Hi. A few years ago the fence between us and our neighbour was becoming worse for wear. On a number of occasions, I asked the neighbour if I could go into his garden to refit panels when they had fallen off, and he had no issue. He never said that it was his fence so he would sort it. The fence is of the type that has vertical boards with small gaps between them.
Then after a while I decided that maybe it was time to replace most of the fence, so I checked my deeds and as they suggested no boundary ownership (no T) I took it upon myself to replace it. I mentioned it to my neighbour and he was happy for me to replace it, he even supplied a contact at a wood supplier so I could get a small discount on the materials. The neighbour never suggested at the time that the fence was his responsibility, or even shared, he just allowed me to replace most of it. That was all about 3 to 4 years ago.
A few months after that, he took it on himself to replace the section of the fence that we didn't do, and after the event asked us for the money for the materials. Which we paid at the time as we were under the assumption that it was our responsibility, so he had actually done us a favour by doing the labour himself.
Then a few weeks ago whilst we were on holiday, he modified the fence. He put vertical pieces of wood all along his side of the fence to block the small gaps between the existing boards. When we asked what he was doing, he said that it was his fence so he was adding those slats to make it more private. We suggested that it wasn't his fence so he produced his deeds which showed the T on his side of the boundary, and said that shows that it is his fence. And that, if we did anything to it then he would get the police involved.
I have asked a few people I know, a couple of people who erect fences for a living, and also a general request on a forum and everyone has said that as I paid for the fence to be replaced, then it is my property and he shouldn't modify it (or even paint his side) without my permission. This is regardless of his deeds showing a T on his side of the boundary.
So there are three areas of fencing where ownership on unclear. The majority which I paid for and replaced, the small section that the neighbour erected but I paid for the materials, and a section that is the existing fence that was in fairly good condition so not replaced.
Then after a while I decided that maybe it was time to replace most of the fence, so I checked my deeds and as they suggested no boundary ownership (no T) I took it upon myself to replace it. I mentioned it to my neighbour and he was happy for me to replace it, he even supplied a contact at a wood supplier so I could get a small discount on the materials. The neighbour never suggested at the time that the fence was his responsibility, or even shared, he just allowed me to replace most of it. That was all about 3 to 4 years ago.
A few months after that, he took it on himself to replace the section of the fence that we didn't do, and after the event asked us for the money for the materials. Which we paid at the time as we were under the assumption that it was our responsibility, so he had actually done us a favour by doing the labour himself.
Then a few weeks ago whilst we were on holiday, he modified the fence. He put vertical pieces of wood all along his side of the fence to block the small gaps between the existing boards. When we asked what he was doing, he said that it was his fence so he was adding those slats to make it more private. We suggested that it wasn't his fence so he produced his deeds which showed the T on his side of the boundary, and said that shows that it is his fence. And that, if we did anything to it then he would get the police involved.
I have asked a few people I know, a couple of people who erect fences for a living, and also a general request on a forum and everyone has said that as I paid for the fence to be replaced, then it is my property and he shouldn't modify it (or even paint his side) without my permission. This is regardless of his deeds showing a T on his side of the boundary.
So there are three areas of fencing where ownership on unclear. The majority which I paid for and replaced, the small section that the neighbour erected but I paid for the materials, and a section that is the existing fence that was in fairly good condition so not replaced.
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