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aemeijers aemeijers is offline
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Default Neighbor's dead tree is leaning against my oak and threateningto fall on my property

JoeSpareBedroom wrote:
"Ron" wrote in message
...
On Apr 29, 1:13 am, wrote:
On Apr 28, 10:09 pm, Joe wrote:

My neighbor has had a dead tree in the back of his property for about
a year, last night the wind finally broke the trunk and it fell a
little toward my yard but was stopped by a large oak tree on my
property. I'm worried that it might break apart and fall when my
children are playing in the yard. I need this tree to come down and
I'm worried that my neighbor won't do it. They have a habit of only
doing the kind of maintenance that is absolutely necessary. How do I
approach them to make sure they take care of this problem? I'm on
good terms with this neighbor and I'd like to take care of this in the
most tactful way possible but I get the feeling they are going to tell
me that if I want the tree down I'm going to have to pay for it
myself.

Umm, it's ALREADY on your property if the only thing keeping it from
hitting the ground is YOUR tree. I'd tell them to remove or I'd call
the county. Since you like these neighbors, you might want to
tactfully "bring it to their attention" (yeah, yeah, they know you
know they know) and mention the danger to your kids, etc. If you don't
get a positive response such as, "We'll have it removed right away",
then call the county. It's a hazard and your neighbor will be ordered
to have it removed. Simple.


Don't know where you live, but it doesn't work like that where I
live.

Whatever part of the tree is on your side of the property is your
responsibility, period.
===========

Bad law you have there. That enables a neighbor to ignore an obvious problem
until it becomes someone else's. Then they can ignore it some more.

Whenever you notice a bad law or a bad project about to be financed with
public money, you can be 100% sure that it was due to either stupidity, or a
politician benefitted financially from the law or project. Always. There are
no exceptions.


In this case, about 800 years of Common Law, from jolly old england,
passed down to our founding fathers. Closely related to the one about
fruit that hangs on a limb that goes over the property line. No
half-vast conspiricy involved, just tradition.

--
aem sends...