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In the spring of 1987, a corporation called Prairie Consolidated Agriculture bought every farm surrounding Howard Tennant's 320 acres in Custer County, Nebraska. They bought the land to the north, the south, the east, and the west. Then they did something that made their intentions clear: they built a chain-link fence across the only road that connected Howard's farm to the county highway. Overnight, Howard Tennant became a prisoner on his own land. The corporation's lawyers made him an offer: sell his farm for forty percent of market value, or watch it become worthless. Howard was seventy-one years old. He had no family left to help him. He had no money for lawyers. Everyone in the county said he was finished. But Howard had something the corporation didn't know about—a yellowed piece of paper that his grandfather had kept in a tin box for over a hundred years. A paper that proved the road they'd blocked wasn't theirs to block. A paper that proved the million-dollar packing facility they'd built was sitting on land they had no right to touch. When Howard showed that paper to the judge, the corporation didn't just lose the case. They had to tear down their own building with their own money. And Howard Tennant drove his pickup truck through the rubble, nice and slow, while the CEO watched from the courthouse steps. This story draws from real easement law and agricultural consolidation history of the 1980s. Characters and dialogue are dramatized for storytelling. Have you ever seen paperwork defeat power? Share your story in the comments. #OldFarmTales #EasementRights #FarmCrisis #PropertyRights #RuralJustice