New Mexico
My parents' next-door neighbor is using our municipal code enforcement department to harass them; can something be done about this?
The issue began when my mother found him cutting the lower branches from a tree on their property last year (a tree that, ironically, served as a privacy barrier between the two properties). She told him to stop, and an argument ensued. The man is extremely aggressive and entitled, and I knew it wasn't going to end there. Sure enough, the letters from the city's code enforcement department soon began.
A shrubbery that's been on the property for 45 years suddenly needed extensive trimming. It wasn't interfering with a sidewalk or on anyone else's property. My classic car from high school that remains neatly covered in the driveway when I'm not working to restore it was now an inoperable "junked" vehicle that needed removing. Flower vases on the porch were "junk". A roller tray used for gardening was "junk". Now, their two perfectly operable vehicles in the driveway (also not "junked"; normal, well-maintained vehicles) that the city knows are operable because it attempted to state otherwise when it came after my classic car and my parents started them right up "need removed".
My father contacted the new code enforcement officer today, who apologised profusely and told him that the neighbor was sending non-stop complaints. When she ignored them, he went to his buddy the mayor, who then contacted her and told her to "do her job".
I've told my parents they need to inform the city that they will be obtaining a lawyer, but they don't want to do so until they know exactly what their legal grounds would be.
My parents' next-door neighbor is using our municipal code enforcement department to harass them; can something be done about this?
The issue began when my mother found him cutting the lower branches from a tree on their property last year (a tree that, ironically, served as a privacy barrier between the two properties). She told him to stop, and an argument ensued. The man is extremely aggressive and entitled, and I knew it wasn't going to end there. Sure enough, the letters from the city's code enforcement department soon began.
A shrubbery that's been on the property for 45 years suddenly needed extensive trimming. It wasn't interfering with a sidewalk or on anyone else's property. My classic car from high school that remains neatly covered in the driveway when I'm not working to restore it was now an inoperable "junked" vehicle that needed removing. Flower vases on the porch were "junk". A roller tray used for gardening was "junk". Now, their two perfectly operable vehicles in the driveway (also not "junked"; normal, well-maintained vehicles) that the city knows are operable because it attempted to state otherwise when it came after my classic car and my parents started them right up "need removed".
My father contacted the new code enforcement officer today, who apologised profusely and told him that the neighbor was sending non-stop complaints. When she ignored them, he went to his buddy the mayor, who then contacted her and told her to "do her job".
I've told my parents they need to inform the city that they will be obtaining a lawyer, but they don't want to do so until they know exactly what their legal grounds would be.