Hello, I have a little query about how to approach this. We have a mature laurel hedge at the entire rear of our garden which is becoming a burden. I would like to remove it. However, the neighbour, of whose fence is adjacent by their left side and shares borders with other neighbours on my left and right, only has there some low metal mesh fence on their side. If I remove the laurel hedge we will be looking into each other's garden and I can guess they won't like it. But they are going to replace part of a proper fence bordering with my neighbour on the left, which I found out just recently and haven't had the chance to speak to the neighbour at the back yet. Also on my deed it says that the responsibility for this hedge is unknown, but I am almost confident it is all ours as its trunks meet the earth on our side of the mesh fence and we were looking after it for years.
I am willing to get a lawyer involved to settle for sure whose responsibility it is if necessary. I have looked to some online solicitors that pride themselves to be cheaper than high street, but I am not sure I can rely on them as much. What do you think? Can I trust those lawyers or I better pay the higher price if it comes to this stage? I will firstly try to talk to the neighbour, maybe she will be easy, but maybe she won't. It isn't cheap to put the fence up, especially if it involves higher concrete posts than those that are there now. She is redoing the part with the other neighbour (it was getting rotten) so I would guess she would eventually have to fix our shared bit. In my view I have the right to do with this laurel hedge what I want and not pay to fit a fence instead if that whole side is the neighbour's responsibility as it is on their left? She has been having an advantage of that hedge to be there for years and somebody else dealing with it. I am tired of maintaining it.
I am willing to get a lawyer involved to settle for sure whose responsibility it is if necessary. I have looked to some online solicitors that pride themselves to be cheaper than high street, but I am not sure I can rely on them as much. What do you think? Can I trust those lawyers or I better pay the higher price if it comes to this stage? I will firstly try to talk to the neighbour, maybe she will be easy, but maybe she won't. It isn't cheap to put the fence up, especially if it involves higher concrete posts than those that are there now. She is redoing the part with the other neighbour (it was getting rotten) so I would guess she would eventually have to fix our shared bit. In my view I have the right to do with this laurel hedge what I want and not pay to fit a fence instead if that whole side is the neighbour's responsibility as it is on their left? She has been having an advantage of that hedge to be there for years and somebody else dealing with it. I am tired of maintaining it.