Medford Boundary Dispute Lawyers and Medford Title Attorneys

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Title & Boundary Dispute Law in Massachusetts

If you know that you and your neighbor's use of your respective properties do not reflect the legal property lines, this can cause a problem.

Sometimes, neighbors will decide amongst themselves that the issue isn't worth fighting over, and will go on as they did before. This is especially likely if the neighbors are on good terms, and the difference between their use of the land, and the actual property lines, is small (say, a few feet or less). This is an ideal situation, at least in the short term. It can, nonetheless, cause problems in the future - preventing a neighbor from enforcing the actual property lines, if they suddenly have a reason to do so.

Thus, neighbors more commonly end up in some type of legal dispute over whether and to what extent the property lines should be enforced. Obviously, when the property lines are changed, one neighbor wins, and the other loses. It should come as no surprise, then, that legal fights are often the result.

In Medford, Massachusetts, property can also be the subject of title disputes, rather than boundary disputes described above. These types of disagreements stem from disagreements over who owns a piece of property. Confusion in this area is more frequent than one might think. If a deed is improperly recorded, land can be "owned" by 2 people simultaneously. Even more troublesome is when land is "sold" to more than one person. This is normally inadvertent, but some people do it deliberately, hoping to abscond the profits acquired by selling the same thing twice. In cases like this, a court has to determine which buyer owns the land. This is a big deal, considering how unlikely it is that a defrauded buyer could get his or her money back.

Possible Outcomes of Boundary and Title Disputes in Medford, Massachusetts

There are many ways to resolve boundary disputes. One way is to change the legal property lines to reflect the use that the neighbors had been making of the land before the discrepancy was discovered. This is typically regarded a sort of "neutral" result - nobody's situation changes. If both neighbors knew about the real boundaries for a very long time, and did nothing about it, a court may view this as them having acquiesced to the status quo, and decide that it would be unfair to force the neighbors to change their use of the land after such a long period of time. This might also be done if enforcing the property lines would place an extremely large burden on one neighbor, and re-drawing them to reflect their actual use would put a comparatively small burden on the other neighbor

Nonetheless, a court might also enforce the legal property boundaries, particularly if failing to do so would place a significant burden on the owner of the encroached-upon land. If the owner of the encroaching land knew of the encroachment, and concealed it from his neighbor, this fact would further weigh heavily in favor of enforcing the legal property lines.

With title disputes (as opposed to the boundary disputes discussed above), a Medford, Massachusetts court has to determine who owns an entire parcel of land. There are some pretty confusing legal issues involved here.

In general, the person who initially recorded the deed at the appropriate government office will be the one who the court deems to own the land, if they didn't have any reason to know about the existence of the other deed, or other sale, or whatever else gave rise to the title disagreement.

What Can A Medford, Massachusetts Attorney Do?

As you might have gathered, it's not uncommon for the legal issues controlling boundary and title disputes to get very complicated. Additionally, any dispute that can affect one's use or ownership of land has very high stakes (land isn't normally cheap, after all). Therefore, it shouldn't come as a surprise that hiring a competent Medford, Massachusetts real estate lawyer to help in situations like this is always a good idea.

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Life in Medford

Medford is a city in Middlesex County, Massachusetts. It has a population of about 55,000 people.

The first European settlement in the area now known as medford was in 1630, when the area was still part of Charlestown. The town grew slowly but steadily over the next few hundred years. After 1880, the population began to explode, coinciding with the industrial revolution. The expansion in population led to the creation of new government services, such as gas, electricity, and water, along with public schools and a dedicated police department.

While working as a social worker in the 1920s, Amelia Earhart lived in Medford, and there are several memorials and historic sites dedicated to her, including the house in which she lived during her tenure in the city. Medford was also home to the man credited with inventing the roller skate.

Modernly, Medford is home to Tufts University, an extremely well-regarded research university. While once considered a "safety school" for students applying to Harvard, Tufts has become a destination school in its own right, in some niche fields of study.

If you live in Medford, Massachusetts, and need a good lawyer, chances are good that you'll be able to find one. With its diverse and vibrant population, Medford, Massachusetts lawyers have evolved in kind.

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