Asking for a friend - really, I am ! My friends first language is not English, this is why I am asking for help, so that I can understand the law a bit in order to explain to him what questions he might be asking of his solicitor. I cannot go with him to see his solicitor because we don’t live anywhere near each other.
What’s has happened so far…
Friend moved into a property over 30 years ago. The property is owned outright.
Friend knows which fence he has to maintain, he has it marked on the deeds.
Some 11-12 years ago, the existing fence was in a bad state of repair, and my friend replaced it. The rotten wooden posts were removed, and replaced with concrete ones in the same holes, and new fencing of the same height was erected.
The neighbour, a great friend, asked if the end panel might be moved over a bit in his favour, to allow him a bit of extra room for a garden plant in the corner of his property (only about a foot). My friend agreed, since the two were friends, and tacked the last fence panel to his shed instead of the end fence pole, giving the neighbour the extra “triangle” bit of land. This had the effect of making the hitherto straight fence “go in” slightly to my friends garden, if that makes sense.
Nothing more was said about the fence for years, until this year.
Out of the blue, the friends middle aged daughter (who does not live at the property) and her boyfriend of many years ( the elderly neighbour has said many times in the past that he is frightened of his common law son in law), asked my friend to move ALL of the fence in their favour. Bear in mind, it’s positioned exactly where it’s been for the last 30 plus years, save for the end panel which was moved 10 or 11 years ago slightly in her fathers favour. The next thing was a solicitors letter from the daughter to my friend, demanding it be moved, but with no supporting evidence as to why or how much.
Moreover, they are saying that my friends shed should also be moved as it is in their garden ! The shed is standing on my friends patio, which was there when he bought the house! and has always been on his own property.
If the neighbours daughter has an argument at all, it can surely only be over the thickness of the line drawn on the original plans and how that might translate to measurements on the actual ground, since the plans match the current fence position, save for the last panel as explained above. To my friends knowledge, the original fence when he moved in, was the first fence ever erected there when the property was first built.
My friend engaged a solicitor and furnished the solicitor with the deeds, measurements and photographs etc, and the solicitor has been trying for many months to get the situation resolved. However, the neighbours daughter always asks for more time to provide her evidence and the matter drags on, and costs escalate. My friend cannot imagine that the neighbours daughter can win, since the “new” fence is in the same position as the old (save for last panel).
The questions I am asking are so that I can hopefully explain to my friend what he needs to ask his solicitor……, since I am not entirely certain that his English has so far been good enough to convey the situation to his solicitor .
1. The daughter doesn’t live with her father. The paperwork coming from her solicitor is in her name and actually mentions the property belongs to her father. There is no mention of an LPA (Lasting Power of Attorney) being in place. Can the daughter therefore sue my friend over a boundary dispute that technically isn’t her dispute?
2. Following on from question one, if she produces an LPA, does she have to start the procedure off again or can she introduce proof of LPA now?
3. If she has LPA, nothwithstanding the fact that the fence hasn’t been moved in over 30 years, and in fact probably NEVER been moved (save for the last panel), can she lawfully make her dad potentially out of pocket financially by pursuing this matter.
4. If she has LPA, can she act in a way that would be out of character for her elderly father, bearing in mind that he was best friends with my friend for decades, right up until COVID. During covid, the neighbour became isolated (high risk because of past health issues), and seems to have been cut off from everyone except for the daughter and her middle aged biker boyfriend.
There is a consensus amongst other neighbours and my friend, that the elderly father may be suffering from dementia now, hence the thought that an LPA might be in place. He would never have argued with my friend like the daughter and her boyfriend are, especially over something as petty as a few inches (quite literally) of garden. They were literally best friends, spend Christmas’ together sometimes, went shopping together, swapped garden plants, the neighbour bought my friends grandchildren sweets every week for when they visited……and now this!
It should be noted that the daughters boyfriend is and always has been very intimidating. I know that in itself isn’t relevant, but I am personally tempted to think that they are just doing all of this to upset my friend. The elderly father has said before that he is scared of the son in law, who revs his motorbikes extra loud, annoying all the neighbours, parks his car on the road outside and purposely blocks my friend and other neighbours in, literally parking within a centimetre of their cars so they have to go and ask him to move, yet there’s plenty of space for everyone to park sensibly.
The elderly neighbour has only been seen a few times over the garden fence since covid, and appears not to have knowledge of any of this dispute.
What’s has happened so far…
Friend moved into a property over 30 years ago. The property is owned outright.
Friend knows which fence he has to maintain, he has it marked on the deeds.
Some 11-12 years ago, the existing fence was in a bad state of repair, and my friend replaced it. The rotten wooden posts were removed, and replaced with concrete ones in the same holes, and new fencing of the same height was erected.
The neighbour, a great friend, asked if the end panel might be moved over a bit in his favour, to allow him a bit of extra room for a garden plant in the corner of his property (only about a foot). My friend agreed, since the two were friends, and tacked the last fence panel to his shed instead of the end fence pole, giving the neighbour the extra “triangle” bit of land. This had the effect of making the hitherto straight fence “go in” slightly to my friends garden, if that makes sense.
Nothing more was said about the fence for years, until this year.
Out of the blue, the friends middle aged daughter (who does not live at the property) and her boyfriend of many years ( the elderly neighbour has said many times in the past that he is frightened of his common law son in law), asked my friend to move ALL of the fence in their favour. Bear in mind, it’s positioned exactly where it’s been for the last 30 plus years, save for the end panel which was moved 10 or 11 years ago slightly in her fathers favour. The next thing was a solicitors letter from the daughter to my friend, demanding it be moved, but with no supporting evidence as to why or how much.
Moreover, they are saying that my friends shed should also be moved as it is in their garden ! The shed is standing on my friends patio, which was there when he bought the house! and has always been on his own property.
If the neighbours daughter has an argument at all, it can surely only be over the thickness of the line drawn on the original plans and how that might translate to measurements on the actual ground, since the plans match the current fence position, save for the last panel as explained above. To my friends knowledge, the original fence when he moved in, was the first fence ever erected there when the property was first built.
My friend engaged a solicitor and furnished the solicitor with the deeds, measurements and photographs etc, and the solicitor has been trying for many months to get the situation resolved. However, the neighbours daughter always asks for more time to provide her evidence and the matter drags on, and costs escalate. My friend cannot imagine that the neighbours daughter can win, since the “new” fence is in the same position as the old (save for last panel).
The questions I am asking are so that I can hopefully explain to my friend what he needs to ask his solicitor……, since I am not entirely certain that his English has so far been good enough to convey the situation to his solicitor .
1. The daughter doesn’t live with her father. The paperwork coming from her solicitor is in her name and actually mentions the property belongs to her father. There is no mention of an LPA (Lasting Power of Attorney) being in place. Can the daughter therefore sue my friend over a boundary dispute that technically isn’t her dispute?
2. Following on from question one, if she produces an LPA, does she have to start the procedure off again or can she introduce proof of LPA now?
3. If she has LPA, nothwithstanding the fact that the fence hasn’t been moved in over 30 years, and in fact probably NEVER been moved (save for the last panel), can she lawfully make her dad potentially out of pocket financially by pursuing this matter.
4. If she has LPA, can she act in a way that would be out of character for her elderly father, bearing in mind that he was best friends with my friend for decades, right up until COVID. During covid, the neighbour became isolated (high risk because of past health issues), and seems to have been cut off from everyone except for the daughter and her middle aged biker boyfriend.
There is a consensus amongst other neighbours and my friend, that the elderly father may be suffering from dementia now, hence the thought that an LPA might be in place. He would never have argued with my friend like the daughter and her boyfriend are, especially over something as petty as a few inches (quite literally) of garden. They were literally best friends, spend Christmas’ together sometimes, went shopping together, swapped garden plants, the neighbour bought my friends grandchildren sweets every week for when they visited……and now this!
It should be noted that the daughters boyfriend is and always has been very intimidating. I know that in itself isn’t relevant, but I am personally tempted to think that they are just doing all of this to upset my friend. The elderly father has said before that he is scared of the son in law, who revs his motorbikes extra loud, annoying all the neighbours, parks his car on the road outside and purposely blocks my friend and other neighbours in, literally parking within a centimetre of their cars so they have to go and ask him to move, yet there’s plenty of space for everyone to park sensibly.
The elderly neighbour has only been seen a few times over the garden fence since covid, and appears not to have knowledge of any of this dispute.
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