Anonymous wrote:This is exactly how all those Fear Thy Neighbor episodes on Discovery ID begin.
Anonymous wrote:I have no idea if the fence is technically on his property. He didn't show me any survey.
I gave my survey to the fence installers eight years ago, and they installed it inside the property line.
I'm more upset at his behavior than anything else. Normal people don't behave like this. He has six acres! Even if my fence were an inch or two on his property (an honest mistake in any case) why would that matter to him? If the situation were reversed, it wouldn't matter to me. And he has shown me no proof whatsoever that the fence is on his property. He just claims it is as an excuse to not pay to repair my fence.
I don't get it.
Anonymous wrote:OMG. DCUM nasties out in force!! Wow.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP - you're in the wrong here. I have read and reread your post a few times to makes sure I understood the facts as you gave them.
You said he did a survey and found out the fence is on his property, not yours. You never disputed this in your post, instead you blamed his supposed "HFA" diagnosis for his a**hole behavior. I guess means you're a psychologist and he is a patient of yours?
Stop calling it "your fence" when it"s actually his.
Stop being an armchair psychologist and diagnosing him with HFA.
You are wrong, he is right. Could he have handled it better? maybe. but you came across quite bad yourself by sending him the bill which you incurred to fix his fence!!
+1 you need to clearly prove that his survey is wrong.
Anonymous wrote:OP - you're in the wrong here. I have read and reread your post a few times to makes sure I understood the facts as you gave them.
You said he did a survey and found out the fence is on his property, not yours. You never disputed this in your post, instead you blamed his supposed "HFA" diagnosis for his a**hole behavior. I guess means you're a psychologist and he is a patient of yours?
Stop calling it "your fence" when it"s actually his.
Stop being an armchair psychologist and diagnosing him with HFA.
You are wrong, he is right. Could he have handled it better? maybe. but you came across quite bad yourself by sending him the bill which you incurred to fix his fence!!
Anonymous wrote:I'm not asking to see his survey. Why should I? I asked him to pay for the damage his workers made to my property. It's my property even if his claim is true, which I doubt. I sent him and his wife a very polite request for repayment, and they both ignored it. They didn't reply that they didn't owe me anything, they simply didn't reply at all. That tells me that very likely, his claim that my fence is on his property is NOT true. Otherwise he would have said so in writing.
Anonymous wrote:Small claims court
Anonymous wrote:OP - you're in the wrong here. I have read and reread your post a few times to makes sure I understood the facts as you gave them.
You said he did a survey and found out the fence is on his property, not yours. You never disputed this in your post, instead you blamed his supposed "HFA" diagnosis for his a**hole behavior. I guess means you're a psychologist and he is a patient of yours?
Stop calling it "your fence" when it"s actually his.
Stop being an armchair psychologist and diagnosing him with HFA.
You are wrong, he is right. Could he have handled it better? maybe. but you came across quite bad yourself by sending him the bill which you incurred to fix his fence!!