The Bloke On Who Wants To Be A...
Film, Media & TV1 min ago
We moved into our current property approximately a year ago. On the Land Registry Title plan, our land extends beyond our back fence to the end of the road which extends behind our house. The road is a dead end and there are houses behind ours. The house which occupies the corner behind ours has recently put up a 3ft chain and post fence around the grassed area, which includes the land we own behind our fence as well as the land he owns behind our next door neighbours. He claims he owns the land behind our house also, but there is no record of a transfer of land to him, and the current Land Registry plans show it is ours. He says he has been maintaining the land for 6/7 years as did his predecessor. However, he has only just put up the fence to keep kids from playing football on the grass. We want to fence this is as part of our garden, as some of our neighbours further along have already done.
I have two questions:
Does adverse possession apply to him as he has maintained the ground, but not fenced it in until last week?
Do we need planning permission to override the covenent in the title deeds?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.The law on adverse possession changed under the Land Registration Act 2002 so that a squatter could claim to be registered as proprietor after 10 years of adverse possession. Your neighbour does not have this period, so I do not believe that he can make such a claim. As far as I know, there is no legal device for him to claim for ten years based on three years being accrued by the previous owner (I am unsure on this point - others such as Golden Shred may correct me), because the claim is by the individual and not transferrable with the title of the property when it sold.
To claim the land at all he would have to apply to the LR - and he has evidently not done this. You should inform him that he is incorrect and advise him that you intend to fence your land.
Your last line refers to a convenent in the title deeds. What is this convenent? (Planning Permission is nothing to do with legal title, being instead to do with the Town and Country Planning Act to develop one's land - it is nothing to do with land ownership.) Hope that helps.
It is largely as buildersmate says, that is that after ten years a formal claim for adverse possession can be made to the Land Registry. All neighbours and affected parties are notified by the LR and if there is an objection no entry will be made and this lasts for two years. If at the end of two years the arguments against the claim are not sorted out then no entry at all will be made. You can read all about it here by scrolling down to and opening LRPG 4. You will see that as a fence has only just been erected he has no claim whatsoever. Merely cutting the grass and tidying up gives rise to no claim at all. Planning Permission has nothing to do with this, it is for the Land Registry and the Courts. As buildersmate requests, could you please give details of the covenant to enable comment.
The actual wording of what I presume is a covenent is under the section heading ' The third schedule before referred to', and there are various paragraphs. This is the fourth paragraph:
4. Not to fence or otherwise enclose that part of the property herby transferred between the dwellinghouse and any road or roads as the case may be onto which it abuts or has a return frontage but to maintain such parts in accordance with the requirements of the appropriate Planning Authority.
Does this enlighten anyone?
The plans of both properties can be found at this link. My property is no 14, and my neighbours property is in the corner behind mine. My existing fence is marked in black, the boundary in red.
http://www.doctors.net.uk/DocStore/DSView/Albu m.aspx?folderid=39253
Sorry, that link didn't work. Try this
http://www.doctors.net.uk/DocStore/DSView/Albu m.aspx?folderid=39253
If you copy and paste the link and take the <p> off the end, it works then...don't know why it won't work
http://www.doctors.net.uk/DocStore/DSview/Album.aspx?folderid=39253
Should I be formally writing to my neighbour to say that he has put a fence on what is legally my property and he should remove it? I am not sure whether this is going to upset the applecart more, so to speak.
The local planning office have said that if I apply for planning permission, then this will override the paragraph in the deeds. I want to do this, but should I go ahead and apply if my neighbour still says he has a claim on the land?
I feel like this is all such a mess!!
(a) write to your neighbour by all means. Simply say that the fence which he has improperly erected on your property must be removed and the ground returned to its former condition within fourteen days, that is by (insert date 16 days from the date of your letter), failing which you will have the fence removed and placed on his property and the ground repaired at his expense without further notice.
(b) your neighbour has no valid or genuine claim to your property of any sort. Non at all. Should he try to advance one it will only be waffle and will not get anywhere.
(c) I am not clear in my own mind as to what you are seeking planning permission for - a fence, shed, garage, greenhouse? You will have to have it properly drawn up to apply and your Local Authority Fee will be about �200 so you will be down �500. Even if you were successful (and personally I think you stand no chance) remember that your contract (covenant) with the estate developer restricts the use of that bit of land to as stated in the covenant and planning permission of itself will not release you from the covenant. You will have to negotiate (purchase) release from the covenant from the estate developer who will in turn have to seek release from the estate overall planning permission from your Local Authority. Not in the least bit likely to happen and quite expensive to find that out as your estate developer will require you to indemnify his costs beforehand.
(d) to my mind your best bet is to persevere to return it to the open grassed area that it is intended to be, make access to get a mower out onto it and maintain it. If you do not do this it will muck up your conveyance and will be a severe obstacle when you want to sell.