Quote:
Originally Posted by rjm1cc
Maybe a way to salvage the relationship is to ask him to hire his own survey company and if your survey was wrong you will pay half his cost. Then you will probably have to offer to pay all the cost if your company was wrong. If it turns out you were wrong I would try and get a refund from your survey company.
The two of you should try and put back the markers. The agreement should be if the surveys are off by say a foot. Not an inch or two.
I would also give the survey paper work to the new company and tell them your problem and to confirm or dispute your survey in writing.
In short try and get the survey companies to answer the question and both of your be on the side of getting it correct.
Good luck
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We've not met the neighbor. Going by original post it does not seem a reasonable solution is possible.
Sadly amusing personal experience through business, I met a guy who lives in Germany. He is married to some duchess and they live in an ancient castle located on a huge property. He and his neighbor are fighting over a tree that has been there for well over 100 years. He told me that under German law he needs like another 20 years and then it will be grandfathered as OK.
Moral, it is not just here. Finding a solution with no antagonism is, or should be the goal. It is difficult to achieve. Too often it is impossible.