12 Dorrington Street,
London EC1N 7TB
Tel: 0800 197 1248
PRIVATE PROPERTY BOUNDARY DISPUTES
The Boundary
Boundaries are denoted on large scale Ordnance Survey plans held by the
Land Registry UK. Each registered title has a title plan. This map shows
your property's physical rather than legal boundaries. The general boundary
rule applies in the UK meaning that boundaries indicated on title plans
may not be accurately represented on the ground. The new Land Registration
Act 2002 allows you to determine and record the exact line of your boundaries
on a registered title, so avoiding any future boundary disputes.
But what happens, for instance, if a neighbour complains a new wall is
overlapping their land, or their new extension takes up part of a pathway
between your houses?
A minor disagreement can quickly become a full-scale dispute involving
solicitors' letters and threats of court action. Even more damaging are
the costs involved. In London, a square metre (10 square foot) piece of
disputed land is worth around £600. Ultimately, the cost of protecting
your right to that land in court could be 50 or 100 times that much, so
it pays to think hard before rushing into legal action.
What should you do?
Request our surveyors to look at all aspects of the problem and advise
on whether or not you have a case.
Chartered surveyors specialising in boundaries are professional advisors
with relevant knowledge of both property issues and the law.
They will look at the problem, prepare any technical data that may help
solve the dispute at an early stage and, if necessary, provide a court
with the appropriate advice and information needed to make a judgement.
They will also advise on alternative dispute resolution procedures, which
would avoid the need to go to court.
Marking out the exact boundary
Accurately identifying the boundary between two properties often requires
specialist knowledge. The red line drawn around a property on the Land
Registry plan only shows the general boundary. It does not identify whether
the boundary runs along the centre of a hedge or along one side of it.
Ordnance Survey maps are equally unreliable because, as part of the mapping
process, they do not mark exact property boundaries. So a line surrounding
the property is not necessarily the property boundary.
We will not only survey the land, check deeds and the plans attached to
them, but will refer to historical documents and aerial photographs.
A boundary can change over time for many reasons: a diverted water course,
or a wooden fence that moves slightly every time it is replaced. The reason
for such changes is rarely recorded and can lead to disputes, especially
if the owner has lost the right to move the boundary line back to its
original position.
Dealing with disputes
The key to resolving a dispute speedily and successfully is to employ
an expert as soon as possible. Each side can use an independent expert
to work out where the boundary lies and write a report. This often resolves
the dispute quickly and simply.