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Another lovely piece of Language peculiar to Scots Law... majander Send a noteboard - 27/11/2013 04:34:23 PM

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If the neighbor is flouting the restrictive covenants and not asking permission, then yes, I would go to court and stop it, especially considering that the owner isn't going to be living there based on the facts you've told me.

Serve the neighbor's ass and go in front of the judge!


In this case it wouldn't be a judge, it'd be the sherriff.

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What would you do? - 15/11/2013 07:33:08 PM 2233 Views
Hrm. - 15/11/2013 08:30:22 PM 919 Views
Re: Hrm. - 16/11/2013 09:57:02 AM 944 Views
Don't they need to apply for planning permission to do that? - 15/11/2013 10:10:35 PM 995 Views
For the door, yes. For the holiday let, I don't think so. - 16/11/2013 09:58:30 AM 938 Views
Hm. Tricky, that. - 15/11/2013 10:38:57 PM 1014 Views
Re: Hm. Tricky, that. - 16/11/2013 09:59:57 AM 998 Views
If there is anything you can do to fight it, do so - 16/11/2013 01:25:28 AM 1032 Views
Yes. - 16/11/2013 10:03:03 AM 977 Views
The most reasonable thing would be to cut a bitch. - 16/11/2013 02:47:42 AM 1042 Views
this sounds fully reasonable, yeah. - 16/11/2013 03:22:46 AM 1045 Views
Quite. - 16/11/2013 10:06:43 AM 890 Views
Cutting a bitch is always an answer. *NM* - 20/11/2013 02:20:06 PM 646 Views
Tough. - 16/11/2013 10:15:21 AM 960 Views
Re: Tough. - 16/11/2013 07:41:49 PM 902 Views
Perhaps I don't grasp the gravity of the situation. - 16/11/2013 03:52:15 PM 960 Views
It's more irritating that grave, but I do worry about security to an extent. - 16/11/2013 07:47:02 PM 867 Views
Re: I hear you. - 17/11/2013 03:50:44 PM 1033 Views
Re: I hear you. - 18/11/2013 05:03:15 PM 935 Views
do you let your child play unsupervised now? - 16/11/2013 06:46:08 PM 880 Views
Not precisely. - 16/11/2013 08:01:54 PM 822 Views
Uh...isn't the nature of ownership that you can do what you want to with your property? - 16/11/2013 10:27:05 PM 824 Views
Not always, according to what title deeds and zoning restrictions say. *NM* - 16/11/2013 10:32:20 PM 414 Views
Well, then you do some research before you start a shit storm with your neighbors. *NM* - 18/11/2013 03:42:43 PM 430 Views
Which obviously we have done, Tim being who he is and all. *NM* - 18/11/2013 04:49:45 PM 444 Views
Well, so what is the neighbor doing wrong? *NM* - 18/11/2013 05:50:25 PM 455 Views
It depends on interpretation, from what I understand. - 18/11/2013 07:17:03 PM 891 Views
Well, I'm not licensed in Scotland - 19/11/2013 03:04:02 PM 841 Views
How is a short-term holiday rental not a business? - 19/11/2013 06:01:50 PM 964 Views
For zoning purposes it's being used as a residence. Don't be daft. - 20/11/2013 02:24:54 PM 863 Views
It's not being used as a residence. No-one is living there. - 20/11/2013 04:26:05 PM 916 Views
The essence of the question was "Would you think it worth the bother to seek an injunction?" - 19/11/2013 07:01:30 PM 1057 Views
I am a fan of British English usually, but not in the case of "flat". And yes, I'd go for interdict - 20/11/2013 02:27:19 PM 862 Views
Another lovely piece of Language peculiar to Scots Law... - 27/11/2013 04:34:23 PM 991 Views
Yes, but subject to limitations. - 19/11/2013 07:03:40 PM 1187 Views
I would get the garden monitored with a camera - 17/11/2013 04:00:51 AM 886 Views
Not a possiblity. *NM* - 18/11/2013 07:17:35 PM 511 Views
I can't see much you can do really... - 19/11/2013 03:01:40 AM 914 Views
Does the building have a factor? - 19/11/2013 11:38:43 AM 865 Views
Yes indeed. - 19/11/2013 07:13:06 PM 838 Views

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