per indina realtor, the building inspector for your county, then sue them
That type of restriction is governed by local laws. You need to call your local town offices.
A line that is a distance from the street or any edge of a lot that structures cannot be built in, typically defined by local ordinances.
how far off the property line do you have to be for a house addition in susex county delaware
A storage shed built in San Diego, California must be at least three feet away from the property line. The eaves of the building must be at least two feet away from the property line.
The "Coffin House" is located in Fountain City, Indiana (near the Ohio border in east central Indiana, roughly on a line between Indianapolis IN and Columbus OH).
You need to check your deed description, the title to your property and local ordinances. There is no universal answer to your question but property lines are usually the boundaries described in your deed. In many cases there are recorded surveys that show property lines.
Real property is land and anything attached to it that cannot be severed without injury to the land such as homes, garages and other buildings. Personal property is any movable or intangible thing that is subject to ownership and is not considered real property. Building materials stored on a building lot would be personal property. Once the house is built it becomes part of the real property. Fixtures in a building sit on the line between real and personal property. You can read more about that distinction at the link below.
They can nail into your fence but if they violate your property line you have grounds for legal action and you will win.
I'm not sure there are any restrictions to where you build on your property. You can build right on the edge of your property line if you want, though most people like to have a little bit of yard all around the house.
In the United States, insurance comes under the laws of a particular state. It is hard to say what will happen in a particular situation. In the case where you mention that a property line comes through a particular house, the insurance policy would probably be valid. However, an insurance policy frequently contains a legal description of the property that is insured. If the house burned down, it might only pay for the value of that part of the house which was on the piece of property described on the insurance policy. Say you owned two lots and you built a 5 bedroom house on one lot and insured it. They you added 5 more bedrooms on the second lot. You increased your insurance but did not change the policy to describe the fact that the other 5 bedrooms were on the second lot. Then when your house burned down, you may only get paid for the first 5 room house.
It is in Greensburg, Indiana!
A bicycle is also not the tropic of Capricorn.