Yes, land surveyors in Minnesota can assist in surveying land and relocating fences to ensure they are positioned correctly according to property boundaries and regulations. It is important to hire a licensed and experienced surveyor to accurately determine property lines and obtain necessary permits before moving any fences.
What's your go-to dance move? If you were a superhero, what would your superpower be? What's the weirdest food combination you enjoy? If you could have any animal as a pet, real or fictional, what would it be?
Some popular online survey tools include SurveyMonkey, Google Forms, and Typeform. SurveyMonkey is user-friendly and offers robust analytics, Google Forms is free and integrates well with other Google products, and Typeform provides visually appealing surveys with interactive features. The best tool for you will depend on your specific needs and budget.
A serf is a person who is bound to the land they work on and is subject to the control of a lord, whereas a commoner is a person who is not nobility but has more freedom to move and work. Serfs have limited rights and are tied to the land, while commoners have more autonomy and social mobility.
Around 200,000 people move into London each year, while approximately 150,000 people move out.
Many former slaves migrated after emancipation in search of economic opportunities, family reunification, escape from racial violence, and to exercise their newfound freedom. The promise of land ownership and self-determination also motivated many to move to urban areas or western territories.
No. For example, if you thought your neighbor's fence was on your property, and you told him "If you move your fence back a foot I'll pay to have it moved and give you $500 besides," he might happily agree (and in the case of a small section of fence it might even be cheaper than having a survey done and taking him to court, particularly if there's a chance you might be wrong). However, a survey plus a court ruling is about the only way to FORCE someone to move a fence.
Hire a lawyer from your area that specializes in property law.
Quite frankly, it would depend on where you live. My advice to you would be to visit the city or town hall and ask them for their advice. Chances are that you or your neighbour will have to hire someone to survey the land to prove who owns the land the fence currently sits on. First, you should hire an attorney who will help you frame the proper question, such as "what is adverse possession" and the relevant statute of limitations and other elements that will determine your case. Second, you should not rely exclusively upon advice obtained at town hall. Civil employees are not generally authorized to give legal advice to the public, and even if they do, it is not necessarily correct. Third, the law of trespass (and adverse possession of real property) is rather complicated and you should not jump to conclusions.If you do not prove adverse possession, which seems likely at this point, and it is proven by survey to be on his property, yes, you will have to move it. If you do prove adverse possession (your lawyer will explain the rules), then not only do you not have to move the fence, the property on your side of the fence becomes yours.
grassor a fence
You have no reason for making a claim on your neighbours property firstly because you have said that his fence is 15 inches into his own yard but if you have had your fence up against his then this would mean that your fence is on his property and he can ask you to move your fence back by 15 inches as the land is his and not yours though again it would depend whos yard the fence posts are in because if your fence posts are also on his 15 inches of land then the fence is lawfully his too and not yours and the same goes for him if his fence posts are on your property then lawfully the fence is yours as the ownership of whos fence all lies down to where the fence posts are and not the actual fencing part of it. Additional information can be found on the discussion page.
a fence
A fence.
Review your governing documents to determine whether or not board permission is required to install a fence -- or not. Read your purchase documents to identify the permissions requested and given for the installation of the fence -- if permission is required under your governing documents. If you installed the fence, requested permissions and they were granted, you followed the guidelines and potentially have a 'legal fence'. If the fence was installed without permission when permission was required, you may be required to move it. If no permission is required, you may have a basis upon which to refuse to move your fence. Otherwise, there may be other reasons why the association wants you to move your fence, in which case the association may want to help you pay to move it, or cover the cost entirely.
ask if he's ok with it, move the fence back, etc
It depends upon where the fence is, who put it up, why it was put up, why it was put where it is, whether the previous owners had any agreement with the neighbors, who has been paying the taxes on the land on the other side, and how long the fence has been there, among other things.In many places, putting up a fence becomes the newly defined boundary line, so you would no longer own anything on the other side of the fence if you failed to have it removed in a timely manner. It's called adverse possession.If nothing was done in time, then the neighbor "owns" the land on the other side of the fence, regardless of what your deed may say.Interestingly, even if they remove the fence after it has been there long enough to give the neighbor vested rights, you still don't get the ownership of that land back, and you may need a quitclaim deed from the neighbor. Good luck with that.
Fence fence revolution
If you click on a fence you will be able to "move" it. You will see that the fence has a green box under it, and at the sides has a yellow boxes under the side posts. Move the fence's side post onto the side post of the piece that you want it to connect to.