!@# damn it My neighbor is fixing to pour a foundation in wrong place, and it's going to hurt my property values bc it's a monstrosity and it's illegal. ...and I'm wondering if I should drop my objection even tho I'm entirely right & he's entirely wrong, just bc neighborliness
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Replying to @MorlockP
So much to unpack here. Is your objection that: . you don't want it so close? . it'll hurt your property values because nobody else will want it so close? . it's against the rules and that's wrong, darn it? . it'll hurt your property values because it's against the rules?
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Replying to @random_eddie @MorlockP
(these are rhetorical questions, I don't expect an answer, and I know you've already thought about this)
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Replying to @random_eddie @MorlockP
other answers include . "One day it could bite HIM in the ass and I don't want to see him get bitten" . "One day it could become an issue between the two of us, or our successors, so let's get it fixed today instead"
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Replying to @random_eddie @MorlockP
@#$%@! I have better things to do than look up property law right now but you've nerd sniped me
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Replying to @random_eddie @MorlockP
Knowing your luck, this case is going to end up in headlines, the Supreme Court, and future property law textbooks.
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Replying to @random_eddie @MorlockP
Property law textbooks are filled with cases where both parties were trying very hard to do the right thing until some small combination of mistake, misunderstanding, or misfortune destroyed their lives, requiring the courts to work out which of their lives got destroyed
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