Leicester Mercury

Things aren’t always rosy in the garden when it comes to rights

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IT’S fair to say the latest lockdown guidance has caused a bit of confusion. With differing rules for all four countries of the UK, just chilling out in the garden has become rather complicate­d.

Yet millions of people don’t have access to a garden and are having to make do with communal spaces, shared gardens or nothing at all.

If you’re living in a house divided in to flats, you may have the biggest property, but the basement flat might have the sole rights to the garden.

Judging by my mailbox, this has led to some tension. So I’ve drafted in my top legal expert mate, Gary Rycroft, to cover your outdoor rights.

If you’re buying a flat in a house divided into flats – or renting one – the lease or tenancy agreement should clearly set out your garden rights. If you’re buying, your solicitor will provide you with a copy, if you’re renting ask your landlord or the letting agency.

The lease is where it can get a bit complicate­d. There could be any number of different arrangemen­ts in place.

Sometimes the garden is retained by the freeholder (landlord) who is responsibl­e for other ‘common parts’ like insuring the building.

Or the garden can be owned by one or more of the leaseholde­rs (tenants) but the lease gives shared rights and responsibi­lities.

Of course, if you own your garden you can do what you like in it – within reason. The planting or failure to control aggressive plants such as Japanese knotweed may lead to a neighbour’s claim for damages, building a fence more than one metre high next to a path or highway or two metres elsewhere will require planning permission­s and nude sunbathing might in extreme cases ‘outrage public decency’.

There may also be some ‘covenants’ on the land set out in the deeds to a house or in the lease of a flat which impose rules – ‘keep the garden tidy’ – or place restrictio­ns – ‘don’t hang washing outside’.

Other activities prohibited by covenants might be barbecues, large gatherings, or noise after a certain time. Our main advice from a legal perspectiv­e is good old common sense.

The absolute golden rule is this: try for as hard and as long as possible not to fall out. Knowing your contract is useful, but don’t start waving it around and making demands unless you really feel you have to.

If the rights of access and rules around garden etiquette aren’t clear, or if you think they don’t understand them, sit down (two metres apart!) with neighbours and have a friendly chat. And remember if you own the flat or house and want to sell it in the future you may have to disclose to a buyer any ‘neighbour disputes’ which can often be a big turn off.

In some cases you may not have access rights to a garden, but your neighbour does and lockdown has led to some lovely stories about the sharing of otherwise ‘exclusive’ spaces. This is to be applauded.

If you are generous with your outdoor space, set out ground rules and time limits from the off. And just because you’ve been allowed in the garden during lockdown doesn’t mean you acquire so called ‘squatters rights’.

Gardens which are already set up as ‘communal’ are a bit different in the sense that they are usually governed by a tenants/management associatio­n or the landlord. These can be set by the holder of rights/management associatio­n, but if you think they are restrictiv­e or unfair you can complain.

■ If you need help with a problem during lockdown, get in touch at resolver.co.uk

 ??  ?? BBQ? Make sure your lease allows it
BBQ? Make sure your lease allows it

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