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►§~All rights are reserved by ORF or the producing companies, people and their actors!~§◄ Who is allowed to enter someone else's property or even drive a car on it and under what circumstances? Why do conflicts surrounding this question lead to criminal court and, under certain circumstances, to prison? The first two cases of the "Am Schauplatz Gericht" edition "Not about my property" designed by Kristina Schmidt-Labenbacher, Sabine Zink and Maria Zweckmayr revolve around the fundamental right of "inviolability of property" on Thursday, June 13, 2024, at 9:05 p.m. on ORF 2 and ORF ON. In order to renovate the facade of their house on the property boundary with their neighbor, the X. family would have to enter their neighbor's property. Although he has received a notice to tolerate this use of his property, he is preventing the facade work. One dispute has even led to criminal court. Mr. T. owns two properties at the end of a small street in Vöcklamarkt, part of which belongs to a neighbor. Why is he only allowed to drive to one property? Why is the neighbor trying to block access to the second property? The situation occasionally threatens to escalate. The editors have included case three in this edition of "Am Schauplatz Gericht" because the insurance company's approach seems unusual. The R. family's house in Abtenau burned down. An expert report commissioned by the public prosecutor's office found no fault on the part of the homeowners. Why is the home insurance company refusing to pay the damages amounting to almost 1.4 million euros?