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Frugal Gardening
Frugal Gardening
Teri Monroe

10 Times a Garden Upgrade Became a Legal Nightmare

1. Planting a Privacy Hedge

Planting a privacy hedge or new fence two inches over the property line can trigger encroachment claims. You can’t rely on past property owners either to tell you where your property line is. Neighbors can demand removal, compensation, or a boundary agreement. Nasty disputes can hamper the resale of your home. Always verify pins with a survey, not guesswork. Even inches can matter in these disputes.

2. Blocking an Easement

Do you have an easement near your property? You’d better check before updating your garden. Utility, drainage, or shared-drive easements often run alongside yards or rear fences. Any structures blocking this easement may need to be removed. Utility crews have legal rights to enter, cut roots, and dig where needed. Check your deed for recorded easements before you redesign your yard. Otherwise, you could get yourself into a garden legal nightmare.

3. The Drainage Fix

You may think that you’re solving an issue with drainage on your property. But you could be redirecting water onto a neighbor’s property unknowingly. Even putting in a patio could worsen runoff into a neighbor’s property. In some places, you’re responsible if the changes you make worsen runoff in other places. It’s always best to consult a professional before big projects, so you won’t get into a legal dispute later. Document pre-project drainage and keep water on your side of the line.

4. Cutting a Neighbor’s Tree

Get written permission before you touch a neighbor’s tree, every time. Ownership follows the trunk: if it’s on their side, it’s their tree. If the trunk straddles the line, it’s typically joint property and both owners must consent. Many cities require permits for protected species or trees above a certain diameter, and cutting without approval can trigger trespass claims, fines, and liability if the tree is damaged or dies. You may usually prune branches that hang over your property line, but only to the line. Disputes over trees can be messy, so talk to your neighbor before doing any work.

5. Landscaping City Property

The curbside often belongs to the city, even if you mow it. Your area may also have sightline laws that ban tall shrubs. Municipal crews may remove noncompliant plantings without notice. If you upgrade this area, check the approved plant list and height limits.

6. Violating HOA Rules

Your garden may be your own, but that doesn’t mean that you can violate HOA rules. It’s part of living in a community with covenants. HOAs can govern plant palettes, hedge heights, artificial turf, and even mulch color. Always submit a simple plan with photos and plant lists before buying materials. Getting approval first is cheaper than “asking forgiveness” later.

7. Illegal Retaining Walls

Terracing a slope with a wall can stabilize soil or collapse onto a neighbor’s yard. Many codes require permits, engineered plans, and setbacks once a wall exceeds a certain height. If you’re holding back soil, hire a pro and pull permits. Building inspectors will not look favorably on DIY projects gone amiss.

8. Digging

Always check before you dig! Irrigation trenches, fence posts, and tree holes can slice power, gas, water, or fiber lines. You can unknowingly cause power outages, injuries, or serious fines. If there is paint and flags, this is an easy way to identify an area you shouldn’t be digging in. Pull the necessary schematics before breaking ground.

9. Chemical Drift

Certain chemicals can pose health risks to neighbors and local ecosystems. Spraying anything from herbicides, pesticides, or vinegar “weed killers” near a fence can drift into the neighbor’s garden, pond, or dog run. Inadvertent damage to roses, veggies, or koi can lead to claims and long grudges. Read warning labels, watch the wind, and use shields or non-chemical methods along boundaries. When in doubt, hand-pull weeds near the fence.

10. Hiring The Wrong Contractor

An unlicensed landscaper or mason may skip permits, ignore codes, and disappear if inspectors show up. Always ask for a license number, insurance certificate, references, and a written scope of who pulls permits. Pay in increments, not all up front. Remember, the cheapest bid can become the priciest mess.

Build Beauty Without The Lawsuits

Great gardens start with great paperwork: surveys, easement checks, and HOA approvals. If you plan on any garden upgrades, take photos and keep receipts. If you’re altering grade, walls, or big trees, spend an hour with a local pro or inspector. Otherwise, you may attract code officers and lawyers instead of pollinators.

Seen a garden project go sideways? Leave your story in the comments so other readers can dodge the same headaches.

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