Jon Maynard Boundaries Ltd, Boundary Demarcation and Disputes, Rights of Way, Expert Witness, Chartered Land Surveyor

BOUNDARY
PROBLEMS

An Internet resource provided free since February 2000 by Jon Maynard Boundaries Ltd

the Boundary Problems web site

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HOW BEST TO USE THIS WEB SITE

If you are new to boundary disputes and want a quick but rounded knowledge of the subject then you must read
Boundaries: the Essentials
Then read in greater depth by clicking on the links at left to any pages that look interesting.

Have a question? Try FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS.

Looking for a specific topic? find it using our Site index.

If you are a British landowner who has a problem with a boundary, once you have read the parts of this web site that are relevant to you, what should you do next?

1.  You may have learned enough to have gained the confidence to negotiate directly with your neighbour to achieve an amicable settlement of the dispute.

2.  You may want a better understanding of how what you have learned can be applied to your own circumstances. You can arrange to talk it over with our Boundary Advisor.

3.  You may have reached the stage where you need to instruct a professional who is expert in the issues in dispute. Contact us at Jon Maynard Boundaries Ltd.
 

Alternatively,
You may want to discuss the matter further with others who can offer sympathetic advice, and either of the internet forums below will be pleased to hear from you.

link to web site of Neighbours from Hell in Britain
link to web site of Garden law
Neighbours from Hell in Britain
GARDEN LAW

You may prefer to contact the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (RICS), who operate a Boundary Disputes Hotline (0870 333 1600) that will put you in touch with a chartered surveyor who specialises in boundary demarcation and disputes and who will be prepared to spend half an hour discussing and advising on your problem free of charge.

Readers should understand that, for the sake of clear writing, the use of male pronouns implies either male or female gender, the use of singular pronouns implies either a singular or a plural context, etc.
Note to students: Please feel free to quote from, criticise or review the information you find on this web site, but please acknowledge the source of the material that you use. You should under no circumstances copy and paste the material on this web site into your own assignments and claim it as your own own work: be assured that your lecturers and tutors will be as familiar with this web site as they are with the standard (hardcopy published) textbooks on the subject and will recognise that the work is not your own.

 

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