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A tree falls. A lawsuit follows. A legal expert explains why

Trees displaying fall colors flank a roadway through neighborhoods in Overland Park, Kansas, Thursday, Oct. 27, 2022.
Charlie Riedel
/
AP
Trees displaying fall colors flank a roadway through neighborhoods in Overland Park, Kansas, Thursday, Oct. 27, 2022.

Updated July 24, 2025 at 3:14 PM EDT

Many people share a love of trees for their shade, their greenery, their beauty — which is why outrage is often the reaction when they're maliciously cut down.

Such incidents are more common than people might think. In a recent case on the Massachusetts island of Nantucket, a man was criminally charged for cutting down his neighbors' trees to improve the views from his own property. He then listed the house for nearly $10 million.

There's a name for this kind of violation: "timber trespass."

It's the legal specialty of New Hampshire lawyer Israel Piedra, who spoke with NPR's Morning Edition.

Piedra said timber trespass cases are "very common," although the Nantucket incident, as well as a similar case in Maine in which a rich couple poisoned the trees of another rich neighbor to get a better view of a harbor, represent a "level of egregiousness" that is more rare, he added.

A typical timber trespass case involves negligence or potential recklessness, such as by not conducting a property survey before removing a tree.

"Generally, it has to do with a neighbor not knowing where the property line is, or perhaps even potentially knowing that [a tree] is probably on their neighbor's property, but plowing ahead and sticking their head in the sand and cutting down the trees anyway," noted Piedra, who estimates he has two dozen active timber trespass cases.

When people intentionally cut down their neighbors' trees without permission, that's known as "willfully intentionality," Piedra said.

"My clients almost always think that it's willful," he added, "but it's very difficult to prove."

Few timber trespass cases lead to criminal charges, Piedra said, because prosecutors must prove intent, and people accused of wrongfully cutting down trees often claim that they thought they had permission to do so, or that the tree-cutting was a misunderstanding.

In the Nantucket case, criminal charges were filed because the defendant cut down such a wide swath of his neighbors' trees, including some not on his property line, that "it was very difficult to impossible for him to argue that it was an accident," Piedra explained.

Property insurance rules can also complicate the situation. Some homeowner insurance policies will compensate homeowners whose trees were cut down accidentally, but not trees that were intentionally damaged or removed without permission, according to Piedra.

Because of that, it "isn't to [the victim's] benefit to allege or prove willfulness, because then the neighbor's insurance coverage is not going to cover them," Piedra said, "and so it becomes advantageous to my clients to concede that this was negligent and not intentional."

For that reason, many cases often resolve with civil fines or settlements. In the Maine tree-poisoning case, for example, the defendants paid a fine of more than $1.5 million -- and kept their harbor view.

Piedro said many people whose trees were cut without their permission are satisfied with financial compensation, especially if they can avoid going to court and recover tens of thousands of dollars for just a few trees. Still, he added, "a lot of folks do feel like no amount of money can put back the trees that were lost."

His advice for anyone who thinks they have a timber trespass case: "Call a lawyer. Make sure that you document everything. Make sure you actually know where your property line is, and usually that means getting a survey. Unfortunately, it's your burden to prove that someone came onto your property, and your back-of-the-napkin-type calculations probably aren't going to cut it, in a legal sense."

These cases, particularly ones involving wealthy warring neighbors, tend to stir public outrage, Piedra said, because "people are taken aback by the disrespect that someone would show by thinking they had the right to go onto someone's property and destroy … a living thing like a tree that a lot of people have emotional attachments to."

"One day they have a beautiful tree. The next day, it's destroyed," he added. "And there's no way to get that back."

Barry Gordemer produced the radio interview and Majd Al-Waheidi edited it for the web.

Copyright 2025 NPR

Sacha Pfeiffer is a correspondent for NPR's Investigations team and an occasional guest host for some of NPR's national shows.