ChatterBank1 min ago
Not Your Usual Fence Boundary Dispute
5 Answers
On one boundary, both my neighbour and I each have a 6ft fence, with a gap in between, due to a dispute with the previous occupiers of my house and the council (one house council owned, the other privately owned). The boundary runs down the middle of the gap. Both the fences are in a state of disrepair and I am arranging for a new fence in my garden. I have asked the neighbour if they want to remove their fence and have just one good quality fence down the middle on the boundary, at no cost to them. They have refused, saying they would rather have and be responsible for their own fence. It is not clear who owns the fence.
My problem here is do I put my new fence on the boundary, or should I put the new fence where the old one is. If I put it where the old one is, there is nothing stopping them, or any future occupiers from taking their fence down and claiming part of our garden, albeit it a small strip. If I put it on the boundary, they could dispute this saying that they are loosing part of their garden by having their fence more on their side, and then the potential that any future occupiers remove our fence and claim part of their garden. Neither of us have any plans to move and the fence I am having should last about 20 years.
I can't understand why the neighbour would not agree to having a free good quality fence on the boundary!?
Any thoughts, suggestions?
My problem here is do I put my new fence on the boundary, or should I put the new fence where the old one is. If I put it where the old one is, there is nothing stopping them, or any future occupiers from taking their fence down and claiming part of our garden, albeit it a small strip. If I put it on the boundary, they could dispute this saying that they are loosing part of their garden by having their fence more on their side, and then the potential that any future occupiers remove our fence and claim part of their garden. Neither of us have any plans to move and the fence I am having should last about 20 years.
I can't understand why the neighbour would not agree to having a free good quality fence on the boundary!?
Any thoughts, suggestions?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by onemoredub. 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.Related Questions
Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.