T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
673.1 | Novice wall builder | BRUTWO::COUTURE | | Mon Jul 14 1986 14:17 | 16 |
| Bill..
My father in law and I put one up 2 years ago and as
of today it's still standing. It can be time consuming but the
results are worth it. Mine is about 3-4 ft. at the highest point
and it tapers to about 1 ft. I dug a footing about 1 ft below
ground level. The wall is about 2f ft. wide at the bottom (this
width should vary depending on the height of the wall. The key
is to make sure each rock is resting solid. This can be
accomplished by using small stones as shims. Also make sure
the face is straight and true (don't have rocks sticking out
at different points. All in all it's not too difficult (just
take a little time....)
Steve
|
673.2 | More advice from a novice | AKOV05::MURRAY | | Mon Jul 14 1986 16:23 | 0 |
673.3 | Good book available | CYGNUS::VHAMBURGER | Vic Hamburger IND-2/B4 262-8261 | Tue Jul 15 1986 16:40 | 4 |
| Yankee magazine publisheda book on building dry walls a few years
back. Check your local bookstore for availability. Publisher is
Yankee Publisheing, Dublin, N. H. Book was about $5-6.00 range.
They should know about new england stone walls if anyone does!
|
673.4 | Yankee book | PRORAT::LANTEIGNE | | Wed Jul 16 1986 12:05 | 10 |
| I used the Yankee book to help build my stone walls. Three years
+ and still standing. Your local library can get it for you or
you can contact Yankee Books directly. By the way, I live in Dublin,
N.H. If I still have my book on stone walls, I'll let you borrow
it if you cannot find one.
Carl
|
673.5 | stones used... | NOVA::BWRIGHT | | Thu Jul 17 1986 14:34 | 5 |
| Thanks for the input, thus far. One question: did you use existing
stones from your property or did you purchase them? If they were
bought, how expensive were they and where did you buy them?
Bill
|
673.6 | Got mine for free... | BRUTWO::COUTURE | | Thu Jul 17 1986 15:17 | 11 |
| Bill...
I got mine when they were rebuilding a road in the
area where I live. I went and asked the forman if I could have
a couple of pickup truck loads and he said no problem. I did
not price them. I'm sure you should be able to pick up some
somewhere.... Just watch out for the snakes when dismanteling
old walls...
Steve
|
673.7 | | AUTHOR::WELLCOME | | Fri Jul 18 1986 12:37 | 12 |
| Fitzgerald & Day (I think that's the name) in Westminster, Mass.
sells "good" (i.e. flat and reasonable size) rocks for stone walls,
$65/ton. Or so I've been told.
Beware of dismantling old stone walls - such practice is a bad idea
for a couple of reasons. One, they are almost certainly owned by
somebody, who may not take kindly to you lugging them off. Two,
stone walls are frequently boundary markers in old deeds, and removing
them may get some town officials mad at you.
Steve
|
673.8 | It's expensive | NUWAVE::SUNG | Al Sung (Xway Development) | Mon Jul 21 1986 19:56 | 21 |
| I've checked into having a stoned wall built for me and this is
what I found. Most books that talk about building walls say that
a dry stone wall should be left to the professionals. That is if
you are looking for a nice flat front with the stones fitting together
like a jig-saw puzzle. You could DIY but the finished product
will probably be more coarse looking. Also, when I talked to the
stoned mason, they always use mortar on the backside of a backfilled
wall for strength. They just make sure that the mortar doesn't
show thru to the front.
Here is the current cost of professional constructed stoned walls
in the Marlboro, MA area:
$20 per square foot for every square foot showing.
Translation: if you have a 3 ft high wall, 1 foot thick at the top
that means you have 4 sq ft for every running foot
of wall or $80 per running foot.
This does not include the cost of stone but does include the mortar.
-al
|
673.9 | Good luck a lot of work | BANZAI::FEENAN | | Sun Jul 27 1986 01:05 | 14 |
| Back in the '70s I built over 100' of stone wall with the help of
my grandfather's knowledge and my father.....This entire wall holds
back the side of a hill and ranges in height from five feet to 3
ft......anyways the whole thing was built from taking utility trailer
loads of stone from road construction sites...never once was refused
from the foreman at the site.
Although these walls all used mortar the key to getting good facial
stones wasn't only finding the 'flat stones' but most were the work
of knowing how to cut/chip off pieces from a stone with a hammer
to end up with the finished product.
-Jay
|
673.10 | | ERLANG::WHALEN | Nothing is stranger than life | Fri Aug 15 1986 17:26 | 5 |
| They are building a stone wall in front of LKG right now. They
started by digging a ditch and filling it with small (1"-2" diameter)
stones, and are now putting the real stones on top of that.
Rich
|
673.11 | Stonewalls..sources, costs, experience.. | MOSAIC::BOWKER | | Wed Oct 01 1986 14:26 | 40 |
| I talked with the contractor building the LJO wall. His name is Houde,
from Hudson..i think. Anyways, the cost (he said) was $55 a running
foot, and that he was low bidder. This was a wall that's finished on
the front, back, and top. It's two feet high and wide, and n.n thou
feet long.
I did a lot of searching for rock wall quotes this spring. The
best quote I got was for $15 a face foot, and the top was 'free'.
Most other quotes were for $17 - $20 a face foot with other
contingencies.
..other contingencies, like:
extra for site prep.. running strings and marking where the
wall was to go with a lime stripe
digging down 6" for the wall base
extra fill for backfilling (if it's a retaining wall)
extra for getting the stone to the worksite (in back of the
house....150' from where it was unloaded)
clean-up
and remember that a corner _| has extra face to it
Fitzgeral and Day out of Winchendon (?) sells the three types of
stone required...at different prices. They deliver in 10-20 ton
loads. Costs: roller base is about $45/ton, chunkies (for the
middle layer) about $65/ton, and flats $75+ a ton. Figure about
1.5 ton for every ten square feet. My stone was from the Petersham
area walls, more schist than granite, but great color and shape.
Look for examples of the contractors work, and references. Fitzgerald
and Day also build. Other locals are P.C. Myette from Groton, and
Neil Jorgenson from Harvard. Have a written contract.
Me...I collapsed a disc last December. I paid to watch the mason
and his helpers do their thing during the height of blackfly season.
It cost a bundle, but faster and less painful than surgery and
recuperation.
/ roger bowker
|
673.13 | | AUTHOR::WELLCOME | Steve | Tue Mar 24 1987 11:23 | 5 |
| Re: .13
Yes, if you read many of the old deeds they are written "...as the
wall now stands." Taking down the walls is like pulling up surveyor's
corner posts.
|
673.14 | Stone walls - make sure you use them! | CYGNUS::VHAMBURGER | Vic Hamburger IND-2/B4 262-8261 | Tue Mar 24 1987 16:01 | 19 |
| re: .12
I had a neighbor tell me the following story one time.
Seems the neighbor lives in a very old saltbox that has been in
her family for the past 200 years (give or take a week...). She
also has a traditional stone wall in front of the house by the street
that may well be as old as the house. She came out one day to find
another neighbor taking it apart and putting the stone around a
new swimming pool! The excuse given? The neighbor with the wall
wasn't USING it?
Now, how the heck do you use a stone wall if not just let it stand
in front of your house as this one was?
Needless to say, neighbor with wall had the neighbor with pool replace
and rebuilt the portion of wall they had removed. BTW, the neighborhood
is full of stories like this about the neighbor with the pool, she
is always up to something obnoxious!
|
673.15 | I got one of them too... | JON::ROZETT | We're from dif'nt worlds, mine's EARTH | Tue Mar 24 1987 16:19 | 6 |
| re:14
Sounds like my next door neighbor!!
/bruce :-)
|
673.16 | me,too. | CADWRK::BUTLER | | Mon Jun 01 1987 12:16 | 5 |
|
I have one, also. Every neighborhood has to have a loser.
rgrds,al
|
673.17 | Should make great neighbors... | ANGORA::TRANDOLPH | | Wed Jul 22 1987 13:31 | 9 |
| A friend and I are going halves on 5 acres of land. The other day,
my friend called me up with a story. Seems the two guys building
in the next lot wanted to build a stone wall. Not on the line, but
on our side. Where were they gonna get the stones? From the stone
wall at the back of our property, naturally.
These are the same guys who had their well site marked off in the
middle of our property. Like Dave Barry says, I am not making this
up. -Tom R.
|
673.18 | Now if only they could do a driveway... | SMEGIT::BROUILLETTE | MIKE BROUILLETTE | Wed Jul 22 1987 16:11 | 7 |
| re .17
Look at the bright side, you already have a site picked
out for a well on your property. Could you get them to dig it for
you too?
Mike B
|
673.19 | | AKOV04::WILLIAMS | | Fri Jul 24 1987 20:05 | 6 |
| Re .17 some of the old stone walls in Massachusetts are protected,
I've been told. Maybe you should check and see if the stone wall
is protecetd and, if it is, let them take a few stones and then
you call the fuzz ;-)
Douglas
|
673.20 | Not a dry wall | VIDEO::DCL | David Larrick | Mon Jul 27 1987 14:40 | 23 |
| I need to build a stone wall to match an existing wall. The existing wall
made of is 4" x 4" x 8" granite paving stones, held together by concrete,
about 30" high, with a raised terrace on one side of the wall (so only the
front and top show).
I have more paving stones, probably enough to do the job.
I've seen plenty of books and articles on building dry stone walls, but none
on this type of wall.
- Do I need to slope the wall back into the terrace? (Note that the
existing wall isn't sloped).
- Do I lay a course, backfill behind it, then lay the next course?
- Same drainage considerations as for a dry wall?
- What type of concrete do I use?
- Would a concrete slab beneath the bottom course be a good idea?
- Compare and contrast this operation, if you can, with bricklaying.
- Please suggest any appropriate books or other sources.
Where possible without compromising structural integrity, I'd like to match
such details of the existing wall as height, (lack of) slope, and color and
texture of concrete. I'm already using the same stones. For details that
won't show, like the slab underneath, I'm happy to do whatever's expedient.
|
673.21 | Crushed stoned below | POP::SUNG | Dept. of Redundancy Dept. | Mon Jul 27 1987 15:19 | 8 |
| Beneath the bottom course...
Most professionals jobs that I've seen for short walls do not use
concrete below the bottom course. Instead they use a layer (don't
know how much) of 1 inch crushed bluestone that has been tamped down.
This also may help with the drainage.
-al
|
673.22 | scenic mud | ANGORA::TRANDOLPH | | Tue Sep 15 1987 16:19 | 7 |
| Yet another interesting Massachusetts stone wall fact:
We've gotta open the wall at the front of our property for a driveway.
This is non-trivial. Since this road is a "scenic" road, the town
planning board has to approve it. Plus, we must send a letter to
all of our "abutters" annoucing our intentions. This holds for cutting
trees, too. Isn't red tape great? -Tom R.
(End of digression)
|
673.23 | Footing for stone wall? | VAXWRK::BSMITH | Carnival Personnel Only...DAMN! | Wed Jun 01 1988 17:00 | 5 |
| If I build a two foot high stone wall with mortor, would I have to build a
four foot high footing under it?? If not, wouldn't frost heaves destroy
the wall over time??
Brad.
|
673.31 | building a stone wall | WEFXEM::DICASTRO | POST NO BILLS HERE | Fri Sep 15 1989 16:32 | 16 |
| Moderator: I checked the Keywords w/ no luck. If this should be moved
please do so.
I am in the midst of a new project. I had 80+ ft. of stone wall
moved into 3 piles (each bigger than a car!) The wall was once the
property border of my lot . I recently obtained the lot behind mine
and had it cleared as well as had the stone wall moved to my new
property boundry. Now I have 3 piles of flatstones! I am trying to
determine if I should try to make a double faced stonewall border,
or just heap 'em all into a long pile.
First, is building a stone wall a DIY type project?
and if so PLEASE provide any tips, recomendations, pointers ,
experiences etc.....
ADthanxVANCE/bob
|
673.32 | 244,645 | HANNAH::DCL | David Larrick | Fri Sep 15 1989 17:35 | 18 |
| This note has been temporarily write-locked pending approval of the author.
To the author: This subject is already under discussion in this file, under the
topics listed in the title. Please look at these notes; you may find that your
question is already answered, or you may find a note where your question would
be an appropriate continuation of the discussion. Note that since nearly
everyone uses NEXT UNSEEN to read notes, your question will get the same
exposure whether it is a response to a two-year-old note or it is its own new
note. These topics were found using the keyword directory (note 1111), and you
may find other notes relating to this subject by examining the directory
yourself.
We do, however, welcome new notes if they explore a specific aspect of a
problem that may be under general discussion. And this moderator has been
known to make mistakes. :^) So if after examining these notes, you wish to
continue the discussion here, send me mail.
DCL [Moderator]
|
673.33 | surveyors stone markers removed | CIVIC::FERRIGNO | | Mon Feb 04 1991 13:53 | 26 |
| We had our New Hampshire property surveyed by a registered surveyor in
1981 at the time we purchased our home/property. Stone bounds were
placed. My neighbor recently came onto what is by survey our property
and placed surveyors markers. He told us that he was remortgaging his
house, and was having his property surveyed.
Concerned about his actions, we consulted a lawyer who wrote our
neighbor a letter saying that if there was a dispute over the boundary,
it would have to be settled by the two surveyors to see what went
awry. We returned home from work one day to find our stone bounds
dug up, new bounds placed 10 feet into our property. Since we weren't
a witness to the action, we can only surmise that it was done by our
neighbor or his surveyor or both. Our lawyer called our neighbor and
his surveyor, both of whom said that they did not "see" any stones.
[we have documentation that our bounds were placed in 1981].
We are trying to settle this in a civilized manner and have a lawyer
writing letters, etc. Needless to say it is costing us a lot of
money. We feel that there was an injustice done here and don't know
why we have to PROVE (i.e., spend money on lawyers) that our 10 year
old survey is any less correct than the one recently done by our
neighbor. He has yet to PROVE that his is correct and ours is wrong.
Is something wrong with this picture? What needs to be done?
Meanwhile, we have lost our markers and 10 feet of our property.
|
673.34 | | VMSDEV::PAULKM::WEISS | Trade freedom for security-lose both | Mon Feb 04 1991 14:52 | 17 |
| The very first thing I would do is try to document as clearly as possible that
the existing bounds were actually dug up, and that they have been dug up
recently. Find the places where the stones were, take pictures, get some other
witnesses of some sort - whatever you can think of to show that they were just
removed. I'm assuming that the bounds were dug up recently. Even if you can
find traces that the bounds are missing, but all you can tell is that they have
been removed some time more than a couple weeks ago, it will be hard to pin it
on them: "Gee, we never saw any bounds, someone else must have removed them."
If you can show that they have been dug up very recently, as in while they were
out there, you have a reasonable chance of proving that they removed them.
Whatever else the legality of the situation, if you can show that they removed
existing bounds, it will put them in an EXTREMELY bad light right off the start,
and that's assuming they aren't prosecuted. I believe that removing bounds
markers is a crime.
Paul
|
673.35 | Photos of dug up stones | CIVIC::FERRIGNO | | Mon Feb 04 1991 15:22 | 7 |
| We took Polaroid photos of the holes from which the bounds were removed
along with photos of the newly placed stones. In order to place the
new stones, they had to dig large holes in what is considered our
lawn! We also filed with the local Police Department (that "someone"
removed our stones).
Our lawyer has the photos.
|
673.36 | Involve the mortgage holders too..... | SENIOR::HAMBURGER | Whittlers chip away at life | Tue Feb 05 1991 12:06 | 23 |
|
I am not a lawyer.....that being said, I would ask my lawyer to politely
but firmly state in a letter to your neighbor, their lawyer, and the bank
doing the remortgage, that the boundary is disputed, boundary markers that
were placed in 1981 have been dug up and moved, and that any attempted use
of the disputed property will result in an immediate court injunction until
such time as you can resolve the boundary issues. I would also notify your
mortgage holder, assuming you have a mortgage on your property.
This way, everyone is clear that something is amiss here and you are doing
everything you can to right the situation. I would also inquire with your
lawyer about recouping your costs in small claims court or having him file
for you if the costs go above small claims limits. Not sure if a housing
court would have any jurisdiction here, but you might inquire about an
injuction against use of the disputed property with that court. It is
something you can file and do yourself without a lot of expense and hassle.
(Assuming you don't consider losing a 1/2 day of work a hassle)
In Mass, the housing court can help you recoup up to $1500, triple
damamges under certain circumstances. New Hampshire may vary....
Vic H
|
673.37 | | ENABLE::GLANTZ | Mike 227-4299 DECtp TAY Littleton MA | Tue Feb 05 1991 12:31 | 6 |
| Vic's suggestion to involve the mortgage holder (if any) is right on.
They may be sufficiently interested to pay all legal fees, especially
if you indicate to them that you're no longer able to. Your lawyer
might lose out, though, because a bank will use their own lawyers. If
this doesn't bother you, it sounds like the way to go.
|
673.38 | Injunction costly | CIVIC::FERRIGNO | | Tue Feb 05 1991 12:33 | 9 |
| We learned that it costs $1500. to file an injunction in the State of
NH. I think it's really sad. In a sense, our neighbor did something
unethical, perhaps illegal, but we appear to have no recourse without
spending more money than the 10 feet of property might be worth. Is
there no other way? To date we've spent over $500 just to defend
what, according to the 1981 survey, is ours.
Thanks for the input and advice. We're just shocked that things like
this are allowed to happen.
|
673.39 | Bank lawyer | CIVIC::FERRIGNO | | Tue Feb 05 1991 12:58 | 13 |
| I think .4 is a good suggestion; one we never thought of. They are,
after all, the property owners. It might be in their best interest to
straighten things out. I just hope that the bank lawyers are ethical.
I've heard that they can be otherwise, that's why people hire outside
lawyers when they buy/sell property.
For example, my neighbor is the 4th owner in 30 years to buy his
property whose deed does not accurately describe reality. About 30
years ago, a road was cut through his property, but his deed says
that he has a 40 foot lot (where the road actually is now). Each
mortgage provider simply passes the deed on as is.
|
673.40 | | WEFXEM::COTE | I've got an alibi... | Tue Feb 05 1991 13:42 | 9 |
| One thing hasn't been mentioned yet; maybe the markers were wrong.
Shouldn't the surveying companies be the ones slugging this out?
If the markers *were* right, then you should have recourse to
the company who says they weren't. If the markers were wrong, then
you should have recourse to the company who did your survey 10 years
ago...
Edd
|
673.41 | Wrong boundary possible | CIVIC::FERRIGNO | | Tue Feb 05 1991 14:53 | 23 |
| We are aware that the markers may be wrong -- that's why we consulted
a lawyer to find out what was the best way to proceed. We were
advised that the two surveyors would need to talk to see where, if
either, went off in the survey.
This occured while the wooden hubs were placed on our property by our
neighbor's surveyor. Next thing that happened was that our stones
were removed and new stones were placed.
Our 1981 survey was compromised.
Our granite stone markers are gone.
Ten feet of our land was "claimed" with no explanation or "proof" that
our survey was incorrect.
We are put in a position of defending our survey. It would seem to me
that our neighbor needed to say that there appeared to be a dispute,
and then come forward with evidence that our survey was incorrect. You
can't just go around grabbing land because you "think" it belongs to
you.
BTW, we learned that the law in NH says that if a surveyor has
incorrectly surveyed your land, as long as it has caused no harm other
than a misunderstood boundary line, there is no recourse.
|
673.42 | be the go-between | WUMBCK::FOX | | Tue Feb 05 1991 15:50 | 10 |
| How about asking the neighbor and his surveyor why they feel the
boundry is where they put it, and not where your stones were?
That doesn't say they moved them (which all parties know in fact
they did), but it might give you a starting point from which you
can go to your surveyor with and discuss. Since it may be difficult
getting the two surveyors together, you can run info between the
two. Hopefully you'll gain enough information to know who did the
job correctly, and then take appropriate action.
John
|
673.43 | | TOKLAS::feldman | Larix decidua, var. decify | Tue Feb 05 1991 16:41 | 17 |
| It will be a lot cheaper for both you and your neighbor to get together and
try to handle this with the surveyors, than to get involved with lawyers and
lawsuits. Have you spoken to your neighbor personally and said "We can either
both spend a few thousand dollars on lawyers - money that will go down the drain
since it is unlikely that either one of you can collect that much in damages --
or we can spend a few hundred on surveyors. Why don't we just arrange a meeting
between the four parties: two surveyors and two landowners, with each landowner
paying their own surveyor, and see if we can get a rational answer to this."
Don't get hung up on this burden of proof issue. Just because your survey was
done first doesn't make it any more correct than theirs. From their point
of view, their 1991 survey is correct, your stone markers were on their
property, and you are the one who took ten feet of their land with no proof
that your survey was correct. The reasonable solution is to share the future
survey costs, not try to force them all on one or the other.
Gary
|
673.44 | What's "title insurance" for? | PETERJ::JOHNSON | If we build it, they will come. | Wed Feb 06 1991 14:54 | 2 |
| Do you have "title insurance"? If so, would that enter into this in any
helpful way?
|
673.45 | Title insurance | CIVIC::FERRIGNO | | Wed Feb 06 1991 14:58 | 1 |
| .11 Another great idea. Thanks.
|
673.46 | Go to the source | CSDNET::DICASTRO | Quantity time! | Wed Feb 06 1991 18:52 | 5 |
| Why not go to see the town records yourself, I would presume this is
the source of the information the surveyors are using. You may even
call ahead and have the documents prepared for you....
Good luck
|
673.47 | DIY (without lawyers) is nice, if you can do it. | LYCEUM::CURTIS | Dick "Aristotle" Curtis | Thu Feb 07 1991 12:38 | 12 |
| .10:
Nice idea -- but it's unclear how reasonable these individuals are. We
don't really know much about them, other than that they (the owners?
the surveyor?) dug up the bounds, which might be a criminal act (does
.0 know what the local laws are regarding it?)
IF they're willing to talk reasonably about it, it would be nice (and
less expensive) to leave lawyers out of it. If you can't do it without
a lawyer, I second the suggestion to get the mortgagor in on it.
Dick
|
673.48 | Not reasonable | CIVIC::FERRIGNO | | Thu Feb 07 1991 15:34 | 15 |
| .10 is a nice idea, but if you re-read the base note, it appeared that
there might be a difference of opinion as to the boundary when we
saw the wooden survey hubs inside of our boundary markers. The next
step would have been for our neighbor's surveyor to say "Oops, looks
like a difference of opinion here, let's see who's right." Meanwhile,
a survey done in 1981 cannot simply be invalidated by digging up the
stones and taking property which may or may not be yours.
Put yourself in this position. One day you wake up and find that
your neighbor has decided that "his" survey is correct and yours isn't,
and simply throws your boundary markers away and places his own. I
believe that you would think that there was something "unjust" about
this. Beyond solving this through legal channels, there is little
option other than getting down on a certain level of digging up
one another's boundary markers. It could go on forever.
|
673.49 | "Landrushing your yard...get a leech" | DNEAST::BLUM_ED | | Thu Feb 07 1991 15:54 | 58 |
| Question one and a big ONE.....was this a registered survey or was it a
"tape survey" typically used to roughly determine boundary lines for
purpose of deed verification.....the two are very different things in
most cases.
Having experienced a case where a "neighbor" moved surveyor pins and
"bound" markers to where he wanted them rather than where they should
have been I can assure you that in Maine (at least, likely everywhere
else) it is a violation of the law to move any surveyor pins and
especially "Bound" markers without appropriate quit claim agreements
concerning the misclaimed property. BUT you must have evidence of the
movement.
It would seem to me that any good lawyer would be able to provide oyu
with recourse. In most (my) cases the earliest bound marker takes
precidence over any more recent surveys, particularily if the marker has
been inplaced and undisputed for more than 7 years. Most all surveys in
new england go back to bound markers set in the 1800's. Disputes arise
in the interpretation of the distances junctures. If a resurvey by
another party appears to result in misspositioning of the pins it then
becomes the responsibility of the desputee (in this case your neighbor)
to PROVE in law (ie court) beyond any doubt by precise survey that the
marker was incorrect..as well as arrange a quit claim or other agreement
with YOU to settle the dispute once proven.
Taking pictures of the holes, measurrment of the offset and soforth is
absolutely critical in proving the original position of the markers.
DO NOT reposition any of the markers yourself or the case will be
compromised.
I suggest you do not attempt to verbally discuss this issue with your
neighbor unless your lawyer is present.....he (by writ of his surveyor)
is trying to grab your property. If he (manages) to sell his house or
refinance off the new survey you will have extreme difficulty in getting
resolution...trust me..it can be horrible.
While it may seem expensive to ream him now and settle the issue....it
will be a lot more expensive to deal with later when you try to clear
your Title for sale. Your current title issurance may cover the costs
of having the precise survey done....or may not...its much more likely
HE has a title problem and is trying to cleverly fix it and sell fast
before you can stomp him with your lawyer.
You are also in a position, should the descrepancy not be resolved one
way or another, of not being able to sell your house or refinance (in the
future) because of obscured title to the section of lawn in question....
this would be uncovered by a resurvey by your buyer which wouldnt agree
with where he has repositioned the bounds to, which wouldnt agree with
your original purchase survey..
My eventual solution was to sell the house...at well below market...with
disputed title to someone else who was a "friend" of the criminal neighbor.
This only after spending several years and beacoupts money trying to
settle in a reasonable manner.
Best of luck, get a good lawyer (leech) and have a lot of patience.
Ed
|
673.50 | Be nice-you BOTH may be right! | ENGINE::PETERSON | I know.., I said I was leaving. BUT...! | Thu Feb 07 1991 16:01 | 42 |
|
re.15
I've had a little experience(mine and my parents) with boundry line
problems.
First, walk over to his house Sat. morning(with your
property 'map' in hand) and say:"Hi, I think we have a problem, and I'd
like to talk about it"
This will work "MOST" of the time.
If that doesn't work, call the bank that he is using and
talk to the head of the mortgage dept. and tell him there is a
"dispute" (<-use that word) over the line.
Get in touch with Your surveyor, and get a copy of his
notes.
Do the rest of the stuff mentioned in the previous replies.
ONE THING TO REMEMBER IS : ERROR OF CLOSURE.
every time a survey is done, there is a slight error. IF your, or
your neighbors land is the nth plot surveyed out of a large number of
lots, and the error has been added on to both, ...You may find that
BOTH surveys are "right". If they are off by 1%, and do 10
plots(starting from different reference points) the two surveys 'may'
overlap.
Then you are back to step one.
CP
|
673.51 | "Put his bucks on hold..." | DNEAST::BLUM_ED | | Thu Feb 07 1991 16:06 | 13 |
|
Re... .17....
I love the part about calling HIS morgage bank and tellin them there
is a Survey dispute,....this WILL immediately put his refinancing efforts
on hold....trust me...no doubt about it. Grab his attention right off.!!!!
Great idea....do it NOW!
E
|
673.52 | | TOKLAS::feldman | Larix decidua, var. decify | Thu Feb 07 1991 19:23 | 13 |
| re: .15
Yes, I might feel it unjust, but I'd still first try to settle it by dealing
directly with the neighbor. I don't mean to imply that I wouldn't consult
with my lawyer; that would definitely be step one. But step two would be to talk
with the neighbors.
What makes you say that the only two options are to either spend your time
digging up each others markers or to go through legal channels (which I take
to mean suing them)? Negotiation should always be considered an option, in this
case, the best one.
Gary
|
673.53 | | ENABLE::GLANTZ | Mike 227-4299 DECtp TAY Littleton MA | Thu Feb 07 1991 19:52 | 12 |
| If the neighbor is indeed refinancing (and not selling), then
informing his bank in writing via your lawyer will put an immediate
hold on things.
If he's selling, a letter to the listing broker will cool their
interest -- no broker wants to get involved in trying to close on a
property with a pending boundary dispute.
The problem with such actions (and the reason to have your lawyer
write the letters) is that the neighbor could countersue for all sorts
of things. I'm hopeful that your lawyer is already well aware of all
of these possibilities, and is taking the most appropriate actions.
|
673.54 | You're in a fight, so get yourself a fighter | CLOSET::DUM::T_PARMENTER | Georgia Ace | Fri Feb 08 1991 11:50 | 16 |
| Maybe I'm wrong, but I sense a lack of aggressiveness on the part of
your lawyer, Mr./Ms. Base Noter.
Look your lawyer right in the eye and ask her if she feels she's the kind of
lawyer you want for this case. This is one of the most common kinds of disputes
and there is a lawyer in your county who is the *best* at handling them.
If your lawyer isn't that person, you can be sure she knows who that person is.
I hope your neighbor hasn't already retained the best one in the county.
A good lawyer isn't a leech, a good lawyer is your hired weapon who will go
out and take care of what needs to be done. The rights and wrongs of this
case are only the beginning. It isn't the lawyer's job to be right or wrong,
it's her job to *win*. In this case, that means knowing the law, knowing
the bankers, knowing the clerks, knowing the history, knowing all the ways
the system works.
|
673.55 | call his bluff and raise him one! | SENIOR::HAMBURGER | Whittlers chip away at life | Fri Feb 08 1991 12:00 | 15 |
|
RE.21
I agree, we may kid alot about lawyers and what they are worth, but when
you need one, they are worth everything. Someone earlier pointed out the
$$$ and time and pain ofsettling a boundary problem. Settle it now, with
the best lawyer you can find, and sue the shorts off your neighbor for
being stupid/sneaky/inconsiderate and generally a miserable neighbor. You
aren't gonna make friends anyway, you might as well be a real pain to him
now with the best lawyer you can hire, and save yourself years of grief.
Neighbor and his surveyor have probably broken the law, it is time to get
the law involved on your side and do it now while you can fight and win.
Vic
|
673.56 | The legal system | SELL3::FERRIGNO | | Fri Feb 08 1991 14:02 | 14 |
| Yes, I agree with those that encourage us to work within the law,
with lawyers. As you can see by our neighbor's actions, he was
never going to be one to negotiate with. I'm also beginning to
see that what might have occurred was, as mentioned in one reply,
a "tape survey" working from an incorrect deed.
This has been really demoralizing event, shocking in a way, to
think that someone can just dig up boundary markers and put new
ones in. We'll continue to hammer at it legally, since it seems
to be the only avenue, even though it is really expensive.
Thanks for all the advice.
|
673.57 | More on the legal system. | TALLIS::KOCH | DTN226-6274 ... If you don't look good, DEC doesn't look good. | Fri Feb 08 1991 14:33 | 20 |
| With regard to 'notifying' the neighbor's bank:
It might be in the bank's interest to 'forget' that they were
notified by you. In any case, any notification you give them or a broker
doesn't count for anything.
What you have to do is file a "LIS PENDENS" [your lawyer will know
the correct spelling] at the registrar of deeds. This becomes an
attachment to the deed indicating that there is 'pending litigation' that
clouds the title. You may have to formally file suit for the reclamation
of the land so that there actually is pending litigation so that you may
file the lis pendens.
No bank will touch a piece of property that has pending litigation --
you can't get a mortgage and you may not be able to refinance, either.
This is the foolproof way to get the effect that has already been
mentioned in other replies.
It may be that a letter simply explaining what you can do to him will
get him to talk with you.
|
673.58 | One last try | TOKLAS::feldman | Larix decidua, var. decify | Fri Feb 08 1991 14:38 | 23 |
| Check out today's Boston Globe, I believe the next to last page of the first
section (opposite the editorials, where they usually put the opinion columns).
There's a full page discussion layout describing why negotiating with Hussein
didn't work, and what could be done to make it work.
Then think how the analysis there could be applied to your situation.
Keeping in mind that we don't have all the details, especially not the
neighbor's point of view, you haven't given any reason to believe that the
neighbor is unwilling to negotiate. That someone, perhaps the neighbor, perhaps
the neighbor's surveyor (we still don't know which) dug up the bounds is not
necessarily a sign that they are unwilling to negotiate. Perhaps the neighbor,
having received his survey, and acting in ignorance of the law but without
malice, simply thought that these things were on his property and therefore he
had the right to remove them. You certainly haven't given us enough information
to conclude that this is definitely not the case. (I agree that it probably
isn't, but probably isn't good enough.)
I'd be suspicious of any attorney who advised me to file suit first, and ask
questions later. Such a lawyer may be more interested in legal fees than
serving the client.
Gary
|
673.59 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Fri Feb 08 1991 15:15 | 3 |
| re .25:
But Gary, he probably doesn't have the air superiority to do it that way.
|
673.60 | One other option | VMSDEV::PAULKM::WEISS | Trade freedom for security-lose both | Fri Feb 08 1991 16:25 | 17 |
| As one last consideration, do you really care about the 10' of lawn? Does that
10' in any way add significantly to the value of your property? For example, is
the boundary close enough to your house that it may cause setback problems if
you ever decided to add onto your house? If so, then go ahead with whatever
legal options are available.
But it's very easy to get caught up in the indignation and resentment of this
neighbor's jerky action, and spend thousands of dollars and untold gallons of
stress-induced excess stomach acid to regain a strip of grass that you never
really cared about in the first place. If you just quietly let the matter drop,
then there will be no border dispute to screw up your future financing or sale
of the house, you won't be in a protracted legal battle with your neighbor, and
you'll be a couple of thousand dollars richer.
And look at the bright side - now HE has to mow that strip of grass. :-)
Paul
|
673.61 | | ULTNIX::taber | Talk about your Massachusetts miracle... | Fri Feb 08 1991 16:53 | 22 |
| Re:.27
Nah.... where's the fun in that? Here in New England, at least,
boundary disputes are what remind you you're alive during the winter.
I agree very much with the people who say make sure your lawyer is a
good one. After you're sure, leave it to the lawyer. I disagree with
people who advocate you personally contacting banks or insurance
companies. Your lawyer will know when to do those things. Calling
your bank or your title insurance company can easily backfire on you.
Remember, the bank's interest is seeing that they get their money back
on the mortgage. The insurance company's interest is seeing that they
pay out the least amount possible in claims. Actions that serve those
interests may not be the same actions that would serve your interest.
In extreme cases, the bank could call the loan. Or the title insurance
company might see a benefit to paying off the value of the strip of
land at today's lower prices and issuing a quitclaim rather than taking
a chance of a decision against them when real estate prices recover.
Leave it to the lawyer. His interests don't necessarily match yours,
but they're the closest.
>>>==>PStJTT
|
673.62 | Comments on Surveys | SENIOR::IGNACHUCK | | Sat Feb 09 1991 03:20 | 74 |
| My turn.
The comparison of Maine State Law (.16) to New Hampshire Law is
of no value in this discussion. I don't know N.H. Law, but in
Massachusetts, I can assure you that just because you stick a
rock in the ground, it doesn't become correct just because it
sits there for seven years. As an example, for those who work
in the Mill, the exit from the Main Street Parking lot, beside
Building 21, (Front Street to Sudbury Street) was moved 20 feet
this past fall because the owner of one of the houses discovered
that the Town of Maynard had incorrectly laid out the road over
80 years ago over his property. He proved it and the road was
relocated onto what Digital thought was it's land.
In Massachusetts, disputes between landowners end up in Land
Court, where a Judge rules on the case and a new plan is
registered which supersedes all previous plans and deeds.
Regardless of the Laws of New Hampshire, don't waste another
dime on this dispute until you verify the validity of your 1981
survey. Hopefully you can find the surveyor and he or she will
tell you that a transit was used to determine angles (as in
so many degrees north, so many minutes west). If so, you are
in much better shape than if a taped (or horseback) survey was
used. Referencing .17, if a calculated survey was performed,
the resulting "error" will be in the area of 100th of a foot,
at most (still within the drill hole on a bound). "Real"
surveyors triple all angle turns and use steel tapes with
temperature corrections (since we all know that steel tapes
can vary as much as 300ths of a foot depending on the outside
temperature!). Unfortunately, most surveys today are horseback
and result in cartoons submitted to banks as Mortgage Inspection
Plans. Not worth a whole lot (no pun intended). Working from
an Inspection Plan to set a bound is an invitation to disaster.
Let's assume that both you and your neighbor are working with
taped surveys. (See invitation to disaster, above). A ten foot
discrepency is still enormous. In order to figure out who's right,
you need to find a valid starting point (a known good bound), and
start measuring back to the dispute from both sides. I assume that
you had bounds placed on the other side of your property. Just to
make sure you have an argument, measure from this point to the disputed
area, and see what it looks like, compared with your plot plan. Do
the same from where your neighbor started, and see how his frontage
lines up. If you still have an overlap, go to the next lots, if possible.
It may very well be that one of you is using an incorrect reference
point. Who knows, maybe some other neighbor moved a bound and threw
you both course and now you and your neighbor can gang up on someone
else and become friends again!!
Two last points:
I wouldn't bother going to the Town or City unless you want to
dig out your neighbor's plot plan. They only have copies of
recorded plans.
As for Title Insurance, good luck. Mine says:
"This policy does not insure against loss or damage by reason of
the following:
.....3. Encroachments, overlaps, boundary line disputes, and any
other matters which would be disclosed by an accurate survey and
inspection of the premises."
I've gone through exactly this type of dispute in the past, and
after a knock on the door, we mutually taped the properties, and
we came to the same conclusions. I won ten feet of his lawn,
put up a 6 foot stockade fence and we never spoke again.....
Good luck,
Frank
|
673.63 | Newton zoning
| CLOSET::DUM::T_PARMENTER | Georgia Ace | Mon Feb 11 1991 11:52 | 3 |
| Well, ten feet sounds like a lot of lawn to me. If our neighbor's yard had
been one inch (1/12 of a foot) wider, we'd have five condos next door to us
right now instead of a nice old house with a big yard.
|
673.64 | | DICKNS::WELLCOME | Steve Wellcome (Maynard) | Mon Feb 11 1991 12:22 | 5 |
| Note if you try measuring distances yourself: in surverying, all
measurements are taken horizontally, so if you have a slope involved
you need to use a level (or a good eye) to hold the tape truly
horizontal, and "step" down (or up) the hill. Vertical distance
doesn't count.
|
673.65 | | VMSDEV::HAMMOND | Charlie Hammond -- ZKO3-04/S23 -- dtn 381-2684 | Mon Feb 11 1991 14:29 | 14 |
| An Aside...
> Note if you try measuring distances yourself: in surverying, all
> measurements are taken horizontally, so if you have a slope involved
> you need to use a level (or a good eye) to hold the tape truly
> horizontal, and "step" down (or up) the hill. Vertical distance
> doesn't count.
This true fact leads to the following, equally true bit of trivia:
An Acre on a hillside has more surface than an Acre of level
ground.
Acres are measured with the boundaries horizontal.
|
673.66 | | TOMCAT::FULTZ | ED FULTZ | Thu Feb 14 1991 15:57 | 16 |
| Paul (re. Paul Weis)
I can understand how 10 feet might not sound like a great deal of land. But,
it seems to me that 10 feet is much more than I would be willing to let go.
If it was your land, do you really believe that you would allow someone to take
10 feet? What if the person on the other side did the same? Now you would be
out 20 feet of land. Now, consider that the neighbor behind you did that, also.
You would now be out 10 feet on 3 sides of your land.
What makes 10 feet so small? What if it was 20 feet? 30 feet? Where do you
decide that the person has taken too much? In my opinion, if there was a
dispute, the neighbor should have discussed it and a formal survey could have
been financed by both neighbors.
Ed..
|
673.67 | | VMSDEV::PAULKM::WEISS | Trade freedom for security-lose both | Thu Feb 14 1991 16:47 | 41 |
| My point was simply: Don't assume that because you have been "wronged" that you
must right that wrong. Of course your neighbor shouldn't have simply removed
your bounds, and you have definitely been "wronged". But if it costs you more
to rectify that wrong than the land was worth to you in the first place, then
you've just compounded the problem.
I can honestly say that on two sides of my land I would not pursue a 10' border
dispute. Those borders are far enough away from my house and in the woods that
I'm not likely to ever make any particular use of that 10' strip, and it would
cost me more in time and aggravation to regain the strip than it's worth. Aside
from the indignation and resentment of having someone be such a jerk to me, I
don't really care where the boundaries are on those two sides. On the third
side, I would definitely pursue it, it's close enough to the house and my usable
yard that I wouldn't want it encroached.
The guy's been a jerk, and he's cost you something by his thoughless actions:
either the piece of land (if you do nothing), or the time and aggravation of
reclaiming it. All I'm saying is: recognize that you do have that choice, don't
just assume that your only recourse is to reclaim it. Go out and look at the
border, and picture him putting up a fence on his side. Picture it where it
should go according to your bounds, and picture it where he would put it if you
let him claim the land. Does it make a significant difference in the look of
your property?
If it matters to you, for whatever reason, then pursue it. I'm just reminding
you to ask the question "Does it matter" before you spend thousands of dollars
on it. Ask yourself "If the boundary was where he set it, and he offered to
sell me the strip to where it should be for the thousands of dollars that it
will cost to reclaim it, would I be interested in buying it?" If the answer is
no, then you might not want to spend the money
One other thing to check, that I just thought of. Find out how much road
frontage your neighbor's lot has. Most towns have frontage limits on building
lots, and they are generally not likely to grant variances to short-frontage
lots. If the town limit is (say) 200 ft, and his lot is 392 feet wide, then by
(oops) surveying a little optimistically on your side he can increase the
frontage to over 400 feet, which would allow him to subdivide. It will be much
harder to back up and challenge the survey if you let him get that subdivision
through.
Paul
|
673.68 | | VMSDEV::HAMMOND | Charlie Hammond -- ZKO3-04/S23 -- dtn 381-2684 | Thu Feb 14 1991 18:49 | 19 |
| > I can honestly say that on two sides of my land I would not pursue
> a 10' border dispute.
I disagree. Emphatically. Robert Frost said
"Good fences make good nieghbors."
The implication is that if you and your neighbor can't agree on
where the boundary is it WILL eventually become a major problem.
It may seem to be more bother and more money that its worth to
pursue this and get it officially settled. But have not doubt! --
If you don't get it settled now it will be even more money and
more bother sometime in the future. (If you're lucky you'll have
sold the property and the bother/money will be on someone else,
but don't count on that.)
BTW, if you willing to accept the loss of 10 feet of land, what
happens when your neighbor comes back in a year or two and claims
another 10 feet? etc., etc., etc.
|
673.69 | Two can play the devil's advocate game | VMSDEV::PAULKM::WEISS | Trade freedom for security-lose both | Thu Feb 14 1991 19:49 | 5 |
| OK, suppose he dug up the markers and moved the bounds 1 inch onto your
property. Is it still worth fighting over because next year he might want
another inch?
Paul
|
673.70 | You dont lose any land, it just gets moved over. | WMOIS::BOUDREAU_C | | Thu Feb 14 1991 20:45 | 31 |
| A similar problem happened to my father-in-law. His new neighbor,
had to install a new septic system. So he (neighbor) had the land
surveyed. The finding was 15' of dad's property was no longer his. Dad
had the his land surveyed, about 20 years ago, the findings were as the
previous plan stated (~1920). The new surveyor placed stakes, and
painted lines on the new bound. Dad knowing that he was right, waited
for the most opportune time to confront the neighbor, the day the
equipment came to start digging for the new septic. He approached the
neighbor and asked what the new lines were for. He replied that was the
boundary. Dad said well what about the one at the water?? (this
property is on a lake). The neighbor said yes you have some of your
beach on my property. Dad argued that his surveyor was wrong.
"But it doesn't really matter, I have 80' of water frontage so
let's tell the neighbor on the other side that I now own 15' of his
beach, because you say so.", argued dad.
Well to make a long story short, the old bounds were right. The
surveyor had missed an old "right of way", that was (you guessed it)
15'. This was 8 lots back. In fact the neighbor's well is on dad's
land.
One thing to remember is, if your bounds are moved, so are the
bounds for the other neighbors in the neighborhood. You may want to get
them involved, since they will be eventually. Remember, your frontage
should stay the same, what you lose on one side you gain on the other.
Now tell the neighbor that he will have to give up 10 on the other side
of him (since his frontage stays the same also).
CB
|
673.71 | | RAMBLR::MORONEY | Shhh... Mad Scientist at work... | Thu Feb 14 1991 20:53 | 19 |
| re .29:
> of no value in this discussion. I don't know N.H. Law, but in
> Massachusetts, I can assure you that just because you stick a
> rock in the ground, it doesn't become correct just because it
> sits there for seven years. As an example, for those who work
> in the Mill, the exit from the Main Street Parking lot, beside
> Building 21, (Front Street to Sudbury Street) was moved 20 feet
> this past fall because the owner of one of the houses discovered
> that the Town of Maynard had incorrectly laid out the road over
> 80 years ago over his property. He proved it and the road was
> relocated onto what Digital thought was it's land.
I'm curious how adverse posession laws come into this. The town had
adverse possesion by having a road there, and the company that owned
the Mill before Digital had adverse posession of the land where the
road is now (railroad tracks were there).
-Mike
|
673.72 | old ruse | NOVA::FISHER | It's your Earth too, love it or leave it. | Thu Feb 14 1991 21:44 | 10 |
| When I investigated getting a GI loan for a property they explained
that there were certain types of lots that were not accepted and the
reason was that after WWII there were lots of [shady] developers who
would sell, e.g., 10 lots on a 900' street, each with 100' frontage
just by changing stones as it became convenient for each lot.
I didn't see how that tied in with my situation but filed it away with
other useless info.
ed
|
673.73 | Adverse Possession 101 | SENIOR::IGNACHUCK | | Fri Feb 15 1991 02:00 | 36 |
| Re: .38:
Mike, while I was typing in the example of the Town of Maynard vs.
the homeowner on Front Street, the question of Adverse Possession
crossed my mind, but I decided to not reference it because my reply
seemed too confusing as it was.
BUT, I don't know why the Town didn't claim Adverse Possession, which
as I recall is an open and continuous use of property for 20 years
with no resistance from the landowner. In this situation, there is
implied consent and thus the user of the land, in this case the Town
of Maynard, gains the right to the land. It may be that the Town
had been taxing the poor landowner for many years and felt that the
honorable thing to do was to acknowledge the error and move the road.
Let's tie this back to the original note, and further confuse the
issue. If New Hampshire has a Right of Adverse Possession Law, it's
worth exploring. As I mentioned previously, State Laws vary greatly,
but it may be that by continual use of the ten foot strip, over a
documented period of time, with passive consent of the neighbor, as
in no objection, the right to the land may have been transferred to
our original noter.
I have a feeling that we are about to go rat hole on Adverse
Possession here, and I am frantically digging for my file on this
issue, since I went through this about ten years ago with a previous
property.
Found it. My recollection on Adverse Possession above is correct.
To further confound everyone, there is an Easement by Prescription
that could apply to this situation, where you claim a right to use
a piece of land, but make no claim of ownership.
Aren't you glad you live in New England?
Frank
|
673.74 | I guess you missed it, Paul | CLOSET::DUM::T_PARMENTER | Georgia Ace | Fri Feb 15 1991 14:22 | 21 |
| My neighbor tried to buy a strip one inch wide and as deep as his lot from
the neighbor on the other side, a church. They were going to sell it to him
for a nominal price. What's an inch? If the sale had gone through, my
neighbor's lot would have been big enougb to allow the construction of two
more buildings. He had a sale set up with a developer who was going to
subdivide his house into two condos and then tack five more condos onto that.
My neighbor was going to get $400,000 for his house and lot with that extra
inch added to it. Without the extra inch, the house and lot were only worth
$260,000 and the developer backed out and it was sold to a small family who
rents just one apartment. That apartment alone adds two cars to his driveway
and one boyfriend's car to the street. I hate to think what 7 condos would
have added.
The $160,000 inch. The inch that turned a quiet neighborhood into a parking
lot. The inch that never was. Just one inch, but instead of seven condos
looking into my living room window, I can look out my living room window and
watch his birdbath that's sitting in the middle of a vast green lawn that's
just one inch too narrow.
If my neighbor had been crooked, he would have done just what the base noter's
neighbor did.
|
673.75 | Who missed what? | VMSDEV::PAULKM::WEISS | Trade freedom for security-lose both | Fri Feb 15 1991 15:00 | 12 |
| Me, in .34:
>One other thing to check, that I just thought of. Find out how much road
>frontage your neighbor's lot has. Most towns have frontage limits on building
>lots, and they are generally not likely to grant variances to short-frontage
>lots. If the town limit is (say) 200 ft, and his lot is 392 feet wide, then by
>(oops) surveying a little optimistically on your side he can increase the
>frontage to over 400 feet, which would allow him to subdivide. It will be much
>harder to back up and challenge the survey if you let him get that subdivision
>through.
Paul
|
673.76 | | VMSDEV::HAMMOND | Charlie Hammond -- ZKO3-04/S23 -- dtn 381-2684 | Fri Feb 15 1991 17:07 | 16 |
| >OK, suppose he dug up the markers and moved the bounds 1 inch onto your
>property. Is it still worth fighting over because next year he might want
>another inch?
The answwer is "Yes, one inch is worth fighting over." A previous
reply gave an example of why this can be so.
But to be fair I'll conceed that "IS worth fighting over" might be
better changed to "CAN BE work fighting over".
Would I fight over one inch? Well, I'd at least fight hard enough
to ensure to be sure I knew what was going on. So far as I can
remember reading the base noter has no idea of what his neighbor's
intentions are.
In that case, I'd fight.
|
673.77 | 10 feet CAN be a lot | ENGINE::PETERSON | I know.., I said I was leaving. BUT...! | Wed Feb 20 1991 15:45 | 15 |
|
10 ft wide x 100 ft deep = 1000 sq ft.
1000 ft sq ~ 1/43 acre.
1 acre building lot = approx $70,000
That 10 ft strip of land just cost $1,600
Pleas keep us posted tas to the outcome
CP
|
673.78 | | TOKLAS::feldman | Larix decidua, var. decify | Wed Feb 20 1991 16:48 | 8 |
| re: .44
A 1 acre building lot may be worth approximately $70K, but a 1+1/43 acre
building lot is also worth approximately $70K. The value of that particular
1000 sq. ft. depends very much on whether or not it can change an unbuildable
lot into a buildable lot.
Gary
|
673.79 | What about the taxes? | SENIOR::IGNACHUCK | | Thu Feb 21 1991 02:52 | 34 |
| There is another factor to consider before you decide that the
legal and emotional cost of fighting over a ten foot strip is not
worth the hassle. If you let your neighbor take the disputed
10 foot strip, without a protest, you are going to continue to pay
the real estate taxes on the land. This is no small gift to your
neighbor.
Example:
My half acre lot in Maynard is assessed at $97,200. (land value, not
total property value). Maynard's residential tas rate is $10.50 per
$1,000 of value. Now, let's assume that my lot is 100 by 200 for the
sake of simplicity (20,000 sq. ft.) One hundred feet of frontage
by 200 feet of sideyard.
If I surrender a 10 by 200 foot strip, I lose the use of 2,000 square
feet of land. BUT, I continue to pay $102. per year in taxes for the
land.
Before someone suggests that the neighbor might be willing to pay the
taxes on the strip, I submit that memories are short and property
changes hands on occasion, and "poof", you're right back into the same
hassle again.
Advise: Go the legal route and settle it once and for all. When and
if you sell the property, the money you spend now will be well worth
it in the long run.
Frank
|
673.80 | | RAMBLR::MORONEY | Shhh... Mad Scientist at work... | Thu Feb 21 1991 03:34 | 15 |
| re value of land:
The value of land (at least for tax purposes) is not proportional to its area.
I felt that my property was overassessed for tax purposes and when I got the
tax bill the reason seemed obvious. They had me listed as having twice as much
land as I really had. I filed for an abatement, and got it - for having 1.3
acres less my property was valued as being worth all of $4000 less.
Infuriated, I went to the town hall and checked the surrounding land values,
but it was consistant with what I saw. Land was valued at about $50,000 for
being a buildable (or built) lot, and all land over some minimum was valued
at $3,000/acre. Regardless of whether a lot could be divided into n parcels
(but if it *was* divided into n parcels they were valued at ~50K each).
-Mike
|
673.81 | A little tidbit... | HDLITE::FLEURY | | Thu Feb 21 1991 10:11 | 10 |
| re: .-1
Not to go too much farther down the rathole... The reason for the
discrepancy in the land values is to keep the land in large parcels.
There is some incentive to the taxpayer to keep larger parcels together
if the taxes on those parcels is less than they would be as individual
building lots. This is a common practice in both MA and NH. This also
tends to slow down growth in the town.
Dan
|
673.82 | | TOKLAS::feldman | Larix decidua, var. decify | Thu Feb 21 1991 20:04 | 6 |
| In fact, they don't always rely on minimum building lot sizes. In my town,
lots are assessed at a certain high value for the first acre, and then a low
value for each additional acre, even though minimum lot sizes for new
construction in residential zones are 2 or 3 acres.
Gary
|
673.83 | Going deeper into the rathole | MARX::SULLIVAN | We have met the enemy, and they is us! | Fri Feb 22 1991 11:49 | 14 |
|
Actually, it is a practical, reasonable, practice. Essentially, the
land is evaluated based on the market. A 1 acre lot will sell for approximately
the same as a 5 acre lot if both can only support one home. You are buying
a house lot. I know. I own a 5 acre lot which cost the same as all the
1.5 acre lots around it. No problems with the land either (wetlands, easements,
etc.). However, it can not be subdivided so all it will ever be is a single
family house lot. The banks and real estate agents look at it this way too.
As do the buyers. I wanted a large lot and very quickly realized I
didn't have to pay any more than a smaller lot. I even saw some 10+ acre lots
which were the same price as a 1 acre lot.
Mark
|
673.84 | Update | CIVIC::FERRIGNO | | Fri Feb 22 1991 15:43 | 28 |
| I just wanted to enter an update on the situation. We met with our
lawyer and our neighbor's surveyor. The surveyor claims that he
didn't "see" any stone bounds. We all walked the property and did
some rough measuring and "eyeballing". It appears that our surveyor
went up a long-established street to find a reference point (city
marker of some sort) and did his measurement from there. That was
about 9 properties up the street. From there, everything appeared to
be in order -- that is, all the bounds on the 9 properties appeared to
be o.k.
Our neighbor's surveyor went one street over, into a relatively new
development, and started from [says this on the survey] "an iron
pipe" in the front of an adjoining property.
So, now we're where I feel we should have been in the first place --
the two surveyors will be trying to determine which survey is correct.
If both are correct, it will then go to land court for resolution.
With regard as to whether or not the ten feet is of value. We own a
corner lot -- our property is bounded by three streets, front and
both sides. Our neighbor is across the side street, and believes that
ten feet of what we consider to be our property belongs to him. In
actuality, we think that his property is under the street.
FYI, our home is over 100 years old. The street dividing our
properties was upgraded to city-acceptance level in 1954.
|
673.85 | | ENABLE::GLANTZ | Mike 227-4299 DECtp TAY Littleton MA | Fri Feb 22 1991 17:29 | 1 |
| Sounds great. Any word from the neighbor?
|
673.86 | That did it-I quit! | SENIOR::IGNACHUCK | | Sat Feb 23 1991 03:30 | 10 |
| RE: .51:
In a prior life, I spent many years as a Surveyor and Civil
Engineer and I was having a lot of fun recalling my past
experiences with land disputes, but when you mentioned an
"accepted" City street between you and your neighbor, you
opened up a whole new can of worms.
Best of luck,
Frank
|
673.87 | Gonna tell us about the worms, or continue to tantalize us? | LYCEUM::CURTIS | Dick "Aristotle" Curtis | Tue Feb 26 1991 16:38 | 5 |
| .53:
Care to elaborate on that, Frank?
Dick
|
673.88 | | RAMBLR::MORONEY | Shhh... Mad Scientist at work... | Tue Feb 26 1991 19:06 | 8 |
| re .51:
I don't think I understand. The neighbor thinks he owns, in addition to his
lot, the road and a part of your side of the road? Or does he think that
if his deed says he owns 0.9 acres, and the measurements of his lot come out
to be 0.8 acres, he must own 0.1 acres on your side of the road or something?
-Mike
|
673.89 | | CIVIC::FERRIGNO | | Wed Feb 27 1991 21:29 | 10 |
| We don't know what he thinks -- our property markers are right up to
the road. For some reason, he believes that he owns ten feet of
property across the road from his property -- the ten feet that
our survey indicated as being our property. That's all we know.
As stated in the base note, our first knowledge of a disagreement
is when we found our stone bounds removed and new stones planted
ten feet into our property -- without discussion or notification of
any kind.
|
673.90 | I give up! Again! | SENIOR::IGNACHUCK | Native Maynardian | Thu Feb 28 1991 02:44 | 47 |
| Well, I'm back! Thanks, Dick. I owe you, pal. :*)
Everything in this note was going along fine (?) until the
revelation of an "accepted" city street came between the two
properties. The key word here is "accepted", as opposed to
right-of-way, or easement.
Cities and Towns don't normally go around looking for streets
to maintain. Developers or abutters petition the City Council
or Town Meeting to get the city or town to "accept" ownership
of a street. This is a legal process that includes "laying
out" the street by angle and distance, and construction of the
street to city or town standards. My point is that someone
or some group asks the city or town to "take my street, please".
When a city or town "accepts" a street, there are specific laws
that kick in that, in effect, wipe out any future claims of
ownership by abutters, and clears the title to the land. The
city or town files a deed and claims ownership of the land under
the street.
End of story.
In the case of our original note, it is impossible for the neighbor
to hop across the accepted street to claim ownership of his missing
10 foot strip. It just can't happen. Streets don't create more
land. If anything, the neighbor *might* claim that the street was
laid out incorrectly, as we've discussed previously in the Front Street
issue at the Mill, but I haven't heard this yet.
IF the street is laid out incorrectly, the noter may still lose her 10
feet, but it will the city or town making the claim, not the neighbor.
The neighbor's 10 feet would be in the street and everything would have
to shift over.
Sooooo, now you have the noter, her neighbor, her bank, and the
City all looking for the missing 10 foot strip.
The reason I gave up (or tried to) was that I can't imagine why the
neighbor would claim 10 feet of land ACROSS an accepted street from
his property. What's the point?
Frank
That's a can of worms....
|
673.91 | Sounds more like a dumpster full of Boas | RANGER::PESENTI | Only messages can be dragged | Fri Mar 08 1991 11:35 | 0 |
673.92 | | BOSOX::TIMMONS | I'm a Pepere! | Wed May 08 1991 15:19 | 5 |
| Well, it's been 2 months since the last entry in here.
Can we have an update to the dispute?
Lee
|
673.93 | Update to base note | SELL1::FERRIGNO | | Tue Jun 18 1991 18:21 | 3 |
| Sorry, we had a death in the family, and this property issues was put
on the back burner. Current status is that the dispute goes to Land
Court. More after that takes place.
|
673.94 | Must know something by now | WFOV12::KOEHLER | Brains? No thanks, I'm on 2nd shift | Fri Oct 18 1991 23:54 | 3 |
| So when does it go to land court?
Jim
|
673.95 | STONES FOR FENCE? | GBMMKT::SKUPIEN | DTN 264-0767, MK2-2/D10 | Fri May 29 1992 16:49 | 7 |
| I need to purchase field stones to build a stone fence. Does anyone
know of a good source?
Thanks,
Darlene Skupien
GBMMKT::SKUPIEN
|
673.96 | field stone source: any hole | RGB::SEILER | Larry Seiler | Sun May 31 1992 02:10 | 13 |
| If it's really round field stones that you want, you don't necessarily
need to buy them. When we decided to build a field stone wall at our
last house, I was able to get plenty by just stopping at construction
sites. Nobody cared if I took them -- they just have to pay to get
rid of them. Of course, you may want to buy them just so that someone
else is arranging the transportation. They should be literally dirt
cheap (other than transportation), since they aren't good for much.
If it's shaped stone (two or more sides flat and parallel) that you
want, I'm sorry but I cannot help you.
Enjoy,
Larry
|
673.97 | Precourt, Inc. in Sudbury, Ma. | TARKIN::BEAVEN | Dick BXB2-2/G08 293-5074 | Mon Jun 01 1992 11:33 | 11 |
| I don't know where you live, but in Sudbury, Ma. - where I live -
we are fortunate to have Precourt, Inc., on Union Ave. They
carry all kinds of stone from rough to finished (like polished
granite for kitchen counters). When we made a garden pool last
year, we purchased "Pennsylvania Fieldstone" from them to
make the edging from. They are very helpful in listening to
what you want to do and then showing you around the yard to
look at different solutions.
Dick
|
673.98 | | VERGA::WELLCOME | Steve Wellcome PKO3-1/D30 | Mon Jun 01 1992 12:56 | 5 |
| There's a company in Westminster, I think, that sells fieldstone.
Sorry, I can't remember the name, but I got the name from Neil
Jorgensen, a landscape architect in Harvard, Mass. He would no
doubt tell you if you gave him a call.
|
673.99 | Where da' at. | ELWOOD::DYMON | | Mon Jun 01 1992 15:59 | 5 |
|
....Fitzgerald & Day inc. Gardner....508-632-5141
|
673.100 | | VERGA::WELLCOME | Steve Wellcome PKO3-1/D30 | Mon Jun 01 1992 16:42 | 4 |
| Re: .4
Yep - that's the place.
|
673.101 | Free stone wall | VLNVAX::OLEKSIAK | | Mon Jun 01 1992 19:49 | 24 |
| <<< PFEAST::NAPIER$TOOL4:[NOTES$LIBRARY]CLASSIFIED_ADS.NOTE;10060 >>>
-< Welcome to C_A, Please READ THE RULES in Note 2.* >-
================================================================================
Note 10370.0 FREE stone wall No replies
GOLF::BROUILLET 18 lines 1-JUN-1992 13:23
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Don Brouillet
DTN 234-4696
GOLF::BROUILLET
A few people were going to take this, but nobody showed up yet. First
come, first served. Must go this week, and you NEED a truck,
preferably heavy duty. A lot of people don't realize how heavy a few
rocks are.
FREE: rocks from a collapsed stone wall. Roughly a 20' section of a
3' wall (above grade, must be some below grade too. I don't know if
these rocks would be called fieldstone, or something better - many of
them have at least one smooth face.
Conditions: You must agree to take all the rocks, as well as any
chunks of mortar left behind. The wall is located at my mother's house
in Athol, MA. You'll need to supply all labor yourself, no help
available.
|
673.24 | stone wall to shore up a garden ramp | MKOTS3::ROBERTS_CR | the evening sky grew dark | Tue Apr 12 1994 15:05 | 10 |
| anyone tried a DIY stone wall since the last note here? we're going
to build a curved ramp which will arch from the garage around and up
to the side/front yard. This is to make hauling garden carts and
implements of destruction easier than bumping things up and down the
inserted steps or around the perimeter of the property. The ramp will
be about 4' wide and we hope the angle will be 30-40 degrees across
an area that is about 25' wide. The stone wall will be part of the
shoring up that will need to happen. Has anyone tried such a feat?
c
|
673.25 | drystone facing | SMURF::WALTERS | | Wed Apr 13 1994 12:58 | 33 |
| I started building a drystone wall last fall. This was to terrace a
part of my yard where a gap in the ledge is washing out in the rain.
The wall is currently 3' high, of which about a foot is underground,
and an arc 10' or so wide. It needs to go up another foot or so, when
I recover more stone from the yard.
Because this is just to buttress a terrace, I inclined the wall
backwards a few degrees so that the wall "leans" into the grade. As
each course was laid down, larger stones are laid inwards as sleepers.
(Another reason for doing it this way is that I come from a place where
drystone walls abound, and I know what skill it takes to create
a vertical drystone wall that will stay put. Drystone terracing is
easier to do.)
If you build a vertical mortared wall you will probably have to put in
some decent footings. However, if you just use the dry stone to face
the side of the ramp, and make the sides of the ramp a slope, frost
heave can do little damage to it.
This also works out well if you are using native stone from your yard,
as opposed to bought flat stone. The stuff from my yard is irregular
with fewer flat stones.
Every few feet is a hole that is filled behind with soil & compost.
This is to provide places for hardy perennial plants & shrubs later.
The plants will improve the look, but also the root systems will help
stabilize the fill.
Regards,
Colin
|
673.26 | LKG wall not a good example. | NETCAD::COLELLA | | Mon Aug 07 1995 22:29 | 12 |
| Wow, a 9 year old note! (Anyone remember $ SHELF ? )
Just wanted to report that the LKG wall did not stand the test of
time. It wasn't put together very well, and heaved and fell down in
several places. (Although it looks as though someone has gone around
and piled the rocks back into the wall. They'll fall again though,
I'm sure.)
I saw something on the news once that said they have a problem in
places like Concord, MA, where sometimes people go into the woods and
help themselves and remove stones from 200-300+ year-old walls.
Supposedly now they have some kind of forest-ranger type person to try
and put a stop to it. Maybe they fine you a dollar-a-pound? :-)
|
673.27 | Hurts more than that! | REFINE::MCDONALD | shh! | Tue Aug 08 1995 12:22 | 8 |
|
Actually, the fine is $50 per stone. No kidding.
There are people who go to towns like Barre with flatbed trucks
and cranes and disassemble farm walls (illegally) and sell the
stone. They can get a fortune for it on the Cape.
- Mac
|
673.28 | | HELIX::WELLCOME | Steve Wellcome MRO1-1/KL31 Pole HJ33 | Tue Aug 08 1995 12:42 | 3 |
| There's more than aesthetics/theft involved in the removal of stone
walls. They are quite often boundary lines in old deeds. The
phrase "...as the wall now stands" shows up over and over again.
|
673.29 | | REFINE::MCDONALD | shh! | Tue Aug 08 1995 16:35 | 11 |
|
re: -.1
Absolutely. It's also common practice to use a feature (e.g corner)
or ADD a feature (e.g. drill hole in a stone) to mark positions on
a boundary. According to a recent survey of my property, a corner
of "my" stone bound almost defines the entire neighborhood... it's
about the only trustworthy measuring point to begin from for quite
a ways.
- Mac
|
673.30 | Another rock?!? | LUDWIG::CASSIDY | Tim Cassidy, #365 | Thu Aug 10 1995 02:03 | 4 |
| Cultivate your stones they way they used to. Plow, hit a rock,
pile it on the wall, plow, hit a rock, pile it on the wall...
Tim
|
673.102 | Remove Stone Wall? | 11666::CLEMENT | Smells like Nirvana | Wed Jun 19 1996 13:27 | 24 |
| Need some advice.
I have a stone wall on my back yard property border, about 80'. The
wall is very old, crooked, and ugly. I believe all the stones are on
my side of the property line. The wall has been there since long
before my house or my bordering neighbors house ever existed.
My neighbor has the advantage in that he has been using my property
as part of his yard for many years. It varies from about 8 feet to
perhaps one foot.
I would like to remove the stone wall, and put up a nice straight
wooden fence. This is impossible to do today due to the stone wall
being in the way and being so crooked.
My neighbors are nice people, and I plan to discuss them with them
before I do anything.
I am wondering if legally there are any issues with my removing this
stone wall that has been there "somewhat forever", or with any other
of my plans mentioned above.
Has anyone shared similar experiences? Thanks, Mark
|
673.103 | Don't mess with a stone bound. | REFINE::MCDONALD | shh! | Wed Jun 19 1996 13:49 | 8 |
|
Regardless of whose property it is on, if (according to the land
records) it is referred to as a "stone bound" (stone boundary) not
only are you NOT allowed to muck with it... but it is a $50 fine
per stone for movinng it or removing stones from it (in MA).
- Mac
|
673.104 | | 18559::WELLCOME | Steve Wellcome SHR3-1/C22 Pole A22 | Wed Jun 19 1996 16:06 | 11 |
| Yes, old deeds are frequently written in terms like, "...12 chains
16 links North 35 degrees 17 minutes East as the wall now stands...."
----------------------
You probably ought to check with a surveyor, or somebody, before
messing with it. It may turn out not to be an issue...but then
again, it might. Based on your description, it sounds as though
it's no longer significant as a property line, if it ever was
(it may have just been a random wall a farmer put up in the middle
of a field), but old deed stuff can get pretty obscure.
|
673.105 | official markers in the ground | 11666::CLEMENT | Smells like Nirvana | Wed Jun 19 1996 16:14 | 10 |
| I should have also stated that there are official property markers
staked in the ground (which is why I know that the stones are on
my property) at my 4 corners of my property. These are metal stakes
with numbers on them and are probably referenced markers on my deed.
I am making calls and will check all the paperwork I have, then if all
seems ok will talk to my neighbor as a courtesy to make sure he has
no objections.
Thanks so far... Mark
|
673.106 | | BIGQ::GARDNER | justme....jacqui | Wed Jun 19 1996 16:39 | 10 |
|
Installing the correct markers and using your property is very
important. There is such a law as adverse possession that kicks
in at about 20 years of another person maintaining/using your
property.
Check with your building inspector.
justme
|
673.107 | | REFINE::MCDONALD | shh! | Thu Jun 20 1996 12:36 | 24 |
|
Also keep in mind that a stone wall which directly crosses your
property (as opposed to demarcating the edges) can still be legally
a stone bound (and therefore "untouchable") if the measurement of
another property's demarcations is based off of the stone bound.
You'd rarely see anyone exercise such an obscurity... but it is always
a possibility.
Personally, I think of stone bounds as historic and I think they
should be preserved (even re-stacked) whenever possible... even when
they no longer represent a boundary.
If you decide to remove the wall and discard the stone, if it is the
tradional New England farm stone (dark green/black, with lichens and
such)... I suggest contacting a wall stone provider to see if they
want to buy it. This stone is in such demand that operations actually
head out to smaller towns with equipment to actually STEAL it.
Apparently there's a big market for it in places like Cape Cod. I know
I posted somewhere else re: groups stealing stone bounds in Barre.
80 foot of a reasonably sized stone bound could easily be 20 tons of
stone... it'll take a lot of runs with a pickup truck to remove it if
you don't call in a "pro".
- Mac
|
673.108 | ...dug 16 tons... | PCBUOA::TARDIFF | Dave Tardiff | Thu Jun 20 1996 17:27 | 5 |
|
Depending on where you are, if you decide to remove the
wall and decide that you're permitted to, I may be able to help
with the stones...I'm always looking for more for MY walls in
progress...
|
673.109 | still researching | 11666::CLEMENT | Smells like Nirvana | Thu Jun 20 1996 17:46 | 17 |
| I have had about 12 offers to take the stones already. That part is
great!
We ran a line from the two corner markers yesterday. Only about 12"
of the wall resides partly in the neighbors yard, the rest is in my
yard varying from a few inches to about 8 feet from the line.
So far everyone at town hall has said it is ok to remove the stones,
but we still have more checking to do. It is not referenced in our
deed according to my wife. I will read it tonite. Folks at townhall
reviewed it also, but we still need to confirm with the legal dept and
the engineering dept. I also know a surveryor and lawyer in town and
will talk to the both of them as well.
- Mark
|
673.110 | | PASTA::PIERCE | The Truth is Out There | Wed Jun 26 1996 17:32 | 15 |
|
I asked my husband about this, he is a stone masson and has been for many
years. He runs into this alot in his line of business.
He said, if you own at least 2ft on the other side of the wall, then you
can do what ever you want to the wall. (but you should be nice and talk
to your neighbor anyway)
If the wall is a property line wall, then you can't do anything to it with
out the permission of the neighbor. If the neighbor has no objection then
you don't even need the town involved.
lkp
|
673.111 | ask the town | CSLALL::NASEAM::READIO | A Smith & Wesson beats four aces, Tow trucks beat Chapman Locks | Thu Jun 27 1996 17:02 | 13 |
| In the town of Boxboro it is illegal to even remove a few stones in a stone
wall just to make a walkway. The ENTIRE town's stone wall system is
protected as part of some historical pact.
The fine for removing the stones will bankrupt you if you're in the wrong
town.
We tried to move a stone wall in the middle of our 3 acre property in
Westfield. No dice. Can't be touched as a historical landmark. ...and we
owned 100 feet on either side of the wall.
Maybe you can get away with it in New Hampshire, but not in most
Massachusetts towns.
|
673.112 | wall ready for removal. | 11666::CLEMENT | Smells like Nirvana | Wed Jul 10 1996 19:47 | 14 |
| Well we have talked to everyone at town hall and our neighbors.
There are no objections to removing this wall. Everyone iterated
what was said here; if it is referenced as a boundary/marker on the
deeds it would be a problem. It is not referenced.
We are ready to have it removed if anyone is still interested. I would
also be interested in having someone come out with some heavy equipment
that could remove the very large stones, if anyone has such equipment
or can recommend someone.
I will repost my offer in "classads.notes". I have not received a
definate commitement from anyone yet, but have had a lot of interest.
Thanks, Mark
|