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VooDude
| Favorite team: | |
| Location: | |
| Biography: | |
| Interests: | |
| Occupation: | |
| Number of Posts: | 3023 |
| Registered on: | 8/11/2017 |
| Online Status: | Online |
Recent Posts
Message
Honestly it’s time to give LA back to the French.
Everyone wants to in the legion for French citizenship. Je ne sais quoi baw.
re: I’m struggling with the breakup of my fiancée
Posted by VooDude on 4/30/26 at 1:18 am to Arthur Bach
quote:
I ended things several times. Then I wanted her back and she said no. It’s for the best. I still love her and we’re still cordial. It’s just not meant to be. I’m dealing with a lot of sadness and anger over the situation, though. I want what is best for her, but it’s still a tough pill to swallow. If I could cry, I would. But I don’t really even know how. She’s giving the ring back and that will be that. Plow into strange, workout, feel it, I’ve heard all the advice. Don’t feel like doing much of anything except isolating and moping alone. Weird to know it’s for the best and still be sad over it.
Mind sharing her side of the story? We’re here to help baw and need all angles before advice.
re: Psychology of People Who Don't Have Tattoos
Posted by VooDude on 4/30/26 at 1:10 am to LemmyLives
quote:Remote work IS a lot more productive. Nothing like only focusing on work without the worry of people seeing me hyperventilating.
You have about as much chance of convincing this crowd there is a difference as you do convincing BabyTac that remote work is usually more productive.
re: 2026 Formula 1 (F1) Season Thread
Posted by VooDude on 4/29/26 at 8:38 pm to s14suspense
quote:They are, but so sick of the marketing gimmicks in a time like this.
Good. Colors.
Even LSU doesn’t think LSU is great anymore. It’s just as good as Ole Miss according to this thread. Wow, Brian Kelly really beat the will out of LSU.
re: The bearded lady is apparently a professor at Oxford U
Posted by VooDude on 4/29/26 at 8:07 am to hawgfaninc
I’m glad society is so accepting now. Think he could get away with teaching at LSU?
re: Reasons why Kiffin should have stayed at Ole Miss?
Posted by VooDude on 4/28/26 at 7:31 am to JOJO Hammer
Man, all these reactions suck. What I get for not posting this on the SEC rant instead of the Louisiana State University exclusive board.
Baton Rouge has a lot of character. There’s a lot of culture and good swimming in the nearby Mississippi.
Baton Rouge has a lot of character. There’s a lot of culture and good swimming in the nearby Mississippi.
Reasons why Kiffin should have stayed at Ole Miss?
Posted by VooDude on 4/27/26 at 10:01 pm
Thread update:
Even LSU doesn’t think LSU is great anymore. It’s just as good as Ole Miss according to this thread. Wow, Brian Kelly really beat the will out of LSU.
Because I cant think of any, so here’s my list of pros for leaving:
• He finally got tired of pretending that Oxford is a nice town.
• LSU actually has a real shot at winning it all. Ole Miss doesn’t.
• After that 11-1 season he knew it was all downhill from here, so he bounced before the regression hit.
• Louisiana recruiting is just easier. One big program, tons of talent, no splitting the state.
• He wanted to coach in the playoff with his Ole Miss team but they wouldn’t let him, so what kind of program is that to be around? Toxic.
• Ole Miss couldn’t match what LSU was offering with NIL and resources.
• Deep down he knows LSU is a blue blood and Ole Miss is an imposter
• He didn’t want to stick around and deal with the inevitable 8-4 seasons and cuck fans.
• Saban said it was the best job in cfb and Ole Miss is a stepping stone.
• His DC was a deranged drunk
• Their confederate mascot and land shark makes it hard to recruit
• Their school, “Ole Miss”, is named after a plantation owner’s mistress, making it even harder to recruit
• Their acceptance rate is 99% and their students still act like they go to Duke. Very snobby and entitled.
Even LSU doesn’t think LSU is great anymore. It’s just as good as Ole Miss according to this thread. Wow, Brian Kelly really beat the will out of LSU.
Because I cant think of any, so here’s my list of pros for leaving:
• He finally got tired of pretending that Oxford is a nice town.
• LSU actually has a real shot at winning it all. Ole Miss doesn’t.
• After that 11-1 season he knew it was all downhill from here, so he bounced before the regression hit.
• Louisiana recruiting is just easier. One big program, tons of talent, no splitting the state.
• He wanted to coach in the playoff with his Ole Miss team but they wouldn’t let him, so what kind of program is that to be around? Toxic.
• Ole Miss couldn’t match what LSU was offering with NIL and resources.
• Deep down he knows LSU is a blue blood and Ole Miss is an imposter
• He didn’t want to stick around and deal with the inevitable 8-4 seasons and cuck fans.
• Saban said it was the best job in cfb and Ole Miss is a stepping stone.
• His DC was a deranged drunk
• Their confederate mascot and land shark makes it hard to recruit
• Their school, “Ole Miss”, is named after a plantation owner’s mistress, making it even harder to recruit
• Their acceptance rate is 99% and their students still act like they go to Duke. Very snobby and entitled.
quote:
I actually read this entire post. At first I assumed it was all copy and paste but this is a great synopsis of the thread and well measure actionable plans. Thank you!
My neighbor who is an attorney refused to answer, but that’s what I got from Grok.
I had to cut off part of it due to text limit, but I’d ask your question to it or other LLMs.
And who says lawyers aren’t also screwed by AI?
are gasoline prices tied towards the international market for oil (petro dollar) or to country supply and demand for it (the US has plenty)?
I want to hear from someone edu’macated.
I want to hear from someone edu’macated.
Property boundary disputes, especially involving potential encroachments by a commercial neighbor like a hotel, can be complex under Mississippi law. Outcomes depend on specific facts, deeds, surveys, title history, any prior agreements or uses, and local ordinances. The person described should immediately consult a licensed Mississippi real estate attorney (ideally one experienced in boundary disputes and quiet title actions in Harrison County) before taking any significant steps. What follows is general information based on publicly available Mississippi law and Biloxi resources—they must get personalized professional advice tailored to their situation.
Key Elements from the Description
• You (the homeowner) closed on the property last fall (roughly fall 2025, assuming current timing).
• The disputed area was thought to be a “shared alley” adjacent to the hotel’s parking lot.
• The prior owner refused curb cuts and claimed ownership with a survey (but wouldn’t share it).
• Your new survey (done with City of Biloxi involvement) shows your property extends ~10 feet further, meaning most of the hotel’s parking lot encroaches on your land.
• The land was never vacated (per city/contractor), so the city and your team view it as unequivocally yours.
• City/contractor suggested presenting your survey to the hotel owner’s lawyer to discuss a settlement.
This appears to be a boundary/encroachment dispute rather than a classic adverse possession or prescriptive easement claim by the hotel (yet). The hotel’s parking use may have been open and longstanding, but since you just purchased, any potential prescriptive rights would likely tie back to prior owners or the hotel’s history of use.
Relevant Mississippi Law (General Overview)
• Boundary Disputes & Surveys: A professional survey coordinated with the city carries significant weight, especially if it aligns with historical records and the city confirms the alley was never vacated. Conflicting surveys (theirs vs. yours) often require negotiation or court resolution. Mississippi courts look at deeds, plats, monuments, and historical evidence. ?
• Encroachment Remedies: Common options include requesting removal of the encroaching improvement (parking lot paving/striping), negotiating a written agreement (e.g., license or easement for continued use in exchange for payment or curb access), or court action. Self-help (e.g., blocking access or removing improvements yourself) risks escalating conflict or liability. ?
• Adverse Possession: In Mississippi, someone can claim ownership after 10 years of actual, open, notorious, hostile/exclusive, and continuous possession (under claim of right). There are nuances, including rules about fences/driveways and disabilities. Since you just bought the property, the clock generally doesn’t favor the hotel starting now—but prior use by the hotel could complicate things if it meets the elements. Paying taxes on the disputed portion can also matter in some contexts. ?
• Prescriptive Easement: Similar 10-year test for a right to use (not own) the land (e.g., for parking/access). It requires the same adverse elements; permissive use doesn’t count. ?
• Quiet Title Action: This is a common chancery court proceeding in Mississippi to confirm ownership, remove “clouds” on title (like disputed claims or encroachments), and get a court order clarifying boundaries. It can resolve conflicting surveys and bind the parties. It often follows failed negotiations. ?
• Public vs. Private Alley: If the alley was never formally vacated by the city, and records show it as part of your parcel (or unvacated public right-of-way that reverted), this strengthens your position. Biloxi’s Land Development Ordinance addresses right-of-way/easement vacations and access standards, but the city has already weighed in via your survey process. ?
Biloxi has a Community Development Department (Planning/Zoning, Code Enforcement, Engineering) that handles these matters. Your coordination with the city is a good start—document everything (emails, conversations, survey details).
Is Presenting the Survey to Their Lawyer for Settlement the Best First Course?
Often yes, as a practical next step—many boundary disputes resolve through negotiation to avoid costly, time-consuming litigation. A polite, professional letter from your attorney (not you directly) enclosing the survey, referencing the city’s input, and proposing a meeting can:
• Put them on formal notice.
• Open discussion of options like: selling/leasing the strip to you, granting an easement for your curb cut (and possibly continued parking use), monetary settlement, or boundary line agreement.
• Create a paper trail showing you acted reasonably.
Pros of starting with settlement talks:
• Cheaper and faster than court.
• Preserves neighbor relations (though the prior “ape shite” reaction suggests tension).
• Avoids immediate escalation.
Cons/Risks:
• They may dig in, produce their own survey, or claim long-term prescriptive rights/adverse possession based on historical parking use.
• Delaying formal action could allow their use to continue (potentially strengthening any future claim by them, though 10 years is the threshold).
If they refuse to engage or negotiations stall, the next step is typically filing a quiet title or boundary dispute action in Harrison County Chancery Court, possibly with a request for injunctive relief (e.g., to stop further encroachment or require removal).
Other Steps They Should Consider (With Attorney Guidance)
1. Hire a Mississippi Real Estate/Boundary Dispute Attorney Promptly: Do not rely solely on city staff or your contractor for legal strategy. Look for firms handling Biloxi/Harrison County real estate litigation (e.g., those mentioning easements, encroachments, or quiet title). They can review your full title/deed, the survey, city records, and the hotel’s potential claims. Early involvement helps frame communications.
2. Document Everything: Keep records of all interactions (past owner, city, contractor, hotel). Get the survey certified and any city correspondence in writing. Consider a title search/update if not already done.
3. City Involvement: Follow up with Biloxi’s Community Development (Planning/Zoning at 228-435-6266 or relevant divisions) or Engineering/Public Works for any official records on the alley’s status, vacation history, or zoning/access requirements. Code Enforcement might address ongoing unauthorized use of your property, but this is secondary to boundary resolution. Do not assume the city will enforce on your behalf without clear violations.
4. Potential Additional Actions:
• Demand they cease using the encroaching area (via attorney letter).
• Explore whether the hotel needs permits for parking lot use that might now be impacted.
• If access is critical for your carport, discuss curb cut permits with the city after clarifying ownership.
• In rare cases, adverse possession or easement claims could be preempted with proper notice/filing, but that’s attorney territory.
Key Elements from the Description
• You (the homeowner) closed on the property last fall (roughly fall 2025, assuming current timing).
• The disputed area was thought to be a “shared alley” adjacent to the hotel’s parking lot.
• The prior owner refused curb cuts and claimed ownership with a survey (but wouldn’t share it).
• Your new survey (done with City of Biloxi involvement) shows your property extends ~10 feet further, meaning most of the hotel’s parking lot encroaches on your land.
• The land was never vacated (per city/contractor), so the city and your team view it as unequivocally yours.
• City/contractor suggested presenting your survey to the hotel owner’s lawyer to discuss a settlement.
This appears to be a boundary/encroachment dispute rather than a classic adverse possession or prescriptive easement claim by the hotel (yet). The hotel’s parking use may have been open and longstanding, but since you just purchased, any potential prescriptive rights would likely tie back to prior owners or the hotel’s history of use.
Relevant Mississippi Law (General Overview)
• Boundary Disputes & Surveys: A professional survey coordinated with the city carries significant weight, especially if it aligns with historical records and the city confirms the alley was never vacated. Conflicting surveys (theirs vs. yours) often require negotiation or court resolution. Mississippi courts look at deeds, plats, monuments, and historical evidence. ?
• Encroachment Remedies: Common options include requesting removal of the encroaching improvement (parking lot paving/striping), negotiating a written agreement (e.g., license or easement for continued use in exchange for payment or curb access), or court action. Self-help (e.g., blocking access or removing improvements yourself) risks escalating conflict or liability. ?
• Adverse Possession: In Mississippi, someone can claim ownership after 10 years of actual, open, notorious, hostile/exclusive, and continuous possession (under claim of right). There are nuances, including rules about fences/driveways and disabilities. Since you just bought the property, the clock generally doesn’t favor the hotel starting now—but prior use by the hotel could complicate things if it meets the elements. Paying taxes on the disputed portion can also matter in some contexts. ?
• Prescriptive Easement: Similar 10-year test for a right to use (not own) the land (e.g., for parking/access). It requires the same adverse elements; permissive use doesn’t count. ?
• Quiet Title Action: This is a common chancery court proceeding in Mississippi to confirm ownership, remove “clouds” on title (like disputed claims or encroachments), and get a court order clarifying boundaries. It can resolve conflicting surveys and bind the parties. It often follows failed negotiations. ?
• Public vs. Private Alley: If the alley was never formally vacated by the city, and records show it as part of your parcel (or unvacated public right-of-way that reverted), this strengthens your position. Biloxi’s Land Development Ordinance addresses right-of-way/easement vacations and access standards, but the city has already weighed in via your survey process. ?
Biloxi has a Community Development Department (Planning/Zoning, Code Enforcement, Engineering) that handles these matters. Your coordination with the city is a good start—document everything (emails, conversations, survey details).
Is Presenting the Survey to Their Lawyer for Settlement the Best First Course?
Often yes, as a practical next step—many boundary disputes resolve through negotiation to avoid costly, time-consuming litigation. A polite, professional letter from your attorney (not you directly) enclosing the survey, referencing the city’s input, and proposing a meeting can:
• Put them on formal notice.
• Open discussion of options like: selling/leasing the strip to you, granting an easement for your curb cut (and possibly continued parking use), monetary settlement, or boundary line agreement.
• Create a paper trail showing you acted reasonably.
Pros of starting with settlement talks:
• Cheaper and faster than court.
• Preserves neighbor relations (though the prior “ape shite” reaction suggests tension).
• Avoids immediate escalation.
Cons/Risks:
• They may dig in, produce their own survey, or claim long-term prescriptive rights/adverse possession based on historical parking use.
• Delaying formal action could allow their use to continue (potentially strengthening any future claim by them, though 10 years is the threshold).
If they refuse to engage or negotiations stall, the next step is typically filing a quiet title or boundary dispute action in Harrison County Chancery Court, possibly with a request for injunctive relief (e.g., to stop further encroachment or require removal).
Other Steps They Should Consider (With Attorney Guidance)
1. Hire a Mississippi Real Estate/Boundary Dispute Attorney Promptly: Do not rely solely on city staff or your contractor for legal strategy. Look for firms handling Biloxi/Harrison County real estate litigation (e.g., those mentioning easements, encroachments, or quiet title). They can review your full title/deed, the survey, city records, and the hotel’s potential claims. Early involvement helps frame communications.
2. Document Everything: Keep records of all interactions (past owner, city, contractor, hotel). Get the survey certified and any city correspondence in writing. Consider a title search/update if not already done.
3. City Involvement: Follow up with Biloxi’s Community Development (Planning/Zoning at 228-435-6266 or relevant divisions) or Engineering/Public Works for any official records on the alley’s status, vacation history, or zoning/access requirements. Code Enforcement might address ongoing unauthorized use of your property, but this is secondary to boundary resolution. Do not assume the city will enforce on your behalf without clear violations.
4. Potential Additional Actions:
• Demand they cease using the encroaching area (via attorney letter).
• Explore whether the hotel needs permits for parking lot use that might now be impacted.
• If access is critical for your carport, discuss curb cut permits with the city after clarifying ownership.
• In rare cases, adverse possession or easement claims could be preempted with proper notice/filing, but that’s attorney territory.
re: Do you appreciate what your ancestors have done for you?
Posted by VooDude on 4/26/26 at 11:20 pm to cubsfan5150
6 bans, 2 warnings
I come from a long line of schrubbers and gardeners. I thank them every day with self sufficiency.
I come from a long line of schrubbers and gardeners. I thank them every day with self sufficiency.
I’ve invited one to my neighbor’s garden before.
re: all my friends are Indians
Posted by VooDude on 4/26/26 at 8:09 pm to Harry Rex Vonner
Have you mastered the sideway head nod yet? Every time I get it can’t decide if it’s disappointment or approval.
re: Neighbor kicked me out of his garden
Posted by VooDude on 4/26/26 at 12:51 pm to ChatGPT of LA
quote:Is that you neighbor? Want to talk about it?
Whats it like being a moron so desperate for attention, you post fake stories on td. What a loser
quote:Yes, his wife is also a good gardener.
What am I missing?
Neighbor kicked me out of his garden
Posted by VooDude on 4/26/26 at 11:27 am
You heard that right. I live in an apartment and cannot access my own garden, so I go to this guy’s house across the street to plant and nurture all sorts of things. Fun hobby.
But he confronted me the other day as I was fertilizing and had nasty, threatening words. What is wrong with people?
But he confronted me the other day as I was fertilizing and had nasty, threatening words. What is wrong with people?
re: What’s one trait you can notice someone is from South Louisiana?
Posted by VooDude on 4/25/26 at 9:16 pm to cajuntiger1010
imbred features.
They look like toddler shows
re: If you met Trump, how would you react and what would you tell him?
Posted by VooDude on 4/25/26 at 2:21 pm to exiledhogfan
quote:booga booga booga
I'd look him dead in the eye, or down at him, and tell him he ain't nearly as tall as he claims to be. Then I'd tell him he's a pussy draft-dodger and a fricking thief who has had to pay for most of the pussy he's ever had.
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