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Wheelie bins
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wyard
Posts: 1 Newbie
Advice please. My daughter has bought her first property. The neighbour next door but one has his 3 wheelie bins under my daughters kitchen window. He says they have to stay there as he has no where to put them. This is because he has made a pretty garden in the front of his property. He is a council tenant and my daughters property is lease hold so she does not own the land. Where do we stand with this please as my daughter would like a pretty garden but cannot do this as his bins are in the way. Many thanks.
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Move the bins back to his own garden And tell him he cant place them there5
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Tell her to move them onto his property.1
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tell him they don't have to stay there and must stay within his property boundary. leasehold still means you have rights to the land.6
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wyard said:Advice please. My daughter has bought her first property. The neighbour next door but one has his 3 wheelie bins under my daughters kitchen window. He says they have to stay there as he has no where to put them. This is because he has made a pretty garden in the front of his property. He is a council tenant and my daughters property is lease hold so she does not own the land. Where do we stand with this please as my daughter would like a pretty garden but cannot do this as his bins are in the way. Many thanks.0
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Is the kitchen window infront of her house or to the side? Are the bins on her boundary or his? If they’re in front of her house I would just move them. He’s being out of order1
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OP where does she store her bins?0
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wyard said:my daughters property is lease hold so she does not own the land.4
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What’s the set up? Is her window right on the road? Who owns the land the bins are on?1
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Offer to let him leave the bins there for, say £15 per week.my daughters property is lease hold so she does not own the land.Please clarify. The land outside the kitchen window is not within the boundary of her lease? Has she checked the leasehold title plan?If it is not, is it within the leasehold Plan of another property/flat within the building?Or is it shared (read the lease)?Or is it simply owned by the freeholder (check the freehold title plan)? If so, who is the freeholder (check the freehold Title)?2
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The neighbour next door but one - so not even her actual neighbour (not that it would make it much better)? Cheeky gits! That takes some massive sense of privilege assuming they have no rights over the land (which is highly unlikely).
If she wants a pretty garden then tell her to go ahead and make one, having moved the bins back to their rightful owner. Put a flower bed under the window so there's nowhere for them to put the wheelie bins.
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