Last summer the house next door in suburban North NJ was purchased by a (barely) thirtyish architect who had plans to remodel/add to his 60 year old dutch colonial. I was working in my back yard on a Sunday afternoon in the Fall and he came over to mention that his bank wanted him to rebuild the steps going down from front yard to back yard (almost 8 foot lower). "Those aren't your steps to rebuild - they're on my property." I told him. So we found his recently installed survey markers, and sure enough, the steps and all the shrubs and hemlocks are on MY side. He also told me he was having tree service in to remove some trees the end of the week. To be safe, I went out and marked all my trees with orange tape - even those clearly on my property by 15 feet.
The following Tuesday, no one home except my college-age daughter - his tree service is removing trees in his backyard AND the hemlocks on my side. My daughter ran out of the house and yelled "You're cutting down our trees!" But between chainsaw noise and non-English speaking workers they cut down 6.
Spoke to neighbor, sent him and tree service a letter advising that he (they) will need to replace trees. Called fence company and pulled permit at Boro Hall. My wife thinks he did it on purpose. I firmly believe it was stupidity and blatant lack of care by the contractor.
So it happens in suburbia too. I knew I had to be wary of encroachment on my upstate NY property where the lines are not well marked and there's a chance that a neighbor or two might cut lumber on my property. But following this and Dan McCarty's thread on Trespassers and Cable Gates, I'm going to add more posted signs and "ride the lines" more frequently.
Sorry for the rant.
Barry Mabery