OAP forced to sell her £420K home after losing 5-year fence dispute
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When Pauline Clark moved into her bungalow in a quiet and upscale cul-de-sac, she hoped it would be the ideal place to spend the rest of her working years peacefully.

However, the widow found herself embroiled in a lengthy five-year boundary disagreement, which eventually forced her to leave her local government job due to health problems caused by the conflict over a narrow 1-foot strip of land with her neighbor, Jenny Field.

Now Ms Field, 76, faces selling her home to cover a £113,000 legal bill after losing the dispute over the boundary between the two women’s bungalows.

The dispute between pensioner Mrs. Clark, 64, and grandmother Ms. Field started in 2020 over where to place a new fence to separate their properties. This disagreement escalated into a civil lawsuit that resulted in Ms. Field losing the case.

Her legal bill was initially under £14,000, but she repeatedly challenged the ruling.

Now, the grandmother must pay Mrs. Clark £113,266, as a judge has ordered. If Ms. Field fails to gather and pay the amount within three months, her £420,000 detached bungalow will be sold to cover the debt.

Ms Field failed to attend the hearing at Bournemouth County Court and the matter was heard in her absence.

Anna Curtis, Mrs. Clark’s representative in court, stated that Ms. Field had shown ‘no intention’ of settling the debt. Therefore, requesting a sale of the property was viewed as a ‘last resort’.

Jenny Field's legal bill spiralled to £113,000 after she repeatedly challenged a civil court ruling

Jenny Field’s legal bill spiralled to £113,000 after she repeatedly challenged a civil court ruling

Pauline Clark, pictured leaving Bournemouth County Court. told the Daily Mail she had 'been to hell and back' as a result of the dispute with her next-door neighbour

Pauline Clark, seen leaving Bournemouth County Court, shared with the Daily Mail that she has endured a difficult and distressing time due to the dispute with her neighbor.

The boundary between Ms Field's bungalow on the left, and Mrs Clark's on the right has been at the centre of a five-year dispute

The boundary between Ms Field’s bungalow on the left, and Mrs Clark’s on the right has been at the centre of a five-year dispute

She said the ongoing dispute had been incredibly stressful for Mrs Clark, who had undergone private counselling to help her through the ‘horrendous’ situation with her neighbour.

The two women live in a smart cul-de-sac in Hamworthy, Poole, Dorset.

Ms Field, a divorcee, bought her three bedroom property in 2016.

Mrs Clark bought the next door property a year earlier.   In June 2020 she demolished and replaced the wooden fence between the two bungalows, but Ms Field claimed she moved the fence 1ft onto her land.

She hired her own contractors two months later to tear down the 6ft fence and reclaim ‘her land’.

Mrs Clark started legal proceedings for the damage, theft and trespassing in February 2021, it went to trial and a judge made a final ruling in December 2022.

Ms Field was ordered to pay £11,800 to Mrs Clark for the damage to the fence and a retaining wall, as well as her £2,120 legal costs.

Since then there have been multiple further court cases with Ms Field trying to overturn the decision, which have bumped up the total she owes into six figures.

The bungalows overlook a green boasting mature trees in the quiet cul-de-sac

The bungalows overlook a green boasting mature trees in the quiet cul-de-sac

Ms Field previously hired contractors to tear down a 6ft fence after claiming Mrs Clark had moved the boundary partition onto her own land

 Ms Field previously hired contractors to tear down a 6ft fence after claiming Mrs Clark had moved the boundary partition onto her own land

A civil restraint order against Ms Field also had to be made due to the sheer volume of documents she bombarded the court with.

District Judge Ross Fentem said Ms Field had sent the court ‘hundreds if not thousands’ of pages of documents in recent months, which was a disproportionate use of court office staff and justice time.

He said: ‘The volume of correspondence is plainly excessive and may be perceived as vexatious.

‘Court staff are being diverted from other tasks and putting the justice system under strain, which is unfair on other court users.’

Ms Field tried to claim £500,000 in damages for Mrs Clark’s alleged ‘sham litigation’, trespass on her land and harassment and said she had suffered nearly five years of abuse of the court system, but her application was dismissed by another district judge.

Judge Fentem said Ms Field’s assertions that Mrs Clark had made fraudulent claims and it was a sham litigation were ‘totally without merit’ and the other judge’s decision was ‘entirely right’.

He noted that Mrs Clark is ‘not a person who has deep pockets’ and had been kept from the money owed to her for a ‘very considerable period of time’.

Ms Curtis said there is ample equity in Ms Field’s property for her to pay the debt and still be able to buy a comfortable retirement property mortgage free and have cash leftover.

Ms Field put this smaller fence up after her next-door neighbour erected her fence

Ms Field put this smaller fence up after her next-door neighbour erected her fence

Ms Curtis said: ‘Those sums have not been paid in any shape or form.

‘The defendant has made it clear she has no intention of paying those figures. She believes they are not legitimate claims and she is not liable for these debts.

‘There has been no discussion or offer of settlement, no suggestion of refinancing or obtaining equity on the property. There has been no proper response in relation to the claim.

‘I would invite you to make an order for sale because the matter has been ongoing for five years now.

‘Judge Walsh ruled in December 2022 in relation to the boundary dispute.

‘That was intended to be a final order, he clearly advised in that judgement this should be an end to the matter. What followed from there was a brand new civil harassment complaint.

‘An order for sale will be the only way in which this matter can be finally concluded and the parties can all move on with their lives.

‘This has been incredibly stressful time for all involved in this case.

Ms Field said she will now sell her home to cover the costs of the legal dispute

Ms Field said she will now sell her home to cover the costs of the legal dispute

‘This is the last resort, all other avenues have been explored.’

Judge Fentem said: ‘This is a very long-running boundary dispute. The defendant has, in various ways, sought to relitigate the original case.

‘Her case is fundamentally that Judge Walsh was wrong to say the original fence was a boundary fence and that it was entirely on her land.

‘Every attempt to relitigate has failed. She appears to be convinced some form of fraud has taken place. There appears to be no reasoned basis for the allegation.

‘There is no evidence in the documentation any wrongdoing was committed.

‘I have no confidence at all the claimant will be paid what she is owed except by an order for sale.

‘This matter needs resolution, the parties need to find a way of putting the entirety of this dispute behind them.

‘The order for sale is a last resort and Draconian remedy but taking all the factors into account I should make an order for sale in this case.’

Ms Field, pictured in her garden, said the property will soon be going on the market

Ms Field, pictured in her garden, said the property will soon be going on the market 

He added another £7,454 costs for this case to the money Ms Field owes.

When asked what she plans to do, Ms Field accepted that she will have put her three-bedroom home on the market.

She said: ‘I haven’t got that sort of money.

‘I have estate agents coming round to put my home on the market for £600,000 so that I will have the money to pay the court.

‘I am selling it because I have to and I am fed up with living here but I will offer to pay her £1 per week.’

Today, Mrs Clark told the Daily Mail she ‘had been to hell and back’ as a result of the five-year dispute.

The widow added: ‘This has cost me a hell of a lot of money – it won’t be over until she is gone.’

Mrs Clark said she thought she was moving to a quiet cul-de-sac where she could see out her working life in peace. She added: ‘I have not spoken to her (Mrs Field) since the day this all started.’

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