California Property Line and Boundary Dispute Attorney

OVERVIEW

A property line dispute can start with something small: a fence in the wrong place, a wall that crosses the boundary, a neighbor using part of your driveway, tree roots damaging improvements, or a survey that does not match what everyone assumed for years.

But these disputes are rarely just about a few inches of land. A boundary issue can affect your property value, your ability to sell or refinance, your right to develop the property, and your long-term ownership rights.

Vokshori Law Group represents California property owners in boundary disputes, fence and wall encroachments, easement disputes, adverse possession claims, prescriptive easement claims, and quiet title litigation. Our firm is based in Los Angeles and handles real estate litigation matters throughout California.

Boundary and Encroachment Disputes We Handle

Boundary disputes often involve more than one legal issue. A neighbor may claim the fence has been there for years. A survey may show that a wall, driveway, patio, hedge, retaining wall, or structure crosses the recorded property line. In some cases, one party may claim ownership or use rights based on adverse possession, prescriptive easement, or an alleged agreement between prior owners.

Common boundary disputes include:

  • Neighbor’s fence built over the property line
  • Wall, driveway, patio, garage, ADU, or structure encroachments
  • Retaining wall and slope disputes
  • Landscaping, hedge, tree, and root disputes
  • Shared fence disputes
  • Survey and legal description conflicts
  • Easement and access disputes
  • Driveway and parking encroachments
  • Claims of adverse possession
  • Claims of prescriptive easement
  • Quiet title lawsuits involving disputed property lines

The right legal strategy depends on the facts. Some disputes can be resolved with a demand letter or boundary agreement. Others require a quiet title lawsuit, injunction, declaratory relief, trespass claim, nuisance claim, or negotiated settlement.

What To Do If Your Neighbor Is Encroaching On Your Property

If you believe your neighbor’s fence, wall, driveway, or structure crosses onto your property, do not rush into self-help. Removing a fence, damaging improvements, or escalating the dispute without legal advice can create additional problems.

A more careful approach usually starts with:
  • Gathering your deed, title report, survey, escrow documents, photographs, and communications with the neighbor.
  • Determining whether the actual legal boundary is clear.
  • Evaluating whether a licensed survey is needed.
  • Reviewing how long the encroachment has existed.
  • Determining whether prior owners knew about or agreed to the condition.
  • Considering whether the issue affects title, value, access, sale, refinancing, or future development.
  • Sending a demand letter or opening settlement discussions if appropriate.
  • Filing suit if the dispute cannot be resolved informally.
  • In many cases, the first question is not “Can I sue?” The better question is: what outcome are you trying to achieve? Depending on the facts, the goal may be removal of the encroachment, compensation, a recorded boundary agreement, a license agreement, an easement, a lot line adjustment, or a court judgment confirming the property boundary.

    Is An Old Fence Enough To Change The Property Line?

    Not automatically.
    A common misconception is that if a fence has been in the wrong place for years, the fence becomes the legal property line. That is not always true. An old fence can be important evidence, but it does not automatically transfer ownership.

    California law distinguishes between several different concepts:

    • Boundary by agreement
    • Adverse possession
    • Prescriptive easement
    • Equitable easement
    • Quiet title
    • Trespass or encroachment

    Each theory has different requirements and different remedies. A neighbor may argue that a longstanding fence or use of land gives them legal rights. The property owner may respond that the fence was misplaced, permissive, temporary, based on mistake, or legally insufficient to transfer ownership or use rights.

    California courts are careful in this area because allowing someone to take ownership or exclusive use of another person’s land is a serious remedy.

    Adverse Possession in California Boundary Disputes

    Adverse possession is often raised in boundary disputes, but it is difficult to prove in California.

    Generally, a person claiming adverse possession must show possession that is actual, open and notorious, hostile to the true owner’s title, continuous and uninterrupted for the required period, and accompanied by payment of property taxes assessed against the property claimed. California Code of Civil Procedure section 325 addresses adverse possession where the claim is not founded on a written instrument, judgment, or decree, and identifies circumstances such as substantial enclosure, cultivation, or improvement. It also includes the important tax-payment requirement.

    That tax requirement is often a major obstacle in boundary disputes. If a neighbor simply had a fence in the wrong place but never paid taxes on the disputed strip of land, an adverse possession claim may fail.

    In Mehdizadeh v. Mincer, a California Court of Appeal addressed a dispute involving a fence that had been built many years earlier in the wrong location. The claimant could not prove adverse possession because he had not paid property taxes on the disputed property. The trial court tried to grant a broad prescriptive easement instead, but the appellate court rejected that result because the easement was so broad that it effectively deprived the record owners of use of their own property.

    The practical point is simple: an old fence does not automatically mean your neighbor owns the land.

    Prescriptive Easement Claims

    A prescriptive easement is different from adverse possession. Adverse possession is a claim to ownership. A prescriptive easement is a claim to use someone else’s property.

    For example, a neighbor may claim a right to use a driveway, walkway, path, or access route because they used it openly, continuously, and adversely for many years. In Warsaw v. Chicago Metallic Ceilings, Inc., the California Supreme Court upheld a prescriptive easement involving vehicle access and affirmed relief requiring removal of a structure that interfered with the easement.

    But prescriptive easement law has limits. A prescriptive easement usually gives a right of use, not ownership. Courts are skeptical when a claimed “easement” gives the claimant exclusive control over another person’s land in a way that looks like ownership.

    In Silacci v. Abramson, the Court of Appeal reversed a judgment granting an exclusive prescriptive easement over a fenced portion of another person’s property. The court rejected the idea that a person could effectively obtain exclusive possession of a neighbor’s land through a prescriptive easement theory.

    That distinction matters in fence and yard disputes. A neighbor who wants to keep exclusive possession of a fenced strip of your property may not be able to avoid the stricter requirements of adverse possession by calling the claim a prescriptive easement.

    Equitable Easements and Encroachments

    Not every encroachment results in an automatic order requiring removal. California courts may sometimes consider hardship, fairness, and the circumstances of the encroachment.

    In Hirshfield v. Schwartz, the Court of Appeal confirmed that the relative hardship doctrine applies when deciding whether to order removal of encroachments. The court recognized that, when an injunction is properly denied, a court may fashion equitable relief to protect the encroacher’s use of the disputed land, subject to appropriate conditions.

    That does not mean encroachers automatically get to keep improvements on someone else’s property. The facts matter. Courts may consider whether the encroachment was innocent or intentional, whether the property owner will suffer irreparable harm, the hardship of removal, and whether compensation or another remedy is appropriate.

    In Ranch at the Falls LLC v. O’Neal, the Court of Appeal reversed a judgment granting easement rights where the trial court had not properly applied the required legal standards. The case is a reminder that equitable easements are not automatic and require careful proof.

    For property owners, this means the remedy in an encroachment dispute is not always obvious. The result may be removal, damages, a negotiated easement, a license, a boundary adjustment, or another court-ordered solution.

    Quiet Title and Boundary Disputes

    A quiet title action may be necessary when the dispute concerns ownership, title, or the legal boundary itself.

    California quiet title law allows a court to determine competing claims to real property. Code of Civil Procedure section 760.010 defines a “claim” broadly to include a legal or equitable right, title, estate, lien, interest in property, or cloud upon title.

    A quiet title complaint must include specific information, including a description of the property, the title claimed by the plaintiff, the adverse claims, the date as of which the determination is sought, and a prayer for determination of title. Code of Civil Procedure section 761.020 sets out those pleading requirements.

    Quiet title cases are also different from ordinary civil cases because the court must examine the plaintiff’s title. Code of Civil Procedure section 764.010 provides that the court shall determine the plaintiff’s title against the defendants’ claims and shall not enter judgment by default without evidence of the plaintiff’s title.

    In boundary disputes, quiet title can be important where the parties need a court judgment confirming who owns the disputed strip of land, whether an easement exists, or whether a claimed interest should be rejected.

    Fence Disputes and California’s Good Neighbor Fence Law

    California has specific rules for shared fences. Civil Code section 841 provides that adjoining landowners share equally in the responsibility for maintaining boundaries and monuments between them. It also creates a presumption that adjoining landowners equally benefit from a fence dividing their properties and are equally responsible for reasonable costs of construction, maintenance, or necessary replacement unless otherwise agreed in writing or unless the presumption is rebutted.

    This statute is often relevant when neighbors dispute who must pay for a shared fence. But it does not answer every boundary dispute. A cost-sharing fence issue is different from a dispute over whether the fence is in the wrong location, whether it encroaches onto one owner’s property, or whether it creates title or easement issues.

    California also has a “spite fence” statute. Civil Code section 841.4 states that a fence or similar structure unnecessarily exceeding 10 feet in height, maliciously erected or maintained to annoy the adjoining owner or occupant, is a private nuisance.

    If a fence dispute involves height, harassment, retaliation, blocked views, light, privacy, or intentional annoyance, the legal analysis may involve nuisance principles in addition to property boundary law.

    Tree, Hedge, and Root Disputes

    Boundary disputes are not limited to fences and walls. Trees, hedges, roots, and landscaping can also create serious conflicts.

    California Civil Code section 833 provides that trees whose trunks stand wholly on one owner’s land belong exclusively to that owner, even if their roots grow into another person’s land. Civil Code section 834 provides that trees whose trunks stand partly on the land of two or more coterminous owners belong to them in common.

    Those rules can matter when a tree is near the boundary line, when roots damage hardscape, foundations, plumbing, or retaining walls, or when neighbors disagree about trimming or removal. The legal analysis can involve ownership, nuisance, negligence, local ordinances, and potential damage claims.

    Before cutting, removing, or damaging a boundary tree, it is usually best to obtain legal advice. Mistakes in tree disputes can create unnecessary liability.

    How Boundary Disputes Are Resolved

    Boundary disputes can be resolved in several ways, depending on the seriousness of the issue and the parties’ willingness to cooperate.

    Possible resolution paths include:

    • Attorney demand letter
    • Neighbor negotiation
    • Survey review and exchange of documents
    • Mediation
    • Written boundary agreement
    • License agreement
    • Easement agreement
    • Lot line adjustment
    • Agreement for removal or relocation of improvements
    • Compensation for the disputed area
    • Quiet title lawsuit
    • Injunction
    • Trespass or nuisance claim
    • Declaratory relief action
    A lawsuit is not always the first step. In many cases, a focused demand letter supported by the deed, survey, photographs, and legal analysis may create a path to settlement. But when the dispute affects ownership rights, title, access, value, sale, refinancing, or development, litigation may be necessary.

    Why You Should Not Ignore a Property Line Dispute

    Ignoring a boundary problem can make it worse.

    A fence, wall, driveway, hedge, or structure that crosses the property line may later create problems with:

    • Sale of the property
    • Buyer inspections
    • Appraisals
    • Refinancing
    • Title insurance
    • Development plans
    • Neighbor relations
    • Future adverse possession or easement claims
    • Disclosure obligations in a later sale

    Even if the disputed area seems small, the legal and financial consequences can be significant. A buyer may refuse to close. A title company may raise an issue. A neighbor may later claim rights based on long-term use. A small encroachment can become a larger real estate litigation problem if it is not addressed correctly.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What is a boundary dispute in California?

    A boundary dispute is a disagreement over the location, ownership, use, or control of a property line or disputed area of land. These disputes often involve fences, walls, driveways, landscaping, trees, easements, surveys, or title records.

    What should I do if my neighbor’s fence is on my property?

    Start by gathering your deed, title report, survey, photographs, and communications with the neighbor. Do not remove or damage the fence without legal advice. Depending on the facts, the next step may be a survey, attorney demand letter, negotiation, mediation, or litigation.

    Can my neighbor take part of my property if their fence has been there for years?

    Not automatically. A long-standing fence may be relevant, but it does not automatically transfer ownership. In California, adverse possession is difficult to prove and generally requires, among other elements, payment of property taxes on the disputed property. Code of Civil Procedure section 325 is especially important on that issue.

    What is the difference between adverse possession and prescriptive easement?

    Adverse possession is a claim to ownership of property. A prescriptive easement is a claim to use someone else’s property. This distinction matters because courts are usually more cautious when a claimed easement would effectively give someone exclusive control over another person’s land.

    Can I force my neighbor to move a fence, wall, or structure?

    Possibly, but it depends on the facts. A court may order removal in some cases. In other cases, the court may consider hardship, delay, the nature of the encroachment, whether the encroachment was intentional, and whether damages or another remedy is appropriate.

    Do I need a survey before hiring a lawyer?

    Not always, but a survey is often important. An attorney can help determine whether a survey is needed, what type of survey may be useful, and how the survey fits with the deed, legal description, title records, photographs, and history of use.

    What is a quiet title action in a boundary dispute?

    A quiet title action asks the court to determine competing claims to real property. In a boundary dispute, quiet title may be used to determine ownership of a disputed strip of land, confirm the property boundary, or resolve claims involving easements or adverse possession.

    Who pays for a shared fence in California?

    California Civil Code section 841 creates a general presumption that adjoining landowners equally benefit from a dividing fence and are equally responsible for reasonable construction, maintenance, or necessary replacement costs, unless there is a written agreement or the presumption is rebutted.

    Can a spite fence be illegal in California?

    Yes. Civil Code section 841.4 provides that a fence or similar structure unnecessarily exceeding 10 feet in height and maliciously erected or maintained to annoy an adjoining owner or occupant is a private nuisance.

    Can tree roots or hedges create a boundary dispute?

    Yes. Tree roots, hedges, and landscaping can create boundary, nuisance, negligence, and property damage issues. California Civil Code sections 833 and 834 address ownership of trees depending on whether the trunk is wholly on one property or partly on the land of adjoining owners.

    Can I remove a fence that crosses onto my property?

    Do not remove a fence without first getting legal advice. Even if a fence appears to encroach, removing it without proper analysis can escalate the dispute and may expose you to claims. A safer approach is to confirm the property line, document the encroachment, and evaluate legal options.

    How long does a boundary dispute take to resolve?

    Some disputes are resolved through a demand letter or negotiation within weeks or months. More serious disputes involving quiet title, adverse possession, prescriptive easement, or injunction claims can take much longer, especially if litigation is required.

    Speak With a California Property Line Dispute Attorney

    Boundary disputes require a careful review of the facts, the property documents, the history of use, and the available legal remedies. The right approach depends on whether the issue involves a misplaced fence, an encroachment, an easement claim, adverse possession, a survey conflict, or a title dispute.

    Vokshori Law Group represents California property owners in real estate litigation, including property line disputes, encroachments, easement disputes, adverse possession claims, prescriptive easement claims, and quiet title actions.

    If you are dealing with a neighbor’s fence, wall, driveway, trees, landscaping, or structure crossing onto your property, contact Vokshori Law Group to discuss your options.

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