I may be wrong but I always assumed it was down to the deeds of the property and so never set in stone.
Like many properties my place if looking from the front has a boundary/fence down the left, the right and at the bottom, my neighbor on the left has always assumed responsibility for my "left" fence so I have always assumed the one to the right is mine ? I had always assumed the one at the bottom of my garden was mine as well but I don't know.
My neighbor to the right who is a bit of a p*+*" says the fence on my right (his left) is his and also the one at the bottom of my garden is his, he has a L shaped garden which runs parallel to my garden and across the bottom as well.
Is there a 100% foolproof way of finding out who owns what ? having done a little research on the net nothing now seems any clearer to me but some interesting knowledge gained.
Thanks.
I may be wrong but I always assumed it was down to the deeds of the property and so never set in stone.
In our case the one on the left is our responsibility and the one on the right is our neighbours
The one at the bottom of the garden is our responsibility
I seem to remember on previous houses that we have owned that various coloured lines were marked on the deeds to indicate ownership, I'll have to check the deeds on the current house, but I cannot remember ever seeing any???
Might be wrong but if the fence has arris rails if they are showing then that fence is yours
I FEEL LIKE I'M DIAGONALLY PARKED IN A PARALLEL UNIVERSE
I recently had this problem. The deeds are the only place where you’ll find an official record. However, not all deeds have this recorded so there may not be an answer
On the drawings of boundaries of the property, there will be a T pointing into whichever property is responsible for the boundary itself.
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If you have the title plan for your property, the boundaries that belong to you should be indicated by small 'T' marks along their length.
You can download title your title plan (£3) from https://eservices.landregistry.gov.u...EnquiryInit.do
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It is, but people today ...
Whichever way but if you go non rails and your neighbour does the same then on one fence you will have rails
I FEEL LIKE I'M DIAGONALLY PARKED IN A PARALLEL UNIVERSE
My title plans show no "T" s, and I have fences on 3 sides.
Strangely enough around here both parties are jointly responsible for the fences.
So check the deeds.
Cheers,
Neil.
My deeds show it in plan drawn version and also in words. Trouble is the words say the absolute opposite of the drawn plans. Very helpful !!
Foggy
Don’t start me on boundary fences,when I checked with land registry they told me the deeds weren’t worth the paper they were written on ,solicitor bent me over the desk.I wish you well.
I would try and agree something with your neighbours in the first instance if nothing is on the Title, Deeds or original planning consent that may help. You could try and seek feedback from your wider neighbours and from the owners of who you purchased the property from although your solicitors should have covered this off as there is not hard and fast rules.
I’ve been involved in a number of boundary disputes over the years. One was resolved using mediation, a couple have been resolved as the neighbours have backed down, one was lost at court and two are currently about to go to court having now had surveys undertaken that are in our favour despite the property owners not being in agreement.
As a word of warning, as our position is very strong and if we win, we will look to recover costs although this is for the court award.
I would like to reiterate that you should try to avoid any boundary disputes and come to a mutual agreement if at all possible, even if you have to eat a little humble pie if you’re in the wrong.
B
With your back to your house the left is normally your responsibility
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This was a decent read.
https://blog.fantasticservices.com/g...ty-neighbours/
ps: It is hard to mediate with a total P*** :(
The reason for having the 'nice side' facing the neighbours is because the posts have to be in your land.
As already said, check deeds...but every house I have owned I have always been responsible for the left side...so old wives tale or not, it may be more common to be responsible for the left as a reasonable guess!
The way my house deeds are written says something along the lines of
"If you stand on the road facing the front of your house, the fence pointing north is yours, and the fence to the rear".
That happens to be the right side for me, however for my neighbour who lives directly opposite, his is the left and rear.
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