Crosswords1 min ago
Unadopted Road
12 Answers
My neighbour has painted in a parking space outside his maisonette. I believe it is an unadopted road and this parking space is not his but he said it is in the deeds of his house. How can I check?
Answers
I didnt know you could adopt a road. I want to adopt the M25.
19:35 Fri 01st Mar 2013
Click 'Find a Property' here, and download the Title Plan for his property for £3:
http:// www.lan dregist ry.gov. uk/publ ic/onli ne-serv ices
http://
Sue. On the Title Document that Chris refers to, there will most likely be an "easement" recorded relating to the access road.
If it mentions particular parking rights then fine. You'll most likely find that it refers to the road only as far as you all have access. In that case, you could park in his "space", and there would be nothing he could do to stop you.
Look for the easement.
If it mentions particular parking rights then fine. You'll most likely find that it refers to the road only as far as you all have access. In that case, you could park in his "space", and there would be nothing he could do to stop you.
Look for the easement.
An 'adopted' road means the local authority have accepted it as part of the public highway and they are responsible for maintaining it.
Conversely, the land forming an unadopted road is owned by someone else. It could be the freehold landlord if these maisonettes are leasehold, or it could be that all the properties on the development own a share of this land. It seems unlikely to be that one person 'owns' the space outside his maisonette, but if he did you would see it if you downloaded the title register and title plan for his property using the link Buenchico gave you.
Easements are a different thing. An easement giving a right of way over another's land entitles one to pass/repass over it. It does NOT give a right to park on it - only pass over it. If the road is owned by the landlord or another party, as The Builder says, it is 100% certain that you have an easement recording that you can pass along the access road. You tedious neighbour will have the same. But it is virtually unheard of that he gets the sole right to park on this road - only in a space allocated when the development was completed - not where it thinks he can just get his paintbrush out to create.
Conversely, the land forming an unadopted road is owned by someone else. It could be the freehold landlord if these maisonettes are leasehold, or it could be that all the properties on the development own a share of this land. It seems unlikely to be that one person 'owns' the space outside his maisonette, but if he did you would see it if you downloaded the title register and title plan for his property using the link Buenchico gave you.
Easements are a different thing. An easement giving a right of way over another's land entitles one to pass/repass over it. It does NOT give a right to park on it - only pass over it. If the road is owned by the landlord or another party, as The Builder says, it is 100% certain that you have an easement recording that you can pass along the access road. You tedious neighbour will have the same. But it is virtually unheard of that he gets the sole right to park on this road - only in a space allocated when the development was completed - not where it thinks he can just get his paintbrush out to create.