News28 mins ago
boundary fence
we have recently replaced a boundary fence at the front of our house We used the exisiting post holes and follwed the exiting fence line. The neighbour has now asked that we remove the fence as it encrouches on his land. It does by a couple of cms as the original fence was obviously not straight and the new fence replicates this. We financed the fence and did all the work, do we now have to remove the fence as he has requested?
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No best answer has yet been selected by joanna37. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.You need a copy of the land deeds. It is common for boundaries to move with fences being taken up and down. I know it's too late now but the deeds should have been consulted before a fence went up IMHO as it can save a lot of problems. Talk to him before doing any more maybe you can reach a compromise.
No F30, all except the first answer are right.
In these situations with a difficult neighbour it is sensible to agree with the neighbour what one is doing and/or take photos beforehand, but the LR title plan only shows what are called 'General Boundaries', not an exact boundary line.
Need to tread carefully (whilst declining to change the thing) as boundary disputes that start to involve lawyers are to be avoided at all costs. They have cost people tens of thousands - all over a tiny strip.
In these situations with a difficult neighbour it is sensible to agree with the neighbour what one is doing and/or take photos beforehand, but the LR title plan only shows what are called 'General Boundaries', not an exact boundary line.
Need to tread carefully (whilst declining to change the thing) as boundary disputes that start to involve lawyers are to be avoided at all costs. They have cost people tens of thousands - all over a tiny strip.