Not very easily I'm afraid as boundaries in general are very ill-defined. Plans registered with HM Land Registry are on such a scale that a pencil line on these plans represents something like a metre on the ground. Nor will the Land Registry tell you exactly where a boundary might be as they themselves are never quite sure. Likewise a surveyor cannot tell you exactly as he has nothing concrete to take measurements from - nothing, in fact, to survey. This is why there are so many boundary disputes and so many happy lawyers.
2006-12-13 22:23:12
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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2017-01-18 19:00:14
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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You need to go see you council office and get the property deeds. All boundaries are shown on these. I don't know how to go about getting them but I do know these deeds show the exact boundaries on the Land Registry as I have just bought a house and I was given this by my solicitor so I could see what I was buying as I live in a terraced house with shared gardens etc.
2006-12-13 22:25:58
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answer #3
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answered by Amy_Lou 3
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Go to your local county courthouse. Go to the Clerk of Courts office and ask them to look up the deed for your home. On the deed, there will be a plat map number. The plat map is a layout of your property along with a description of the boundaries. After this, you can use that information to mark off the boundary yourself, or you could pay a surveyor to come out and do the same.
2006-12-13 22:15:57
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answer #4
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answered by devildawg200218 2
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Hire a surveyor or get your plans from the council- they surely should be able to provide you with these. Get a a copy of your title deed from your deeds office
2006-12-13 22:24:11
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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City Hall, records department.
property is public record.
you'll find your property listed by address...
with dimensions.
if this fence has been standing more than 7 years...
see a lawyer first...you may have some right under homestead laws to keep any additional property fenced for more than 7 years.
2006-12-13 22:16:46
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answer #6
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answered by Warrior 7
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city hall, city place of work, community district.. or what ever this is observed as interior the section the place you reside... take your diagram without dimensions to city place of work. Use it to jot down on once you notice the unique. they'd desire to have copies of the lot plans with the size as they have been on the time of the unique subdivision of that parcel of land. somewhat commonly new surveys are required on the time of a sale of a supplies for in basic terms your reason... somebody could have placed a protection submit (or consistent with danger a fence) on supplies that's no longer theirs. take a verify out the unique plan just to confirm.
2016-12-11 08:53:45
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answer #7
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answered by ? 4
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Check the deeds or do a land registry search
2006-12-13 22:19:18
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answer #8
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answered by James M 2
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You need to check your title deeds. Though these come from the council anyway, so they probably know what they're talking about.
2006-12-13 22:14:52
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answer #9
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answered by Wafflebox 5
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Get the title deeds
2006-12-13 22:15:57
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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