Allotments 4 All

Allotment Stuff => The Basics => Topic started by: roxy on April 04, 2011, 20:25:29

Title: Advice, please
Post by: roxy on April 04, 2011, 20:25:29
Hi, I'm new to Allotments 4 All. Does anyone know what is a reasonable amount of time to expect someone to remove their stuff from an allotment when they give up the lease. We've been on our plot for 18 months and the bloke that had it before has suddenly started coming on to our plot and taking up flagstones. Not sure what to do. Don't want to cause friction, but it seems to be to be completely out of order. Any advice appreciated.
Title: Re: Advice, please
Post by: ceres on April 04, 2011, 20:45:45
Moved for greater visibility.
Title: Re: Advice, please
Post by: grawrc on April 04, 2011, 21:01:53
We normally allow 2-3  weeks. After 18 months it would be quite out of order. Take it up with your committee or the council.
Title: Re: Advice, please
Post by: cornykev on April 04, 2011, 21:02:09
Does the bloke still have a plot on site.........If not he should.nt be on site
Is there a committee......... speak to them or your lease holder
He shouldn't come on to your plot unless invited........ this is a no no on most plots
Is he a big bloke.   If not I'd t##t him, the last bit was a joke.    :-X
Title: Re: Advice, please
Post by: Trevor_D on April 04, 2011, 21:03:57
When they give up the lease, they leave what's there. So it's yours. (Which also applies to the rubbish they've left - on my plot, half a Morrison shelter!! Don't ask what happened to the other half....)

But how has he suddenly started coming back on site? Shouldn't he have surrendered the key?

Don't you have a Committee?
Title: Re: Advice, please
Post by: elvis2003 on April 04, 2011, 21:35:25
no way should this be happening,the cheeky b*****d! as others have said,call in the committee/council.did he even say anything to you,or ask if you minded him being there?
Title: Re: Advice, please
Post by: Bugloss2009 on April 04, 2011, 21:44:56
going on someone elses plot is a nono, completely. Tenancy terminations usually  specify that you should leave the plot in the same condition as you found it.......!.....but waiting 18 months is a joke

you could always take up the flags yourself. take them home, and put them back when this idiot has stopped sniffing around. When you put them back, they are (of course) different flagstones, and taking them is obviously theft etc etc
Title: Re: Advice, please
Post by: Bugloss2009 on April 04, 2011, 21:49:14
and if the guy asks where his flagstones have gone you could say

1. I thought you had taken them
2. obviously someone else has seen you helping himself to other people's property, and they thought they'd have some too
Title: Re: Advice, please
Post by: lincsyokel2 on April 04, 2011, 21:57:32
Umm since its now your plot, i'd threaten to call the police and have him arrested for theft. Its your plot, and you now own everything on it.
Title: Re: Advice, please
Post by: elvis2003 on April 04, 2011, 22:01:40
we are so outraged we all forgot to say welcome to the forum,welcome!
Title: Re: Advice, please
Post by: flitwickone on April 04, 2011, 22:11:39
dont put up with it report him to the police or do what i would do
Title: Re: Advice, please
Post by: 1066 on April 04, 2011, 22:39:54
welcome roxy  :) and as others have said don't put up with it, its c****y behaviour
Title: Re: Advice, please
Post by: cornykev on April 05, 2011, 05:15:41
Sorry Roxy, welcome to the crazy world of allotmenteering.  ;)
Title: Re: Advice, please
Post by: roxy on April 05, 2011, 09:06:51
Thank you so much for all the advice. It's reassured me to know I'm not over-reacting. The bloke does still have a plot on site (right next to me unfortunately) which is how he has access. I'm going to speak to the committee rep today. Thanks again.  I already feel part of your online community.   :)
Your last comment made me laugh.


Does the bloke still have a plot on site.........If not he should.nt be on site
Is there a committee......... speak to them or your lease holder
He shouldn't come on to your plot unless invited........ this is a no no on most plots
Is he a big bloke.   If not I'd t##t him, the last bit was a joke.    :-X
Title: Re: Advice, please
Post by: antipodes on April 05, 2011, 09:11:27
Oh that's a bit unfortunate. Hope he's not the resentful type  :(
Still, it's our of order, he should have spoken to you a long time ago about the flagstones, honestly. And if he wants them back, i mean you ask, you don't just go and take them!
Title: Re: Advice, please
Post by: shirlton on April 05, 2011, 09:29:58
If he wanted anything from the plot he was giving up then he should have taken them before his tenency expired.
Lets hope that you have a committee will stand up to him.
Title: Re: Advice, please
Post by: picman on April 05, 2011, 09:32:27
Roxy , This should be left with the committee , any plot-holder who takes anything off another plot without consent should get evicted. I would not get personalty involved, put your objection with dates / items in writing to the secretary , I would demand return of items failing this say you will complain to the council ( landlord).

Don't let it spoil your enjoyment ...

    
Title: Re: Advice, please
Post by: staris on April 05, 2011, 09:47:39
i would tread carefully l know that he's not entitled to take them now he has vacated the plot but if he's on the next plot to you don't want to end up falling out with him.
if it was me i would have a word with directly before involving anyone else  :)
Title: Re: Advice, please
Post by: roxy on April 05, 2011, 10:01:37
Yes, that's what's worrying me because I think he is likely to be the vindictive type (a real smiling assassin with the emphasis on 'ass').  ;)   I'm going to get the advice of the committee before proceeding. Thanks again to you all for the support; it's made me feel a lot better.


i would tread carefully l know that he's not entitled to take them now he has vacated the plot but if he's on the next plot to you don't want to end up falling out with him.
if it was me i would have a word with directly before involving anyone else  :)
Title: Re: Advice, please
Post by: Robert_Brenchley on April 07, 2011, 18:46:10
He ought to be evicted without question, if you've got the evidence to back up what you say.
Title: Re: Advice, please
Post by: roxy on April 08, 2011, 10:00:31
That would be the ideal solution as far as I'm concerned.  ;D Unfortunately it doesn't specify in our contracts that you have to remove your stuff within a certain period of time (but I think they are now going to add a clause) and I know he'll argue the point. However, he is trespassing on my allotment. I was at the allotment the other day and he hasn't taken any more flags. Hopefully that will be it now otherwise I'm going to have to go round his house and have it out with him!

He ought to be evicted without question, if you've got the evidence to back up what you say.
Title: Re: Advice, please
Post by: lincsyokel2 on April 08, 2011, 10:17:47
Look, theres a simple principle in law.

When you are tenant on property, you have a right to enjoy use of that rented property without hindrance or trespass. Thats why the landlord  cant enter you're house without giving you 30 days notice.

His trespass on your rented land amounts to interference in you right to enjoy your land. His removal of your property is theft, and since he has removed items, you have sustained actual damages, which in principle you can recover for in  a civil court, not to mention the criminal act of theft.

You have an absolute right here.
Title: Re: Advice, please
Post by: picman on April 08, 2011, 19:28:44
Roxy. I understand the perhaps delicate position you may feel you are in being newish to the site but I really think you should press your committee secretary to at least warn him about his illegal behavior, there is not any need to specify a time to "remove his stuff" , the day the tenancy ends thats it, as the new tenant you may decide to give a short grace period but thats your prerogative.  As I said before don't get personally involved , make the committee do their job. He should not be allowed to get away with it.
 
Title: Re: Advice, please
Post by: Trevor_D on April 08, 2011, 20:12:57
Roxy, it's not your problem and you can't take the law into your own hands.

That's what the committee is there for! Someone has to deal with the messy bits and that's why they were elected. Leave it to them and stay out of it!
Title: Re: Advice, please
Post by: Unwashed on April 08, 2011, 20:41:07
Look, theres a simple principle in law.

When you are tenant on property, you have a right to enjoy use of that rented property without hindrance or trespass. Thats why the landlord  cant enter you're house without giving you 30 days notice.

His trespass on your rented land amounts to interference in you right to enjoy your land. His removal of your property is theft, and since he has removed items, you have sustained actual damages, which in principle you can recover for in  a civil court, not to mention the criminal act of theft.

You have an absolute right here.
Your right to the peaceful enjoyment of your property is against the landlord, not a third party and simple trespass isn't actionable.

It's not altogether easy to say who has the better title to the flags, the tenant, the neighbour, or the landlord.

The flags could very well belong to the neighbour.  When a tenant leaves stuff behind when they vacate rented property the stuff still belongs to them unless they've abandoned it, and there has to be pretty clear evidence of abandonment and the fact that it was left behind isn't enough.  As the previous tenant continued to be the tenant of a neighbouring plot gives a very good indication that the flags were not in fact abandoned.

If the old tenant had left the flags in a pile there'd be no question - even after 18 months they'd still belong to the old tenant.  However, the flags were laid, and that changes things.  They're in intimate contact with the ground and that makes them part of the plot itself, and the tenant's right is limited to the exclusive occupation and enjoyment of the plot, the tenant never has the right to carry away the fabric of the plot.  So it's the landlord who owns the flags, though the current tenant has an eclusive right to use them.

If the previous tenant laid the flags then technically that's called waste - I know it's actually improving the plot, but it's not the tenant's plot to improve because the landlord has the right to get the plot back in the same condition as at the start of the lease - no worse, no better (other than cultivation, but that's another story).  So the landlord would have been within her rights to insist the previous tenant remove the flags when he vacated, but in fact the landlord consented to the waste.

So my unqualified and potentially completely and utterly wrong suggestion is that the flags don't belong to the old tenant, they belong to the landlord, and the current tenant has the right against the landlord to their exclusive enjoyment.

Roxy, complain to the landlord.  You rented the plot with flagstones and someone has taken those flagstones away so you need to tell the landlord what's happened to her property and insist that you get some replacements laid.
Title: Re: Advice, please
Post by: lincsyokel2 on April 08, 2011, 20:53:23
Look, theres a simple principle in law.

When you are tenant on property, you have a right to enjoy use of that rented property without hindrance or trespass. Thats why the landlord  cant enter you're house without giving you 30 days notice.

His trespass on your rented land amounts to interference in you right to enjoy your land. His removal of your property is theft, and since he has removed items, you have sustained actual damages, which in principle you can recover for in  a civil court, not to mention the criminal act of theft.

You have an absolute right here.
Your right to the peaceful enjoyment of your property is against the landlord, not a third party and simple trespass isn't actionable.
Yes it is, because he has sustained actual damages, ie the theft of his property. Thats why breaking and entering is a crime, but Squatting isnt, if you dont break in.

Quote

It's not altogether easy to say who has the better title to the flags, the tenant, the neighbour, or the landlord.

The flags could very well belong to the neighbour.  When a tenant leaves stuff behind when they vacate rented property the stuff still belongs to them unless they've abandoned it, and there has to be pretty clear evidence of abandonment and the fact that it was left behind isn't enough.  As the previous tenant continued to be the tenant of a neighbouring plot gives a very good indication that the flags were not in fact abandoned.
I disagree. The old tenant is under an obligation to clear the plot, assuming they tenancy agreement is the same as most allotment agreements. In my agreement the previous tenant loses title to anything left on the plot after one month.

Quote
If the old tenant had left the flags in a pile there'd be no question - even after 18 months they'd still belong to the old tenant.  However, the flags were laid, and that changes things.  They're in intimate contact with the ground and that makes them part of the plot itself, and the tenant's right is limited to the exclusive occupation and enjoyment of the plot, the tenant never has the right to carry away the fabric of the plot.  So it's the landlord who owns the flags, though the current tenant has an eclusive right to use them.
I would have thought anything removable was goods and chattels, not part of the substance of the plot. I agree they probably might revert to the landlord, but then arguably title seems to pass to the new tenant.


Quote
If the previous tenant laid the flags then technically that's called waste - I know it's actually improving the plot, but it's not the tenant's plot to improve because the landlord has the right to get the plot back in the same condition as at the start of the lease - no worse, no better (other than cultivation, but that's another story).  So the landlord would have been within her rights to insist the previous tenant remove the flags when he vacated, but in fact the landlord consented to the waste.
I agree

Quote
So my unqualified and potentially completely and utterly wrong suggestion is that the flags don't belong to the old tenant, they belong to the landlord, and the current tenant has the right against the landlord to their exclusive enjoyment.

Roxy, complain to the landlord.  You rented the plot with flagstones and someone has taken those flagstones away so you need to tell the landlord what's happened to her property and insist that you get some replacements laid.

I think thats possibly the first step, and then if that doesnt solve it your only other option is the police.
Title: Re: Advice, please
Post by: Unwashed on April 08, 2011, 20:53:50
Roxy. I understand the perhaps delicate position you may feel you are in being newish to the site but I really think you should press your committee secretary to at least warn him about his illegal behavior, there is not any need to specify a time to "remove his stuff" , the day the tenancy ends thats it, as the new tenant you may decide to give a short grace period but thats your prerogative.  As I said before don't get personally involved , make the committee do their job. He should not be allowed to get away with it.
 
I don't think this is relevent here, but I'd like to mention about stuff an old tenant leaves behind.  Unless it's clearly and demonstrably abandoned then it still belongs to the old tenant, and just because it was left behind is not enough to prove it was abandoned.

So when the landlord or new tenant discovers the old tenant's property they have an obligation to find the tenant and get the stuff taken away, and while you're looking for the tenant and waiting for the stuff to be collected you have a duty to keep it safe.  If you dispose of the old tenant's stuff without making a good enough effort to contact them or giving them a reasonable time to tak etheir stuff away you can be sued for damages.

I'm not 100%, but I'm pretty sure that a clause in the tenancy agreement that deems stuff left behind to have been abandoned is not enforceable.

After you've made a decent effort to contact the old tenant and given them reasonable notice to collect their stuff you're entitled to sell the stuff and be reimbursed for your costs, but you have to keep any money left over safe and make an effort to get it to the tenant, and you have a duty to get the best price for the stuff, and if you don't the old tenant can turn up years later and sue you for the loss.

Again, it's just my unqualified opinion and you'd be daft to act on advice from a bloke on the internet who you've never met and has just done a bit of googling, but I hope it gives you somewhere to start your own enquires.
Title: Re: Advice, please
Post by: Unwashed on April 08, 2011, 21:24:24
Look, theres a simple principle in law.

When you are tenant on property, you have a right to enjoy use of that rented property without hindrance or trespass. Thats why the landlord  cant enter you're house without giving you 30 days notice.

His trespass on your rented land amounts to interference in you right to enjoy your land. His removal of your property is theft, and since he has removed items, you have sustained actual damages, which in principle you can recover for in  a civil court, not to mention the criminal act of theft.

You have an absolute right here.
Your right to the peaceful enjoyment of your property is against the landlord, not a third party and simple trespass isn't actionable.
Yes it is, because he has sustained actual damages, ie the theft of his property. Thats why breaking and entering is a crime, but Squatting isnt, if you dont bre ak in.
Simple trespass is not actionable.  If the trespass causes damage then you can sue for damages, but it's a civil matter and has nothing to do with breaking and entering.  If a trespasser stole stuff and you wanted to take out a civil action you'd sue for conversion, not trespass.  Breaking and entering is a crime because S.9 of the Theft Act 1968 makes it a criminal offence, but it only applies to buildings, not land.

Squatting isn't a crime because trespass isn't a criminal offence.
Title: Re: Advice, please
Post by: Unwashed on April 08, 2011, 21:33:59
Quote

It's not altogether easy to say who has the better title to the flags, the tenant, the neighbour, or the landlord.

The flags could very well belong to the neighbour.  When a tenant leaves stuff behind when they vacate rented property the stuff still belongs to them unless they've abandoned it, and there has to be pretty clear evidence of abandonment and the fact that it was left behind isn't enough.  As the previous tenant continued to be the tenant of a neighbouring plot gives a very good indication that the flags were not in fact abandoned.
I disagree. The old tenant is under an obligation to clear the plot, assuming they tenancy agreement is the same as most allotment agreements. In my agreement the previous tenant loses title to anything left on the plot after one month.
I'll see your disagree and raise you a Torts (Interference with Goods) Act 1977.
Title: Re: Advice, please
Post by: lincsyokel2 on April 08, 2011, 21:38:04
Look, theres a simple principle in law.

When you are tenant on property, you have a right to enjoy use of that rented property without hindrance or trespass. Thats why the landlord  cant enter you're house without giving you 30 days notice.

His trespass on your rented land amounts to interference in you right to enjoy your land. His removal of your property is theft, and since he has removed items, you have sustained actual damages, which in principle you can recover for in  a civil court, not to mention the criminal act of theft.

You have an absolute right here.
Your right to the peaceful enjoyment of your property is against the landlord, not a third party and simple trespass isn't actionable.
Yes it is, because he has sustained actual damages, ie the theft of his property. Thats why breaking and entering is a crime, but Squatting isnt, if you dont bre ak in.
Simple trespass is not actionable.  If the trespass causes damage then you can sue for damages, but it's a civil matter and has nothing to do with breaking and entering.  If a trespasser stole stuff and you wanted to take out a civil action you'd sue for conversion, not trespass.  Breaking and entering is a crime because S.9 of the Theft Act 1968 makes it a criminal offence, but it only applies to buildings, not land.

Squatting isn't a crime because trespass isn't a criminal offence.

Squatting isnt a crime because the principle of Adverse Possession is built into common law and you cant cancel a Common Law right with a Parliamentary Statute......see Thoburn vs Sunderland City Council 2000 and the ruling of Laws L J...........and thats because Common Law Rights are established by Settlement Treaties, which are above Parliament.
Title: Re: Advice, please
Post by: Unwashed on April 08, 2011, 21:41:08
Quote
If the old tenant had left the flags in a pile there'd be no question - even after 18 months they'd still belong to the old tenant.  However, the flags were laid, and that changes things.  They're in intimate contact with the ground and that makes them part of the plot itself, and the tenant's right is limited to the exclusive occupation and enjoyment of the plot, the tenant never has the right to carry away the fabric of the plot.  So it's the landlord who owns the flags, though the current tenant has an eclusive right to use them.
I would have thought anything removable was goods and chattels, not part of the substance of the plot. I agree they probably might revert to the landlord, but then arguably title seems to pass to the new tenant.
And it turns on this.  Are laid flags movable property or not.  I say not, but I wouldn't like to bet on it.  Perhaps someone can shed light on this?
Title: Re: Advice, please
Post by: picman on April 08, 2011, 22:14:09
Read all that opinion , but this , if i'm not mistaken happened 18 months after leaving the plot...  cannot be right. come on committee don't be mice.
Title: Re: Advice, please
Post by: Unwashed on April 08, 2011, 22:46:15
Squatting isnt a crime because the principle of Adverse Possession is built into common law and you cant cancel a Common Law right with a Parliamentary Statute......see Thoburn vs Sunderland City Council 2000 and the ruling of Laws L J...........and thats because Common Law Rights are established by Settlement Treaties, which are above Parliament.
No, squatting isn't a crime because it isn't a crime.  Crimes are crimes because legislation makes them so, and if there isn't legislation that makes a thing a criminal offence then it isn't.

Thoburn vs Sunderland City Council dealt with the legitimacy of secondary legislation repealing primary legislation by implication.

Of course legislation can, and frequently does, override the common law.

There is no such thing as a principle of adverse posession.  

This is now going seriously off-topic so you might want to create a new thread in The Shed if you want to carry on.
Title: Re: Advice, please
Post by: Unwashed on April 08, 2011, 22:50:51
Read all that opinion , but this , if i'm not mistaken happened 18 months after leaving the plot...  cannot be right. come on committee don't be mice.
If it turns out that the flags are movable property then they belong to the old tenant and there is no time limit.  It's up to the committee to do something, but it needs to be careful because it's by no means certain that the old tenant has done anything wrong.
Title: Re: Advice, please
Post by: lincsyokel2 on April 08, 2011, 23:16:31


There is no such thing as a principle of adverse posession.  

 'Friad there is....................

At common law where entitlement to possession of land was in dispute (originally only in what were known as real actions) the person claiming a right to possession could not allege that the land had come into their possession in the past (in older terminology that they had been "put into seisin") at a time before the reign of Henry I. There was thus a cut off date going back into the past before which the law would not be interested.


In England and Wales, adverse possession has been governed by the Limitation Act 1980, the Land Registration Act 1925 and the Land Registration Act 2002. Different rules are in place for the limitation periods of adverse possession in unregistered land and registered land.

For unregistered land, the Limitation Act of 1980 states that a squatter must remain in adverse possession for 12 years, at which point the paper owner's title to the land is extinguished.

For registered land, adverse possession claims completed before 13 October 2003 (the date the 2002 Act came into force) are governed by section 75(1) and 75(2) of the Land Registration Act of 1925. The limitation period remains the same (12 years) but instead of the original owner's title to the land being extinguished, the original owner holds the land on trust for the adverse possessor. The adverse possessor can then apply to be the new registered proprietor of the land.

The position of a registered landowner was significantly improved by the Land Registration Act of 2002. Where land is registered, the adverse possessor may apply to be registered as owner after 10 years of adverse possession and the Land Registry must give notice to the true owner of this application. This gives the landowner a statutory period of time [65 business days] to object to the adverse possession, and if they do so the application fails. Otherwise, the squatter becomes the registered properietor according to the land registry. If the true owner is unable to evict the squatter in the two years following the first application, the squatter can apply again after this period and be successful despite the opposition of the owner. The process effectively prevents the removal of a landowner's right to property without his knowledge, while ensuring squatters have a fair way exercising their rights.

Where a tenant adversely possesses land, there is a presumption that he is doing so in a way that will benefit his landlord at the end of his term. If the land does not belong to his landlord, the land will become part of both the tenancy and the reversion. If the land does belong to his landlord, it would seem that it will be gained by the tenant but only for the period of his term.
Title: Re: Advice, please
Post by: tonybloke on April 08, 2011, 23:16:49
our tenancy agreement states that anything left on the plot ( at end of tenancy) becomes the property of the association, simples
Title: Re: Advice, please
Post by: lincsyokel2 on April 08, 2011, 23:18:24
our tenancy agreement states that anything left on the plot ( at end of tenancy) becomes the property of the association, simples

Who must then either grant you use, or grant you title, to those goods. Either way, the original tenant has no title to the goods, and there removal is theft.
Title: Re: Advice, please
Post by: tonybloke on April 08, 2011, 23:21:24
our tenancy agreement states that anything left on the plot ( at end of tenancy) becomes the property of the association, simples

Who must then either grant you use, or grant you title, to those goods. Either way, the original tenant has no title to the goods, and there removal is theft.


I agree !!
Title: Re: Advice, please
Post by: Unwashed on April 09, 2011, 09:21:22
our tenancy agreement states that anything left on the plot ( at end of tenancy) becomes the property of the association, simples
I don't believe you can make such a rule.  The legal position is that stuff left behind remains the property of the out-going tenant unless there is clear evidence that it has been abandoned, and the fact that it is left behind is not sufficient evidence.  Making a rule that says otherwise means nothing.

What you can probably do is make a rule that says 30 days after the tenant vacates you'll dispose of anything left on the plot and give the proceeds to the tenant less reasonable necessary expenses.  I would say that gives the tenant the required notice and doesn't go beyond what the law allows.
Title: Re: Advice, please
Post by: picman on April 09, 2011, 17:26:21
It all seems to hang on interpretation of " removable property" , you could say practically everything on an allotment plot is removable property, Shed , raised bed planks, compost in those beds, fruit trees / bushes , posts , water butts, plant pots, bird scares, bricks and the problem slabs.
Now it is suggested we have to put all abandoned stuff to one side in case a tenant from 1960 comes looking for it....  Wonder what Judge Judy would say......

I am going to propose a change to our rules as per tonybloke's 30 day rule in his last comment. ( probably a 30 Hour rule... ;)
   
Title: Re: Advice, please
Post by: Robert_Brenchley on April 09, 2011, 17:38:24
We had a case where several thousand Victorian blue bricks and edging tiles were left on a plot. Some were taken from plots on the site which were lying empty - I saw the previous tenant with some in her barrow, on several occasions - and I suspect others were taken from the gardens of empty houses, but can't prove it. At first the tenant claimed to be 'holding them in trust for the site' to prevent other people stealing them; later, they claimed to own them. They're known to have been selling small quantities off at car boot sales. The plot passed to their offspring.

They then claimed ownership; they'd 'bought them on eBay', and began to dispose of them. We never caught them at it, and I suspect they were coming down at crack of dawn to take them. The landowner claimed ownership, but their solicitor never did a thing about it, and most or all of them have now vanished. I just wish that had gone to court, I could have given you some answers!
Title: Re: Advice, please
Post by: nodig on April 09, 2011, 20:16:02
Stack the remaining flagstones on the border with your neighbour, exactly half over your plot and  half over his.

If he still thinks they are his, then he won't need to tresspass on your plot to get them.

If he doesn't take them, after about a week paint the top one orange.

If he asks why did you paint 'my' flagstone orange, say that was the only colour you had available.

If he gets angry say sorry, and that you will paint it any colour he chooses.

If he says I didn't want it painted in the first place, say sorry and wash the colour off (use only washable poster paint).

Then ask him to move 'his' flagstone off your plot.

If he refuses, then tell him you are going to paint it orange again.

If he gets angry again, then don't paint it straight away, do it when he is not there.

If the next time you see him, he says you have painted 'my' flagstone orange again, and tells you to clean it off, say sorry and politely explain that you have used permanent paint this time by accident.

If he says that you will have to replace it, say ok, take the orange one away, and tell him to take the one underneath.

If he says it is mine anyway, ask him to take it off your plot.

If he refuses, tell him that you will paint it orange then (but do it when he is not there).

If the next time you see him........

I hope the above helps you Roxy, and you might end up with a load of orange flagstones.



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