Boston Herald

Home buyer’s fence on neighbor’s property

- By GARY M. SINGER SUN SENTINEL

We bought our home a year ago with a fenced-in yard. Recently, our neighbor demanded that we remove the fence from his property, stating it is two feet over the line. I looked at our closing papers and saw that our survey does show our fence is on his property. The fence company, the seller and our title company are telling us they will not help. We bought the house this way, and it does not feel right for us to have to pay to have the fence moved.

You will have to pay to have the fence moved because you became responsibl­e for it when you became the owner. When you entered into the contract to purchase the property, you and the seller agreed to a bundle of rights and responsibi­lities. The situation you are now dealing with was addressed in your contract and is part of the reason that you had the home surveyed during the closing process.

The typical contract lets you notify the seller if there is an issue, such as yours, and would require the seller to fix the problem before closing. However, if you failed to notify the seller and went to closing, you waive this re- quirement. It becomes your problem, not the seller’s. The fence company installed the fence with the approval of the seller, so they are not responsibl­e, and this would be excluded from your title insurance policy because it is plainly showing on the survey.

While the typical real estate contract seems like a simple fill-in-the-blank form, it has been crafted over the years to address almost every issue that arises during the process. There are numerous rights and responsibi­lities in those pages, and they should be carefully read.

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