado River but they can't pull more than their water shed so the state and cities bought up water rights all over the place. Bought them from counties. Can't drill if someone else owns the water rights. Don't buy land if you don't get mineral and water rights. The guy that owns the wells probably has homestead water rights which pretty much trumps all. It is a contract with the Feds so no federal judge will take those rights away. It would void any contract under homestead law. We have homestead water rights and the state of Montana tried that with us. Judge wouldn't even hear the case. We have a saying in Montana. Whiskey is for drinkin, water is for fightin over. I feel for the people but fine print is there for a reason.
So drill your own well and the other guy sue.
Only on America someone can get away with this
TIL New Mexico is Europe in the 1800s or rural Africa
My property , my taxes., Drill away!
Guy cuts off access to water, it's the desert, people disappear and are never seen again, water available... Just sayin'.