Neighbor Called 911 When Her 'Shared Pool' Became Fresh Dirt-mdue - Chainityai

Neighbor Called 911 When Her ‘Shared Pool’ Became Fresh Dirt-mdue

The first time I found Carol Fitch in my pool, I thought I had misunderstood what I was seeing.

She was not climbing out in embarrassment. She was not apologizing through the fence. She was floating in the shallow end with a blue foam noodle under her arms and a glass sweating on the deck beside her, as relaxed as a guest at a hotel she had paid for.

I stood at my back door for a few seconds before I went outside.

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“Carol, what are you doing?”

She looked up at me with mild surprise, not guilt. She said she used to swim there all the time with the Pattersons, the people who had owned the house before me.

That sentence explained everything and excused nothing.

I told her the Pattersons did not own the house anymore. I told her the pool was private property. She climbed out with the towel she had brought from home and said she would ask next time. I told her there should not be a next time unless I gave clear permission first.

At that point, I still believed this was a boundary issue that could be solved by direct language.

I was wrong.

Three weeks later, after I installed a combination lock on the gate, I found the lock open on the deck and Carol back in the water. She said she had left me a note. When I did not respond, she decided silence meant yes.

I told her silence meant get out.

I changed the combination and added a key lock. Two weeks later, both locks were open and Carol was in the pool again. I still do not know how she got through the key lock. I only know that she did, and that by then the issue had stopped being neighborly awkwardness and started being trespass.

My wife Angela was the one who ended the soft phase. She came outside and told Carol that if she entered our yard again, we would involve the police. Carol stepped out of the pool furious, gathered her towel, and warned us that we did not understand how things worked on Fairwater Court.

Angela answered, “I know how locks work.”

That was the last time Carol swam in the pool.

It was not the last time she tried to control it.

The HOA complaints began with my lock hardware. Carol said the new deadbolt did not match the architectural standards for exterior gates. I answered with photographs and the relevant section of the guidelines. The complaint was dismissed.

Then she complained about pool chairs being stored on the deck, even though they were outdoor furniture in summer. Dismissed.

Then the color of the pool cover. Dismissed.

Then the garden hose reel. The hedge. The porch light. The pool pump during permitted hours. A potted plant near the gate. The reflection of pool water on the ceiling of my screened porch, which she described as an artificial light source affecting her property.

Nine formal complaints in fourteen months.

Nine dismissals.

After the second complaint, I started a folder. By the ninth, it had become a record of the whole relationship: notices, responses, dismissal letters, photos, camera timestamps, notes she left, messages from the neighborhood app, and a written log of every time she approached the yard.

Angela saw me adding the ninth dismissal and asked how long I planned to keep documenting.

“Until I have enough,” I said.

“Enough for what?”

“Something permanent.”

I did not know what that meant yet. I only knew the pool had become the object around which Carol organized her entitlement. As long as it existed, she had something to fight over, something to claim, something to report, something to punish me for withholding.

The answer came when Ray Kimball, my contractor, came over to talk about a kitchen project. After we finished measuring inside, I took him to the backyard and asked what it would take to remove the pool completely.

Not cover it.

Not fence it better.

Remove it.

Ray said it would require a county permit, demolition of the shell, clean fill, compaction, grading, topsoil, and seed. It would take a few active workdays once the permit was approved. It would not be cheap, but it was straightforward.

“Any reason I cannot remove my own pool?” I asked.

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