ustmd
Platinum Member
Lots of good advise so far. But what to do depends on several factors that you havent said/answered yet.
First, someone else already asked, WHAT type of fence????Decorative?Livestock?Privacy?
Second, have you even talked to this nice old lady? If so, what was her reaction?
Third, You said this woman has lived there for 10 years? Was this fence there the whole time? And you also said that your in-laws JUST bought the place last year, and during the survey is when the issue was discovered right?
I guess I have to ask, why did you not survey BEFORE you bought the place?
I am sorry to say that legally, I dont think you can do anything, other than maybe going after the people that sold the place to your inlaws or the realtors. Because if this woman has lived there for 10 years with no issues, and now all of the sudden the new neighbors(your inlaws) want to raise a fuss...Leagally, I think she owns the land now.
Best thing you can do is talk with the old lady and see if she is willing to let you move her fence for her. If she refuses, you've got no beef with her. You need to go after the people that sold the property to your "inlaws)
I appreciate all of the great feedback.
Here is some information:
1. The fence is a 3 strand electric fence for a horse pasture.
2. We have talked to the old lady. She is in disbelief. Her common comment is "I am losing so much of my land". She keeps missing the point it was not her land to begin with. The guy who installed her fence installed it in the wrong place. This issue is not in doubt. The last surveyor actual uncovered the official pins in the ground that mark the corners of her lot.
3. The issue was discovered when my in laws did the survey prior to purchasing the open 10 acres. Just to clarify, the old lady and my in laws houses are in a legal defined sub-division. The 10 acres are not in a sub-division (it is a "meets and bounds" property) adjacent to the sub-division.
4. My in laws have consulted a lawyer. Legally in Texas, the old lady has no claim to the land. An "Adverse Possession claim" cannot start until after 15 years and every time the property is transfered the clock resets. Also, adverse possession claims almost never succeed in Texas.
(I am not saying they don't succeed in other states
Actually in Texas, we could have just bulldozed the fence and moved on.
My question is not with the legal issues, but the neighbor issues. The old lady is in denial and we are trying to be reasonable.