- Joined
- 29 Nov 2008
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A much better solution would be to buy a cat and let it shìt on her garden.
I've sought legal advice and it contitutes a civil trespass. I have the legal right to ask her to remove the fence from my land, to rebuild the brick pillar she knocked down (which lead to the remainder of the wall falling down) and for her to remove the strip of resin bound driveway she has had laid in my garden and to reinstate the flower bed/land that was there before. I would imagine it will cost her a considerable amount of money to complete these three things..... but then I suppose karma has a way of balancing things out. This never would have been a problem if she had allowed me access for 2 days so I could have replaced the fascias and soffits on her side of my house. What goes around comes around I guess. Just be nice
The solicitor also stated I could remove the fence as I can prove its on my land and make her try and take legal action against me. She would have to make an appeal on the grounds of possessory title through adverse possession via the land registry. But the land registry would write to me in those circumstances to ask if I was happy to have the land reassigned to her deeds.
LOL
Did your advice include that the neighbour may have permission, a licence, or implied/explicit easement or acquired one?
I bought the house from original purchaser.
You had better consult a solicitor.
An alternative would be to demolish the pillar and the fence and let the neighbour try to sue you.
If you want it to be you cuddly bear you.Your real name isn't Linda is it Woody?
Criminal damage? Hardly good advice. Police don't sue, they have the CPS to prosecute!
...Shes also had my wall knocked down....
Here's a better thought. Why don't purchasers just make damn sure what they are buying before buying it?Here's a thought
I'd say you have offered another, not a better, thought. A valid one nevertheless. However I'd assert my point still stands, through design, make the boundary very difficult to argue about.Here's a better thought. Why don't purchasers just make damn sure what they are buying before buying it?
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