rye_knower
New Member
- Jurisdiction
- Texas
I own a home in a Texas community where there are many tall pine trees all around. Next to my house there are two lots (equaling roughly 1.5 acres) that are full of brush and pine trees (no house). There are several dead trees that will soon fall on my fence and shed and one tall dead pine tree that would easily reach my house if it were to fall that direction. One tree fell several years ago and damaged my fence and I had to clean it up.
The owner on file died about 14 years ago (confirmed by obituary), but the taxes were still being paid for years mostly under his name and sometimes his sons name. The owner had a wife that died about 8 years ago (confirmed by obituary), but the taxes were still being paid up until about 3 years ago. There is no record of anyone else having owned the property since the owners death 14 years ago. Nobody visits the property.
I tried sending letters for 3 years to all the sons known addresses (home and business), I've called all know phone numbers, and I've traveled to all business addresses. I've received no response to letters, the phone numbers were disconnected or unresponsive, and the business locations were abandoned. However, he did recently start a website and stated they will now be an online only company and it has recent updates. Therefore, I emailed the business and still have received no response. He also updated his home address, which I sent a letter to, but again no response. In my correspondence I let him know about the trees and offered to purchase the property so I could have them remove.
My question is: Would it be a better strategy to pay the taxes for 5 years, clean up the property, then make an adverse possession claim or have a lawyer threaten to file a lawsuit for current and future damages to my property?
The son is not technically the owner on paper so I wasn't sure if the latter would even fly. I've seen images of his house. It's a nice brick home in a nice community so I assume he has money. I doubt he has property insurance on these lots though.
The owner on file died about 14 years ago (confirmed by obituary), but the taxes were still being paid for years mostly under his name and sometimes his sons name. The owner had a wife that died about 8 years ago (confirmed by obituary), but the taxes were still being paid up until about 3 years ago. There is no record of anyone else having owned the property since the owners death 14 years ago. Nobody visits the property.
I tried sending letters for 3 years to all the sons known addresses (home and business), I've called all know phone numbers, and I've traveled to all business addresses. I've received no response to letters, the phone numbers were disconnected or unresponsive, and the business locations were abandoned. However, he did recently start a website and stated they will now be an online only company and it has recent updates. Therefore, I emailed the business and still have received no response. He also updated his home address, which I sent a letter to, but again no response. In my correspondence I let him know about the trees and offered to purchase the property so I could have them remove.
My question is: Would it be a better strategy to pay the taxes for 5 years, clean up the property, then make an adverse possession claim or have a lawyer threaten to file a lawsuit for current and future damages to my property?
The son is not technically the owner on paper so I wasn't sure if the latter would even fly. I've seen images of his house. It's a nice brick home in a nice community so I assume he has money. I doubt he has property insurance on these lots though.