wow- what a foolish ruling.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news...nd-a-changed-legal-landscape/article12698935/
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news...nd-a-changed-legal-landscape/article12698935/
wow- what a foolish ruling.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news...nd-a-changed-legal-landscape/article12698935/
Only if it overhangs onto your neighbour.a tree on your property is now joint property with neighbour
so a branch or a root goes on your neighbours property and they are now a joint owner of the tree?Only if it overhangs onto your neighbour.
why is that such a problem?so a branch or a root goes on your neighbours property and they are now a joint owner of the tree?
I don't know about just 'a branch' or 'a root'. The article quotes the Forestry Act which refers to 'roots' and where 'trunk branches out'.so a branch or a root goes on your neighbours property and they are now a joint owner of the tree?
if i have a tree on my property that i want to take down- why do i have to involve the neighbour?why is that such a problem?
the tree is underground your neighbours property...still your neighbours propertyif i have a tree on my property that i want to take down- why do i have to involve the neighbour?
i dont get this?..why is it a problem to get permission from your neighbour if the tree;s roots and branches are on your neighbours property? makes sense to me too...
It may not be underground your neighbour's property. I think if it just sprawls over (in this case, MOST of the tree's higher branches sprawled over), it can be considered joint property. (They refer to 'wayward branches').the tree is underground your neighbours property...still your neighbours property
No problem at all to ask. To get permission, especially where cost might be involved, is a much more difficult thing. What this report doesn't make clear is just how the two-party owner situation it created out of a pair of disputing neighbours can be expected to get anything done.i dont get this?..why is it a problem to get permission from your neighbour if the tree;s roots and branches are on your neighbours property? makes sense to me too...
but you don't own the land under the surface.the tree is underground your neighbours property...still your neighbours property
I'm with you and Red. The problem is that the tree lobby in Toronto is extremely powerful. They want to turn Toronto into another Amazon Forest.I'm with red on this one. If it's not outright stupid, it is not a helpful decision.
That's perhaps an overstatement. But anyone who has travelled out of a treeless neighbourhood into one where trees shade the road can testify how effectively they lessen the laod on air conditioning and how much more pleasant they make the summer. We were stupid not to continue the early XXth C's fashion for large trees. Sadly many were planted almost simultaneously, so now they're dying off the same way and denuding whole streets at once. What we're planting now are species deliberately chosen to stay small and not give us the benefits the earlier trees did. And all maintenance of the small trees can be left to the property owners. Because, 'we're taxed to death here! Do nothing that costs me taxes! Not even if it would save me money!"I'm with you and Red. The problem is that the tree lobby in Toronto is extremely powerful. They want to turn Toronto into another Amazon Forest.