Our neighbour applied for adverse possession which we recently defended successfully in the first tier property Tribunal. We have now repossessed our land and fenced it but her solicitor is now telling us that we were incorrect to do this. Does he have a point or is this just posturing?
What happens after I've successfully defended against adverse possession
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Could it be because the neighbour is seeking permission to appeal to the Upper Tribunal? Although even if he is I'm not sure why you can't fence it in the meantime. I'll be interested to see what the lawyers here think.
Or maybe he is just posturing with a "we're going to win at appeal so don't wste your money fencing it" type of comment.All opinions expressed are based on my personal experience. I am not a lawyer and do not hold any legal qualifications.
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There is an interesting article titled "Adverse possession and rights of way - the search for an unequivocal act" at www.clarkewillmott.com
The article covers a case where a claimant failed in court to achieve adverse possession of the defendant's alleyway which the previous property owner had used for years and constructed a gate in the alleyway. The judge decided that the installation of the gate was not an unequivocal act.
If the solicitor did not say why you shouldn't have built a fence, you should reply and ask the legal reason why not
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Originally posted by Pezza54 View PostThere is an interesting article titled "Adverse possession and rights of way - the search for an unequivocal act" at www.clarkewillmott.com
The article covers a case where a claimant failed in court to achieve adverse possession of the defendant's alleyway which the previous property owner had used for years and constructed a gate in the alleyway. The judge decided that the installation of the gate was not an unequivocal act.
If the solicitor did not say why you shouldn't have built a fence, you should reply and ask the legal reason why not
Thankyou for taking the time to reply, I appreciate it.
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Originally posted by PallasAthena View PostCould it be because the neighbour is seeking permission to appeal to the Upper Tribunal? Although even if he is I'm not sure why you can't fence it in the meantime. I'll be interested to see what the lawyers here think.
Or maybe he is just posturing with a "we're going to win at appeal so don't wste your money fencing it" type of comment.
I'm obviously not going to take the fence down but it has been an interesting process to be part of - having to defend our right to our own property has been tedious in the extreme!
Thanks for taking the time to reply, I appreciate it.
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When was the FTT decision (exact date) ? Do you know if an appeal has been filed?
Do you have the written judgement?
Is your title to the land registered at Land Registry?
The above information may help craft a robust reply to your neighbour's solicitors, but in the meantime I see no reason for you not to sit tight and not remove the fence.
What happened over a number of years to make your neighbours think they could claim adverse possession?Lawyer (solicitor) - retired from practice, now supervising solicitor in a university law clinic. I do not advise by private message.
Litigants in Person should download and read the Judiciary's handbook for litigants in person: https://www.judiciary.uk/wp-content/..._in_Person.pdf
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Originally posted by atticus View PostWhen was the FTT decision (exact date) ? Do you know if an appeal has been filed?
Do you have the written judgement?
Is your title to the land registered at Land Registry?
The above information may help craft a robust reply to your neighbour's solicitors, but in the meantime I see no reason for you not to sit tight and not remove the fence.
What happened over a number of years to make your neighbours think they could claim adverse possession?
We are already the registered owners of the land as it is part of our title and the application for adverse possession has been canceled.
The boundary was originally created in the way that it was with the consent of the previous owners of our property - it was having and proving this consent that disproved adverse possession. The neighbour applied under the transitional processes under the old regime.
Do you think that I need to reply to the solicitor? There is no specific request for information, more of a setting out of their point of view, which differs from ours.
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Did your neighbour use the land in dispute as a right of way, possibly for over 20 years? Does the new fence block their right of way?
You stated you were able to prove consent given by the previous owner. Consent to do what with the land? Was this consent a written document?
Their solicitor mentioned the original fence line. Who erected the fence, why was it built and who removed it?
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A short and firm but polite reply should suffice.Lawyer (solicitor) - retired from practice, now supervising solicitor in a university law clinic. I do not advise by private message.
Litigants in Person should download and read the Judiciary's handbook for litigants in person: https://www.judiciary.uk/wp-content/..._in_Person.pdf
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Originally posted by Pezza54 View PostDid your neighbour use the land in dispute as a right of way, possibly for over 20 years? Does the new fence block their right of way?
You stated you were able to prove consent given by the previous owner. Consent to do what with the land? Was this consent a written document?
Their solicitor mentioned the original fence line. Who erected the fence, why was it built and who removed it?
The land was a corner of a garden and gave the neighbour no access, although it did prevent our access which is why we originally asked for it to be returned to us - this was when the neighbour applied for adverse possession. We have now restored our access by installing a gate into the new fence that we erected after the adverse possession was not found. The consent was for the neighbour to use the corner of our garden, nothing more. We have retuned both gardens to the way they are shown on both of our titles.
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Originally posted by atticus View PostA short and firm but polite reply should suffice.
Thankyou for your response, I appreciate it
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Costs - you will need to go through the torturous process of detailed assessment, about which I am happily ignorant. Perhaps find and speak to a "costs lawyer" in your area?
Am I right to guess you were not legally represented?Lawyer (solicitor) - retired from practice, now supervising solicitor in a university law clinic. I do not advise by private message.
Litigants in Person should download and read the Judiciary's handbook for litigants in person: https://www.judiciary.uk/wp-content/..._in_Person.pdf
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