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Oops! Just started an accidental neighbour dispute

494 replies

tinytoessize4 · 29/08/2008 23:03

Any legal eagles reading? Advice please...

We have a shared passageway only with next door, enclosed at either end, and locked at our end (we did not put the lock on and have evidence to prove this). We thought we owned it outright, but this is not the case as it is a restrictive covenant in the deeds. Anyway, we propsed to move our kitchen downstairs into the passageway area, knockig down our internal wall to create an open room. Yes, we know the planning permission necessary and checked this out. Out of courtesy we informed our neighbour of our pending planning permission application. We have a small son and one bedroom. We only have 2k to do the alterations. I'll continue...we informed her of this, and that she had never utilised the right of access since we had been there and never since the previous owner of our house had been there either. She got a wee bit shirty. Saying that we admitted blocking our passage by placing a lock on the door (!) to which she didn't have a key (why? because she never bothered to get one when whoever put the lock on did it.) and that this was actionable nuisance. grr. she said she wanted monetary compensation for this. We said we didn't have any money. But we do have a shared right of access across the back of her property. We offered to exchange this. She hasn't yet responded. We said it would be best if we met face to face (terrible but we haven't met her and we've been here 2yrs! We were talking by letter). She's a litigation lawyer and though I am a law student, still have a year left. She quoted James v Stevenson [1893] AC 291 at me but I couldn't find it on Westlaw. Where do we stand with regard to the fact the right of access hasn't been exercised by her for about 10yrs? is there any precedent of lapsed right of access? Sorry its long ladies & gents....

OP posts:
BoneyBackJefferson · 28/07/2017 11:37

tinytoessize4
exactly. she knows it is near to lapsing and therefore she would have no bargaining chip at all and would just have to legally roll over and take it.

This ^ is funny, all she has to do to stuff up your plans is demand a key and that you remove the bits that are blocking your passage. and go and stand in there.

paying her costs seems a small price to pay.

BoneyBackJefferson · 28/07/2017 11:39

I fucking HATE ZOMBIE threads those that re-activate them should be banned.

amusedbush · 28/07/2017 11:40

My advice, drop it, you are being totally unrealistic

This all happened almost a decade ago. Pretty sure OP isn't looking for advice any more!

ExConstance · 28/07/2017 11:43

You won't have £2,000 if this goes to court, it will cost you the value of your house and some I would imagine (former lawyer who knows falling out with your neighbour is a very bad idea.) The police will not be the least bit interested in "Criminal Damage" if she removes the lock they have better things to do.

SwimmingInLemonade · 28/07/2017 11:59

Amazing zombie thread! I hope the OP is still around...

FUNM · 28/07/2017 12:03

^ MNHQ pls remove my above post...posted in wrong thread thanks and report button isnt working

Willow2017 · 28/07/2017 12:06

Why would you reanimate a thread that died 9 years ago?

Msqueen33 · 28/07/2017 12:08

People want to know what happened I expect!

viques · 28/07/2017 12:14

this thread is made of rubber, it keeps bouncing back to life.

It would be very wooo if it turns out that the OP has now moved into a flat without a garden but has a fancy for a garden and nice plastic doors just like she once had a fancy for a bigger kitchen ............

Liiinoo · 28/07/2017 12:38

There is no way you can do all this would entail for £2000 even if your neighbour agreed. You would need to redraw boundaries and access details for both properties and alter the records at land registry and presumably you would be liable for the costs for this and your neighbour IF she agreed to it. You would need to notify your mortgage holders as they lent on a property boundaried by a footpath and you would be making it into a linked property.

Sadly you don't get anything for nothing in this life. You cannot increase the foot print of your property and install a fitted kitchen for £2000 and nor can you get free, reliable legal advice from an online forum.

Liiinoo · 28/07/2017 12:45

I am sad it is a zombie thread. It was fascinating - what a sense of entitlement!

TinyPawz · 28/07/2017 12:53

Can some link the neighbours doorway garden threat please?

sittingonacornflake · 17/02/2019 19:02

God I'd love to know the outcome of this!

Cwtches123 · 18/02/2019 18:23

sittingonacornflake I;m sure a lot of people would but most have got the sense not to resurrect a zombie thread!!!!

The op posted in 2008.

MaybeitsMaybelline · 20/02/2019 19:33

It’s like 2 years old, probably dies a death,

MaybeitsMaybelline · 20/02/2019 19:33

Ha ha really? I was a decade out!

Chocolatedeficitdisorder · 21/02/2019 19:17

Thanks for reanimating this, I haven't read it in a while and it still makes me smile.

I hope the OP and her 12 year old child are living in a nice, modern 2-bed semi with a nice garden for the boy to play football in .

I also hope she comes back and tells us what happened before she moved.

YogaDrone · 21/02/2019 20:55

This is one of my favourite threads ever. I'd really love to know what happened in the end, although I'd put money on OPs extension plans not being realised Grin

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