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Ownership Of Land Between Two Properties
A friend of ours has cultivated a narrow strip of land she always thought was part of her garden for the past fifty years. The strip of land is alongside a large outbuilding belonging to the adjoining property. The relatively recent occupant of the adjoining property has now claimed that the strip of land is marked on their deeds as belonging to them. If this is indeed the case, how does the law stand after fifty years?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Your friend needs to start by getting the title deeds (with plans) for her own property & the neighbour's. They might clarify whether what the neighbour says is correct, but often the plans are very small scale & it may be difficult to be certain where the boundary is. She can get the deeds from the Land Registry online but be careful to go to the Gov. site & not one of the many commercial ones which charge far too much.
If the deeds show the land as belonging to the neighbour your friend might have a case for taking ownership under the adverse possession rules. These normally apply only if the land has been used without the permission of the owner for longer than (I think) 20 years, & is fenced off from neighbouring land. She needs to find out the exact rules (Land Registry helpline may be able to advise), decide whether she thinks she complies with them & make a claim to the Land Registry if she does. She may find she needs a solicitor to deal with this. If the neighbour objects, there is no guarantee of success.
If the deeds show the land as belonging to the neighbour your friend might have a case for taking ownership under the adverse possession rules. These normally apply only if the land has been used without the permission of the owner for longer than (I think) 20 years, & is fenced off from neighbouring land. She needs to find out the exact rules (Land Registry helpline may be able to advise), decide whether she thinks she complies with them & make a claim to the Land Registry if she does. She may find she needs a solicitor to deal with this. If the neighbour objects, there is no guarantee of success.