Unintentional boundary encroachment garage

  • Erstellt am 2016-03-13 10:17:53

Sebastian79

2016-03-21 14:11:00
  • #1
And what if someone sells their property? What then? Here one should think a bit further...
 

Payday

2016-03-21 14:14:37
  • #2
I already wrote that above and the other solution there is not clean either. Normally, you would have to run the full procedure through the notary or somehow dismantle the 8cm (if possible). If you have had the part installed, they are allowed to make corrections or cover the notary costs.
 

Sebastian79

2016-03-21 14:16:22
  • #3
You wrote something above about a written agreement between the neighbors - but that might not interest any other buyer later on. And it doesn’t have to... I would be very cautious about that.
 

DG

2016-03-21 14:41:46
  • #4


That’s exactly the point – and that’s why it’s regulated differently. The other options are legally secure even without a transfer of ownership.

What payday suggested is more like a ground lease payment, which is paid once and thus covers the damage for the agreed period or the lifetime of the building. The problem is that after 25 years and three ownership transfers, nobody knows or can verify it anymore.

Best regards
Dirk Grafe
 

Bauexperte

2016-03-22 00:52:08
  • #5

That is probably quite difficult when identical garages are missing 8 cm of space

Rhenish greetings
 
Oben