Shocking moment farmer winches away his neighbour’s car – and still wins £500,000 court battle over his bins

Shocking moment farmer winches away his neighbour’s car – and still wins £500,000 court battle over his bins

THIS is the shocking moment a farmer winched away his neighbour’s car – and still won a £500,000 court battle over his bins.

Geoff Carter, 76, and his wife Corinne, 69, who is battling cancer, fell out with their farmer neighbour Trevor Goldsworthy over where he left rubbish for weekly bin collections.

As part of the row the neighbour's son was seen on CCTV using a telehandler to pick up and move Mr Carter’s car
As part of the row the neighbour’s son was seen on CCTV using a telehandler to pick up and move Mr Carter’s car
The farmer still managed to win a court battle
The farmer still managed to win a court battle
Geoff Carter, pictured, and his wife are selling their £450,00 home in order to pay their legal bills
Geoff Carter, pictured, and his wife are selling their £450,00 home in order to pay their legal bills

Trevor’s son Simon was seen on CCTV using a telehandler to pick up and move Geoff’s Skoda Fabia from outside his home.

Geoff sought compensation through the courts for alleged damage to the car but it was rejected.

The couple have put their £450,000 dream home on the market to cover their legal bills.

Geoff said: “It’s absolutely destroyed us, we have got nothing left. We’ve lost half a million pounds.

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“All we wanted was a quiet life and a nice view but we’ve lost this house, it’s gone, it’s already on the market.

“I’m getting on for 80, my wife’s getting on for 70, we’ve had a house since 1973 and now we’re totally f****.

“We can’t start working again, we’re too old now. We have nothing but our state pensions.”

The Carters swapped their Buckhurst Hill, Essex, home for a cottage in rural west Cornwall in 2018 after falling in love with the area while on holiday.

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But within weeks of buying the property they had fallen out with farmer Mr Goldsworth.

They claimed the rubbish – left across the road from their house – stopped them from accessing their drive and attracted flies.

The row escalated to the point where the neighbours ended up in court – where Mr Goldsworthy was found to be in the right.

An appeal at Bristol Crown Court failed, leaving the Carters liable for both sides’ full legal costs, at which point Mr Goldsworthy arranged for the rubbish to be collected elsewhere anyway.

Mr Carter said: “If we hadn’t put so much into this home we would have sold up long ago and moved on but we were just trapped by it and the further the case went on the harder it was to back out as we would have been liable for all their costs anyway.”

Trevor was taken to court over where he had been leaving his rubbish
Trevor was taken to court over where he had been leaving his rubbish

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Jonathan Rose

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