I was upstairs and renovated the house and changed the sewer pipe in the bathroom, and I thought it

Updated on Bathroom 2024-08-11
2 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-01-24

    It's not necessary to write or not, even if you don't write, if there is a problem at that time, the upstairs must be repaired, even if you write, if the upstairs cheats, you can't help it, there's no need, and now I'm depressed, I'm scared, I'm always worried.

  2. Anonymous users2024-01-23

    A property signature is required, so write it realistically.

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1. All the legal provisions are as follows, the party damaged by water leakage should first ask the housing quality inspection department to make an appraisal report on the cause of water leakage in the house and how to make up the leakage; After identification, if it is the cause of the adjacent party, the adjacent party may be required to repair it immediately or in a timely manner on the basis of the report, and may request compensation from the adjacent party for the damage caused during the repair period. If the adjacent party does not cooperate, the injured party can take the dispute to court. The legal basis for this is Article 83 of the General Principles of the Civil Code >>>More

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1. All are illegal, you can ask the property to coordinate, and if you can't coordinate, ask the relevant law enforcement department of the local real estate bureau to order the upstairs to change back.

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Neighbouring rights disputes.

Article 84 of the Property Law [Principles for Handling Adjacent Relationships] The adjacent rights holders of immovable property shall correctly handle adjacent relationships in accordance with the principles of conducive to production, convenience of life, solidarity and mutual assistance, and fairness and reasonableness. >>>More

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An action for property damage can be brought against the upstairs occupant as the defendant. >>>More

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Hello, if you sue the owner you can sue for infringement and let him compensate you for the loss of your property, just go directly to your local grassroots court to sue, and the rest of the procedure court will. The handling fee you are talking about is formally called the litigation fee, which is generally difficult to estimate, and should be determined in combination with your case and the local economic level, and should be borne by the losing party. If you can provide evidence to prove that you really missed work because of the repair, you can get appropriate compensation for this compensation, which is the so-called "who claims, who proves". >>>More