This English question involves literary analysis, grammar, or writing skills. The detailed response below provides a well-structured answer with supporting evidence and clear explanations.
ScanSolve AI Answer
d. A right to draw or lead water from the servient tenement to the dominant tenement. This is also known as a rural servitude. Here's why: Praedial servitudes are limited real rights that one piece of land (the dominant tenement) has over another piece of land (the servient tenement*). They benefit the land itself, not a specific person. Options a, b, and c describe personal servitudes* (usufruct, usus, and habitatio, respectively), which are granted in favour of a specific person and do not require a dominant tenement. Option d describes a right that involves both a servient tenement (from which water is drawn) and a dominant tenement* (to which water is led), which is a defining characteristic of a praedial servitude. The right to draw or lead water is a classic example of a rural praedial servitude.
