If you need urgent support, call 999 or go to your nearest A&E. To contact our Crisis Messenger (open 24/7) text THEMIX to 85258.
Tree roots

My parents' neighbour stubbornly refuses to do anything about the tree in his garden, which grows bigger every year, is very close to my parents' house, and is causing major problems for them. As well as blocking out light, some of its branches overhung their garden. I know that you're allowed to cut off tree branches that overhang your garden up to the boundary, so they did that. Is this law also true of tree roots? The roots are causing damage to my parents' garden - breaking their concrete path from underneath. It's very likely that the branches also go under their house, which could cause subsidence, destablising it. The roots could also break underground pipes. Are they allowed to remove the roots that are under their house and garden?
My parents cannot afford to hire a solicitor or go to court and even if they could, they would prefer not to go down that route. They used to have a friend, who was a plumber, who told them that the roots are a threat to the pipes and was also sure that the damage to the garden was caused by the roots - although he didn't know the law regarding what you're allowed to do about a neighbour's tree.
The tree isn't near enough to any other houses or gardens to cause any problems for anyone else. That means that there's no chance that my parents could get any of the other neighbours to support them in doing anything about the tree.
My parents cannot afford to hire a solicitor or go to court and even if they could, they would prefer not to go down that route. They used to have a friend, who was a plumber, who told them that the roots are a threat to the pipes and was also sure that the damage to the garden was caused by the roots - although he didn't know the law regarding what you're allowed to do about a neighbour's tree.
The tree isn't near enough to any other houses or gardens to cause any problems for anyone else. That means that there's no chance that my parents could get any of the other neighbours to support them in doing anything about the tree.
0
Comments
Your neighbour cut down your tree? It was in your garden - and they cut the whole thing down, which fell onto your wall (rather than merely pruning the overhang)? I'm only talking about my parents cutting off what's on their side of the fence, not what's on their neighbour's side.
Our tree was actually on the wall
Your neighbour obviously did the wrong thing. My parents aren't considering going into his garden - they just want to get rid of what's in their garden.
If the neighbour's tree was further away from my parents' house, it wouldn't be much of a problem. Its trunk is inches away from the fence and is only a several feet away from both houses. Before my parents pruned it, some of the branches were mere inches away from their house. I can't understand why anyone would want a tree so close to their house.