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Previously on "Determining Ownership of a Boundary"

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  • lightng
    replied
    Some would say that two people arguing over land is like two fleas on the back of a dog arguing which one owns the dog.

    My own family have had problems with land so I would disagree. Imagine owning acres of land in Hong Kong ($$$$$$$) and not being able to use it because of squatters. By squatters, I'm not talking about homeless migrants but multi-national corps. The twenty year legal battle continues... Now that is a tulip land problem.

    Leave a comment:


  • xoggoth
    replied
    It might be in the conveyance documents, not same as deeds. Also look at convention in the rest of the street, usually same.

    Leave a comment:


  • wurzel
    replied
    Originally posted by Clippy View Post
    Yes and rather than go through the hassle/expense of trying to enforce a hazy law, I erected a new fence myself.

    Try here for advice.
    Nice one. Not much forking out 22 quid for a title plan from the land registry then. Would love to discuss it with my the landowner on the other side of the wall but he's a cantankerous old farmer so might as well forget it.

    Leave a comment:


  • Clippy
    replied
    Yes and rather than go through the hassle/expense of trying to enforce a hazy law, I erected a new fence myself.

    Try here for advice.

    Leave a comment:


  • wurzel
    started a topic Determining Ownership of a Boundary

    Determining Ownership of a Boundary

    I've got a boundary with a field running down the side of my garden but I don't know who the wall that forms the boundary actually belongs to. Somebody told me to get a title plan from the Land Registry but all that seems to do is state what area of land actually belongs to a property withouth specifying ownership of the boundaries. Anyone been here before?
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