I had a surveyor cross my line by starting from an erroneously placed section corner, he platted my property as his own, and had it recorded. The county even had the overlap marked on the county records. But nothing was ever said to me. The County surveyor did an extensive re survey and relocated the section corner back to the 1850 or so position. The county surveyor prorated the quarter/quarter line so the NW quarter has an extra ten feet on the south and the SW quarter of the NW quarter is minus ten feet on it's north side. I had a 20 foot overlap I did not know I had, until a neighbor with the overlap had a survey done. He has title insurance. Lawyers exchanged phone calls and letters for three years and nothing got accomplished until my lawyer sued the neighbor. The end result was we settled on the new prorated quarter/quarter line and the neighbors title insurance paid me what I lost and title insurance paid the neighbor to the north what he lost.
I would suggest to talk with a real estate attorney. Or you could have your property surveyed. If the line is not where your neighbor says it is build a fence. Then tell your neighbor to sue you and if you lose you will remove the fence. Title insurance will not do anything unless there is a law suite. Property line disputes will cost money.
I would still talk to a real estate attorney before you do anything. Good Luck
Upload one or more videos to your post. Photo filesizes should be less than 300K and Videos, less than 2MB. Formats allowed are gif, jpg, png, ogg, mp4, mov, and avi. Be sure to use filenames without spaces or special characters, and filetypes of 3 digits lower case.
We sell tractor parts! We have the parts you need to repair your tractor - the right parts. Our low prices and years of research make us your best choice when you need parts. Shop Online Today. [ About Us ]
Today's Featured Article - Earthmaster Project Progress Just a little update on my Earthmaster......it's back from the dead! I pulled the head, and soaked the stuck valves with mystery oil overnight, re-installed the head, and bingo, the compression returned. But alas, my carb foiled me again, it would fire a second then flood out. After numerous dead ends for a replacement carb, I went to work fixing mine.I soldered new floats on the float arm, they came from an old motorcycle carb, replaced the packing on the throttle shaft with o-rings, cut new ga
... [Read Article]
Latest Ad:
1964 I-H 140 tractor with cultivators and sidedresser. Starts and runs good. Asking 2650. CALL RON AT 502-319-1952
[More Ads]
All Rights Reserved. Reproduction of any part of this website, including design and content, without written permission is strictly prohibited. Trade Marks and Trade Names contained and used in this Website are those of others, and are used in this Website in a descriptive sense to refer to the products of others. Use of this Web site constitutes acceptance of our User Agreement and Privacy Policy
TRADEMARK DISCLAIMER: Tradenames and Trademarks referred to within Yesterday's Tractor Co. products and within the Yesterday's Tractor Co. websites are the property of their respective trademark holders. None of these trademark holders are affiliated with Yesterday's Tractor Co., our products, or our website nor are we sponsored by them. John Deere and its logos are the registered trademarks of the John Deere Corporation. Agco, Agco Allis, White, Massey Ferguson and their logos are the registered trademarks of AGCO Corporation. Case, Case-IH, Farmall, International Harvester, New Holland and their logos are registered trademarks of CNH Global N.V.