Advice needed regarding domestic right of use.

Nip it in the bud straight away is my only advice. Talk to the neighbours about it

I had a neighbour once who asked my wife to move her car from outside our front door because their sons girlfriend needed somewhere close to their house to park

There was no diplomacy from me, treat cunts like cunts is the way forward. Very rarely do rude inconsiderate people not know they are being rude, it isn't up to normal people to help them not be cunts.
 
Your daughter’s neighbour appears to be claiming what is in law described as a prescriptive easement (Google it)
Essentially, do something on someone’s property for long enough and you get certain common law rights
Not a leg to stand on unless she has been doing this unchallenged for 20 years. And even then it can be challenged
I knew Gray’s Land Law would come in handy one day
Is domestic right of use different though ?
 
Hi guys
Has anyone got any advice regarding domestic right of use.
My daughter has just purchased a property and the next door neighbour has their 3 bins permanently in her garden, plus a storage box and unbelievably today put her washing on a drying rack in said daughters garden !!!
Now the neighbour has access through my daughters property via a shared ginnel, but bins & washing ffs
Please any advice greatly received as she's stressed to fuck...last option will be torching her bins !! ;)
If she's been doing it for 10- 12 years she may have rights to that part of the property through adverse possession.
 
Obviously I'm no legal eagle but our next door neighbour pulled out that one when we bought our house and they had been using an unfenced part at the bottom of our garden to chuck their lawn clippings on for years.


PS I had a brickie friend (just released from Strangeways) at the time and he was working to demolish an abbatoir round the corner. So he built us 25 yards of 6' high dividing wall with double cheshire commons to the rear boundary and told our neighbour if he threw anything over it he would be in the foundations.
 
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Obviously I'm no legal eagle but our next door neighbour pulled out that one when we bought our house and they had been using an unfenced part at the bottom of our garden to chuck their lawn clippings on for years.


PS I had a brickie friend (just released from Strangeways) at the time and he was working to demolish an abbatoir round the corner. So he built us 25 yards of 6' high dividing wall with double cheshire commons to the rear boundary and told our neighbour if he threw anything over it he would be in the foundations.
I like his style ;)
 

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