To: GaltAdonis
He's right...The wall is on his property....The court should order it removed.
People can make agreements.
I've seen 1" x 200 ft. strip cut off a driveway.
7 posted on
06/16/2022 4:37:12 AM PDT by
Sacajaweau
( )
To: Sacajaweau
“He’s right...The wall is on his property....The court should order it removed.” If it is on his property it should be taken down or he be compensated for it appropriately.
20 posted on
06/16/2022 5:29:20 AM PDT by
cpdiii
(CANE CUTTER-DECKHAND-ROUGHNECK-OILFIELD CONSULTANT-GEOLOGIST-PILOT-PHARMACIST)
To: Sacajaweau
He's right...The wall is on his property....The court should order it removed. People can make agreements. I've seen 1" x 200 ft. strip cut off a driveway.There's actually a legal reason to be picky about property lines and people who extend structures or whatever, over those lines.
If you do not object, you can lose that land. It's a variation of Squatters Rights.
22 posted on
06/16/2022 5:37:02 AM PDT by
Lazamataz
(The firearms I own today, are the firearms I will die with. How I die will be up to them.)
To: Sacajaweau
I was involved in the resolution of a 4” property line dispute involving a buried drainage line. The title insurance company likely spent over $10K to fix that one.
To: Sacajaweau
Our little town just made a guy tear down a 70,000 building because of stupid crap like this. You either work it out or here comes the bulldozer.
35 posted on
06/16/2022 7:14:18 AM PDT by
Delta 21
(It started as a virus, and mutated into an IQ test.)
To: Sacajaweau
Alternatively, the offending neighbor should be convinced to buy the 2” x 100’ for fair market value and end the controversy.
38 posted on
06/16/2022 9:27:21 AM PDT by
T. Rustin Noone
(the angels wanna wear my red shoes......)
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