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#121
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On Monday, June 24, 2013 5:24:34 PM UTC-7, wrote:
On Monday, June 24, 2013 3:30:18 PM UTC-4, Ashton Crusher wrote: On Mon, 24 Jun 2013 13:32:55 -0400, Don Wiss wrote: On Mon, 24 Jun 2013 13:24:14 -0400, "dadiOH" wrote: Both surveys show the line in the same place, right? Correct. And despite that, they encroached on your property, right? Question: why did you not stop them? I stopped them when they tried to put it 2 3/4" over. I showed them where the line is. I assumed that they then did it right. Only now have I discovered that they didn't. And the discovery was made when my fence guy put in the side fence and it didn't line up with this fence. So we measured to see what was going on. Don. www.donwiss.com (e-mail link at home page bottom). That would slightly change my prior response since you did raise the issue with them. That said, I think you would still lose if this goes to court. There is only the most trivial of harm to you from what's happened and it seems like the issue with your fence could have been easily fixed at the time it was built had the contractor cared how it was going to line up - apparently he didn't or he would have spotted it before putting up your fence. In this kind of civil dispute there's a good chance the court is not going to focus on technicalities of the law, otherwise they would order a fence moved even if encroached even a sixteenth of an inch over the property line. The court is more likely to look at what an equitably/fair solution would be after hearing from all parties. If I were the judge knowing what I know at this point I'd not be likely to order the fence moved. But another person as judge, god only knows what someone else might decide. I'm having a hard time picturing how/why your fence was not able to line up with this one. You're misinformed as to what courts and judges do. They aren't there to figure out what is fair. They are there to apply the rule of law. And I think you will find plenty of case law that says you can't build something on another person's property. 1.5" isn't much, but it's also clear why they did it. By doing it, they got their fence around a telephone poll. IMO, this would be a slam dunk win, and the fence would have to be moved. To follow your reasoning, a neighbor could build his house where it's not supposed to be, then because it's an inconvenience to redo it, he gets away with it. Judges do consider equity, not just the letter of the law. I've had 40 years of boundary surveys under my belt and have been retained as an expert witness over land issues. Consider the following: 300 foot long block with 12 each 25 foot wide properties. We survey the last property in the block and find that it is only 24 feet wide. We verify that the block is 300 feet in total and find that the first property is sitting on 26 feet width and everyone in between has exactly 25 feet. Subdivision is about 90 years old. All houses are about the same age. A judge would find it very inequitable to have every one of the owners mover their improvements by one (1) foot. All 10 of the interior lots are encroaching on their neighbor by one foot. Fairness and equity are a big part of the law.. Ivan Vegvary |
#123
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Posted to alt.home.repair
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On Wed, 26 Jun 2013 21:09:07 -0700 (PDT), Ivan Vegvary
wrote: Judges do consider equity, not just the letter of the law. I've had 40 years of boundary surveys under my belt and have been retained as an expert witness over land issues. Consider the following: 300 foot long block with 12 each 25 foot wide properties. We survey the last property in the block and find that it is only 24 feet wide. We verify that the block is 300 feet in total and find that the first property is sitting on 26 feet width and everyone in between has exactly 25 feet. Subdivision is about 90 years old. All houses are about the same age. A judge would find it very inequitable to have every one of the owners mover their improvements by one (1) foot. All 10 of the interior lots are encroaching on their neighbor by one foot. Fairness and equity are a big part of the law. Ivan Vegvary So then the first guy benefits while the last guy loses. In a case like that will he be able to use the 1 foot at the first house? If, say, he has a family picnic, could he set up the food tables on the 1 foot of the first guys yard? Could he set up a narrow tennis court in his yard? |
#124
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Posted to alt.home.repair
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On Thursday, June 27, 2013 12:09:07 AM UTC-4, Ivan Vegvary wrote:
On Monday, June 24, 2013 5:24:34 PM UTC-7, wrote: On Monday, June 24, 2013 3:30:18 PM UTC-4, Ashton Crusher wrote: On Mon, 24 Jun 2013 13:32:55 -0400, Don Wiss wrote: On Mon, 24 Jun 2013 13:24:14 -0400, "dadiOH" wrote: Both surveys show the line in the same place, right? Correct. And despite that, they encroached on your property, right? Question: why did you not stop them? I stopped them when they tried to put it 2 3/4" over. I showed them where the line is. I assumed that they then did it right. Only now have I discovered that they didn't. And the discovery was made when my fence guy put in the side fence and it didn't line up with this fence. So we measured to see what was going on. Don. www.donwiss.com (e-mail link at home page bottom). That would slightly change my prior response since you did raise the issue with them. That said, I think you would still lose if this goes to court. There is only the most trivial of harm to you from what's happened and it seems like the issue with your fence could have been easily fixed at the time it was built had the contractor cared how it was going to line up - apparently he didn't or he would have spotted it before putting up your fence. In this kind of civil dispute there's a good chance the court is not going to focus on technicalities of the law, otherwise they would order a fence moved even if encroached even a sixteenth of an inch over the property line.. The court is more likely to look at what an equitably/fair solution would be after hearing from all parties. If I were the judge knowing what I know at this point I'd not be likely to order the fence moved. But another person as judge, god only knows what someone else might decide. I'm having a hard time picturing how/why your fence was not able to line up with this one. You're misinformed as to what courts and judges do. They aren't there to figure out what is fair. They are there to apply the rule of law. And I think you will find plenty of case law that says you can't build something on another person's property. 1.5" isn't much, but it's also clear why they did it. By doing it, they got their fence around a telephone poll. IMO, this would be a slam dunk win, and the fence would have to be moved. To follow your reasoning, a neighbor could build his house where it's not supposed to be, then because it's an inconvenience to redo it, he gets away with it. Judges do consider equity, not just the letter of the law. I've had 40 years of boundary surveys under my belt and have been retained as an expert witness over land issues. Consider the following: 300 foot long block with 12 each 25 foot wide properties. We survey the last property in the block and find that it is only 24 feet wide. We verify that the block is 300 feet in total and find that the first property is sitting on 26 feet width and everyone in between has exactly 25 feet. Subdivision is about 90 years old. All houses are about the same age. A judge would find it very inequitable to have every one of the owners mover their improvements by one (1) foot. All 10 of the interior lots are encroaching on their neighbor by one foot. Fairness and equity are a big part of the law. Ivan Vegvary So, I sign a contract for you to survey my land for $2000. You perform the work, there is no dispute that it's correct. I later find that 8 other surveyors are only charging $800 to $1200. I send you a check for $1000, because that's a fair price. So, is a judge going to decide that $1000 is a fair price and that's all I have to pay, or is the judge going to enforce contract law and make me pay you the $2000? I agree you can come up with extreme cases, like the one you cite. But even in that example, it isn't even clear to me who is at fault, how the problem came to be, and that it can't be solved by straightforward application of the law. For example, the application of adverse possession. The last lot is 24ft, it's been that way long enough to satisfy adverse possession. That could be the end of story without any need for "fairness". If the 24 ft means that it doesn't meet the minimums to build some new structure, put up a new fence, etc, then that's what zoning variances are for. And this case thread of someone putting up a fence on your property 2 months ago is very different. If judges started allowing a fence to stay based on "fairness", it sets a very bad precedence. It encourages everyone else to do the same thing and then sue for "fairness" instead of property rights. In this thread case, there is no dispute as to where the property boundary was. The neighbor's workmen were informed of it. The survey of both neighbors show it to be in the same place. My main point is that many people think a judge is there with fairness and equity as the main concern. If that were the case, the judge in my surveying work example would say all you get is $1000, because that is a fair price for the work. But the judge is going to enforce contract law and you would get your $2000. |
#125
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Posted to alt.home.repair
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On Thu, 27 Jun 2013 06:13:28 -0700 (PDT), "
wrote: Judges do consider equity, not just the letter of the law. I've had 40 years of boundary surveys under my belt and have been retained as an expert witness over land issues. Consider the following: 300 foot long block with 12 each 25 foot wide properties. We survey the last property in the block and find that it is only 24 feet wide. We verify that the block is 300 feet in total and find that the first property is sitting on 26 feet width and everyone in between has exactly 25 feet. Subdivision is about 90 years old. All houses are about the same age. A judge would find it very inequitable to have every one of the owners mover their improvements by one (1) foot. All 10 of the interior lots are encroaching on their neighbor by one foot. Fairness and equity are a big part of the law. Ivan Vegvary So, I sign a contract for you to survey my land for $2000. You perform the work, there is no dispute that it's correct. I later find that 8 other surveyors are only charging $800 to $1200. I send you a check for $1000, because that's a fair price. So, is a judge going to decide that $1000 is a fair price and that's all I have to pay, or is the judge going to enforce contract law and make me pay you the $2000? I agree you can come up with extreme cases, like the one you cite. But even in that example, it isn't even clear to me who is at fault, how the problem came to be, and that it can't be solved by straightforward application of the law. For example, the application of adverse possession. The last lot is 24ft, it's been that way long enough to satisfy adverse possession. That could be the end of story without any need for "fairness". If the 24 ft means that it doesn't meet the minimums to build some new structure, put up a new fence, etc, then that's what zoning variances are for. And this case thread of someone putting up a fence on your property 2 months ago is very different. If judges started allowing a fence to stay based on "fairness", it sets a very bad precedence. It encourages everyone else to do the same thing and then sue for "fairness" instead of property rights. In this thread case, there is no dispute as to where the property boundary was. The neighbor's workmen were informed of it. The survey of both neighbors show it to be in the same place. My main point is that many people think a judge is there with fairness and equity as the main concern. If that were the case, the judge in my surveying work example would say all you get is $1000, because that is a fair price for the work. But the judge is going to enforce contract law and you would get your $2000. You presented a clear contract law issue which is easily resolved based on past precedent. The 1.5" property line issue is not the same. The use of the equity law is often for cases when the award of money makes no sense. Show any real harm from the fence being 1.5" off. Is that costing you money? No. Just because someone wants to be a dick (and I'm not saying the OP is in this case) doesn't mean he will be allowed to. This is a residential house and it's value is not diminished because of the loss of 1.5" of property. If the error was 1.5 feet there would be something worth worrying about. Also, lets say machinery needed to be moved in between that fence and the house and losing 1.5" means the machinery no longer fits and the guy can't run his business. In that case equity would be to move the fence. |
#126
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Posted to alt.home.repair
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On Thursday, June 27, 2013 3:02:17 PM UTC-4, Ashton Crusher wrote:
....snip... You presented a clear contract law issue which is easily resolved based on past precedent. The 1.5" property line issue is not the same. The use of the equity law is often for cases when the award of money makes no sense. Show any real harm from the fence being 1.5" off. How about 127 posts in a.h.r? Is that costing you money? No. Just because someone wants to be a dick (and I'm not saying the OP is in this case) doesn't mean he will be allowed to. This is a residential house and it's value is not diminished because of the loss of 1.5" of property. If the error was 1.5 feet there would be something worth worrying about. Also, lets say machinery needed to be moved in between that fence and the house and losing 1.5" means the machinery no longer fits and the guy can't run his business. In that case equity would be to move the fence. |
#127
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On Thu, 27 Jun 2013 12:16:39 -0700 (PDT), DerbyDad03
wrote: On Thursday, June 27, 2013 3:02:17 PM UTC-4, Ashton Crusher wrote: ...snip... You presented a clear contract law issue which is easily resolved based on past precedent. The 1.5" property line issue is not the same. The use of the equity law is often for cases when the award of money makes no sense. Show any real harm from the fence being 1.5" off. How about 127 posts in a.h.r? Is It keeps people off the streets,... that's got to be a good thing.... |
#128
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On Thursday, June 27, 2013 3:02:17 PM UTC-4, Ashton Crusher wrote:
On Thu, 27 Jun 2013 06:13:28 -0700 (PDT), " wrote: Judges do consider equity, not just the letter of the law. I've had 40 years of boundary surveys under my belt and have been retained as an expert witness over land issues. Consider the following: 300 foot long block with 12 each 25 foot wide properties. We survey the last property in the block and find that it is only 24 feet wide. We verify that the block is 300 feet in total and find that the first property is sitting on 26 feet width and everyone in between has exactly 25 feet. Subdivision is about 90 years old. All houses are about the same age. A judge would find it very inequitable to have every one of the owners mover their improvements by one (1) foot. All 10 of the interior lots are encroaching on their neighbor by one foot. Fairness and equity are a big part of the law. Ivan Vegvary So, I sign a contract for you to survey my land for $2000. You perform the work, there is no dispute that it's correct. I later find that 8 other surveyors are only charging $800 to $1200. I send you a check for $1000, because that's a fair price. So, is a judge going to decide that $1000 is a fair price and that's all I have to pay, or is the judge going to enforce contract law and make me pay you the $2000? I agree you can come up with extreme cases, like the one you cite. But even in that example, it isn't even clear to me who is at fault, how the problem came to be, and that it can't be solved by straightforward application of the law. For example, the application of adverse possession. The last lot is 24ft, it's been that way long enough to satisfy adverse possession. That could be the end of story without any need for "fairness". If the 24 ft means that it doesn't meet the minimums to build some new structure, put up a new fence, etc, then that's what zoning variances are for. And this case thread of someone putting up a fence on your property 2 months ago is very different. If judges started allowing a fence to stay based on "fairness", it sets a very bad precedence. It encourages everyone else to do the same thing and then sue for "fairness" instead of property rights. In this thread case, there is no dispute as to where the property boundary was. The neighbor's workmen were informed of it. The survey of both neighbors show it to be in the same place. My main point is that many people think a judge is there with fairness and equity as the main concern. If that were the case, the judge in my surveying work example would say all you get is $1000, because that is a fair price for the work. But the judge is going to enforce contract law and you would get your $2000. You presented a clear contract law issue which is easily resolved based on past precedent. The 1.5" property line issue is not the same. Why isn't it the same? As the facts are presented here, there is no disagreement over the survey, no issue of accuracy. The neighbor's contractor was even informed by Don where the property line is located and that where they were first going to put the fence was 3" on his side. The property line is not disputed. Then the contractor and/or neighbor went ahead and built the fence on Don's property anyway. Any monkey with a transit would know the fence was on the wrong property. The use of the equity law is often for cases when the award of money makes no sense. Don doesn't want an award. He wants the fence off his property. Show any real harm from the fence being 1.5" off. Is that costing you money? No. Just because someone wants to be a dick (and I'm not saying the OP is in this case) doesn't mean he will be allowed to. The "dick" is the neighbor and/or his contractor, who built a fence on property they don't own. Why would a court reward this behavior? If they let this guy do it, then why wouldn't anyone violate any neighbor's property rights, and then leave it up to the property owner to prove "real harm"? This is a residential house and it's value is not diminished because of the loss of 1.5" of property. If the error was 1.5 feet there would be something worth worrying about. Again, as the facts are presented here, it was *not* a mistake. And even if it is, what I own is mine. If you come along and build something on it, it's YOUR problem, not mine. And it's not up to me to prove that it harms me. Nor is it up to me to prove that there is loss in my property value. It's up to the neighbor to show that the fence is on his property, where it belongs. Also, lets say machinery needed to be moved in between that fence and the house and losing 1.5" means the machinery no longer fits and the guy can't run his business. In that case equity would be to move the fence. BS. The property line is clear. The neighbor chose to violate it, even after being told. The law says you can't build something on you neighbors property. Judges follow the law. |
#129
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On Wed, 26 Jun 2013 22:13:02 -0600, Tony Hwang
wrote: wrote: On Monday, June 24, 2013 3:30:18 PM UTC-4, Ashton Crusher wrote: On Mon, 24 Jun 2013 13:32:55 -0400, Don Wiss wrote: On Mon, 24 Jun 2013 13:24:14 -0400, "dadiOH" wrote: Both surveys show the line in the same place, right? Correct. And despite that, they encroached on your property, right? Question: why did you not stop them? I stopped them when they tried to put it 2 3/4" over. I showed them where the line is. I assumed that they then did it right. Only now have I discovered that they didn't. And the discovery was made when my fence guy put in the side fence and it didn't line up with this fence. So we measured to see what was going on. Don. www.donwiss.com (e-mail link at home page bottom). That would slightly change my prior response since you did raise the issue with them. That said, I think you would still lose if this goes to court. There is only the most trivial of harm to you from what's happened and it seems like the issue with your fence could have been easily fixed at the time it was built had the contractor cared how it was going to line up - apparently he didn't or he would have spotted it before putting up your fence. In this kind of civil dispute there's a good chance the court is not going to focus on technicalities of the law, otherwise they would order a fence moved even if encroached even a sixteenth of an inch over the property line. The court is more likely to look at what an equitably/fair solution would be after hearing from all parties. If I were the judge knowing what I know at this point I'd not be likely to order the fence moved. But another person as judge, god only knows what someone else might decide. I'm having a hard time picturing how/why your fence was not able to line up with this one. You're misinformed as to what courts and judges do. They aren't there to figure out what is fair. They are there to apply the rule of law. And I think you will find plenty of case law that says you can't build something on another person's property. 1.5" isn't much, but it's also clear why they did it. By doing it, they got their fence around a telephone poll. IMO, this would be a slam dunk win, and the fence would have to be moved. To follow your reasoning, a neighbor could build his house where it's not supposed to be, then because it's an inconvenience to redo it, he gets away with it. Hi, Ever heard there is no law but exceptions? That's what minor variances and adjustments are for. |
#130
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On Thu, 27 Jun 2013 13:34:37 -0700 (PDT), "
wrote: On Thursday, June 27, 2013 3:02:17 PM UTC-4, Ashton Crusher wrote: On Thu, 27 Jun 2013 06:13:28 -0700 (PDT), " wrote: Judges do consider equity, not just the letter of the law. I've had 40 years of boundary surveys under my belt and have been retained as an expert witness over land issues. Consider the following: 300 foot long block with 12 each 25 foot wide properties. We survey the last property in the block and find that it is only 24 feet wide. We verify that the block is 300 feet in total and find that the first property is sitting on 26 feet width and everyone in between has exactly 25 feet. Subdivision is about 90 years old. All houses are about the same age. A judge would find it very inequitable to have every one of the owners mover their improvements by one (1) foot. All 10 of the interior lots are encroaching on their neighbor by one foot. Fairness and equity are a big part of the law. Ivan Vegvary So, I sign a contract for you to survey my land for $2000. You perform the work, there is no dispute that it's correct. I later find that 8 other surveyors are only charging $800 to $1200. I send you a check for $1000, because that's a fair price. So, is a judge going to decide that $1000 is a fair price and that's all I have to pay, or is the judge going to enforce contract law and make me pay you the $2000? I agree you can come up with extreme cases, like the one you cite. But even in that example, it isn't even clear to me who is at fault, how the problem came to be, and that it can't be solved by straightforward application of the law. For example, the application of adverse possession. The last lot is 24ft, it's been that way long enough to satisfy adverse possession. That could be the end of story without any need for "fairness". If the 24 ft means that it doesn't meet the minimums to build some new structure, put up a new fence, etc, then that's what zoning variances are for. And this case thread of someone putting up a fence on your property 2 months ago is very different. If judges started allowing a fence to stay based on "fairness", it sets a very bad precedence. It encourages everyone else to do the same thing and then sue for "fairness" instead of property rights. In this thread case, there is no dispute as to where the property boundary was. The neighbor's workmen were informed of it. The survey of both neighbors show it to be in the same place. My main point is that many people think a judge is there with fairness and equity as the main concern. If that were the case, the judge in my surveying work example would say all you get is $1000, because that is a fair price for the work. But the judge is going to enforce contract law and you would get your $2000. You presented a clear contract law issue which is easily resolved based on past precedent. The 1.5" property line issue is not the same. Why isn't it the same? As the facts are presented here, there is no disagreement over the survey, no issue of accuracy. The neighbor's contractor was even informed by Don where the property line is located and that where they were first going to put the fence was 3" on his side. The property line is not disputed. Then the contractor and/or neighbor went ahead and built the fence on Don's property anyway. Any monkey with a transit would know the fence was on the wrong property. The use of the equity law is often for cases when the award of money makes no sense. Don doesn't want an award. He wants the fence off his property. Show any real harm from the fence being 1.5" off. Is that costing you money? No. Just because someone wants to be a dick (and I'm not saying the OP is in this case) doesn't mean he will be allowed to. The "dick" is the neighbor and/or his contractor, who built a fence on property they don't own. Why would a court reward this behavior? If they let this guy do it, then why wouldn't anyone violate any neighbor's property rights, and then leave it up to the property owner to prove "real harm"? This is a residential house and it's value is not diminished because of the loss of 1.5" of property. If the error was 1.5 feet there would be something worth worrying about. Again, as the facts are presented here, it was *not* a mistake. And even if it is, what I own is mine. If you come along and build something on it, it's YOUR problem, not mine. And it's not up to me to prove that it harms me. Nor is it up to me to prove that there is loss in my property value. It's up to the neighbor to show that the fence is on his property, where it belongs. Also, lets say machinery needed to be moved in between that fence and the house and losing 1.5" means the machinery no longer fits and the guy can't run his business. In that case equity would be to move the fence. BS. The property line is clear. The neighbor chose to violate it, even after being told. The law says you can't build something on you neighbors property. Judges follow the law. The thing you keep missing is that this is NOT a contract dispute. The guy who built the fence did NOT have a contract with the OP, he had a contract with the owner of the house who had the fence built. If the court ruled that the fence had to be moved, THEN that homeowner would have a contract dispute with the contractor who failed to build it on the property and HE could sue for performance if teh contractor refused to move the fence. The OP has no standing to sue based on the contract, he's not a party to it. |
#131
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On Thu, 27 Jun 2013 13:34:37 -0700 (PDT), "
wrote: On Thursday, June 27, 2013 3:02:17 PM UTC-4, Ashton Crusher wrote: On Thu, 27 Jun 2013 06:13:28 -0700 (PDT), " wrote: Judges do consider equity, not just the letter of the law. I've had 40 years of boundary surveys under my belt and have been retained as an expert witness over land issues. Consider the following: 300 foot long block with 12 each 25 foot wide properties. We survey the last property in the block and find that it is only 24 feet wide. We verify that the block is 300 feet in total and find that the first property is sitting on 26 feet width and everyone in between has exactly 25 feet. Subdivision is about 90 years old. All houses are about the same age. A judge would find it very inequitable to have every one of the owners mover their improvements by one (1) foot. All 10 of the interior lots are encroaching on their neighbor by one foot. Fairness and equity are a big part of the law. Ivan Vegvary So, I sign a contract for you to survey my land for $2000. You perform the work, there is no dispute that it's correct. I later find that 8 other surveyors are only charging $800 to $1200. I send you a check for $1000, because that's a fair price. So, is a judge going to decide that $1000 is a fair price and that's all I have to pay, or is the judge going to enforce contract law and make me pay you the $2000? I agree you can come up with extreme cases, like the one you cite. But even in that example, it isn't even clear to me who is at fault, how the problem came to be, and that it can't be solved by straightforward application of the law. For example, the application of adverse possession. The last lot is 24ft, it's been that way long enough to satisfy adverse possession. That could be the end of story without any need for "fairness". If the 24 ft means that it doesn't meet the minimums to build some new structure, put up a new fence, etc, then that's what zoning variances are for. And this case thread of someone putting up a fence on your property 2 months ago is very different. If judges started allowing a fence to stay based on "fairness", it sets a very bad precedence. It encourages everyone else to do the same thing and then sue for "fairness" instead of property rights. In this thread case, there is no dispute as to where the property boundary was. The neighbor's workmen were informed of it. The survey of both neighbors show it to be in the same place. My main point is that many people think a judge is there with fairness and equity as the main concern. If that were the case, the judge in my surveying work example would say all you get is $1000, because that is a fair price for the work. But the judge is going to enforce contract law and you would get your $2000. You presented a clear contract law issue which is easily resolved based on past precedent. The 1.5" property line issue is not the same. Why isn't it the same? As the facts are presented here, there is no disagreement over the survey, no issue of accuracy. The neighbor's contractor was even informed by Don where the property line is located and that where they were first going to put the fence was 3" on his side. The property line is not disputed. Then the contractor and/or neighbor went ahead and built the fence on Don's property anyway. Any monkey with a transit would know the fence was on the wrong property. The use of the equity law is often for cases when the award of money makes no sense. Don doesn't want an award. He wants the fence off his property. Show any real harm from the fence being 1.5" off. Is that costing you money? No. Just because someone wants to be a dick (and I'm not saying the OP is in this case) doesn't mean he will be allowed to. The "dick" is the neighbor and/or his contractor, who built a fence on property they don't own. Why would a court reward this behavior? If they let this guy do it, then why wouldn't anyone violate any neighbor's property rights, and then leave it up to the property owner to prove "real harm"? This is a residential house and it's value is not diminished because of the loss of 1.5" of property. If the error was 1.5 feet there would be something worth worrying about. Again, as the facts are presented here, it was *not* a mistake. And even if it is, what I own is mine. If you come along and build something on it, it's YOUR problem, not mine. And it's not up to me to prove that it harms me. Nor is it up to me to prove that there is loss in my property value. It's up to the neighbor to show that the fence is on his property, where it belongs. Also, lets say machinery needed to be moved in between that fence and the house and losing 1.5" means the machinery no longer fits and the guy can't run his business. In that case equity would be to move the fence. BS. The property line is clear. The neighbor chose to violate it, even after being told. The law says you can't build something on you neighbors property. Judges follow the law. Good luck with that. |
#132
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On Thu, 27 Jun 2013 21:28:45 -0400, wrote:
On Wed, 26 Jun 2013 22:13:02 -0600, Tony Hwang wrote: wrote: On Monday, June 24, 2013 3:30:18 PM UTC-4, Ashton Crusher wrote: On Mon, 24 Jun 2013 13:32:55 -0400, Don Wiss wrote: On Mon, 24 Jun 2013 13:24:14 -0400, "dadiOH" wrote: Both surveys show the line in the same place, right? Correct. And despite that, they encroached on your property, right? Question: why did you not stop them? I stopped them when they tried to put it 2 3/4" over. I showed them where the line is. I assumed that they then did it right. Only now have I discovered that they didn't. And the discovery was made when my fence guy put in the side fence and it didn't line up with this fence. So we measured to see what was going on. Don. www.donwiss.com (e-mail link at home page bottom). That would slightly change my prior response since you did raise the issue with them. That said, I think you would still lose if this goes to court. There is only the most trivial of harm to you from what's happened and it seems like the issue with your fence could have been easily fixed at the time it was built had the contractor cared how it was going to line up - apparently he didn't or he would have spotted it before putting up your fence. In this kind of civil dispute there's a good chance the court is not going to focus on technicalities of the law, otherwise they would order a fence moved even if encroached even a sixteenth of an inch over the property line. The court is more likely to look at what an equitably/fair solution would be after hearing from all parties. If I were the judge knowing what I know at this point I'd not be likely to order the fence moved. But another person as judge, god only knows what someone else might decide. I'm having a hard time picturing how/why your fence was not able to line up with this one. You're misinformed as to what courts and judges do. They aren't there to figure out what is fair. They are there to apply the rule of law. And I think you will find plenty of case law that says you can't build something on another person's property. 1.5" isn't much, but it's also clear why they did it. By doing it, they got their fence around a telephone poll. IMO, this would be a slam dunk win, and the fence would have to be moved. To follow your reasoning, a neighbor could build his house where it's not supposed to be, then because it's an inconvenience to redo it, he gets away with it. Hi, Ever heard there is no law but exceptions? That's what minor variances and adjustments are for. Which is exactly what a 1.5" mistake is. |
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On Thu, 27 Jun 2013 19:28:18 -0700, Ashton Crusher
wrote: Which is exactly what a 1.5" mistake is. Is a 1.5" mistake the same as a 1.5" I know its wrong but I'm doing it anyway? Intent may be a factor. |
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On Fri, 28 Jun 2013 01:59:58 -0400, Ed Pawlowski wrote:
On Thu, 27 Jun 2013 19:28:18 -0700, Ashton Crusher wrote: Which is exactly what a 1.5" mistake is. Is a 1.5" mistake the same as a 1.5" I know its wrong but I'm doing it anyway? Intent may be a factor. I could answer that but it would just be my opinion and that's what's got this whole discussion in a tizzy. Combine that with the notion some people have that judges "just follow the law". Jeez, haven't you people ever been to traffic court? The lower you go in the court hierarchy the more the judges just do whatever the hell they feel like doing. Thinking "I'm right, therefore I'll win" is a fools game. Yes, Intent could be a factor. But keep in mind that the parties to the suit will not necessarily be the guy with the intent/the guy that made the mistake. Are you going to sue the guy who owns the fence or the guy who built it? |
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On Thu, 27 Jun 2013 23:46:13 -0700, Ashton Crusher
wrote: I could answer that but it would just be my opinion and that's what's got this whole discussion in a tizzy. Combine that with the notion some people have that judges "just follow the law". Jeez, haven't you people ever been to traffic court? My favorite was many years ago in Philadelphia. Must have been 150 of us in court that morning. Judge comes in and the Bailiff says "all rise". Judge walks to the bench and asks "how do you plead" Everyone (what a surprise) said NOT GULTY. Judge said "dismissed" He probably had an early Tee time. |
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On Thursday, June 27, 2013 9:42:38 PM UTC-4, Ashton Crusher wrote:
On Thu, 27 Jun 2013 13:34:37 -0700 (PDT), " wrote: On Thursday, June 27, 2013 3:02:17 PM UTC-4, Ashton Crusher wrote: On Thu, 27 Jun 2013 06:13:28 -0700 (PDT), " wrote: Judges do consider equity, not just the letter of the law. I've had 40 years of boundary surveys under my belt and have been retained as an expert witness over land issues. Consider the following: 300 foot long block with 12 each 25 foot wide properties. We survey the last property in the block and find that it is only 24 feet wide. We verify that the block is 300 feet in total and find that the first property is sitting on 26 feet width and everyone in between has exactly 25 feet. Subdivision is about 90 years old. All houses are about the same age. A judge would find it very inequitable to have every one of the owners mover their improvements by one (1) foot. All 10 of the interior lots are encroaching on their neighbor by one foot. Fairness and equity are a big part of the law. Ivan Vegvary So, I sign a contract for you to survey my land for $2000. You perform the work, there is no dispute that it's correct. I later find that 8 other surveyors are only charging $800 to $1200. I send you a check for $1000, because that's a fair price. So, is a judge going to decide that $1000 is a fair price and that's all I have to pay, or is the judge going to enforce contract law and make me pay you the $2000? I agree you can come up with extreme cases, like the one you cite. But even in that example, it isn't even clear to me who is at fault, how the problem came to be, and that it can't be solved by straightforward application of the law. For example, the application of adverse possession. The last lot is 24ft, it's been that way long enough to satisfy adverse possession. That could be the end of story without any need for "fairness". If the 24 ft means that it doesn't meet the minimums to build some new structure, put up a new fence, etc, then that's what zoning variances are for. And this case thread of someone putting up a fence on your property 2 months ago is very different. If judges started allowing a fence to stay based on "fairness", it sets a very bad precedence. It encourages everyone else to do the same thing and then sue for "fairness" instead of property rights. In this thread case, there is no dispute as to where the property boundary was. The neighbor's workmen were informed of it. The survey of both neighbors show it to be in the same place. My main point is that many people think a judge is there with fairness and equity as the main concern. If that were the case, the judge in my surveying work example would say all you get is $1000, because that is a fair price for the work. But the judge is going to enforce contract law and you would get your $2000. You presented a clear contract law issue which is easily resolved based on past precedent. The 1.5" property line issue is not the same. Why isn't it the same? As the facts are presented here, there is no disagreement over the survey, no issue of accuracy. The neighbor's contractor was even informed by Don where the property line is located and that where they were first going to put the fence was 3" on his side. The property line is not disputed. Then the contractor and/or neighbor went ahead and built the fence on Don's property anyway. Any monkey with a transit would know the fence was on the wrong property. The use of the equity law is often for cases when the award of money makes no sense. Don doesn't want an award. He wants the fence off his property. Show any real harm from the fence being 1.5" off. Is that costing you money? No. Just because someone wants to be a dick (and I'm not saying the OP is in this case) doesn't mean he will be allowed to. The "dick" is the neighbor and/or his contractor, who built a fence on property they don't own. Why would a court reward this behavior? If they let this guy do it, then why wouldn't anyone violate any neighbor's property rights, and then leave it up to the property owner to prove "real harm"? This is a residential house and it's value is not diminished because of the loss of 1.5" of property. If the error was 1.5 feet there would be something worth worrying about. Again, as the facts are presented here, it was *not* a mistake. And even if it is, what I own is mine. If you come along and build something on it, it's YOUR problem, not mine. And it's not up to me to prove that it harms me. Nor is it up to me to prove that there is loss in my property value. It's up to the neighbor to show that the fence is on his property, where it belongs. Also, lets say machinery needed to be moved in between that fence and the house and losing 1.5" means the machinery no longer fits and the guy can't run his business. In that case equity would be to move the fence. BS. The property line is clear. The neighbor chose to violate it, even after being told. The law says you can't build something on you neighbors property. Judges follow the law. The thing you keep missing is that this is NOT a contract dispute. The guy who built the fence did NOT have a contract with the OP, he had a contract with the owner of the house who had the fence built. If the court ruled that the fence had to be moved, THEN that homeowner would have a contract dispute with the contractor who failed to build it on the property and HE could sue for performance if teh contractor refused to move the fence. The OP has no standing to sue based on the contract, he's not a party to it. I never said it was a contracts case. I only used that as a simple example of where the court enforces LAW, not what the judge thinks is fair. And what you keep missing is that the law says you can't build something on another man's property. That is what the neigbor did, in flaggerant violation of the law. His contractor and architect were explicitly told that where they were putting the fence was illegal. They went ahead and did it anyway. Now, you want to pretend that the property owner now has to prove that it actually harmed him, by how much, etc. The court will have none of that. The remedy is simple, move the fence. And the stinking fence is what 50 ft long? And finally, you keep missing that courts don't want to reward and encourage bad behavior. If the law worked like you think, every asshole would build a fence onto someone else's property because the court would then say "Well, it's only 2", 6", 12" over on somebody else property, the lot is 1/2 acre, so unless you can prove it actually harms you, the fence stays. Some world that would be. |
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On Thursday, June 27, 2013 10:28:18 PM UTC-4, Ashton Crusher wrote:
On Thu, 27 Jun 2013 21:28:45 -0400, wrote: On Wed, 26 Jun 2013 22:13:02 -0600, Tony Hwang wrote: wrote: On Monday, June 24, 2013 3:30:18 PM UTC-4, Ashton Crusher wrote: On Mon, 24 Jun 2013 13:32:55 -0400, Don Wiss wrote: On Mon, 24 Jun 2013 13:24:14 -0400, "dadiOH" wrote: Both surveys show the line in the same place, right? Correct. And despite that, they encroached on your property, right? Question: why did you not stop them? I stopped them when they tried to put it 2 3/4" over. I showed them where the line is. I assumed that they then did it right. Only now have I discovered that they didn't. And the discovery was made when my fence guy put in the side fence and it didn't line up with this fence. So we measured to see what was going on. Don. www.donwiss.com (e-mail link at home page bottom). That would slightly change my prior response since you did raise the issue with them. That said, I think you would still lose if this goes to court. There is only the most trivial of harm to you from what's happened and it seems like the issue with your fence could have been easily fixed at the time it was built had the contractor cared how it was going to line up - apparently he didn't or he would have spotted it before putting up your fence. In this kind of civil dispute there's a good chance the court is not going to focus on technicalities of the law, otherwise they would order a fence moved even if encroached even a sixteenth of an inch over the property line. The court is more likely to look at what an equitably/fair solution would be after hearing from all parties. If I were the judge knowing what I know at this point I'd not be likely to order the fence moved. But another person as judge, god only knows what someone else might decide. I'm having a hard time picturing how/why your fence was not able to line up with this one. You're misinformed as to what courts and judges do. They aren't there to figure out what is fair. They are there to apply the rule of law. And I think you will find plenty of case law that says you can't build something on another person's property. 1.5" isn't much, but it's also clear why they did it. By doing it, they got their fence around a telephone poll. IMO, this would be a slam dunk win, and the fence would have to be moved. To follow your reasoning, a neighbor could build his house where it's not supposed to be, then because it's an inconvenience to redo it, he gets away with it. Hi, Ever heard there is no law but exceptions? That's what minor variances and adjustments are for. Which is exactly what a 1.5" mistake is. Despite expressing opinions, you haven't even read the facts. As the facts are stated, it was most definitely *not* a mistake. |
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On Thursday, June 27, 2013 10:28:18 PM UTC-4, Ashton Crusher wrote:
On Thu, 27 Jun 2013 21:28:45 -0400, wrote: On Wed, 26 Jun 2013 22:13:02 -0600, Tony Hwang wrote: wrote: On Monday, June 24, 2013 3:30:18 PM UTC-4, Ashton Crusher wrote: On Mon, 24 Jun 2013 13:32:55 -0400, Don Wiss wrote: On Mon, 24 Jun 2013 13:24:14 -0400, "dadiOH" wrote: Both surveys show the line in the same place, right? Correct. And despite that, they encroached on your property, right? Question: why did you not stop them? I stopped them when they tried to put it 2 3/4" over. I showed them where the line is. I assumed that they then did it right. Only now have I discovered that they didn't. And the discovery was made when my fence guy put in the side fence and it didn't line up with this fence. So we measured to see what was going on. Don. www.donwiss.com (e-mail link at home page bottom). That would slightly change my prior response since you did raise the issue with them. That said, I think you would still lose if this goes to court. There is only the most trivial of harm to you from what's happened and it seems like the issue with your fence could have been easily fixed at the time it was built had the contractor cared how it was going to line up - apparently he didn't or he would have spotted it before putting up your fence. In this kind of civil dispute there's a good chance the court is not going to focus on technicalities of the law, otherwise they would order a fence moved even if encroached even a sixteenth of an inch over the property line. The court is more likely to look at what an equitably/fair solution would be after hearing from all parties. If I were the judge knowing what I know at this point I'd not be likely to order the fence moved.. But another person as judge, god only knows what someone else might decide. I'm having a hard time picturing how/why your fence was not able to line up with this one. You're misinformed as to what courts and judges do. They aren't there to figure out what is fair. They are there to apply the rule of law. And I think you will find plenty of case law that says you can't build something on another person's property. 1.5" isn't much, but it's also clear why they did it. By doing it, they got their fence around a telephone poll. IMO, this would be a slam dunk win, and the fence would have to be moved. To follow your reasoning, a neighbor could build his house where it's not supposed to be, then because it's an inconvenience to redo it, he gets away with it. Hi, Ever heard there is no law but exceptions? That's what minor variances and adjustments are for. Which is exactly what a 1.5" mistake is. If I am understanding the situation correctly - based on what Don has written - it wasn't a mistake. Let's recap: From the first post in this thread: "The back yard neighbor has put up a fence that is 1 1/2" on my property. They have a survey. I also have a survey from the same surveyor. I showed them where the line was. But they went ahead and did this in order to have the entire top fit behind a phone pole that is on their property." Key point: Don said the neighbor did it, but later he "clarified" that and said he didn't talk to the neighbor, he talked to the contractor. *Time out for some defense lawyer speak: If he started this thread with a false/unclear statement, can we really trust anything he says after that? He first said "The back yard neighbor..." followed immediately by "_They_ have a survey" and mentioned a pole "on their property". At that point in the thread it was not clear who "they" refered to, but we all assumed it was the neighbor. Only later did he clarify that "they" meant the contractor. That also mean that the statement about "on their property" was essentially false. OK, if we ignore the "who is they" issue, the key words from his OP are "I showed them where the line was. But they went ahead and did this..." Later, when you (Ashton) said: "I think you would be on shaky legal grounds. From what you said you knew when it was being built that it was on your property yet you let them build it there" Don replied: "NO. I stopped them from putting it 2 3/4" over and told them to not put any of it on my property. I showed them where the line is." So, if we choose to believe what Don has posted, as soon as they (the contractor) started to install the fence 2 3/4" over the property, he talked to the contractor and informed him as to where the property line was. If, in fact, the contractor installed the fence 1 1/2" (later reduced, by Don, to 1 1/4") in order to clear the aforementioned pole, then there was no "mistake". The fence was intentionally installed on his property. |
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On Fri, 28 Jun 2013, DerbyDad03 wrote:
If, in fact, the contractor installed the fence 1 1/2" (later reduced, by Don, to 1 1/4") in order to clear the aforementioned pole, then there was no "mistake". The fence was intentionally installed on his property. I recruited someone and with my new 30' tape measure I took two measurements. At one spot it is 2" over. At another spot it was 1-1/2" to 1-3/4" over. If there is a bow in the tape you can't get an accurate measurement. It appears to not be straight. In addition to the pole, they also had to clear a silver maple that is in their yard, but not behind my yard. Don. www.donwiss.com (e-mail link at home page bottom). |
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On Monday, June 24, 2013 9:56:44 AM UTC-5, Don Wiss wrote:
The back yard neighbor has put up a fence that is 1 1/2" on my property. They have a survey. I also have a survey from the same surveyor. I showed them where the line was. But they went ahead and did this in order to have the entire top fit behind a phone pole that is on their property. Had they not faced the good side towards themselves, it would not have been an issue. All that is on my property are the 4x4 posts and the top. Do I have the right to slice the posts and top right at the line? The fence back is attached to the fence sides, which would give it stability. The reason for doing this is the properties are staggered. I'm adding a fence to the back where this fence isn't, and it won't line up. I know I have the right to cut off tree limbs that hang over. But do I also have the right to cut back a fence that is hanging over? Don. www.donwiss.com (e-mail link at home page bottom). Have you actually talked to the neighbor directly yet???????????? |
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On Fri, 28 Jun 2013 11:44:19 -0700 (PDT), "
wrote: Have you actually talked to the neighbor directly yet???????????? Some people have neighbor bogey. An exaggerated fear, like people that have "convict bogey" - an exaggerated fear of convicted felons. |
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On Fri, 28 Jun 2013 05:41:23 -0700 (PDT), "
wrote: On Thursday, June 27, 2013 9:42:38 PM UTC-4, Ashton Crusher wrote: On Thu, 27 Jun 2013 13:34:37 -0700 (PDT), " wrote: On Thursday, June 27, 2013 3:02:17 PM UTC-4, Ashton Crusher wrote: On Thu, 27 Jun 2013 06:13:28 -0700 (PDT), " wrote: Judges do consider equity, not just the letter of the law. I've had 40 years of boundary surveys under my belt and have been retained as an expert witness over land issues. Consider the following: 300 foot long block with 12 each 25 foot wide properties. We survey the last property in the block and find that it is only 24 feet wide. We verify that the block is 300 feet in total and find that the first property is sitting on 26 feet width and everyone in between has exactly 25 feet. Subdivision is about 90 years old. All houses are about the same age. A judge would find it very inequitable to have every one of the owners mover their improvements by one (1) foot. All 10 of the interior lots are encroaching on their neighbor by one foot. Fairness and equity are a big part of the law. Ivan Vegvary So, I sign a contract for you to survey my land for $2000. You perform the work, there is no dispute that it's correct. I later find that 8 other surveyors are only charging $800 to $1200. I send you a check for $1000, because that's a fair price. So, is a judge going to decide that $1000 is a fair price and that's all I have to pay, or is the judge going to enforce contract law and make me pay you the $2000? I agree you can come up with extreme cases, like the one you cite. But even in that example, it isn't even clear to me who is at fault, how the problem came to be, and that it can't be solved by straightforward application of the law. For example, the application of adverse possession. The last lot is 24ft, it's been that way long enough to satisfy adverse possession. That could be the end of story without any need for "fairness". If the 24 ft means that it doesn't meet the minimums to build some new structure, put up a new fence, etc, then that's what zoning variances are for. And this case thread of someone putting up a fence on your property 2 months ago is very different. If judges started allowing a fence to stay based on "fairness", it sets a very bad precedence. It encourages everyone else to do the same thing and then sue for "fairness" instead of property rights. In this thread case, there is no dispute as to where the property boundary was. The neighbor's workmen were informed of it. The survey of both neighbors show it to be in the same place. My main point is that many people think a judge is there with fairness and equity as the main concern. If that were the case, the judge in my surveying work example would say all you get is $1000, because that is a fair price for the work. But the judge is going to enforce contract law and you would get your $2000. You presented a clear contract law issue which is easily resolved based on past precedent. The 1.5" property line issue is not the same. Why isn't it the same? As the facts are presented here, there is no disagreement over the survey, no issue of accuracy. The neighbor's contractor was even informed by Don where the property line is located and that where they were first going to put the fence was 3" on his side. The property line is not disputed. Then the contractor and/or neighbor went ahead and built the fence on Don's property anyway. Any monkey with a transit would know the fence was on the wrong property. The use of the equity law is often for cases when the award of money makes no sense. Don doesn't want an award. He wants the fence off his property. Show any real harm from the fence being 1.5" off. Is that costing you money? No. Just because someone wants to be a dick (and I'm not saying the OP is in this case) doesn't mean he will be allowed to. The "dick" is the neighbor and/or his contractor, who built a fence on property they don't own. Why would a court reward this behavior? If they let this guy do it, then why wouldn't anyone violate any neighbor's property rights, and then leave it up to the property owner to prove "real harm"? This is a residential house and it's value is not diminished because of the loss of 1.5" of property. If the error was 1.5 feet there would be something worth worrying about. Again, as the facts are presented here, it was *not* a mistake. And even if it is, what I own is mine. If you come along and build something on it, it's YOUR problem, not mine. And it's not up to me to prove that it harms me. Nor is it up to me to prove that there is loss in my property value. It's up to the neighbor to show that the fence is on his property, where it belongs. Also, lets say machinery needed to be moved in between that fence and the house and losing 1.5" means the machinery no longer fits and the guy can't run his business. In that case equity would be to move the fence. BS. The property line is clear. The neighbor chose to violate it, even after being told. The law says you can't build something on you neighbors property. Judges follow the law. The thing you keep missing is that this is NOT a contract dispute. The guy who built the fence did NOT have a contract with the OP, he had a contract with the owner of the house who had the fence built. If the court ruled that the fence had to be moved, THEN that homeowner would have a contract dispute with the contractor who failed to build it on the property and HE could sue for performance if teh contractor refused to move the fence. The OP has no standing to sue based on the contract, he's not a party to it. I never said it was a contracts case. I only used that as a simple example So simple that it is WRONG. of where the court enforces LAW, not what the judge thinks is fair. And what you keep missing is that the law says you can't build something on another man's property. What law says that? People build stuff on other peoples property all the time. Usually they have an easement. Sometimes they don't. If the property owner fails to object the guy doing the building may wind up with ownership thru adverse possession. The possession has to be notorious and adverse and typically for a certain period of time. That is what the neighbor did, in flaggerant violation of the law. His contractor and architect were explicitly told that where they were putting the fence was illegal. They went ahead and did it anyway. Now, you want to pretend that the property owner now has to prove that it actually harmed him, by how much, etc. The court will have none of that. The remedy is simple, move the fence. And the stinking fence is what 50 ft long? Sorry but that's how the real world works. Sometimes it sucks. He may not win in court, it's far from a slam dunk. And finally, you keep missing that courts don't want to reward and encourage bad behavior. If the law worked like you think, every asshole would build a fence onto someone else's property because the court would then say "Well, it's only 2", 6", 12" over on somebody else property, the lot is 1/2 acre, so unless you can prove it actually harms you, the fence stays. Some world that would be. Most people would not be willing to take the chance. If a judge only sees one case like this a year and it's over 1.5" of encroachment that does not real harm he is unlikely to rule that the fence must be moved. If he sees one a week things might well be different. Most judges aren't going to operate on the silly thinking about what might happen if things were vastly different then they are. Just out of curiosity, what do you think would happen if this case was slightly different... lets say that the contractor built the fence 1.5 inches away from the property line. Now that owner sees this and tells teh contractor to move the fence over 1.5". The contractor refuses. This would actually be a case in contract law. What do you think the judge would say? Would he tell the contractor he must move teh fence so it is EXAXCTLY on the line but not over? Or would he listen to the contractor say "I always build a little short of the line to be sure I don't put the homeowner in jeopardy should it turn out there is a slight survey error. In 20 years of building fences no one has ever complained before. I don't think it makes sense to move the fence and create the possibility of encroachment." and after listening to the contractor the judge might say "You re right, this is an insignificant deviation that creates no actual harm to the homeowner. Case dismissed. Just as would happen for the case in question.... |
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On Fri, 28 Jun 2013 05:42:54 -0700 (PDT), "
wrote: On Thursday, June 27, 2013 10:28:18 PM UTC-4, Ashton Crusher wrote: On Thu, 27 Jun 2013 21:28:45 -0400, wrote: On Wed, 26 Jun 2013 22:13:02 -0600, Tony Hwang wrote: wrote: On Monday, June 24, 2013 3:30:18 PM UTC-4, Ashton Crusher wrote: On Mon, 24 Jun 2013 13:32:55 -0400, Don Wiss wrote: On Mon, 24 Jun 2013 13:24:14 -0400, "dadiOH" wrote: Both surveys show the line in the same place, right? Correct. And despite that, they encroached on your property, right? Question: why did you not stop them? I stopped them when they tried to put it 2 3/4" over. I showed them where the line is. I assumed that they then did it right. Only now have I discovered that they didn't. And the discovery was made when my fence guy put in the side fence and it didn't line up with this fence. So we measured to see what was going on. Don. www.donwiss.com (e-mail link at home page bottom). That would slightly change my prior response since you did raise the issue with them. That said, I think you would still lose if this goes to court. There is only the most trivial of harm to you from what's happened and it seems like the issue with your fence could have been easily fixed at the time it was built had the contractor cared how it was going to line up - apparently he didn't or he would have spotted it before putting up your fence. In this kind of civil dispute there's a good chance the court is not going to focus on technicalities of the law, otherwise they would order a fence moved even if encroached even a sixteenth of an inch over the property line. The court is more likely to look at what an equitably/fair solution would be after hearing from all parties. If I were the judge knowing what I know at this point I'd not be likely to order the fence moved. But another person as judge, god only knows what someone else might decide. I'm having a hard time picturing how/why your fence was not able to line up with this one. You're misinformed as to what courts and judges do. They aren't there to figure out what is fair. They are there to apply the rule of law. And I think you will find plenty of case law that says you can't build something on another person's property. 1.5" isn't much, but it's also clear why they did it. By doing it, they got their fence around a telephone poll. IMO, this would be a slam dunk win, and the fence would have to be moved. To follow your reasoning, a neighbor could build his house where it's not supposed to be, then because it's an inconvenience to redo it, he gets away with it. Hi, Ever heard there is no law but exceptions? That's what minor variances and adjustments are for. Which is exactly what a 1.5" mistake is. Despite expressing opinions, you haven't even read the facts. As the facts are stated, it was most definitely *not* a mistake. Are you sure? Yes, the initial error was pointed out. Do we know that the guy who was party to the conversation was the actual guy digging the holes? We know he did move the first erroneous posts back. Not enough apparently. But can we be sure there was not a misunderstanding between the OP and the contractor as to what was to be moved back? The OP's intent was that NOTHING encroach but perhaps teh contractor thought the OP meant that he didn't want the face boards encroaching but didn't care if the posts did. Or maybe he intended that nothing encroach but he did the math wrong when he figured how far back he needed to move things. What do you suppose will be testified to in court? I have seen many instances of this kind of miscommunication and it's certainly within the realm of possibility here. So I again offer MY opinion that if this went to court the judge would say "You're here to complain about a 1.5" accouchement!!! Case Dismissed, or perhaps "I'll award you $150 for a counseling session". |
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On Fri, 28 Jun 2013 06:57:10 -0700 (PDT), DerbyDad03
wrote: On Thursday, June 27, 2013 10:28:18 PM UTC-4, Ashton Crusher wrote: On Thu, 27 Jun 2013 21:28:45 -0400, wrote: On Wed, 26 Jun 2013 22:13:02 -0600, Tony Hwang wrote: wrote: On Monday, June 24, 2013 3:30:18 PM UTC-4, Ashton Crusher wrote: On Mon, 24 Jun 2013 13:32:55 -0400, Don Wiss wrote: On Mon, 24 Jun 2013 13:24:14 -0400, "dadiOH" wrote: Both surveys show the line in the same place, right? Correct. And despite that, they encroached on your property, right? Question: why did you not stop them? I stopped them when they tried to put it 2 3/4" over. I showed them where the line is. I assumed that they then did it right. Only now have I discovered that they didn't. And the discovery was made when my fence guy put in the side fence and it didn't line up with this fence. So we measured to see what was going on. Don. www.donwiss.com (e-mail link at home page bottom). That would slightly change my prior response since you did raise the issue with them. That said, I think you would still lose if this goes to court. There is only the most trivial of harm to you from what's happened and it seems like the issue with your fence could have been easily fixed at the time it was built had the contractor cared how it was going to line up - apparently he didn't or he would have spotted it before putting up your fence. In this kind of civil dispute there's a good chance the court is not going to focus on technicalities of the law, otherwise they would order a fence moved even if encroached even a sixteenth of an inch over the property line. The court is more likely to look at what an equitably/fair solution would be after hearing from all parties. If I were the judge knowing what I know at this point I'd not be likely to order the fence moved. But another person as judge, god only knows what someone else might decide. I'm having a hard time picturing how/why your fence was not able to line up with this one. You're misinformed as to what courts and judges do. They aren't there to figure out what is fair. They are there to apply the rule of law. And I think you will find plenty of case law that says you can't build something on another person's property. 1.5" isn't much, but it's also clear why they did it. By doing it, they got their fence around a telephone poll. IMO, this would be a slam dunk win, and the fence would have to be moved. To follow your reasoning, a neighbor could build his house where it's not supposed to be, then because it's an inconvenience to redo it, he gets away with it. Hi, Ever heard there is no law but exceptions? That's what minor variances and adjustments are for. Which is exactly what a 1.5" mistake is. If I am understanding the situation correctly - based on what Don has written - it wasn't a mistake. Let's recap: From the first post in this thread: "The back yard neighbor has put up a fence that is 1 1/2" on my property. They have a survey. I also have a survey from the same surveyor. I showed them where the line was. But they went ahead and did this in order to have the entire top fit behind a phone pole that is on their property." Key point: Don said the neighbor did it, but later he "clarified" that and said he didn't talk to the neighbor, he talked to the contractor. *Time out for some defense lawyer speak: If he started this thread with a false/unclear statement, can we really trust anything he says after that? He first said "The back yard neighbor..." followed immediately by "_They_ have a survey" and mentioned a pole "on their property". At that point in the thread it was not clear who "they" refered to, but we all assumed it was the neighbor. Only later did he clarify that "they" meant the contractor. That also mean that the statement about "on their property" was essentially false. OK, if we ignore the "who is they" issue, the key words from his OP are "I showed them where the line was. But they went ahead and did this..." Later, when you (Ashton) said: "I think you would be on shaky legal grounds. From what you said you knew when it was being built that it was on your property yet you let them build it there" Don replied: "NO. I stopped them from putting it 2 3/4" over and told them to not put any of it on my property. I showed them where the line is." So, if we choose to believe what Don has posted, as soon as they (the contractor) started to install the fence 2 3/4" over the property, he talked to the contractor and informed him as to where the property line was. If, in fact, the contractor installed the fence 1 1/2" (later reduced, by Don, to 1 1/4") in order to clear the aforementioned pole, then there was no "mistake". The fence was intentionally installed on his property. Hopefully you read my immediately prior post of a minute ago. There is plenty of unknowns here in terms of what was said and more importantly, what was actually understood. In addition, we cannot rule out that the contractor intended to get it ALL on the right side of the "line" but made a calculation error. |
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On Fri, 28 Jun 2013 15:00:11 -0700, Ashton Crusher wrote:
Just out of curiosity, what do you think would happen if this case was slightly different... lets say that the contractor built the fence 1.5 inches away from the property line. Actually last Summer the contractor told he built them 1" inside the line to be safe. But there are two brothers. It was the older one that told me that. The younger one may have been the one overseeing the fence construction. Don. www.donwiss.com (e-mail link at home page bottom). |
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On Fri, 28 Jun 2013 21:19:10 -0400, Don Wiss
wrote: Actually last Summer the contractor told he built them 1" inside the line to be safe. But there are two brothers. It was the older one that told me that. The younger one may have been the one overseeing the fence construction. Would you pee your pants if you had to talk to the neighbor? You seem to blame everybody else, but have not spoken to the owner? Shall I give you some advice about dealing with a tiger's den? |
#148
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On Thursday, June 27, 2013 9:42:38 PM UTC-4, Ashton Crusher wrote:
On Thu, 27 Jun 2013 13:34:37 -0700 (PDT), " wrote: On Thursday, June 27, 2013 3:02:17 PM UTC-4, Ashton Crusher wrote: On Thu, 27 Jun 2013 06:13:28 -0700 (PDT), " wrote: Judges do consider equity, not just the letter of the law. I've had 40 years of boundary surveys under my belt and have been retained as an expert witness over land issues. Consider the following: 300 foot long block with 12 each 25 foot wide properties. We survey the last property in the block and find that it is only 24 feet wide. We verify that the block is 300 feet in total and find that the first property is sitting on 26 feet width and everyone in between has exactly 25 feet. Subdivision is about 90 years old. All houses are about the same age. A judge would find it very inequitable to have every one of the owners mover their improvements by one (1) foot. All 10 of the interior lots are encroaching on their neighbor by one foot. Fairness and equity are a big part of the law. Ivan Vegvary So, I sign a contract for you to survey my land for $2000. You perform the work, there is no dispute that it's correct. I later find that 8 other surveyors are only charging $800 to $1200. I send you a check for $1000, because that's a fair price. So, is a judge going to decide that $1000 is a fair price and that's all I have to pay, or is the judge going to enforce contract law and make me pay you the $2000? I agree you can come up with extreme cases, like the one you cite. But even in that example, it isn't even clear to me who is at fault, how the problem came to be, and that it can't be solved by straightforward application of the law. For example, the application of adverse possession. The last lot is 24ft, it's been that way long enough to satisfy adverse possession. That could be the end of story without any need for "fairness". If the 24 ft means that it doesn't meet the minimums to build some new structure, put up a new fence, etc, then that's what zoning variances are for. And this case thread of someone putting up a fence on your property 2 months ago is very different. If judges started allowing a fence to stay based on "fairness", it sets a very bad precedence. It encourages everyone else to do the same thing and then sue for "fairness" instead of property rights. In this thread case, there is no dispute as to where the property boundary was. The neighbor's workmen were informed of it. The survey of both neighbors show it to be in the same place. My main point is that many people think a judge is there with fairness and equity as the main concern. If that were the case, the judge in my surveying work example would say all you get is $1000, because that is a fair price for the work. But the judge is going to enforce contract law and you would get your $2000. You presented a clear contract law issue which is easily resolved based on past precedent. The 1.5" property line issue is not the same. Why isn't it the same? As the facts are presented here, there is no disagreement over the survey, no issue of accuracy. The neighbor's contractor was even informed by Don where the property line is located and that where they were first going to put the fence was 3" on his side. The property line is not disputed. Then the contractor and/or neighbor went ahead and built the fence on Don's property anyway. Any monkey with a transit would know the fence was on the wrong property. The use of the equity law is often for cases when the award of money makes no sense. Don doesn't want an award. He wants the fence off his property. Show any real harm from the fence being 1.5" off. Is that costing you money? No. Just because someone wants to be a dick (and I'm not saying the OP is in this case) doesn't mean he will be allowed to. The "dick" is the neighbor and/or his contractor, who built a fence on property they don't own. Why would a court reward this behavior? If they let this guy do it, then why wouldn't anyone violate any neighbor's property rights, and then leave it up to the property owner to prove "real harm"? This is a residential house and it's value is not diminished because of the loss of 1.5" of property. If the error was 1.5 feet there would be something worth worrying about. Again, as the facts are presented here, it was *not* a mistake. And even if it is, what I own is mine. If you come along and build something on it, it's YOUR problem, not mine. And it's not up to me to prove that it harms me. Nor is it up to me to prove that there is loss in my property value. It's up to the neighbor to show that the fence is on his property, where it belongs. Also, lets say machinery needed to be moved in between that fence and the house and losing 1.5" means the machinery no longer fits and the guy can't run his business. In that case equity would be to move the fence. BS. The property line is clear. The neighbor chose to violate it, even after being told. The law says you can't build something on you neighbors property. Judges follow the law. The thing you keep missing is that this is NOT a contract dispute. The guy who built the fence did NOT have a contract with the OP, he had a contract with the owner of the house who had the fence built. If the court ruled that the fence had to be moved, THEN that homeowner would have a contract dispute with the contractor who failed to build it on the property and HE could sue for performance if teh contractor refused to move the fence. The OP has no standing to sue based on the contract, he's not a party to it. What you keep missing is the law says you can't build something on another man's property. The remedy for that is simple. The fence gets moved. This isn't some innocent mistake. It's an overt act of the neighbor or his workmen, not giving a damn and deliberately putting a fence on another man's property, even after being told by the owner not to. You want to now believe that a court is going to get into what is "fair", to make the guy infringed prove that he's really harmed. This is absurd. The court will order the fence to be moved. And it's not that it's impossible to do, it's a tiny backyard with what, 40ft of fence? Good grief. |
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On Friday, June 28, 2013 6:00:11 PM UTC-4, Ashton Crusher wrote:
On Fri, 28 Jun 2013 05:41:23 -0700 (PDT), " wrote: On Thursday, June 27, 2013 9:42:38 PM UTC-4, Ashton Crusher wrote: On Thu, 27 Jun 2013 13:34:37 -0700 (PDT), " wrote: On Thursday, June 27, 2013 3:02:17 PM UTC-4, Ashton Crusher wrote: On Thu, 27 Jun 2013 06:13:28 -0700 (PDT), " wrote: Judges do consider equity, not just the letter of the law. I've had 40 years of boundary surveys under my belt and have been retained as an expert witness over land issues. Consider the following: 300 foot long block with 12 each 25 foot wide properties. We survey the last property in the block and find that it is only 24 feet wide. We verify that the block is 300 feet in total and find that the first property is sitting on 26 feet width and everyone in between has exactly 25 feet. Subdivision is about 90 years old. All houses are about the same age. A judge would find it very inequitable to have every one of the owners mover their improvements by one (1) foot. All 10 of the interior lots are encroaching on their neighbor by one foot. Fairness and equity are a big part of the law. Ivan Vegvary So, I sign a contract for you to survey my land for $2000. You perform the work, there is no dispute that it's correct. I later find that 8 other surveyors are only charging $800 to $1200. I send you a check for $1000, because that's a fair price. So, is a judge going to decide that $1000 is a fair price and that's all I have to pay, or is the judge going to enforce contract law and make me pay you the $2000? I agree you can come up with extreme cases, like the one you cite. But even in that example, it isn't even clear to me who is at fault, how the problem came to be, and that it can't be solved by straightforward application of the law. For example, the application of adverse possession. The last lot is 24ft, it's been that way long enough to satisfy adverse possession. That could be the end of story without any need for "fairness". If the 24 ft means that it doesn't meet the minimums to build some new structure, put up a new fence, etc, then that's what zoning variances are for. And this case thread of someone putting up a fence on your property 2 months ago is very different. If judges started allowing a fence to stay based on "fairness", it sets a very bad precedence. It encourages everyone else to do the same thing and then sue for "fairness" instead of property rights. In this thread case, there is no dispute as to where the property boundary was. The neighbor's workmen were informed of it. The survey of both neighbors show it to be in the same place. My main point is that many people think a judge is there with fairness and equity as the main concern. If that were the case, the judge in my surveying work example would say all you get is $1000, because that is a fair price for the work. But the judge is going to enforce contract law and you would get your $2000. You presented a clear contract law issue which is easily resolved based on past precedent. The 1.5" property line issue is not the same. Why isn't it the same? As the facts are presented here, there is no disagreement over the survey, no issue of accuracy. The neighbor's contractor was even informed by Don where the property line is located and that where they were first going to put the fence was 3" on his side. The property line is not disputed. Then the contractor and/or neighbor went ahead and built the fence on Don's property anyway. Any monkey with a transit would know the fence was on the wrong property. The use of the equity law is often for cases when the award of money makes no sense. Don doesn't want an award. He wants the fence off his property. Show any real harm from the fence being 1.5" off. Is that costing you money? No. Just because someone wants to be a dick (and I'm not saying the OP is in this case) doesn't mean he will be allowed to. The "dick" is the neighbor and/or his contractor, who built a fence on property they don't own. Why would a court reward this behavior? If they let this guy do it, then why wouldn't anyone violate any neighbor's property rights, and then leave it up to the property owner to prove "real harm"? This is a residential house and it's value is not diminished because of the loss of 1.5" of property. If the error was 1.5 feet there would be something worth worrying about. Again, as the facts are presented here, it was *not* a mistake. And even if it is, what I own is mine. If you come along and build something on it, it's YOUR problem, not mine. And it's not up to me to prove that it harms me. Nor is it up to me to prove that there is loss in my property value. It's up to the neighbor to show that the fence is on his property, where it belongs. Also, lets say machinery needed to be moved in between that fence and the house and losing 1.5" means the machinery no longer fits and the guy can't run his business. In that case equity would be to move the fence. BS. The property line is clear. The neighbor chose to violate it, even after being told. The law says you can't build something on you neighbors property. Judges follow the law. The thing you keep missing is that this is NOT a contract dispute. The guy who built the fence did NOT have a contract with the OP, he had a contract with the owner of the house who had the fence built. If the court ruled that the fence had to be moved, THEN that homeowner would have a contract dispute with the contractor who failed to build it on the property and HE could sue for performance if teh contractor refused to move the fence. The OP has no standing to sue based on the contract, he's not a party to it. I never said it was a contracts case. I only used that as a simple example So simple that it is WRONG. of where the court enforces LAW, not what the judge thinks is fair. And what you keep missing is that the law says you can't build something on another man's property. What law says that? People build stuff on other peoples property all the time. Usually they have an easement. Sometimes they don't. Good grief! Do I have to spell out everything for you? He has NO EASEMENT. HE had no PERMISSION. In fact, his architect and contractor were specifically told that where they were about to install the fence was on the wrong property. And in the cases where you build something on someone else property WITHOUT permission, it is in clear violation of the law. If the property owner fails to object the guy doing the building may wind up with ownership thru adverse possession. The possession has to be notorious and adverse and typically for a certain period of time. Yeah, like 20 years. It's been two months. And the party also has to pay the real estate taxes on the property for those 20 years. The neighbor isn't paying the taxes, Don is. That is what the neighbor did, in flaggerant violation of the law. His contractor and architect were explicitly told that where they were putting the fence was illegal. They went ahead and did it anyway. Now, you want to pretend that the property owner now has to prove that it actually harmed him, by how much, etc. The court will have none of that. The remedy is simple, move the fence. And the stinking fence is what 50 ft long? Sorry but that's how the real world works. Sometimes it sucks. He may not win in court, it's far from a slam dunk. I disagree. It'a about as clear a case as exists, about who is right, who is wrong, who owns the property. If courts like shysters get away with this, chaos would soon take over. And finally, you keep missing that courts don't want to reward and encourage bad behavior. If the law worked like you think, every asshole would build a fence onto someone else's property because the court would then say "Well, it's only 2", 6", 12" over on somebody else property, the lot is 1/2 acre, so unless you can prove it actually harms you, the fence stays. Some world that would be. Most people would not be willing to take the chance. If a judge only sees one case like this a year and it's over 1.5" of encroachment that does not real harm he is unlikely to rule that the fence must be moved. BS. Again, you think courts just start out with some concept of "fairness". That the judge is going to think "Gee, it really ain't that bad, it would be an inconvenience for the bad guy to move it, etc. That is precisely my point. Judges don't go there, unless it's some issue that isn't readily covered and solved by existing law and case law. And when you deliberately build a fence on another person't property, it's simple. You can't. The fence goes. If he sees one a week things might well be different. Most judges aren't going to operate on the silly thinking about what might happen if things were vastly different then they are. The silly thinking here is that it's OK for some skunk to violate a person's property rights and build a fence on someone else's property. Just out of curiosity, what do you think would happen if this case was slightly different... lets say that the contractor built the fence 1.5 inches away from the property line. Now that owner sees this and tells teh contractor to move the fence over 1.5". The contractor refuses. This would actually be a case in contract law. What do you think the judge would say? Would he tell the contractor he must move teh fence so it is EXAXCTLY on the line but not over? Very likely the contractor would lose. The contractor is the professional. If the contractor was unwilling to build the fence where the owner wanted it, he should have told him so. He should not have entered into a contract and then disregard the contract and do what he pleases. The contractor kept hidden what he was really going to do. If he had been honest, the owner could have called other contractors to find one that would do what he wanted. Or would he listen to the contractor say "I always build a little short of the line to be sure I don't put the homeowner in jeopardy should it turn out there is a slight survey error. In 20 years of building fences no one has ever complained before. I don't think it makes sense to move the fence and create the possibility of encroachment." and after listening to the contractor the judge might say "You re right, this is an insignificant deviation that creates no actual harm to the homeowner. Case dismissed. Just as would happen for the case in question.... Good grief! Now you're trying to conflate a hypothetical case where a contractor builds a fence 1.5" over on property the guy owns, with one where the fence is built on SOMEONE ELSES PROPERTY. |
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#151
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jeff_wisnia wrote:
Don Wiss wrote: The back yard neighbor has put up a fence that is 1 1/2" on my property. They have a survey. I also have a survey from the same surveyor. I showed them where the line was. But they went ahead and did this in order to have the entire top fit behind a phone pole that is on their property. Had they not faced the good side towards themselves, it would not have been an issue. All that is on my property are the 4x4 posts and the top. Do I have the right to slice the posts and top right at the line? The fence back is attached to the fence sides, which would give it stability. The reason for doing this is the properties are staggered. I'm adding a fence to the back where this fence isn't, and it won't line up. I know I have the right to cut off tree limbs that hang over. But do I also have the right to cut back a fence that is hanging over? Don. www.donwiss.com (e-mail link at home page bottom). I'm surprised you haven't yet mentioned how much you are paying in property tax for that 1-1/2 inch strip of land you can't use and moan about your neighbor not offering to reimburse you that amount each year. G "Good fences make good neighbors." Jeff Hi, I am just glad I live in a 7 house Cul de Sac. We're all getting along very well. No problems. |
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On 6/28/2013 6:00 PM, Ashton Crusher wrote:
....Major Snippage Occurred... Just out of curiosity, what do you think would happen if this case was slightly different... lets say that the contractor built the fence 1.5 inches away from the property line. Now that owner sees this and tells teh contractor to move the fence over 1.5". The contractor refuses. This would actually be a case in contract law. What do you think the judge would say? Would he tell the contractor he must move teh fence so it is EXAXCTLY on the line but not over? Or would he listen to the contractor say "I always build a little short of the line to be sure I don't put the homeowner in jeopardy should it turn out there is a slight survey error. In 20 years of building fences no one has ever complained before. I don't think it makes sense to move the fence and create the possibility of encroachment." and after listening to the contractor the judge might say "You re right, this is an insignificant deviation that creates no actual harm to the homeowner. Case dismissed. Just as would happen for the case in question.... There's a huge, huge, huge (that's 3 x huge) difference between a dispute involving the incorrect placement of a fence by a contractor when the fence is entirely on the property of the individual that signed the contract and the incorrect placement of a fence onto the property of someone who is in no way involved in the contract. I seriously doubt that even the same judge would consider an encroachment onto a third party's property equivalent to the fence between placed inside the property line of the land owner whocontracted the fence. |
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#155
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On Saturday, June 29, 2013 11:25:22 AM UTC-6, DerbyDad03 wrote:
On 6/29/2013 9:14 AM, wrote: On Thursday, June 27, 2013 9:42:38 PM UTC-4, Ashton Crusher wrote: ...Major Snippage Occurred... The thing you keep missing is that this is NOT a contract dispute. The guy who built the fence did NOT have a contract with the OP, he had a contract with the owner of the house who had the fence built. If the court ruled that the fence had to be moved, THEN that homeowner would have a contract dispute with the contractor who failed to build it on the property and HE could sue for performance if teh contractor refused to move the fence. The OP has no standing to sue based on the contract, he's not a party to it. What you keep missing is the law says you can't build something on another man's property. The remedy for that is simple. The fence gets moved. This isn't some innocent mistake. It's an overt act of the neighbor or his workmen, not giving a damn and deliberately putting a fence on another man's property, even after being told by the owner not to. You want to now believe that a court is going to get into what is "fair", to make the guy infringed prove that he's really harmed. This is absurd. The court will order the fence to be moved. And it's not that it's impossible to do, it's a tiny backyard with what, 40ft of fence? Good grief. No argument from me, but just from a practical point of view, moving 40' of fence 1.5 *feet* would probably be easier to do than moving 40' of fence 1.5 inches. If the post holes had the typical 80 lb bag of cement dumped into each hole, moving them 1.5" is going to be kind of hard - I agree: not impossible, but kind of hard. === An awful lot of bull**** over 1 1/2 inches of space which WILL NEVER BE USED BY ANYONE. This guy watches the contractor build the fence where it now is and THEN complains. Why didn't he say something BEFORE it was completed? He KNEW that it was going AROUND that power pole...by letting the building continue he was by his inaction OKAYING the whole shebang. |
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DerbyDad03 wrote:
On 6/29/2013 9:14 AM, wrote: On Thursday, June 27, 2013 9:42:38 PM UTC-4, Ashton Crusher wrote: ...Major Snippage Occurred... The thing you keep missing is that this is NOT a contract dispute. The guy who built the fence did NOT have a contract with the OP, he had a contract with the owner of the house who had the fence built. If the court ruled that the fence had to be moved, THEN that homeowner would have a contract dispute with the contractor who failed to build it on the property and HE could sue for performance if teh contractor refused to move the fence. The OP has no standing to sue based on the contract, he's not a party to it. What you keep missing is the law says you can't build something on another man's property. The remedy for that is simple. The fence gets moved. This isn't some innocent mistake. It's an overt act of the neighbor or his workmen, not giving a damn and deliberately putting a fence on another man's property, even after being told by the owner not to. You want to now believe that a court is going to get into what is "fair", to make the guy infringed prove that he's really harmed. This is absurd. The court will order the fence to be moved. And it's not that it's impossible to do, it's a tiny backyard with what, 40ft of fence? Good grief. No argument from me, but just from a practical point of view, moving 40' of fence 1.5 *feet* would probably be easier to do than moving 40' of fence 1.5 inches. If the post holes had the typical 80 lb bag of cement dumped into each hole, moving them 1.5" is going to be kind of hard - I agree: not impossible, but kind of hard. Hi, Also I am wondering what is surveyor's allowed margin of error? Making enemy of neighbor with 1.5" overlook or mistake or whatever. Is it worth it? |
#157
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Ashton Crusher wrote:
On Thu, 27 Jun 2013 13:34:37 -0700 (PDT), " wrote: On Thursday, June 27, 2013 3:02:17 PM UTC-4, Ashton Crusher wrote: On Thu, 27 Jun 2013 06:13:28 -0700 (PDT), " wrote: Judges do consider equity, not just the letter of the law. I've had 40 years of boundary surveys under my belt and have been retained as an expert witness over land issues. Consider the following: 300 foot long block with 12 each 25 foot wide properties. We survey the last property in the block and find that it is only 24 feet wide. We verify that the block is 300 feet in total and find that the first property is sitting on 26 feet width and everyone in between has exactly 25 feet. Subdivision is about 90 years old. All houses are about the same age. A judge would find it very inequitable to have every one of the owners mover their improvements by one (1) foot. All 10 of the interior lots are encroaching on their neighbor by one foot. Fairness and equity are a big part of the law. Ivan Vegvary So, I sign a contract for you to survey my land for $2000. You perform the work, there is no dispute that it's correct. I later find that 8 other surveyors are only charging $800 to $1200. I send you a check for $1000, because that's a fair price. So, is a judge going to decide that $1000 is a fair price and that's all I have to pay, or is the judge going to enforce contract law and make me pay you the $2000? I agree you can come up with extreme cases, like the one you cite. But even in that example, it isn't even clear to me who is at fault, how the problem came to be, and that it can't be solved by straightforward application of the law. For example, the application of adverse possession. The last lot is 24ft, it's been that way long enough to satisfy adverse possession. That could be the end of story without any need for "fairness". If the 24 ft means that it doesn't meet the minimums to build some new structure, put up a new fence, etc, then that's what zoning variances are for. And this case thread of someone putting up a fence on your property 2 months ago is very different. If judges started allowing a fence to stay based on "fairness", it sets a very bad precedence. It encourages everyone else to do the same thing and then sue for "fairness" instead of property rights. In this thread case, there is no dispute as to where the property boundary was. The neighbor's workmen were informed of it. The survey of both neighbors show it to be in the same place. My main point is that many people think a judge is there with fairness and equity as the main concern. If that were the case, the judge in my surveying work example would say all you get is $1000, because that is a fair price for the work. But the judge is going to enforce contract law and you would get your $2000. You presented a clear contract law issue which is easily resolved based on past precedent. The 1.5" property line issue is not the same. Why isn't it the same? As the facts are presented here, there is no disagreement over the survey, no issue of accuracy. The neighbor's contractor was even informed by Don where the property line is located and that where they were first going to put the fence was 3" on his side. The property line is not disputed. Then the contractor and/or neighbor went ahead and built the fence on Don's property anyway. Any monkey with a transit would know the fence was on the wrong property. The use of the equity law is often for cases when the award of money makes no sense. Don doesn't want an award. He wants the fence off his property. Show any real harm from the fence being 1.5" off. Is that costing you money? No. Just because someone wants to be a dick (and I'm not saying the OP is in this case) doesn't mean he will be allowed to. The "dick" is the neighbor and/or his contractor, who built a fence on property they don't own. Why would a court reward this behavior? If they let this guy do it, then why wouldn't anyone violate any neighbor's property rights, and then leave it up to the property owner to prove "real harm"? This is a residential house and it's value is not diminished because of the loss of 1.5" of property. If the error was 1.5 feet there would be something worth worrying about. Again, as the facts are presented here, it was *not* a mistake. And even if it is, what I own is mine. If you come along and build something on it, it's YOUR problem, not mine. And it's not up to me to prove that it harms me. Nor is it up to me to prove that there is loss in my property value. It's up to the neighbor to show that the fence is on his property, where it belongs. Also, lets say machinery needed to be moved in between that fence and the house and losing 1.5" means the machinery no longer fits and the guy can't run his business. In that case equity would be to move the fence. BS. The property line is clear. The neighbor chose to violate it, even after being told. The law says you can't build something on you neighbors property. Judges follow the law. Good luck with that. Hmmm, Law is man made. Judge is human. |
#158
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On Sat, 29 Jun 2013 09:36:08 -0600, Tony Hwang
wrote: Hi, If it was 1 and half foot over I'd do something but mere 1.5"?, Hmmm... Have you ever thought of doing something courteous like snipping 900 lines of the previous message? |
#159
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On Sat, 29 Jun 2013 11:24:52 -0700 (PDT), Roy
wrote: An awful lot of bull**** over 1 1/2 inches of space which WILL NEVER BE USED BY ANYONE. This guy watches the contractor build the fence where it now is and THEN complains. Why didn't he say something BEFORE it was completed? He KNEW that it was going AROUND that power pole...by letting the building continue he was by his inaction OKAYING the whole shebang. IIRC, he did make it known at the time. Should he have gotten a gun and stopped them? |
#160
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On Fri, 28 Jun 2013 18:31:19 -0700, Oren wrote:
Would you pee your pants if you had to talk to the neighbor? I have been trying to visit him. I left a message on the old phone number he had back a year ago when he lived in Manhattan. I went over two evenings this past week, but he was not home. I guess with his wife away he found something else to do in the evenings. I could see that he was there today. On my second trip around the block I got him. As expected he was not aware of the problem. Neither the architect or contractor told him that I was complaining. He is going to ask his contractor to look into it. Don. www.donwiss.com (e-mail link at home page bottom). |
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