Columbia Boundary Dispute Lawyers and Columbia Title Attorneys

Find the right Title & Boundary Dispute attorney in Columbia, MD

Title & Boundary Dispute Law in Maryland

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.

It's normally possible, though not always easy, for neighbors to come to a resolution of these disputes on their own. If the neighbors happen to like one another, and the difference between the actual property lines and what they believed the property lines to be is extremely small (a foot or two, for example), they might simply decide to go on as they had before. This is certainly a desirable solution in the short term, since it saves everyone a great deal of time and energy. Nonetheless, in the long term, this can cause problems, particularly if one neighbor decides they want to enforce the legal property lines down the road.

Normally, when this happens, the owner of the property which is being encroached upon wants to expand their property to reflect the legal boundaries, and the owner of the land that will be shrunk by recognizing the legal property lines will want to keep the situation as it is.

In Columbia, Maryland, 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 Columbia, Maryland

Courts have many tools at their disposal to resolve boundary disputes. One way is to just re-draw the property lines to reflect how the neighbors had been using the land before the discrepancy was discovered. This doesn't truly change the position of either neighbor, and is sometimes the fairest result. This is most commonly done because the neighbors were both aware of the legal property lines, and that they differed from how they were using the land, and went on using the land anyway.

A court may do the opposite, and decide to enforce the property lines as they're drawn. This will generally benefit one neighbor and hurt the other. A court will probably do this if one neighbor knew that his land was encroaching onto another person's property, and actively tried to hide that fact from his neighbor. Obviously, such bad actions shouldn't be rewarded. Conversely, if the neighbor whose land was being encroached upon knew about the discrepancy, and did nothing about it, the court will likely change the property lines to reflect this prior use, to prevent that neighbor from being rewarded for "sitting on his rights."

With title disputes, a court has to decide who owns a particular piece of land. There are many factors that a court will consider, and this decision is governed by some fairly complicated laws in Columbia, Maryland.

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 Columbia, Maryland Attorney Do?

The legal problems that can come up in boundary and title disputes can get very intricate. Given this fact, and the high stakes of such disputes, most people shouldn't approach these issues without good legal representation. It should therefore go without saying that the counsel of a reliable Columbia, Maryland real estate attorney is essential in most of these disputes.

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Life in Columbia

Columbia, Maryland is a planned community. It consists of ten independent villages, each with a distinct character. It has a population of almost 90,000 people, and is generally considered a suburb of both Baltimore and Washington, D.C.

The modern community of Columbia, Maryland was established in the 1960s, and the planning of the community involved many ideas that were, at the time, revolutionary. For example, rather than building a large number of cookie-cutter houses with only a few floor plans to choose from,the developers strove for architectural diversity, giving home-buyers much more choice. In addition to city planners, some nationally-renowned experts in the social sciences were deeply involved in the process, bringing in their expertise to make Columbia, Maryland as livable as possible.

Money Magazine has named Columbia, Maryland one of the best places to live in the United States. Each village center in Columbia boasts a central shopping area, designed to be far more aesthetically pleasing than traditional strip malls.

There are plenty of Columbia, Maryland lawyers who specialize in a wide variety of legal fields. Whether you need to make a will, buy a house, or confront any other legal issue, there is a Columbia, Maryland lawyer who can help.

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