Why Neighbor Disputes Need Documentation
Neighbor conflicts feel personal, but when they escalate to property damage, harassment, or legal action, they become evidence-based. Police and courts hear "my neighbor is terrible" every day. What they respond to is a documented pattern — dates, times, locations, proof.
Common Issues Worth Documenting
🔊
Noise violations
late parties, construction outside hours, persistent disturbances
🏚️
Property damage
fence damage, vandalism, vehicle damage
📏
Boundary disputes
encroaching structures, fences on your property
😤
Harassment
threatening notes, aggressive confrontations
⚠️
Code violations
illegal structures, fire hazards, trash accumulation
🐕
Pet issues
dogs off leash, waste on your property, aggressive animals
How to Document Effectively
Building Your Case
The strength comes from consistency. One photo is nothing. Fifty timestamped, location-verified photos showing the same violation over three months is a pattern courts take seriously.
Pattern of documented incidents over time
When to Escalate
Document and communicate directly with neighbor in writing
File with HOA or local code enforcement — attach evidence
Consult an attorney — bring your evidence timeline
File in court with complete documentation
