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1This has been done once by every {{sitcom}} and sitcom-like cartoon since 1952.
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3AliceAndBob are neighbors, and they hate each other. One day, Alice goes to a government office and finds a city map that shows her property extends well past the fence between them. Alice will begin commandeering anything of Bob's that falls into her property. A tree, a workshed, the TV in his living room, etc.
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5The episode frequently ends with Bob discovering that the first read it wrong, and what it ''really'' meant was that the property line cuts into Alice's property instead. Insert defeated "wah-wah-waaaah" trombone sounds here.
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7This is usually {{Snapback}}ed as it never comes up again.
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9Note that this is a classic example of HollywoodLaw: in reality this kind of discrepancy would (1) immediately lead to a lawsuit, which (2) would almost always be solved by somehow granting Bob the land he thought was his. (The mechanisms here are [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adverse_possession adverse possession]], which is basically a StatuteOfLimitations as applied to property law, if he or his predecessors in interest[[note]]As a quick lesson, suppose adverse possession takes 20 years in Bob's jurisdiction. If it's 2010 now, and Bob inherited the house from his uncle in 2008, and the uncle bought it from some other fellow in 1996, and that other fellow built the house and the fence that extends across the property line in 1989, then all of that counts towards Bob's 20 years of possession, even though he's only been on the property for two years.[[/note]] used the land consistently enough for long enough, and various kinds of easements and forced sales if he hasn't.)
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11See also ThisIsMySide, which is the same plot in miniature. Compare and contrast with ForeignerForADay.
12----
13!!Examples:
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15[[foldercontrol]]
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17[[folder: Comic Books ]]
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19* There was once an issue of ''Disney Magazine'' that had this happen to WesternAnimation/DonaldDuck. He finds a bricked-up doorway in his cellar, behind which is a chest of valuable antique coins. He sells them, and goes on a spending spree, only to have his neighbour come by with a map proving that anything behind the bricked-up door is actually on ''his'' property. All of Donald's fancy new furniture is repossessed, and immediately re-purchased by the neighbour, so Donald has to make do with some old chairs found in the main part of the cellar. [[spoiler: Turns out the chairs are even more valuable than the coins were.]]
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21[[/folder]]
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23[[folder: Film ]]
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25* The Oscar-winning silent 1952 short ''Film/{{Neighbours}}'', directed by Creator/NormanMclaren for the Creator/NationalFilmBoardOfCanada, is a dramatic and disturbing instance. A surreal anti-war parable, it depicts an escalating battle between two homeowners over the ownership of a single flower growing right on their property line. Watch it [[http://www.nfb.ca/film/neighbours_voisins here]].
26* In the classic Polish comedy ''Film/SamiSwoji'' two families end up in a FeudingFamilies situation because a Kargul plowed '3-fingers-width' deep into land claimed by the Pawlaks. The eldest Pawlak son retaliates by hitting the Kargul with a scythe and then flees to America. Decades later the two families need to cooperate to survive the aftermath of World War 2 but the patriarchs still occasionally break the peace when they get into silly property disputes over things like who owns the cat that hunts the rats in their sheds.
27* ''Film/ASeriousMan'': Larry is in a low-simmering dispute with his neighbor over their property line. The neighbor wants to build a boat shed across what Larry considers their property line. The neighbor begins to mow a strip of Larry's side of the lawn as a passive-aggressive way of asserting his own definition of their property line.
28[[/folder]]
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30[[folder: Literature ]]
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32* OlderThanFeudalism: ''Literature/TheBible'' prohibits moving your neighbor's boundary stone or other property marker, presumably to prevent just such a quarrel taking place.
33--> "Do not remove the ancient boundary stone that your ancestors set up." ([[Literature/BookOfProverbs Proverbs 22:28]])
34* Subverted in the famous Creator/{{Robert Frost}} poem, [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mending_Wall Mending Wall]], published in his ''Literature/{{Collected Poems|1930}}''. It isn't necessarily about the property line intruding on either person's side of the fence, but rather whether or not a literal stone wall is needed to solidify the property line.
35--> "Good fences make good neighbors."
36* ''Literature/DiaryOfAWimpyKid: Wrecking Ball'': It turns out that an extension to the Heffleys' house is over their neighbor's property line, so they have to tear it down and patch up the hole in the wall.
37* ''Literature/NightWatchDiscworld'': Sam Vimes alludes to this trope while musing on the difference between what the police ''can'' do and what people ''think'' they can do:
38--> "Keep the peace. That was the thing. People often failed to understand what that meant. You’d go to some life-threatening disturbance, like a couple of neighbors scrapping in the street over who owned the hedge between their properties, and they’d both be bursting with aggrieved self-righteousness, both yelling, their wives would either be having a private scrap on the side or would have adjourned to a kitchen for a shared pot of tea and a chat, and they all expected you to Sort It Out.
39--> "And they could never understand that it wasn’t your job. Sorting it out was a job for a good surveyor and a couple of lawyers, maybe. Your job was to quell the impulse to bang their stupid fat heads together, to ignore the affronted speeches of dodgy self-justification, to get them to stop shouting, and to get them off the street. Once that had been achieved, you job was over. You weren’t some walking god, dispensing finely tuned natural justice. Your job was simply to bring back peace.
40--> "Of course, if your few strict words didn't work and Mr Smith subsequently clambered over the disputed hedge and stabbed Mr Jones to death with a pair of gardening shears, then you had a different job, sorting out the notorious Hedge Argument Murder. But at least it was one you were trained to do."
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42[[/folder]]
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44[[folder: Live Action Television ]]
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46* ''Series/SanfordAndSon'': "This Land Is Whose Land?" Fred gets a surveyor to measure his and Julio's property line so he can get Julio to keep his stuff out of the junkyard. It turns out Julio legally owns most of the yard.
47* ''Series/MarriedWithChildren'': In one episode, Jefferson D'Arcy takes an apple that fell from the Bundys' tree and Al argues with him over the apple's ownership. It leads the two families into finding out the official boundary between their lands isn't even a straight line. The tree belongs to the D'Arcys. The Bundys further research the map and find out the D'Arcys' barbecue drill is in ''their'' property. The D'Arcys retaliate by setting a toll booth at the Bundys' garage entrance. The Bundys retaliate by reporting an irregular improvement that, since it's done on what turned out to be D'Arcy property, the D'Arcys are fined for it. They eventually decide to make peace but then [[HereWeGoAgain another apple falls off the tree]] and Al and Jefferson fight over it.
48* ''Series/{{That 70s Show}}'' - happened exactly like the trope's definition, starting with Bob taking things from Red's garage and ending with Red finding out that he owns part of Bob's house.
49* The episode involving LawsuitFever in ''Series/DoctorQuinnMedicineWoman'' involves Dorothy, who owns and operates the local newspaper, finding out that her property actually extends into the area where Grace has set up her cafe. This sets up a rift between the two friends, and they soon find themselves going to court over it. Since the original judge ends up not being able to get into town, Dr. Mike has to be the judge. She ends up ruling that since the commonly accepted property boundary has been assumed for so long--even when the newspaper office was purchased--the area belongs to Grace.
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53[[folder: Music ]]
54* Music/TheBonzoDogBand's song "My Pink Half Of the Drainpipe" explores this concept in song.
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58[[folder: Western Animation ]]
59* In a second-season episode of ''WesternAnimation/TheFlintstones'', Barney painted a property line through the middle of the room Fred just added to his house (tricking Barney into doing all the work.)
60* ''WesternAnimation/TheJetsons'': This was the central plot point of the episode "Private Property"; Mr. Spacely had George examine the blueprints, where he believed that Cogswell's new building was 6 inches over Spacely's property line, until Cogswell re-examines the blueprints and finds that his property is the bigger one and Spacely's building was 6 inches over. Cogswell manages to talk Spacely into buying Cogswell's building, which George discovers is 6 inches too tall and has to be dismantled, only to find out that Spacely got stuck buying Cogswell's building which has to be torn down.
61%%* ''WesternAnimation/SpongeBobSquarePants'' did this.
62* ''WesternAnimation/GoofTroop'', In the episode "Goof Under My Roof" plays it straight, when it looks like Pete owns half of Goofy's house, and he then claims everything in that half as his. At the end, it turns out that Pete doesn't own half of Goofy's property,. but rather Goofy owns half of his.
63* A ''WesternAnimation/MightyMouse'' cartoon "The Green Line" featured a town where mice lived on one side of said line, cats on the other. An evil cat spirit tries to get the cats to ignore the line and attack the mice, but Mighty quickly arrives to restore peace.
64* One episode of ''WesternAnimation/ThePinkPanther'' ("Pink Panzer") had an unseen narrator building up conflict between the Pink Panther and his neighbor, starting with a couple of borrowed possessions, but then coming into this trope when he, at the narrator's urging, saws off a limb that extends over the line, dropping leaves into his yard. The neighbor retaliates by sawing off part of the Pink Panther's ''house'' that was extending into the space over ''his'' yard. The narrator gets the panther to build a wall, then the neighbor to bring out a unit of artillery, the panther to bring out something bigger, the neighbor to call in some military help... At the end, the narrator is eventually revealed to be [[spoiler:The Devil]].
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