The answer to this question may vary depending on local laws and regulations. In some jurisdictions, if a fence has been in place for more than a certain number of years (as specified by local laws), it may be considered a prescriptive or adverse possession claim, meaning the neighbor might not be able to make you move it. It is advisable to consult with a local attorney or land registry office for accurate information regarding your specific situation.
They could just remove the fence. It is on their property, which means it technically belongs to them. It is very likely that when it was originally erected it was put up by the person who's land it is on.
Most fences are installed a foot or so inside the property line of the owner.
If the mailbox is on the other side of the sidewalk closer to the street then is it the county's property and it is a federal offense to mess with it but if it is in your property then yes you can do whatever you wish with it.
Generally real property is land, whatever is erected on, affixed to, or growing on it. Also rights annexed to or issuing out of, or exercisable within or about the land.
If its erected on your property it is your property. If it's on common land or adjacent to property owned by you, it doesn't become yours just because it has been standing for so many years.
Erected is a verb.
You won't get respected until that tent is erected. Because it was shipped to America in 'knock-down' form, the Statue of Liberty was quickly erected. How many bridges have you erected?
They erected a statue in his memory.
Rexx Erected was created on 2001-11-06.
It was erected on February 20, 1956.
It was erected to keep other countries from interfering. It was supposed to increase communism.
The Twin Towers were erected in the early 1970's with completion in 1972.
A temple was erected to the city's god.
Yes. Real estate and real property are synonymous meaning land and and any improvements made to the land such as anything growing on it, permanently attached to or erected on it. Included is the bundle of rights attached to the property. Black's Law Dictionary lists real property as the primary term. Another term is realty. The legal meaning in the United States is based on English Common Law.