Well that definitely hasn’t happened in this case. My mate uses his garage on a daily basis.You can make a claim for the land after just ten years, of your making exclusive use of the land, treating it as though it were yours,
Well that definitely hasn’t happened in this case. My mate uses his garage on a daily basis.You can make a claim for the land after just ten years, of your making exclusive use of the land, treating it as though it were yours,
I told him that over 10 years ago but he just brushed it off as he was on good terms with him then. I said I’d have mentioned to him when the plans went in for the side extension the fact that he wouldn’t be able to get to his garage any more and I'd have stuck a fence/wall up then. The neighbour has three cars and their son has just moved back home so there are 4 cars in the household and he's one of those people that don’t think the road is good enough for him to park his cars on.Retrospect is easy but your mate was an absolute Muppet to have ever agreed to that. Build a fence on the boundary.
The neighbour has three cars and their son has just moved back home so there are 4 cars in the household and he's one of those people that don’t think the road is good enough for him to park his cars on.
Not a boundary dispute, it’s about a right of way of rather lack of it.A lot of layers make huge sums over boundary disputes. The key to this is what the deeds say as that will be the starting point.
That law seems as though it must change on a regular basis. Some friends of ours did a similar thing to you over 40 years ago now with a piece of land next to there home. As it was never maintained and became an eyesore and dumping ground they approached a solicitor to try and find who owned it and what they could do about it. They could never establish who owned it and their solicitor advised them to fence it off and clear it up and use as part of their garden. But if anyone came forward who could prove ownership within 16 years they would have to vacate the land. It was a risk they were prepared to take so they followed his advice and 16 years later had the deeds of their house altered to incorporate the land. I did not realise anything had changed since then so thank you for the information.I agree, the OP is making regular use of his land (drive), so adverse possession has nowt to do with it. I was simply explaining the law to
jj4091, in view of his erroneous comment.
Sorry I misread the original post and thought the neighbour was trying to claim ownershipNot a boundary dispute, it’s about a right of way of rather lack of it.
That makes a stronger case for the neighbour retaining his right of access over the remaining available drive, not a weaker one.Your mate would defend the action by pointing out the easement was lost when the extension was built.
Whilst I agree with the statement regarding planners make no assessment of land ownership I do know of restrictions/requirements for Off-Road parking when approving to house extensions - i.e. If there is already Off-Road parking for 2 or more cars than any extension cannot reduce that number. I'd suspect in this case unless there is a written agreement that the household building the extension can have a right of way over the neighbours ground then I'd expect there to be in the planning conditions that more of the front gardens is converted to parking.How long ago was the extension built?
The planning permission is irrelevant. Planners make no assessment of land ownership when granting permission.
If the unchallenged use has occurred for more than 20 years, there may be some arguments.
I'm working on the bases that, IF there was an easement it would be reciprocal. It is enforced in full on not. You can't expect a court to enforce your rights against a neighbour while ignoring his rights against you. A court would look at the extension and tell you, this was your own doing.That makes a stronger case for the neighbour retaining his right of access over the remaining available drive, not a weaker one.
If they have an easement its obstruction, simple as that really,If a car was parked regularly on the drive in a position not allowing a car acces through what would the neighbour do, or say ?
Broken down cars needing repairs happen
But it was done with the permission of motties mate, so the easement has been varied, it surely doesn't have to be all or nothing.I'm working on the bases that, IF there was an easement it would be reciprocal. It is enforced in full on not. You can't expect a court to enforce your rights against a neighbour while ignoring his rights against you. A court would look at the extension and tell you, this was your own doing.