Quiet young parents get dragged to a property line dispute by their rural countryside neighbor, who covers the boundary in signs and ropes, and involves county repeatedly

Advertisement
  • Small house in a green valley beside a flowing stream, surrounded by steep forested mountains.
  • Next door neighbor in rural area put up ropes, signs and has called the cops and the county to report us just existing

    New home built a year ago. My husband met the neighbor while building and tried to be nice and talk about the creek the splits the properties.
  • Dude went off on him, bought a ton of rope to put as his property (no survey all on his own, using the stakes the building company set up), put up no trespassing signs etc.
  • The county has approved the construction multiple times and kept having to come out because the neighbor is claiming the runoff from the system we are required to use by the county is 8 feet instead of 10 from his property.
  • He has called multiple times and everyone that has to come investigate says we are to code and he's just being a
  • Then he starts putting up no dumping signs, no hunting signs... we do not hunt. We don't dump anything.
  • The past year we had a new baby and quite literally barely spent any time outside.
  • Parents sitting on a bed by a large window, sharing breakfast with their toddler and smiling together.
  • We are quiet people. We have no animals. We aren't loud and don't have parties. My husband works and I take care of our baby.
  • I told my husband to ignore him because it's his money he's wasting and dude obviously wants a fight.
  • But it's not stopping. I was picking up leaves today in our backyard and he came out of his house to watch
  • Do I continue to just ignore it? I'm so sick of county people showing up and now our address in police records because this guy wants to use his free time to worry about the line on his property.
  • He has a neighbor on the other side but doesn't have any type of line up for them.
  • I was terrified to start a garden because I'm worried about permits so I literally called the township to ask and he told me the guy could kick rocks and he just moved in 4 years ago himself.
  • ETA: it's been a rough year financially but we will look into survey and fencing. For now I will try to obtain all the reports and get a camera.
  • Thank you for all the advice and I'll try to reply to most when I can!
  • InternationalOil540 You should get an official survey.
  • vwscienceandart So, is the creek the property line? Do YOU have an actual official survey? Because this is sounding like a helluva good time to establish a fence line. Usually you'd want a full privacy fence with wackos like this, but if the waterway is the line that bungles that a bit. There's always barbed wire!
  • PinkFloydBoxSet If the city, county and state do not have regulations covering it, do it. Plant a garden. The neighbor can f himself with a rusty shovel. And you probably need to tell him that. Also make sure you have documents of everything he has interfered with, and get cameras. Because he will escalate and evidence is the only thing that will hold up to get a court order, which you are going to need.
  • feelsodifferentt This isn't "annoying neighbor" anymore, this is harassment with extra steps. Start documenting everything, he's clearly committed to this
  • Mountain_Chocolate65 Build a tall fence on that side of your house. Good fences make good neighbors.
  • Trick_Few We don't know where you live, but where i live, natural water ways are public property as well as some of the banks which is typically the high water mark. For example, you can tell where the high water line is caused by spring run-off. The private property lines don't change with the changing water lines. If I were you, I would install a fence and trees to protect your privacy. This guy is trying to intimidate and harass you. You have a child to protect and your neighbor is unhinged.
  • michael1265 Some people move to the country because they hate other people. Somebody probably told him that your lot would never be built on, and now he is taking it out on you. Document everything.
  • Guinnessman 1964 Schedule a fence company to install a fence the same day a survey is done. This way they can't screw around with any posts. Also get an exact GPS location of each corner pin. There is no doubt this guy would pull them given a chance.
  • CrazyMildred Make fun of him with your garden. Put little No Trespassing signs all around it with flourescent orange ropes.
  • LeftLane4PassingOnly You tried the good neighbor thing. How about giving the annoying neighbor thing a go. What you need is some animals. Something like roosters.
Scroll Down For The Next Article