Owen v Cornell: 1967

The mere fact of a sub-mortgage did not prevent the principal mortgagee from exercising his rights under the principal mortgage. ‘The fact was that the legal estate in the term of 3,000 years still remained in the head mortgagee, notwithstanding that he had created out of it a sub-demise for a shorter period. There remained a nominal reversion of one day which was in the head mortgagee. The sub-mortgagee had a lesser estate carved out of the head mortgagee’s estate. He [Buckley J] saw no reason in these circumstances why the head mortgagee ought not to be permitted to exercise his rights in respect of the legal estate vested in him to obtain possession of the property. He saw nothing which suggested that Parliament intended any other result.’

Judges:

Buckley J

Citations:

(1967) 203 EG 29

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedFour-Maids Ltd v Dudley Marshall (Properties) Ltd 1957
A mortgagee may under common law go into possession before the ink is dry on the mortgage unless there is something in the contract, express or by implication, whereby he has contracted himself out of that right. He has the right because he has a . .

Cited by:

ApprovedCredit and Mercantile Plc v Feliciangela Marks CA 14-May-2004
The defendant had charged her home to the claimant and fallen into arrears. There was a sub-charge executed on the same day in favour of the Bank of Scotland (BOS) under which the claimant agreed to repay to BOS the amount it owed to them.
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.197901

Pulleyn v Hall Aggregates (Thames Valley) Ltd: 1993

Citations:

(1993) 65 P and CR 276

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedMayor and Burgesses of London Borough of Hounslow v Anne Minchinton CA 19-Mar-1997
The defendant asserted title to a strip of land by adverse possession. The judge had held that the occupation by the claimant had been insufficient to establish possession.
Held: The use of the land as a garden for compost heaps and similar . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land, Limitation

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.195611

Chang v Registrar of Titles: 11 Feb 1976

(High Court of Australia) The court discussed the trusteeship arising on a contract for the sale of land.
Mason J said: ‘It has long been established that a vendor of real estate under a valid contract of sale is a trustee of the property sold for the purchaser. However, there has been controversy as to the time when the trust relationship arises and as to the character of that relationship. Lord Eldon considered that a trust arose on execution of the contract (Paine v Meller; Broome v Monck). Plumer M.R. thought that until it is known whether the agreement will be performed the vendor ‘is not even in the situation of a constructive trustee; he is only a trustee sub modo, and providing nothing happens to prevent it. It may turn out that the title is not good, or the purchaser may be unable to pay’ (Wall v Bright). Lord Hatherley said that the vendor becomes a trustee for the purchaser when the contract is completed, as by payment of the purchase money (Shaw v Foster). Jessel M.R. held that a trust sub modo arises on execution of the contract but that the constructive trust comes into existence when title is made out by the vendor or is accepted by the purchaser (Lysaght v Edwards). Sir George Jessel’s view was accepted by the Court of Appeal in Rayner v Preston.
It is accepted that the availability of the remedy of specific performance is essential to the existence of the constructive trust which arises from a contract of sale’. Jacob J: ‘Where there are rights outstanding on both sides, the description of the vendor as a trustee tends to conceal the essentially contractual relationship which, rather than the relationship of trustee and beneficiary, governs the rights and duties of the respective parties’.

Judges:

Mason J, Jacob J

Citations:

(1976) 137 CLR 177, (1976) 50 ALJR 404, (1976) 8 ALR 285, [1976] HCA 1

Links:

Austlii

Jurisdiction:

Australia

Cited by:

CitedJerome v Kelly (Her Majesty’s Inspector of Taxes) HL 13-May-2004
In 1987, trustees holding land for various beneficiaries in undivided shares entered into a contract to sell it to a purchaser. In 1989 Mr and Mrs Jerome, who were absolutely entitled to interests in the land, assigned part of their beneficial . .
CitedScott v Southern Pacific Mortgages Ltd and Others SC 22-Oct-2014
The appellant challenged a sale and rent back transaction. He said that the proposed purchaser had misrepresented the transaction to them. The Court was asked s whether the home owners had interests whose priority was protected by virtue of section . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land, Contract, Commonwealth

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.196888

Bury v Pope: 1587

The owner of land was held entitled to erect a house against his neighbour’s windows even though they had enjoyed light for over 30 years. ‘And lastly, the earth hath in law a great extent upwards, not only of water as hath been said, but of aire, and all other things even up to heaven, for cujus est solum ejus est usque ad coelum, as it is holden.’ (Coke)
A claim to an easement through use since time immemorial could be defeated where it could be proved that the origin of the enjoyment must have been more recent than 1189.

Citations:

(1587) Cro Eliz 118, [1653] EngR 382, (1653) Cro Eliz 118, (1653) 78 ER 375 (B)

Links:

Commonlii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedHunter and Others v Canary Wharf Ltd HL 25-Apr-1997
The claimant, in a representative action complained that the works involved in the erection of the Canary Wharf tower constituted a nuisance in that the works created substantial clouds of dust and the building blocked her TV signals, so as to limit . .
CitedStar Energy Weald Basin Ltd and Another v Bocardo Sa SC 28-Jul-2010
The defendant had obtained a licence to extract oil from its land. In order to do so it had to drill out and deep under the Bocardo’s land. No damage at all was caused to B’s land at or near the surface. B claimed in trespass for damages. It now . .
CitedLynn Shellfish Ltd and Others v Loose and Another SC 13-Apr-2016
The court was asked as to the extent of an exclusive prescriptive right (ie an exclusive right obtained through a long period of use) to take cockles and mussels from a stretch of the foreshore on the east side of the Wash, on the west coast of . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.195599

Orr v Mitchell: 1893

Until the interest of the purchaser has been recorded or registered the seller remains vested in the real right. His relationship with the purchaser is controlled by the rights and obligations which were created by their contract. When the disposition is delivered the general rule is that it becomes the sole measure of the contracting parties’ rights if there is a dispute about the subject to which right has been acquired by the purchaser.

Citations:

(1893) 20 R (HL) 27

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedBurnett’s Trustee v Grainger and Another HL 4-Mar-2004
A flat was sold, but before the purchasers registered the transfer, the seller was sequestrated, and his trustee registered his own interest as trustee. The buyer complained that the trustee was unjustly enriched.
Held: The Act defined the . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Scotland, Land

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.194223

Wyld v Silver: 1963

A purchaser found that he was restrained from building on his land which interfered with a legal but ‘ancient and outmoded’ right to hold a fair on the land on Fridays in Whitsun Week in every year.
Held: At common law the principle is clear that after land has been legally declared to be a green that, ‘once a Green, always a Green’.

Citations:

[1963] Ch 243, [1962] 3 All ER 309

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedOxfordshire County Council v Oxford City Council, Catherine Mary Robinson ChD 22-Jan-2004
Land had been registered in part as a common. The council appealed.
Held: The rights pre-existing the Act had not been lost. The presumption against retrospectively disapplying vested rights applied, and the application had properly been made. . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.192094

Abbott v Weekly: 1665

A custom that ‘the inhabitants of the vill, time out of memory, and had used to dance there at all times of the year at their free will, for their recreation’ was held to be a good custom, and the land was established as a common.

Citations:

(1665) 1 Lev 176

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedOxfordshire County Council v Oxford City Council, Catherine Mary Robinson ChD 22-Jan-2004
Land had been registered in part as a common. The council appealed.
Held: The rights pre-existing the Act had not been lost. The presumption against retrospectively disapplying vested rights applied, and the application had properly been made. . .
CitedOxfordshire County Council v Oxford City Council and others HL 24-May-2006
Application had been made to register as a town or village green an area of land which was largely a boggy marsh. The local authority resisted the application wanting to use the land instead for housing. It then rejected advice it received from a . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.192091

Bernard Wheatcroft Ltd v Secretary of State for the Environment: CA 1982

The developer originally sought permission for 450 homes. That was refused. Before the appeal, it proposed an alternative with 250 homes to be adopted only if the size of the development were considered to be the critical factor. The inspector decided for the smaller scale application. The developer appealed, but the Secretary of State dismissed the appeal saying in addition that it was improper to allow the smaller scale development where the development was not severable.
Held: It had been permissible for the Inspector to grant a lesser permission than had been applied for, by the use of conditions and provided the effect was not to alter the substance of the application, which was a matter on which the Secretary of State had to exercise his judgment. The court went on to explain how the judgment should be reached: ‘The main but not the only criterion on which that judgment should be exercised is whether the development is so changed that to grant it would be to deprive those who should have been consulted on the changed development of the opportunity of such consultation.’ Where a proposed deveeopment had already been through full consultation, and opposition had been total, it was not necessary to consult again on the smaller proposal.
The court considered the additional difficulties in commons application cases of allowing amendments on apppeal because of the need to allow for the public interest.

Judges:

Forbes J

Citations:

(1982) 43 PandCR 233

Statutes:

Commons Registration Act 1965, Town amnd Country Planning ACt 1971

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedRegina (Alfred McAlpine Homes Ltd) v Staffordshire County Council 17-Jan-2002
The court refused to set aside the council’s decision to register as a common a lesser area then applied for. ‘ Does the council have power to register a smaller area than applied for? It is perfectly true that there is no express power in either . .
CitedOxfordshire County Council v Oxford City Council, Catherine Mary Robinson ChD 22-Jan-2004
Land had been registered in part as a common. The council appealed.
Held: The rights pre-existing the Act had not been lost. The presumption against retrospectively disapplying vested rights applied, and the application had properly been made. . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land, Planning

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.192183

Ministry of Defence v Wiltshire County Council: 3 May 1995

The court considered that the time period of twenty years necessary to establish a right of common under the Act was the period ending with the date of the application.
Held: The court rectified the register under section 14 so as to remove the registration of an area of land between a row of houses occupied by military personnel and the Ministry’s airbase. The user by the inhabitants of the Ministry’s houses was not ‘as of right’ as was required.
Harman J said that his views on locality were a second ground for his decision: ‘Other points were argued. In particular, Mr Drabble QC argued that it was impossible for a village green to be created by the exercise of rights save on behalf of some recognisable unit of this country–and when I say recognisable I mean recognisable by the law. Such units have in the past been occasionally boroughs, frequently parishes, both ecclesiastical and civil, and occasionally manors, all of which are entities known to the law, and where there is a defined body of persons capable of exercising the rights or granting the rights.
The idea that one can have the creation of a village green for the benefit of an unknown area–and when I say unknown I mean unknown to the law, not undefined by a boundary upon a plan, but unknown in the sense of unrecognised by the law-then one has, says Mr Drabble, no precedent for any such claim and no proper basis in theory for making any such assertion. In my belief that also is a correct analysis.’ and ‘Upon that basis there can be no possible claim of right here arising, and the activities are not activities which could give rise to a claim of right sufficient to found a basis that the activity is enough to create a village green. That would be, in my view, the end of the case and it would then be just to rectify the register because, in my view, it would be unfair and burdensome, that is unjust, to a landowner to have an entry made upon a register which hampers and burdens him in the exercise of his rights over his own land when those burdens have no proper existence at all in law. My judgment therefore is that the motion should succeed’.

Judges:

Harman J

Citations:

[1995] 4 All ER 931

Statutes:

Commons Registration Act 1965

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedOxfordshire County Council v Oxford City Council, Catherine Mary Robinson ChD 22-Jan-2004
Land had been registered in part as a common. The council appealed.
Held: The rights pre-existing the Act had not been lost. The presumption against retrospectively disapplying vested rights applied, and the application had properly been made. . .
CitedOxfordshire County Council v Oxford City Council and others HL 24-May-2006
Application had been made to register as a town or village green an area of land which was largely a boggy marsh. The local authority resisted the application wanting to use the land instead for housing. It then rejected advice it received from a . .
CitedPaddico (267) Ltd v Kirklees Metropolitan Council and Others ChD 23-Jun-2011
The company sought the rectification of the register of village greens to remove an entry relating to its land, saying that the Council had not properly considered the need properly to identify the locality which was said to have enjoyed the rights . .
CitedPaddico (267) Ltd v Kirklees Metropolitan Council and Others ChD 23-Jun-2011
The company sought the rectification of the register of village greens to remove an entry relating to its land, saying that the Council had not properly considered the need properly to identify the locality which was said to have enjoyed the rights . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.192098

Pullen v Palmer: 1696

The essential difference between tenants in common and joint tenants is that while tenants in common may hold their lands either by several titles or by several rights, joint tenants hold them by one title and by one right. There is no difference as to the possession and manner of taking profits.

Citations:

(1696) 3 Salk 207

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Land, Trusts

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.190119

Lake v Craddock: 1733

Five people bought land It was conveyed to them as joint tenants in fee, but they contributed rateably. Some died, and one took no part for thirty years.
Held: The absent owner was re-admitted. They were held to be tenants in common in equity

Citations:

(1729) 1 Eq Cas Abr 290, (1733) 3 P Wms 158, 24 ER 101 LC

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Land

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.190118

Anon: 1469

Title deeds ‘follow the land’ and are inherited as real estate with the land.

Citations:

(1469) Y B 9 Edw 4

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Land

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.190120

Powell v London and Provincial Bank: 1893

The requirement that it was necessary for an agent of a company delivering a deed to have been appointed under seal was surmountable by corporations giving officers authority by deed.

Citations:

[1893] 2 Ch 555

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedBolton Metropolitan Borough Council v Torkington CA 31-Oct-2003
The proposed landlord had sealed the lease, but the tenant was to seal and deliver his part by a certain date. The respondent purported to complete the lease later.
Held: Under the 1985 Act completion would require writing, intention and . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.188672

Purbrick v Hackney London Borough Council: ChD 26 Jun 2003

The property fell into disrepair. The claimant began to use it for storage, carrying out some refurbishment. He now claimed to own the property by adverse possession.
Held: Littledale was not to be followed unless the facts were strictly on all fours. He had done all that was possible to occupy and retain possession of the premises. He was not required to demonstrate that he had intended to claim ownership of the building but only that he intended to exclude the world. That he had done. ‘ . . . it is to some extent implicit in the present law of adverse possession that an owner of property who makes no use of it whatever should be expected to keep an eye on the property to ensure that adverse possession rights are not being clocked up. A period of 12 years is a long period during which to neglect a property completely.’

Judges:

Mr Justice Neuberger

Citations:

Gazette 10-Jul-2003, [2004] 1 P and CR 553

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedLittledale v Liverpool College CA 1900
The mere storage of items in a property was insufficient to demonstrate the necessary intention to dispossess the rightful owner. It was a mere exercise of the rights under an easement. Enclosure of land is not necessarily decisive. Lord Lindley MR . .

Cited by:

CitedTopplan Estates Ltd v David Townley CA 27-Oct-2004
The registered proprietor of land appealed a finding that the defendant had established adverse possession of their land. The claimant had occupied it as part of his farm. Originally there had been a grazing tenancy. The tenancy was terminated, and . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land, Limitation

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.184716

Flureau v Thornhill: 1746

A person who contracts to purchase land, but where the title is, without collusion, defective cannot claim for his loss of bargain. ‘These contracts are merely upon condition, frequently expressed, but always implied, that the vendor has good title. If he has not, the return of the deposit with interest and costs, is all that can be expected.’ ‘Upon a contract for a purchase, if the title proves bad, and the vendor is, without fraud, incapable of making a good one, I do not think the pourchaser can be entitled to any damages for the fancied goodness of the bargain, which he supposes he has lost.’

Judges:

Blackstone J, De Grey CJ

Citations:

(1776) 2 Wm Bl 1078, 96 ER 635, [1746] EngR 175, (1746-1779) 2 Black W 1078, (1746) 96 ER 635

Links:

Commonlii

Cited by:

ApprovedBain v Fothergill HL 1874
The defendants intended to sell to the plaintiffs their leasehold interests in mining royalties, but were under a covenant not to sell without the consent of the lessors. A condition of the sale provided for ‘ the usual covenant for our protection . .
CitedHollier v Rambler Motors (AMC) Ltd CA 19-Nov-1971
The plaintiff left his car with the defendant garage for repair. Whilst there it was substantially damaged by fire. The defendant sought to rely upon their terms which would negative liability, saying that the terms had been incorporated by . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land, Contract, Damages

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.183267

Central Electricity Generating Board v Clwyd County Council: 1976

The owner of a farm applied late for the registration of a right of common over the Dee Marsh Saltings which had been provisionally registered as common land. After an inquiry the Commons Commissioner, Hugh Francis QC, confirmed the registration of the land as common land. He took the view, after hearing the evidence as to grazing and other uses, that the land was subject to rights of common within the meaning of the definition in section 22, although none had been registered at the date of the provisional registration of the land as common land, and none were exercisable at the date of the hearing.
Held: The registration was overruled. Any rights of common which might have existed when the provisional registration was made had not been extinguished for want of registration. Goff J. held that an existing right of common was extinguished if not registered by the prescribed date.

Judges:

Goff J

Citations:

[1976] 1 All ER 251, [1976] 1 WLR 151

Statutes:

Commons Registration Act 1965

Cited by:

CitedG and K Ladenbau (UK) Ltd v Crawley and De Reya QBD 25-Apr-1977
The defendant solicitors acted for the plaintiff in the purchase of land, but failed to undertake a commons search which would have revealed an entry which would prevent the client pursuing his development. The defect was discovered only when . .
CitedLittlejohns, Regina (on The Application of) v Devon County Council and Another Admn 24-Mar-2015
The claimants sought judicial review of the refusal by the defendants to register rights of common in certain lands under the 2006 Act. The defendants said that the rights asserted did not fall within the scope of transitional provisions in the 2006 . .
CitedLittlejohns and Another v Devon County Council and Another CA 6-May-2016
Appeal against rejection of request for registration of land as a common: ‘At the heart of the appeal lies the question of law whether it is possible to acquire a right of common by virtue of an express grant or (as in the present case) user after 2 . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.183169

Sudbrook Trading Estate Ltd v Eggleton: HL 1982

The grantors of an option, which contained a machinery for fixing the price, had refused to appoint a valuer and that made it impossible for the contractual machinery for the valuation of the option price to work. The House of Lords held that the machinery for fixing the price was merely a subsidiary part of the agreement, and that the fact that the grantors refused to operate the machinery did not render the agreement unenforceable on the grounds that no price was fixed. The court could substitute a valuation made by the court following an inquiry. Authorities going back over many years could be overruled by the House. (Lord Fraser) ‘Accordingly when the option was exercised there was constituted a complete contract for sale, and the clause should be construed as meaning that the price was to be a fair price. On the other hand where an agreement is made to sell at a price to be fixed by a valuer who is named, or who, by reason of holding some office such as an auditor of a company whose shares are to be valued, will have special knowledge relevant to the question of value, the prescribed mode may well be regarded as essential. Where, as here, the machinery consists of valuers and an umpire, none of whom is named or identified, it is in my opinion unrealistic to regard it as an essential term. If it breaks down there is no reason why the Court should not substitute other machinery to carry out the main purpose of ascertaining the price in order that the agreement may be carried out.’

Judges:

Lord Diplock, Lord Fraser

Citations:

[1983] 1 AC 444, [1982] 3 All ER 1, [1982] 3 WLR 315, 1982] ANZ Conv R 541

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

DistinguishedMerer v Fisher and Another CA 13-May-2003
A right of pre-emption had misdescribed the property when it was registered. The land was transferred without regard to the right of pre-emption. It was found as a fact that no money passed for the transfer, and the claimants said the unregistered . .
CitedMannai Investment Co Ltd v Eagle Star Assurance HL 21-May-1997
Minor Irregularity in Break Notice Not Fatal
Leases contained clauses allowing the tenant to break the lease by serving not less than six months notice to expire on the third anniversary of the commencement date of the term of the lease. The tenant gave notice to determine the leases on 12th . .
CitedPortsmouth City Football Club v Sellar Properties (Portsmouth) Limited, Singer and Friedlander Properties Plc ChD 17-Sep-2003
Various contracts were entered into for the sale of land, with compensation being paid in certain circumstances. One contract required a calculation of consideration as a set figure less a sum to be calculated as the cost of acquiring land. The sum . .
AppliedDidymi Corporation v Atlantic Lines and Navigation Co Inc ‘The Didymi’ CA 1988
A contract contained a clause covering the rate of hire of a 5 year time charter: ’30(1) The … speed and fuel consumption of the vessel as stipulated in this charter-party are representations by the owners. Should the actual performance of the . .
AppliedRoyal Bank of Scotland v Jennings, Pezaro and Circuitpoint (Brewery Road) Limited CA 24-Oct-1996
The reddendum in the lease provided for a rent review: ‘there will be a rent review for each of the review periods’. The express machinery for such review could only be initiated by the landlord, but in refusing to initiate a review the landlord was . .
CitedIrwin v Wilson and Others ChD 23-Feb-2011
The claimant sought a declaration that his contract for the sale of leasehold property to the defendants had been lawfully terminated by a letter from his solicitors. The defendants had moved in before completion, but the claimant found himself . .
CitedB J Aviation Ltd v Pool Aviation Ltd CA 18-Jan-2002
The parties disputed the effect of a clause in an option agreement, and as to whether it contained an agreement to negotiate and was therefore not binding.
Held: Chadwick LJ said: ‘First, each case must be decided on its own facts and on the . .
MentionedMRI Trading Ag v Erdenet Mining Corporation Llc CA 8-Mar-2013
The Commercial Court had found the result of an arbitration award ‘obviously wrong’, and ineed bizarre.
Held: The appeal failed. The award was flawed, in failing to take account of the trading context between the parties: ‘The overall . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land, Contract

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.183373

Re Christchurch Inclosure Act: 1888

Citations:

(1888) 38 Ch D 520

Cited by:

CitedHitchin Cow Commoners Trust, Re ChD 5-Dec-2001
Land was registered as a common. Rights had been created over the land under the 1882 Act after the Inclosure Acts. Were these rights in the nature of charitable trusts? No use of the land as a cow common had taken place with living memory, and most . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.182779

Davey v Harrow Corporation: CA 1957

The Plaintiff’s house was damaged by roots penetrating from trees on adjoining land. At first instance, Sellers J found that the damage was caused by the trees, but they were not proven to be the property of the defendants. On appeal and after further evidence it was found that the trees had been growing for some time on the defendants land.
Held: The defendants were liable in nuisance for damage caused by encroaching roots whether self sown or planted. Where a boundary hedge is delineated on an Ordnance Survey map by a line, the line indicates the centre of the existing hedge. This accords with the practice of the OS and courts can take notice of that practice as prima facie evidence of what a line on a map indicates. ‘After that Fisher -v- Winch and this, courts in future can take notice of this practice of the Ordnance Survey (that the boundary line on the map indicated the centre of the existing hedge) as at least prima facie evidence of what a line on the map indicates.’ As to damage by roots: ‘once it is established that encroachment by roots is a nuisance, it must follow that if damage is thereby caused, an action on the case will lie.’

Judges:

Lord Goddard CJ

Citations:

[1957] 2 WLR 941, [1957] 2 All ER 305, [1958] 1 QB 60

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

AppliedFisher v Winch CA 1939
The land of both parties had been in common ownership. The first plot to be conveyed was sold by a conveyance which set out by reference to the numbers on an Ordnance map the different parcels with their description and acreage. The second . .
AppliedLemmon v Webb HL 27-Nov-1894
A land-owner was free to lop off boughs from his neighbours trees to the extent that they reached over his land, and he could lop them without going on to the neighbour’s land. He was not required to give notice of his intention to do so. . .
QuestionedGiles v Walker 1890
. .
ExplainedJames Dressel v Partnership Housing Ltd EAT 19-Mar-2003
EAT The appellant challenged the decision of the tribunal in that the chairman had sat alone despite the existence of a condition under s5 requiring him to consider acting with a panel.
Held: The chairman . .

Cited by:

CitedAlan Wibberley Building Ltd v Insley CA 12-Nov-1997
Where adjoining fields are separated by a hedge and a ditch, who owns the ditch?
Held: The old presumption as to the location of a boundary based on the layout of hedges and ditches is irrelevant where the conveyance was by reference to an OS . .
CitedLeakey v The National Trust for Places of Historic Interest or Natural Beauty CA 31-Jul-1979
Natural causes were responsible for soil collapsing onto neighbouring houses in Bridgwater.
Held: An occupier of land owes a general duty of care to a neighbouring occupier in relation to a hazard occurring on his land, whether such hazard is . .
CitedNetwork Rail Infrastructure Ltd v Williams and Another CA 3-Jul-2018
Japanese Knotweed escape is nuisance
The defendant appealed against an order as to its liability in private nuisance for the escape of Japanese Knotweed from its land onto the land of the claimant neighbours. No physical damage to properties had yet been shown, but the reduction in . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Nuisance, Land

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.183042

Davis v Whitby: CA 1974

The court discussed the need for some system of acquisition of right by user.
Lord Denning MR said: ‘the long user as of right should by our law be given a lawful origin if that can be done.’
Stamp LJ said: ‘if long enjoyment of a right is shown, the court will strive to uphold the right by presuming that it had a lawful origin.’

Judges:

Lord Denning MR, Stamp LJ

Citations:

[1974] 1 Ch 186

Statutes:

Law of Property Act 1925 40

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedRoland Brandwood and others v Bakewell Management Ltd CA 30-Jan-2003
House owners had used vehicular access across a common to get to their houses for many years. The commons owner required them to purchase the right, and they replied that they had acquired the right by lost modern grant and/or by prescription.
CitedBakewell Management Limited v Brandwood and others HL 1-Apr-2004
Houses were built next to a common. Over many years the owners had driven over the common. The landowners appealed a decision that they could not acquire a right of way by prescription over the common because such use had been unlawful as a criminal . .
CitedInglorest Investments Ltd v Robert Campbell and Another CA 2-Apr-2004
The appellants appealed an order that property be part of the estate of the deceased. There had been an agreement to assign the reversion of the lease to the claimant. That was not completed, but he later acquired the freehold reversion. No written . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land, Limitation

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.179839

Giovanni F Crisa Another v Highways Agency: LT 31 Dec 1998

LT COMPENSATION – compulsory acquisition of leasehold shop and premises – jurisdiction of Lands Tribunal where acquisition alleged to be unlawful – whether proof of loss – goods left on premises after entry – mitigation – loss of profits and goodwill – whether compensation can be awarded for loss of quality of life – compensation of andpound;66,675 awarded to Woodstock Engineering Ltd and andpound;1,000 to Mr Crisa.

Citations:

ACQ/132/1998

Land

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.168581

Howell v Hayward and Another: CA 18 Apr 2018

Renewed application for permission to appeal against an order made in the Central London County Court dismissing the greater part of a claim which relates to certain properties at Penarth in Wales.

Citations:

[2018] EWCA Civ 2967

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Land

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.633450

Bowring Services Ltd v Scottish Widows Fund and Life Assurance Society: 1995

Citations:

[1995] 1 EGLR 158

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedLynn Shellfish Ltd and Others v Loose and Another SC 13-Apr-2016
The court was asked as to the extent of an exclusive prescriptive right (ie an exclusive right obtained through a long period of use) to take cockles and mussels from a stretch of the foreshore on the east side of the Wash, on the west coast of . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.606895

Williams v Booth: 14 Apr 1910

High Court of Australia – Griffith CJ said: ‘I do not think that any case of accretion is made out. The law as stated by Blackstone (2 Bl Com, p 262), is that ‘if this gain be by little and little, by small and imperceptible degrees, it shall go to the owner of the land adjoining. For de minimis non curat lex. … But, if the alluvion or dereliction be sudden or considerable, in this case it belongs to the King; for, as the King is Lord of the sea, and so owner of the soil while it is covered with water, it is but reasonable he should have the soil, when the water has left it dry.’ The word ‘imperceptible’ refers to the slowness of the additions to the soil. Assuming, then, that a moment has arrived at which the mouth of the lagoon became permanently closed, the suggested accretion is not an addition of an imperceptible quantity of soil to the plaintiff’s land, but of an area of many acres occurring at the moment of permanent closure, so that, according to the plaintiff’s contention, on one day the land belonged to the King as Lord of the sea and on the next to the plaintiff. This is a sudden and considerable alluvion or dereliction, and does not operate to confer a title by accretion.’

Judges:

Griffith C.J., Barton, O’Connor, Isaacs JJ

Citations:

[1910] HCA 12, (1910) 10 CLR 341

Links:

Austlii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedLynn Shellfish Ltd and Others v Loose and Another SC 13-Apr-2016
The court was asked as to the extent of an exclusive prescriptive right (ie an exclusive right obtained through a long period of use) to take cockles and mussels from a stretch of the foreshore on the east side of the Wash, on the west coast of . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.606897

Aynsley v Glover: ChD 1875

An original use of land for agricultural purposes does not accommodate a use of a supporting right of way to support use of dominant land for a caravan park or camping site. Such would be an unjustifiable increase in the burden.
Where the court is asked to infer an immemorial user from evidence going back as far as living memory can run, the court can act on evidence of user whether it is continuous or discontinuous.

Judges:

Harman J

Citations:

(1875) 10 Ch App 1023

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedLynn Shellfish Ltd and Others v Loose and Another SC 13-Apr-2016
The court was asked as to the extent of an exclusive prescriptive right (ie an exclusive right obtained through a long period of use) to take cockles and mussels from a stretch of the foreshore on the east side of the Wash, on the west coast of . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.606893

Baxendale v Instow Parish Council: ChD 1982

Sir Robert Megarry V-C said: ‘Another instance of movable freeholds, and one that is very much in print in this case, may arise on a grant of foreshore; for such a grant may convey an estate in the foreshore in whatever position it is from time to time. If the sea imperceptibly recedes, the foreshore recedes with it, the foreshore that has been granted moves inland. This has to be considered in relation to the law of accretion and diluvion. Apart from any grant of the foreshore, if there is dituvion the movement of the foreshore appears to divest the frontager of some of his land; for what was dry land becomes part of the new foreshore, and so belongs to the owner of the foreshore, usually the Crown: see In re Hall and Selby Railway (1839) SM and W 327, 333; [1839] EngR 133; 151 ER 139, 141.’ and ‘one would expect sea-grounds, oyster-layings, shores and fisheries to follow the sea as it advances or retreats.’

Judges:

Sir Robert Megarry V-C

Citations:

[1982] Ch 14

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedLynn Shellfish Ltd and Others v Loose and Another SC 13-Apr-2016
The court was asked as to the extent of an exclusive prescriptive right (ie an exclusive right obtained through a long period of use) to take cockles and mussels from a stretch of the foreshore on the east side of the Wash, on the west coast of . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.606896

Le Strange v Lynn Corporation: QBD 1868

(Extensive newspaper Report) (i) the Estate claimed its exclusive Right extended over Stubborn Sand but not over Ferrier Sand or other unconnected sandbanks, (ii) the decision effectively established the northern and southern boundaries of the Area the subject of the Right, and (iii) the proceedings illustrate how the Estate has taken steps to protect the Right over the Area.

Judges:

Lord Coleridge CJ

Citations:

Unreported 1885

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedLynn Shellfish Ltd and Others v Loose and Another SC 13-Apr-2016
The court was asked as to the extent of an exclusive prescriptive right (ie an exclusive right obtained through a long period of use) to take cockles and mussels from a stretch of the foreshore on the east side of the Wash, on the west coast of . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.569892

Brinckman v Matley: 1904

Members of the public did not have the right to go on the foreshore for the purpose of bathing or getting access to the sea for bathing.

Judges:

Buckley J

Citations:

[1904] 2 Ch 313

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedBlundell v Catterall 7-Nov-1821
The defendant used a beach ‘between the high-water mark and the low-water mark of the River Mersey’ at Great Crosby in Lancashire for the purpose of providing bathing facilities (including bathing machines and carriages for members of the public who . .

Cited by:

CitedNewhaven Port and Properties Ltd, Regina (on The Application of) v East Sussex County Council and Another SC 25-Feb-2015
The court was asked: ‘whether East Sussex County Council . . was wrong in law to decide to register an area . . known as West Beach at Newhaven . . as a village green pursuant to the provisions of the Commons Act 2006. The points of principle raised . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.559503

Blount v Layard: 1981

Public use rights to navigate or (less commonly) to fish, where secured by statute or user, were not inconsistent with private ownership of the land beneath the water.
Bowen LJ said: ‘that nothing worse can happen in a free country than to force people to be churlish about their rights for fear that their indulgence may be abused, and to drive them to prevent the enjoyment of things which, although they are matters of private property, naturally give pleasure to many others besides the owners, under the fear that their good nature may be misunderstood.’

Judges:

Bowen LJ

Citations:

[1891] 2 Ch 681

Cited by:

CitedNewhaven Port and Properties Ltd, Regina (on The Application of) v East Sussex County Council and Another SC 25-Feb-2015
The court was asked: ‘whether East Sussex County Council . . was wrong in law to decide to register an area . . known as West Beach at Newhaven . . as a village green pursuant to the provisions of the Commons Act 2006. The points of principle raised . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.559513

Woolwich Equitable Building Society v Marshall: ChD 1952

Judges:

Danckwerts J

Citations:

[1952] Ch 1

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

Wrongly DecidedScott v Southern Pacific Mortgages Ltd and Others SC 22-Oct-2014
The appellant challenged a sale and rent back transaction. He said that the proposed purchaser had misrepresented the transaction to them. The Court was asked s whether the home owners had interests whose priority was protected by virtue of section . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.553539

Inland Revenue Commissioners v G Angus and Co: CA 1889

Lord Esher MR rejected an argument that a specifically enforceable contract or agreement for the sale of land is in truth a conveyance: ‘And it is said that, when an agreement is such that equity will grant specific performance of it, it is to be considered as a conveyance in equity, or an ‘equitable conveyance.’ If that were true, it would be an equitable conveyance of a legal property or a legal right. But let us consider what the doctrine of specific performance is. If the instrument is a ‘conveyance’ in itself, why do you want a decree for specific performance? If the instrument has conveyed the property to the purchaser, he does not require specific performance of an agreement with reference to his own property which has been already conveyed to him. The fact that the instrument is one of which equity will decree specific performance, fixes it at once as an ‘agreement,’ and not as a ‘conveyance.’ It would be a contradiction of terms to say that that which requires a decree for specific performance is in itself a ‘conveyance’ which has conveyed the property to the purchaser. If there has been a ‘conveyance’ of the property, you do not require specific performance. If property sold is conveyed by an instrument to the purchaser, and after that conveyance the vendor keeps it, the purchaser’s remedy would not be by way of specific performance, but, if the property be personal property, by an action of trover; or, if it be real property, by an action of ejectment. In my opinion, therefore, however clear it may be that an instrument is an agreement of which a Court of Equity would instantly decree specific performance, if it were not performed by the vendor, such an instrument is not a ‘conveyance on sale’ within the meaning of the Act, but is only an ‘agreement’.’

Judges:

Lindley LJ, Lord Esher MR

Citations:

(1889) 23 QBD 579

Statutes:

Stamp Act 1870 70

Citing:

CitedTasker v Small 3-Jun-1836
The words in a Settlement to raise Money by ‘Mortgage, Annuity or otherwise,’ authorises a Sale of a reversionary Estate.
Lord Cottenham LC said that the rule by which a purchaser becomes in equity the owner of the property sold ‘applies only . .

Cited by:

CitedScott v Southern Pacific Mortgages Ltd and Others SC 22-Oct-2014
The appellant challenged a sale and rent back transaction. He said that the proposed purchaser had misrepresented the transaction to them. The Court was asked s whether the home owners had interests whose priority was protected by virtue of section . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land, Contract, Stamp Duty

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.553538

In re White’s Charities; Charity Commissioners v Mayor of London: 1898

There is no distinction in law between a highway in the country and a street in a town. Where the grantor of a right of way owns the entire width of the land, the presumption applies to the entire width and not only ad medium filum.
Romer J said: ‘It is undesirable, in terms of public interest, to have odd pieces of land, whose ownership is largely academic in practice . . vested in persons who have no interest in any adjoining land, and who may well not even be aware that they own part of the highway. It is in the interest of the parties to a conveyance that the purchaser takes the adjoining highway land, essentially for the same reason. On that basis, if the adjoining owner happens to own more than half the width of the adjoining road, even all the adjoining road, it would seem logical that the presumption should lead to his being deemed to convey away the whole of his interest in the adjoining road.’

Judges:

Romer J

Citations:

[1898] 1 Ch 659

Cited by:

CitedPaton and Another v Todd ChD 11-May-2012
The claimants sought leave to appeal against rejection of their request made to the Deputy Adjudicator for the rectification of the title to land they claimed title to land which was registered to the respondent neighbour.
Held: The claimant’s . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.538893

Miller v Tipling: 1918

(Ontario Court of Appeal) Mulock CJ Ex said: ‘The law is well established that a right of way appurtenant to a particular close must not be used colourably for the real purpose of reaching a different adjoining close. This does not mean that where the way has been used in accordance with the term of the grant for the benefit of the land to which it is appurtenant, the party having thus used it must retrace his steps. Having lawfully reached the dominant tenement, he may proceed therefrom to adjoining premises to which the way is not appurtenant; but if his object is merely to pass over the dominant tenement in order to reach other premises that would be an unlawful user of the way’.

Judges:

Mulock CJ Ex

Citations:

(1918) 43 DLR 649

Jurisdiction:

Canada

Citing:

CitedHarris v Flower CA 1904
The servient land-owner alleged an excessive user by which it was attempted to impose an additional burden on the servient tenement in the use of a right of way for obtaining access to a factory erected partly on the land to which the right of way . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.523882

Case LXXII 36 H 6, 5: 1220

The King’s tenant by knight’s service in capite, gives his land to A, for life, the remainder to B. in tail ; he in remainder dies, his heir within age ; afterwards tenant for life dies ; this heir shall be in ward to the King, if the King will. This case is so abridged by Fitz. title (Gard, 57. Br. Abridging this case, title Gard., 4, cites the remainder to be in fee to B with which which. 37 H. 8, 26, agrees. See the statute of 34 E. 3, ch. 15, it seems to me, that thi: King shall not have the wardhip of this heir, for the reversioner is tenant to the King. The bishop of Durham, who has jure regalia, in such case could not have the forfeiture for treason of the land of such tenant in tail, for he was not his tenant: and the statute of Westm. 2, de donis, divides the estate tail from the reversion, and makes them two estates ; and binds the King : and before the said statute of Westm. 2, de donis, and the statute of Quia emptores terrarum, the King’s tenant might infeof another to hold from him, and so deprive the King of his antient tenant in demesne. And though the alienation was without licence, this was not material ; for, by the statute of 1 K. 3, ch. 12, this alienaition shall stand, and is only finable.

Citations:

[1220] EngR 453, (1220-1623) Jenk 88, (1220) 145 ER 63 (B)

Links:

Commonlii

Land

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.461365

Howe v Smith: CA 1884

A contract for the sale of land required the purchaser to pay andpound;500 ‘as a deposit and in part payment of the purchase money’, and that if the purchaser failed to complete on time the vendor should be free to resell and recover any deficiency in price as liquidated damages. The purchaser failed to complete and the vendor resold the property for the same price. The question for the Court of Appeal was whether the vendor was entitled to retain the andpound;500, having suffered no loss.
Held: The court considered the contract and, in particular, what was meant by the words ‘as a deposit and in part payment of the purchase money’. The contract meant that the payment was not to be merely a part payment but also a guarantee of performance, entitling the vendor to forfeit the payment if the purchaser failed to complete.
Bowen LJ said: ‘The question as to the right of the purchaser to the return of the deposit money must, in each case, be a question of the conditions of the contract. In principle it ought to be so, because of course persons may make exactly what bargain they please as to what is to be done with the money deposited. We have to look to the documents to see what bargain was made.’

Judges:

Bowen, Cotton, Fry LJJ

Citations:

(1884) LR 27 Ch D 89

Cited by:

CitedChillingworth v Esche CA 1923
The purchasers agreed in writing to purchase land ‘subject to a proper contract to be prepared by the vendors’ solicitors’ accepting andpound;240 ‘as deposit and in part payment of the said purchase money’. A contract was prepared by the vendor’s . .
CitedSharma and Another v Simposh Ltd CA 23-Nov-2011
The parties created an oral (and therefore void) contract for a development, the claimants paid a deposit, expressed to be non-refundable, and the defendant builders completed the building work. The buyers backed out. The developer now appealed . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract, Land

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.451288

CASE XLI 2 Cr 8, 302-3 Hob 6, Brock v Spencer: 1220

Trespass in Dale, the defendant pleads that the place alledged in the new assiginment is parcel of a manor or in parochia de Dale praedict. Upon not guilty pleaded, the visne shall be of Dale ; for the word preedict makes the vill and parish all one.
Judged in the Exchequer-chamber.

Citations:

[1220] EngR 236, (1220-1623) Jenk 294, (1220) 145 ER 214 (A)

Links:

Commonlii

Land, Torts – Other

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.461148

Goff v Gauthier: 1991

Citations:

[1991] 62 PandCR 388

Cited by:

CitedCleaver and Others v Schyde Investments Ltd CA 29-Jul-2011
The parties had contracted for the sale of land. The purchaser secured the rescinding of the contract for innocent misrepresentation. A notice of a relevant planning application had not been passed on by the seller’s solicitors. The seller appealed . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land, Contract

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.443308

In Re Alton Corporation: 1985

Sir Robert Megarry V-C, said in relation to a loan accompanied by the deposit of title deeds: ‘I have to remember that the basis of an equitable mortgage is the making of an agreement to create a mortgage, with the deposit of the land certificate and, since Steadman v. Steadman [1976] AC 536 . . probably the paying of the money as well, ranking as sufficient acts of part performance to support even the purely oral transaction. But some contract there must be.’

Judges:

Robert Megarry VC

Citations:

[1985] BCLC 27

Citing:

CitedSteadman v Steadman HL 1976
A mere payment of a sum of money might amount to an act of part performance, as might the act of a purchaser instructing solicitors to prepare and submit a draft conveyance or transfer, so as to leave asituation capable of enforcement in equity. . .

Cited by:

CitedUnited Bank of Kuwait Plc v Sahib and Others CA 2-Feb-1996
The bank appealed against a decision that the simple deposit of deeds with a bank did not take effect as an equitable charge.
Held: Depositing deeds with a bank is not sufficient to create a charge over them. The old law as to the creation of . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land, Equity

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.434816

City and Westminster Properties v Mudd: ChD 1958

Judges:

Harman J

Citations:

[1958] 2 All ER 733

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedHepworth v Pickles ChD 2-Nov-1899
The parties contracted for the sale and purchase of a shop which had been used continuously and openly with an off-licence for the sale of alcohol for twenty four years. After exchange, a restrictive covenant was revealed against the use of land as . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.425246

Banning v Wright (Inspector of Taxes): HL 1972

Lord Hailsham of St Marylebone LC pointed out that the word ‘waiver’ is derived from the same root as the word ‘waif’ – a thing, or person, abandoned. Lord Hailsham continued: ‘In my view, the primary meaning of the word ‘waiver’ in legal parlance is the abandonment of a right in such a way that the other party is entitled to plead the abandonment by way of confession and avoidance if the right is thereafter asserted.’

Judges:

Lord Hailsham of St Marylebone LC

Citations:

[1972] 2 All ER 987, [1972] 1 WLR 972

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedPrudential Plc and Another, Regina (on The Application of) v Special Commissioner of Income Tax and Others CA 13-Oct-2010
The court was asked whether advice given by an accountant could be protected against disclosure by legal professional privilege. The company had taken advice from its accountants, and objected to disclosure of that advice to the tax authorities . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.425247

BP Petroleum Developments Ltd v Ryder: 1987

Compensation was made on the basis of an increase in value from andpound;40 per annum per acre to andpound;45 for the rights over the additional land sought by the special purchaser, the increase being made ‘for him to be certain that he will acquire the rights he seeks’.

Citations:

[1987] 2 EGLR 233

Cited by:

CitedStar Energy Weald Basin Ltd and Another v Bocardo Sa SC 28-Jul-2010
The defendant had obtained a licence to extract oil from its land. In order to do so it had to drill out and deep under the Bocardo’s land. No damage at all was caused to B’s land at or near the surface. B claimed in trespass for damages. It now . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land, Damages

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.421491

Miller’s Wharf Partnership v Corinthia Column Ltd: 1991

The contract for a lease was conditional on several matters, with a provision that the sellers would use their best endeavours to satisfy the conditions. A notice to rescind was served. The conditions had been satisfied only after the de fixed, but before the rescission notice.
Held: A way to argue for the loss of the right of rescission was to qualify the right to ‘rescind at any time thereafter’ by making it one to ‘rescind at any time thereafter but before the condition is satisfied’. Knox J said this had not been argued on behalf of the plaintiff ‘and in my judgment entirely justifiably.’

Judges:

Knox J

Citations:

[1991] 1 EGLR 192

Cited by:

CitedMcGahon v Crest Nicholson Regeneration Ltd CA 21-Jul-2010
The claimants contracted to purchase an apartment ‘off-plan’. The contract was conditional on the grant of a head lease. Notice to complete was served by the developers did not disclose that the head lease had not been granted until after the date . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.420999

Grissell And Sir Christopher Hodsden’s Case: 1653

In the case it was agreed for law, that if two lords be tenants in common of a waste, and each of them hath a court, in which are divers by-lawes made, it ought to be presented by the homage, that such a one hath not any thing in the common ad exhaeredtionem domini, and not dominorum, notwithstanding that they are tenants in common.

Citations:

[1653] EngR 878, (1653) Godb 156, (1653) 78 ER 95 (C)

Links:

Commonlii

Land

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.413185

Pomfret v Ricroft (No 2): 1685

Citations:

[1685] EngR 2601, (1685) 2 Keb 505, (1685) 84 ER 317 (D)

Links:

Commonlii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

See AlsoPomfret v Ricroft 1669
A lease was granted with the use of a pump on land not demised. The lessee complained of the lack of repair of the pump.
Held: The lessee had a right to repair the pump, but the landlord did not have a duty to maintain it. Where land is . .
See AlsoPomfret v Ricroft (No 1) 1685
. .

Cited by:

See AlsoPomfret v Ricroft 1714
. .
See AlsoPomfret v Roycroft 1726
. .
See AlsoPomfret v Ricroft 1726
. .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.399376

Pomfret v Ricroft (No 1): 1685

Citations:

[1685] EngR 2602, (1685) 2 Keb 569, (1685) 84 ER 357 (D)

Links:

Commonlii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

See AlsoPomfret v Ricroft 1669
A lease was granted with the use of a pump on land not demised. The lessee complained of the lack of repair of the pump.
Held: The lessee had a right to repair the pump, but the landlord did not have a duty to maintain it. Where land is . .

Cited by:

See AlsoPomfret v Ricroft (No 2) 1685
. .
See AlsoPomfret v Ricroft 1714
. .
See AlsoPomfret v Roycroft 1726
. .
See AlsoPomfret v Ricroft 1726
. .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.399377

Rubinstein v Secretary of State for the Environment: 1987

Because of the conclusive nature of inclusion of a right of way on the definitive map as at the relevant date, Section 53(3)(c)(iii) could only involve consideration of evidence relating to matters after the relevant date, for example the physical destruction of the land over which the right of way was said to exist.

Judges:

Taylor J

Citations:

(1987) 57 PandCR 111

Cited by:

OverruledRegina v Secretary of State for the Environment ex parte Burrows and Simms CA 1990
The conclusive character of the definitive map and statement is not intended to preclude the duty of the local authority to modify them where proper. If evidence came to light to show that a mistake had been made in drawing up the definitive map, . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.392872

Pomfret v Ricroft: 1714

Citations:

[1714] EngR 506, (1714) 1 Sid 429, (1714) 82 ER 1198 (D)

Links:

Commonlii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

See AlsoPomfret v Ricroft 1669
A lease was granted with the use of a pump on land not demised. The lessee complained of the lack of repair of the pump.
Held: The lessee had a right to repair the pump, but the landlord did not have a duty to maintain it. Where land is . .
See AlsoPomfret v Ricroft (No 1) 1685
. .
See AlsoPomfret v Ricroft (No 2) 1685
. .

Cited by:

See AlsoPomfret v Roycroft 1726
. .
See AlsoPomfret v Ricroft 1726
. .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.391329

Pomfret v Ricroft: 1726

Citations:

[1726] EngR 652, (1726) 1 Vent 26, (1726) 86 ER 18 (F)

Links:

Commonlii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

See AlsoPomfret v Ricroft 1669
A lease was granted with the use of a pump on land not demised. The lessee complained of the lack of repair of the pump.
Held: The lessee had a right to repair the pump, but the landlord did not have a duty to maintain it. Where land is . .
See AlsoPomfret v Ricroft (No 1) 1685
. .
See AlsoPomfret v Ricroft (No 2) 1685
. .
See AlsoPomfret v Ricroft 1714
. .
CitedPomfret v Roycroft 1726
. .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.379232

Moses v Marsland: 1901

A ‘public building’ is a building which the public is invited to enter or to which it can demand admission.

Citations:

[1901] 1 QB 668

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedYarl’s Wood Immigration Ltd and Others v Bedfordshire Police Authority CA 23-Oct-2009
The claimant sought to recover the costs of damage to their centre following a riot, saying that under the 1886 Act, they were liable. It appealed against a ruling that they were unable to claim as a public authority, saying that the 1886 Act was . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.377517

Hurst v Picture Theatres Ltd: CA 1915

The plaintiff had paid to enter the cinema, but was asked to leave by the manager who said he had not paid. He was forcibly removed. The jury found as a fact that he had paid the entrance fee. The defendant argued that the plaintiff had only a revocable licence to enter the premises, and had no interest which would entitle him to stay after revocation of the licence.
Held: The Court of Appeal rejected this argument holding that in the circumstances the contract provided him with a licence plus a grant of an interest which was enforceable in equity and which after the judicature Acts clearly provided not withstanding the absence of a legal interest (created by deed).
Buckley LJ said: ‘We have listened in this case to a very ingenious and interesting argument from Mr. Mackinnon, but, if I may borrow the words of Lord Esher in Butler v. Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway (1888) 21 Q.B.D. 207, 211, it may have been quite right for the appellants’ counsel to suggest the point, but when considered it is contrary to good sense. I may add that I think it is not only contrary to good sense, but contrary also to good law as administered since the Judicature Act in this Court. The proposition Mr. McKinnon sets out to affirm is that if a man has paid for his seat at the opera, or the theatre, and has entered and taken his seat, and is behaving himself quite properly, it is competent to the proprietors of the theatre, merely because they choose so to do, to call him to withdraw before he has seen the performance for the enjoyment of which he has paid; that what he has obtained for his money is a mere revocable licence to come upon the land of the proprietor of the theatre, and that the proprietor may, simply because he chooses, say ‘I revoke your licence; go.’ If that proposition be true, it involves startling results.
Kennedy LJ has suggested one. Suppose that there be sitting in the stalls a man who is a constant patron of the opera or the thentre, to whom the management pay great deference, whether from his rank or his habit of attendance: he goes to the management and says, ‘I do not like the person sitting in front of me or next to me; ask him to go.’ It would be competent to the management to go to that person and say: ‘Please go; you cannot have your money back, go.’ Further, if the proposition is right, it follows that, having let the seat to A., the management may come to A. at the end of the first act or before and say, ‘I revoke your licence, go,’ and he has to go. The management may let the seat to B. for the rest of the performance, and at the end of the second act or sooner they may come to B. and say, ‘I revoke your licence, go.’ He will have to go, and they may let the seat a third time to C. Those consequences ensue from this proposition if it be well founded.
It was for that reason I said at the outset of my remarks that it seems to me, when the point comes to be considered, it is contrary to good sense. Next it is to my mind contrary also to good law. The proposition is based upon the well-known decision in Wood v. Leadbitter 13 M. and W. 838.
Let me at the outset say what Wood v. Leadbitter seems to me to have decided. It affirmed that a mere licence, whether or not it be under seal, by which I mean a, licence not coupled with an interest or a gra.nt whether it be under seal or not, is revocable. It affirmed also that if there be a licence coupled with an interest or coupled with a grant, it is not, or at any rate in general it is not, revocable. For those two propositions I read these two sentences from the case of Wood v. Leadbitter at p. 844: ‘A mere licence is revocable; but that which is called a licence is often something more than a licence; it often comprises or is connected with a grant, and then the party who has given it cannot in general revoke it, so as to defeat his grant, to which it was incident. It may further be observed, that a licence under seal (provided it be a mere licence) is as revocable as a licence by parol; and, on the other hand, a licence by parol, coupled with a grant, is as irrevocable as a licence by deed, provided only that the grant is of a nature capable of being made by parol.’
Those are propositions with which, as it seems to me, no one quarrels or can quarrel. Wood v. Leadbitter rested, I think, upon one of two grounds-I will indicate them both-but I think it was the second of those which I am going to mention. The first ground is that the man who bought his ticket for the race meeting not obtained any grant of the right to come during the currency of the meeting to see any particular spectacle from its commencement to its termination. If that were the ground, it would, I think, be erroneous. I conceive he had the right to see what was to be seen during the days covered by his ticket. But I do not think that was the ground on which the Court decided it. They decided it upon the ground, which will be found at p. 842 and onwards, that no incorporeal inheritance affecting land can be created or transferred otherwise than by deed, a proposition which was discussed with some elaboration in the course of the judgment.
What Alderson B. was saying there was: this man has got no deed; he has got nothing under seal; he has therefore not got a grant; he cannot in this Court be heard to say he is a grantee, and because he is not a grantee he is a mere licensee, and being a mere licensee (whether it is under seal or not under seal does not make any difference) the licence is revocable.
Let me for a moment discuss this present case upon the footing that Wood v Leadbitter stands as good law at this date. I am going to say presently that to my mind it does not, but suppose it does, stand as good law at this date. What is the grant in this case? The plaintiff in the present action paid his money to enjoy the sight of a particular spectacle. He was anxious to go into a picture theatre to see a series of views or pictures during I suppose, an hour or a couple of hours. That which was granted to him was the right to enjoy looking at a spectacle, to attend a performance from its beginning to its end. That which was called the licence, the right to go upon the premises, was only something granted to him for the purpose of enabling him to has e that which had been granted him, namely the right to see, he could not see the performance unless he went into the building His right to go into the building was something given to him in order to enable him to have the benefit of that which had been granted to him, namely, the right to hear the opera, or see the theatrical performance, or see the moving pictures as was the case here. So that here there was a licence coupled with a grant. If so, Wood v. Leadbitter does not stand in the way at all. A licence coupled with a grant is not revocable; Wood v. Leadbitter affirmed as much.
So far I have been treating it as if Wood v Leadbitter were law as now administered in every Court. Let us see how that matter stands. Wood v Leadbitter was a case decided in a Court of law before the Judicature Act; it was a case to be decided, therefore, simply upon the principles which are applicable in a Court of law as distinguished from a Court of Equity. What was the principle which would have been administered in a Court of Equity in the year 1845, the date of Wood v. Leadbitter, or subsequently. For that I look at the decision of Wood V.C. in Frogley v. Earl of Lovelace (1859) John. 333. Other cases have been cited to us; I select this one because it seems to me to be the most pertinent, and to state the proposition in the most plate manner. The facts in Frogley v. Earl of Lovelace were these: the defendant was lessor to the plaintiff of certain lands for twenty-one years; he had executed a lease to him, but preciously to the execution of the lease this was [the lessee] but was not under seal: ‘It is hereby agreed that [the lessee] shall have the exclusive right of sporting over, and killing the game upon, the lands included in the withinwritten lease, and also upon the lands adjacent thereto belonging to the said Earl’ (describing such adjacent lands) ‘during the continuance of the said term, if the said Ralph Frogley shall so long live; he undertaking to keep and leave a fair stock of game thereupon, and not to keep such an excessive quantity of hares and rabbits as to do damage to the said Earl or his under-tenants in the neighbourhood.’ On February 9, 1859, the lessor served the lessee with a notice that after that date he revoked, rescinded, and put an end to that agreement. The question was whether he could do so or not. The suit was brought in a Court of Equity for specific performance for the execution of a proper instrument under seal giving effect to the document which was not under seal. The plaintiff moved for an injunction as prayed by his bill, namely, an injunction to give effect to his rights until that deed had been executed, and that was the matter which came before the Vice Chancellor. At p. 339 the Vice-Chancellor says this: ‘ The memorandum is a mere writing not under seal and the case of Wood v. Leadbitter has decided that, in order to acquire a right such as that which is here claimed by the plaintiff an instrument under seal is necessary; and that, at law, an instrument purporting to grant such a right, though given for a valuable consideration, is revocable at all:- time, and without paying back the money. At law, therefore, the plaintiff has no remedy until the defendant shall have executed a deed containing a proper and legal grant of the exclusive right of sporting in accordance with the terms of the agreement.’ Finding, therefore, that the plaintiff’s interest was incapable of being supported at law upon the footing of Wood v. Leadbitter, he gave him relief in equity, and in so doing so, he says: ‘It appears to me that the plaintiff is clearly- entitled to an injunction in the interval until the defendant shall has-e executed proper legal grant of the right claimed bethe plaintiff.’ What could be plainer ? According to Wood v. Leadbitter the plaintiff would have been dismissed from a Court of Law; he would have had no case. He comes into a Court of Equity and he obtains relief in equity because he would have no remedy at law, and his remedy is given until he has been clothed with such rights under a proper instrument as that he has a remedy at law, and then he is left to his legal rights. I will read a few words from the judgment of Kay J. in McManus v Cooke 35 Ch. D. 681, Kays J. says: ‘Hewlins v Shippam 5 B. and C. 221, Wood v Leadbitter 13 M. and W. 838, and other authorities at common law were cited, and it was argued that the right claimed could only be granted by deed, and that therefore the licence was revocable; but this common law doctrine was not allowed to prevail in equity.” As I have shown in Frogley v. Earl of Lovelace John. p.333 it was not allowed to prevail in equity.
The position of matters now is that the Court is bound under the Judicature Act to give effect to equitable doctrines. The question we have to consider is having regard to equitable considerations, Wood v Leadbitter is now law, meaning that Wood v Leadbitter is a decision which can be applied in its integrity in a Court which is bound to give effect to equitable considerations. In my opinion, it is not. Cozens Hardy J, as he then was, the present Master of the Rolls, in the case of Lowe v Adams [1901] 2 Ch 598, at p. 600, said this: ‘Whether Wood v. Leadbitter is still good Iaw having regard to Walsh v. Lonsdale’ 21 Ch. D. 9 -which is a decision of the Court of Appeal-‘is very doubtful.’ The present Lord Parker, then Parker J., in the case of Jones v. Earl of Tankerville [1909] 2 Ch 440, at p. 443 says this: ‘An injunction restraining the revocation of the licence, when it is revocable at law, may in a sense be called relief by way of specific performance, but it is not specific performance in the sense of compelling the vendor to do anything. It merely prevents him from breaking his contract, and protects a right in equity which but for the absence of a seal would be a right at law, and since the Judicature Act it may well be doubted whether the absence of a seal in such a case can be relied on in any Court.’ What was relied on in Wood v. Leadbitter, and rightly relied on at that date, was that there was not an instrument under seal, and therefore there was not a grant, and therefore the licensee could not say that he was not a mere licensee, but a licensee with a grant. That is now swept away. It cannot be said as against the plaintiff that he is a licensee with no grant merely because there is not an instrument under seal which gives him a right at law.
There is another way in which the matter may be put. If there be a licence with an agreement not to revoke the licence, that, if given for value, is an enforceable right. If the facts here are, as I think they are, that the licence was a licence to enter the building and see the spectacle from its commencement until its termination, then there was included in that contract a contract not to revoke the licence until the play had run to its termination. It was then a breach of contract to revoke the obligation not to revoke the licence, and for that the decision in Kerrison v. Smith [1897] 2 QB 445 is an authority. So far I have dealt with the law.
‘I will say a few words as to what were the facts in this case. The plaintiff entered this picture theatre and paid 6d. for his admission. The defendants denied that he had paid, and that was the question for the jury in the case. The jury have given the plaintiff a verdict; they have found that he did pay his 6d., and that fact is not now in contest before us. Alleging that the plaintiff had not paid, the attendant at the theatre, and then the manager, called upon him to go out of the theatre, treating him as a fraudulent person, a person who had come in without payment. There was some conversation with, I think, one attendant and a second attendant, and then the manager came, and the manager called upon him to go out. A police constable was then called in, and in the presence of the audience the man was again called upon to come out. The police constable was asked to take him out, but declined and said the doorkeeper could take him out if he were so minded. Thereupon the doorkeeper laid hands upon him to remove him by force, and the plaintiff, as a reasonable man, yielded at once to the man and went out. There was in law an assault, and an assault of a grievous kind. He was exposed to indignity, and it is for that indignity, I suppose, that the jury have given him a verdict for 150l.’
‘The defendants had for value contracted that the plaintiff should see a certain spectacle from its commencement to its termination. They broke that contract and it was a tort on their part to remove him. They committed an assault upon him in law. It was not of a violent kind, because, like a wise man, the plaintiff gave way to superior force and left the theatre. They sought to justify the assault- by saying, that they were entitled to remove him because he had not paid. He had paid, the jury have so found. Failing on that question of fact, they say: that they were entitled to remove him because his licence was revocable. In my opinion it was not. There was, I think, no justification for the assault here committed. Under the circumstances it was for the jury to give him such a sum as was right for the assault which was committed upon him, and for the serious indignity to a gentleman of being seized and treated in this way in a place of public resort. The jury have found that he was originally in the theatre as a spectator, that the assault was committed upon him, and that it was a wrongful act.
I think that the appeal which has been brought before us, and which is founded simply upon the question of law which I have discussed at the beginning of this judgment, fails and must be dismissed with costs.’
Kennedy LJ said: ‘I am of the same opinion. The facts as well as the law have been very fully dealt with, and I do not propose to add much. We have heard a very careful and interesting argument chiefly affecting the character of Wood v. Leadbitter. Personally, I am indifferent as to whether that case has or has not been subjected to some slight imputations upon its character. It was decision of a great Court, and I desire to treat it myself with the utmost respect, but I do not think it governs this case. The plaintiff was in this picture theatre and was assaulted and subjected to indignities which were entirely unjustifiable by those who handled him and compelled him to go out. What is his position? He says ‘I was there by right; I was occupying a sent for which I had paid in a place of public entertainment,’ he says that if you pay a certain price you must be entitled to the possession of the seat. The seat, I understand, is one which he may choose; it is not a reserve seat, but a seat which he entered. He did enter that seat, and they took him out again practically, in the eyes of the law, by force. Now the defendants have to justify that, and they justify it by saying that there is a point of law apart from the defence in fact which failed, namely that he was not there by right because he had not fulfilled the condition of payment. The defendants say through their counsel, ‘In point of law, even if you did pay, we had a right to turn you out, although you were behaving in the way in which those who go into places of public entertainment are bound (by implied contract at any rate) to behave.’ They say, ‘In law we are justified because all that you had was a revocable licence. When we use the words ‘revocable licence,’ ‘ say the defendants, ‘we mean that we can at will require you to leave this building, and you are bound to obey. Therefore, as we can legally require you to do so, you must go quietly, and if you do not go quietly we are right, using no more force than is necessary, in putting you out.’ For the reasons I ventured to refer to in the course of the argument by way of illustration (which have been still better illustrated by Buckley L.J. in his judgment) such an astounding conclusion is one which one would require as a matter of law, I think, and as a matter of common sense, to be strictly justified. The justification is hung entirely on the peg of the doctrine which is said to be the doctrine established by the considered decision of the Court of Exchequer in the year 1845. With regard to that decision, I am not going myself to say, and I should feel I was presumptuous in saying, that it was not at the time a perfectly good decision. It has been quoted frequently with respect, and I am not going to say a word in dimiution of that respect. But what was the decision ? It is stated, and I think with perfect correctness, at the bottom of p. 838: ‘A right to come and remain for acertain time on the land of another can be granted only by- deed; and a parole licence to do so, though money be paid for it is revocable at any time, and without paying back the money.’
‘Now I hold that this case, as Buckley LJ has intimated, the contract would not be correctly expressed by saying that it was a right to come and remain for a certain time on the land of another. In this case I think there was, if you were to put the contract into terms, a contract that there should be an irrevocable right to remain until the conclusion of the performance. I do not lay stress upon that point, and for this reason, that in the case of Wood v. Leadbitter, the plaintiff, who ho was in a particular part of the racecourse, might have said that he had the same sort of contract, but he did not say it, and therefore I will leave the matter alone. What was decided by the case was that the grant, to be effectual and irrevocable, must be a grant valid in law, and such a grant could only he made by deed. Passages have already been quoted from that judgment, and I am not going to take up time by quoting them again, but I think that it is important to remember that at the very commencement of the judgment of Alderson B. he points out that the question arose upon the plea and its replication, and the replication, he points out, is that: ‘At the time of such removal, the plaintiff was in the said close by the leave and licence of Lord Eglintoun.’ It was not there suggested by the plaintiff, ‘My right to remain is not merely by leave and licence of Lord Eglintoun; I have an implied contract that I should be there and that contract is not subject to revocation.’ Therefore, as I say, one must deal with that case upon the pleading, and upon that pleading the judgment of the Court cannot be put more specifically or more correctly than in the passage I have quoted from the headnote. There must be a grant by deed; if you show only a parol licence, you have no case. There are several passages which show that. When the learned Alderson B. is commenting on the case, from the decision in which the Court differed, of Talyer v. Waters (1817) 7 Taunt. 374, he says at p. 854: ‘It was taken for granted that, if the statute of Frauds did not apply, a parol licence was sufficient, and the necessity of an instrument under seal, by reason of the interest in question being a right in nature of an easement, was by some inadvertence kept entirely out of sight.’ There is language used in the passage on p. 845 which has been already cited by Buckley L.J. to the same effect, and which states this in one sentence: ‘But where there is a licence by parol, coupled with a parol grant, or pretended grant, of something which is incapable of being granted otherwise than by deed, there the licence is a mere licence; it is not an incident to a valid grant, and it is therefore revocable.’ Does that apply now? Since the Judicature Act there is no doubt we have to apply the principles of equity, and according to those principles there was in this case that which was not granted by a deed, and which need not be granted by deed, and therefore there was that which is valid now in equity as a good title upon which this gentleman, the plaintiff, being in possession of a seat, had a right to stay and say ‘It is no use your saying to me I am obliged to go because I have not got in the language of Wood v. Leadbitter (l) a grant by deed; this is an interest which, whether you call it an easement or not, is an interest which I can now acquire in equity by parol, and I have that interest.’
‘The passage which has been quoted from Parker J.’s judgment in Jones v. Earl of Tankerville states that which I believe to be right, namely, that an injunction restraining the revocation of the licence, when it is revocable at law, may in a sense be called relief by way of specific performance, but it is not specific performance in the sense of compelling the Vendor to do anything. It merely prevents him from breaking his contract, and protects a right in equity which, but for the absence of a seal, would be a right at law. There is also the judgment of Kay .J. in McManus v. Cooke 35 Ch. at p. 697. The learned judge sets out number of propositions established by the authorities in regard to these questions, and amongst other things he says that the equity applies ‘wherever the defendant has obtained and is in possession of some substantial advantage under a parol agreement which, if in writing, should be such as the Court would direct to be specifically performed. The doctrine applies to a parol agreement for an easement, though no interest in land is intended to be acquired.’
‘I have come to the conclusion, therefore, putting,’ aside altogether the question what the contract was in this case, that in fact to treat it upon the basis of Wood v. Leadbitter, being good law is wrong because of more modern legislation. It is no longer good law to do such act as the defendants have done here.
I think I ought to add that that which we are now asserting in this Court has been recognised in the passage to which I referred in the course of the argument from Sir Frederick Pollock’s work upon Torts. He points out carefully at p. 390, referring to Wood v. Leadbitter and Tayler v Waters, which was there overruled, that even in such a case, where there had been part performance, specific performance is sometimes decreed, and equitable rights are now enforced by all the Courts. (See also Roscoe’s Nisi Prius, vol. ii., p. 930.) It seems to me that there was here a good equitable right which rendered the act of the defendants in the present case bad in law.’

Judges:

Buckley LJ, Kennedy LJ, Phillimore LJ

Citations:

[1915] 1 KB 1

Citing:

CitedWood v Leadbitter ExcC 22-Feb-1845
The plaintiff complained of being assaulted. He had been on Doncaster Race Course with a ticket. The owner’s servant requested him to leave, and when he refused gently laid his hands on the plaintiff to remove him. The plaintiff said that his . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract, Equity, Land

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.377908

St John v Bishop of Winton: 1774

One possessed of three species of estates in the county of H. viz. one by articles wholly executory, another executory in part and a third (being an advowson) completely executed by a recent conveyance, devises to his wife as follows: ‘All the manors, messuages, advowsons and hereditaments in the county of H, for the purchase whereof I have already contracted and agreed, or in lieu thereof, the money arising by the sale of my real estate in the county of L. ;’ (with directions for completing the contracts). The advowson, the purchase of which was completely executed before the making of the will, shall pass.

Citations:

[1774] EngR 31, (1774) 1 Cowp 94, (1774) 98 ER 985

Links:

Commonlii

Wills and Probate, Land

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.373887

Jones v Randall: 7 Feb 1774

In an action upon a wager, whether a decree of the Court of Chancery would be reversed on appeal to the House of Lords, proof of the decree arid reversal is sufficient without shewing the previous proceedings below. – A copy of the judgment of reversal is admissible, and need not be stamped.

Citations:

[1774] EngR 42, (1774) 1 Cowp 17, (1774) 98 ER 944 (A)

Links:

Commonlii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

See AlsoJones v Randall HL 23-Apr-1774
Gaming – Declaration that there was a promissory note on a wager given to the piaintiff by defendant in case of a decree in the Court of Chancery should be reversed in the House of Lords, to which decree the person who had laid upon the reversal was . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land, Litigation Practice

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.373898

Knight v Halsey: 1800

Hops are, by law, titheable after they are picked from the bind. And no usage can vary this rule. No evidence is sufficient to support a real composition, unless it have some reference to a deed of composition.

Citations:

[1800] EngR 5, (1800) 2 Bos and Pul 172, (1800) 126 ER 1221

Links:

Commonlii

Land, Taxes – Other

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.345781

Cattle v The Stockton Waterworks: 1875

The owner of land had contracted with the plaintiff for him to build a tunnel under a road, along which there was a defective water pipe. The pipe leaked, and when the contractor started to dig, the water that had accumulated under the road flowed out, obstructing the works. This either reduced the contractor’s profit or caused him to make a loss, and he claimed in Rylands v Fletcher.
Held: The contractor had no title to claim.
Blackburn J said: ‘In the present case the objection is technical and against the merits, and we should be glad to avoid giving it effect. But if we did so, we should establish an authority for saying that, in such a case as that of Fletcher v. Rylands . . the defendant would be liable, not only to an action by the owner of the drowned mine, and by such of his workmen as had their tools or clothes destroyed, but also to an action by every workman and person employed in the mine, who in consequence of its stoppage made less wages than he would otherwise have done. And many similar cases to which this would apply might be suggested. It may be said that it is just that all such persons should have compensation for such a loss, and that, if the law does not give them redress, it is imperfect. Perhaps it may be so. But, as was pointed out by Coleridge, J., in Lumley v. Gye . . Courts of justice should not ‘allow themselves, in the pursuit of perfectly complete remedies for all wrongful acts, to transgress the bounds, which our law, in a wise consciousness as I conceive of its limited powers, has imposed on itself, of redressing only the proximate and direct consequences of wrongful acts.’ In this we quite agree.’

Judges:

Blackburn J

Citations:

(1875) LR 10 QB 453

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedD Pride and Partners (A Firm) and Others v Institute for Animal Health and Others QBD 31-Mar-2009
The claimants sought damages after the loss of business when the defendants’ premises were the source of an outbreak of foot and mouth disease. The organism had escaped from their premises via a broken drain.
Held: Much of the damage claimed . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land, Torts – Other

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.331089

The Marquis of Stafford v Coyney: 1827

Where a land-owner suffered the public to use, for several years, a road through his estate for all purposes, except that of carrying coals : Held, that this was either a limited dedication of the road to the public or no dedication at all, but only a licence revocable ; and that a person carrying coals along the road after notice not to do so, was a trespasser. Semble, that there may be a Iimited dedication of a highway to the public.

Citations:

[1827] EngR 201, (1827) 7 B and C 257, (1827) 108 ER 719

Links:

Commonlii

Cited by:

CitedBrand and Another v Philip Lund (Consultants) Ltd ChD 18-Jul-1989
The plaintiffs objected to the transport of wood from the defendant’s neighbouring land by lorry along an accessway to the plaintiff’s land. They said the defendants had no right of vehicular access. The defendants asserted a public vehicular . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.323955

Russell v Shenton: 1842

The cleansing and repairing of drains and sewers is prima facie the duty of him who occupies the premises, and does not devolve upon the owner, merely as such. Therefore a declaration in case fur omitting to cleanse and repair drains and sewers, whereby the plaintiffs adjacent premises suffered damage, is bad on general demurrer if it charge the defendant as the ‘owner and proprietor” of such drains and sewers, unless it also allege some ground of liability. The words ‘owner and proprietor’ do not necessarily import that the party is occupier.

Citations:

[1842] EngR 72, (1842) 3 QB 449, (1842) 114 ER 579

Links:

Commonlii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Land, Utilities

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.307027

The Queen v The Inhabitants Of Sandon: 21 Apr 1854

An indictmerit preferred at the Assizes, for non-repair of a highway, by order of justices under stat. 5 and 6 W. 4, c. 60, s. 95, is removeable by certiorari at the instance of the defendants.

Citations:

[1854] EngR 408, (1854) 3 El and Bl 547, (1854) 118 ER 1247

Links:

Commonlii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Land, Local Government

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.293265

The Board of Works for The Poplar District v Nicholas Knight And Henry Weitzell: 26 May 1858

A wall had been erected from time immemorial on land adjacent to a tidal river; and it kept out from such land the river at high water, the land being drained into the river by drains at a considerable distance from the wall.

Citations:

[1858] EngR 724, (1858) El Bl and El 408, (1858) 120 ER 561

Links:

Commonlii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Local Government, Land

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.289195

Allen v England: 1862

The court considered a claim for land by adverse possession against the owner on paper. Erle CJ said: ‘It may be taken that the plaintiff had the beneficial occupation for more than twenty years, and if that will give him a title, I will give him leave to move. But, in my judgment, every time Cox put his foot on the land it was so far in his possession that the statute would begin to run from the time when he was last upon it.’

Judges:

Erle CJ

Citations:

[1862] EngR 1, (1862) 3 F and F 49, (1862) 176 ER 22

Links:

Commonlii

Cited by:

CitedZarb and Another v Parry and Another CA 15-Nov-2011
The parties disputed the position of the boundary between their neighbouring properties. The appellant Z had succeeded in establishing that the the boundary was as they decribed on paper, but the respondents had succeeded in their claim for adverse . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land, Limitation

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.286167

Smith v Andrews: 1891

Citations:

[1891] 2 Ch 678

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

FootnoteBlount v Layard CA 1888
The court said how unfortunate it would be if the owner of an exclusive fishery were forced to insist on his rights by reason of a fear that tolerated fishing by members of the public might crystallise into a public right of fishing, which it would . .

Cited by:

CitedBarton v The Church Commissioners for England ChD 15-Dec-2008
The commissioners claimed a right by prescription to all fish to be taken in a stretch of the River Wye. The claimant was to moor a barge on the river.
Held: The court explained the nature and legal status of fisheries in the law going back to . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.279924

Le Strange v Rowe: 1866

The court considered a claim for the right to take mussels from the foreshore.
Held: Erle CJ directed the jury that ‘there is evidence of what to my mind was a very strong act of ownership in respect to the taking of mussels’.

Citations:

[1866] EngR 10 (B), (1866) 4 F and F 1048

Links:

Commonlii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedLynn Shellfish Ltd and Others v Loose and Another SC 13-Apr-2016
The court was asked as to the extent of an exclusive prescriptive right (ie an exclusive right obtained through a long period of use) to take cockles and mussels from a stretch of the foreshore on the east side of the Wash, on the west coast of . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.280721

Staffordshire and Worcestershire Canal Navigation v Bradley: 1912

Citations:

[1912] 1 Ch 91

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedBarton v The Church Commissioners for England ChD 15-Dec-2008
The commissioners claimed a right by prescription to all fish to be taken in a stretch of the River Wye. The claimant was to moor a barge on the river.
Held: The court explained the nature and legal status of fisheries in the law going back to . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.279925

Re Scott and Alvarez’s Contract No 2: CA 1895

Lindley LJ discussed the circumstances under which a deposit paid under a contract for the sale of land could be returned. Even where specific performance was refused to the vendor because the title was wholly defective, the purchaser might be left unable to rescind by the terms of the contract, and therefore unable in law to claim return of the deposit: ‘There is no question of discretion in such a case as that . . The legal answer is this: ‘There is no breach of contract at all; you have taken your chance with respect to your deposit; and unless you shew a breach by the vendor of his bargain, you are not entitled to have that deposit back.”

Judges:

Lindley LJ

Citations:

[1895] 2 Ch 603

Cited by:

CitedMIDILL (97Pl) Ltd v Park Lane Estates Ltd and Another CA 11-Nov-2008
Refusal to return Land Contract Deposit
The court was asked as to whether a seller could retain a deposit paid by the claimant on a sale where contracts had been exchanged but the buyer had proved unable to go ahead.
Held: The appeal against refusal of return of the deposit failed. . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land, Contract

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.279042

Johnson v Barnes: 1873

A corporation may prescribe to have an exclusive right of pasture.

Citations:

(1873) LR 8 CP 527

Cited by:

CitedBarton v The Church Commissioners for England ChD 15-Dec-2008
The commissioners claimed a right by prescription to all fish to be taken in a stretch of the River Wye. The claimant was to moor a barge on the river.
Held: The court explained the nature and legal status of fisheries in the law going back to . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.279918

Smith v Wallace: 1895

Romer J said that a vendor of land wanting to exercise the right of rescission given him by the relevant contract term must do so ‘fairly, and to determine promptly whether he [will] exercise the power or not. He [is] not entitled to take advantage of his position, and to leave the purchaser in ignorance whether the contract [is] to be treated as rescinded or not.’

Judges:

Romer J

Citations:

[1895] 1 Ch 385

Cited by:

CitedAlchemy Estates Ltd v Astor and Another ChD 5-Nov-2008
The parties disputed the effect of a contract between them for the sale of a leasehold property. After exchange the solicitors failed to obtain the landlord’s consent to the proposed assignment as required by the lease. In the meantime the proposed . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land, Contract

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.277561

Mellor v Spateman: 1669

A corporation may prescribe to have a common of pasture.

Citations:

(1669) 1 Saund 339

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedBarton v The Church Commissioners for England ChD 15-Dec-2008
The commissioners claimed a right by prescription to all fish to be taken in a stretch of the River Wye. The claimant was to moor a barge on the river.
Held: The court explained the nature and legal status of fisheries in the law going back to . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.279917

Lord Chesterfield v Harris: CA 27 Jun 1908

The court considered the acquisition of a profit a prendre of fishing, by prescription over a stretch of the River Wye.
Held: Lord Chesterfield’a appeal succeeded. To be valid, a profit appurtenant must, as I have said, be limited and that limit is assessed by the ‘needs of the estate’.
Buckley LJ considered that ‘At this point I emphasize again that the defendants make no claim in gross. It may well be that there can exist in law a right in gross to enter and take without limitation – without stint – the profits or proceeds of another’s land commercially for the purposes of sale. But prescription in a que estate, being a prescriptive right in respect of particular land to a profit a prendre in alieno solo, is, I think, necessarily measured by the size or nature or wants of the estate in respect of which the prescription is made. Thus if it be for common of pasture it must be for cattle levant and couchant; that is to say, it must be limited by the number of cattle capable of being supported during the winter upon the estate in respect of which the prescription is made.’ or ‘[prescription] must be for a profit a prendre measured by the nature, size and necessities of the estate’.
He rejected an argument that a ‘common of piscary’ stood in a different position to other rights of common, for example, the right to pasture which is referred to in the above quotation, the right to turbary and suchlike.

Judges:

Cozens-Hardy MR, Buckley LJ

Citations:

[1908] 2 Ch 397

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

At ChDLord Chesterfield v Harris ChD 18-Nov-1906
A claim was made to an unlimited right of fishing on the River Wye, said to be vested in the freehold tenants of the manor and to have been acquired by prescription.
Held: The claim was to a right in the nature of a profit a prendre, and was . .

Cited by:

CitedBettison and others v Langton and others HL 17-May-2001
A right to pasture animals on a common had been levant and couchant, and as such was inalienable as a separate asset from the land where the animals were kept. The right was registered under the Act, and was thereby transformed into a right to graze . .
At CALord Chesterfield v Harris HL 17-Jul-1911
The House considered the nature and ownership of fishing rights on the River Wye. Freeholders in adjoining parishes had been fishing a non-tidal portion of the river for centuries, not by stealth or indulgence, but openly, continuously, as of right . .
CitedBarton v The Church Commissioners for England ChD 15-Dec-2008
The commissioners claimed a right by prescription to all fish to be taken in a stretch of the River Wye. The claimant was to moor a barge on the river.
Held: The court explained the nature and legal status of fisheries in the law going back to . .
CitedBarton v The Church Commissioners for England ChD 15-Dec-2008
The commissioners claimed a right by prescription to all fish to be taken in a stretch of the River Wye. The claimant was to moor a barge on the river.
Held: The court explained the nature and legal status of fisheries in the law going back to . .
CitedPolo Woods Foundation v Shelton-Agar and Another ChD 17-Jun-2009
The court considered whether the claimant had established a profit a prendre against the defendant neighbour’s land in the form of a right of pasturage, acquired either by lost modern grant or by prescription.
Held: The appeal succeeded, but . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.279920

Lord Chesterfield v Harris: HL 17 Jul 1911

The House considered the nature and ownership of fishing rights on the River Wye. Freeholders in adjoining parishes had been fishing a non-tidal portion of the river for centuries, not by stealth or indulgence, but openly, continuously, as of right and without interruption, and not only for sport or pleasure, but commercially, in order to sell the fish and make a living by it. The riparian owners, the now respondent Lord Chesterfield and a Mrs Foster asserting ownership of the bed of the river brought an action of trespass against the freeholders for fishing. Mr Harris, one of them, now appealed.
Held: The appeal failed (Majority, Earl Loreburn LC, Shaw of Dunfermline, and Ashbourne LL dissenting). S legal origin for the right claimed by the freeholders could not be presumed, and the action lay at the suit of the riparian proprietors. A prescription in a que estate for a profit a prendre in alieno solo without stint and for commercial purposes is unknown to the law.
Earl Loreburn LC did not find it necessary to address whether, inter alia, an appurtenant right of fishery could be for more than was needed for consumption on the land, or whether it could be without stint.
He said: ‘To begin with, it is common ground that at one time this hundred, or manor, was terra regis, and most probable that the manor, or hundred, included all the stretch which is now in question. We know that in quite early times the King alienated the riparian land; whether with or without the bed of the river usque ad medium filum is left in doubt by the terms of such of his grants as are extant and have been produced. We know that his grantees, in fact, suffered (and I cannot suppose this was out of mere good nature for so many hundred years) a continuous fishing by the freeholders under claim of right. A legitimate inference is that before he granted the land he had previously granted his right of fishery. Nor is it strange if he did so. At the time of Domesday Book this was border land contiguous to Wales, a country still the scene of fighting, or in which the King was obliged to have fighting men ready for action, and among them the men of Irchenfield, whose privilege it was to form the vanguard in attack and the rearguard in retreat, as Domesday informs us. It would be natural enough that he should give them a right of fishery, and that they should repay him by a promise of service . . All this is far beyond human ken; but that in some way the King made a grant of this fishery seems a very natural supposition, and it is our duty, as I understand the law, to presume it was granted lawfully if it could be granted at all. The alternative is that the freeholders have been poachers for all these centuries. That would be the most violent presumption I ever heard of.’
Lord Ashbourne (dissenting) said: ‘I have come to the conclusion that it is reasonably possible and probable that the right claimed had a legal origin. The King may have made a grant to freeholders of the area of fishing in gross, and this may have made them a corporation; or the King may have made a grant to an existing corporation upon trust for the freeholders.’
Lord Shaw (dissenting) said: ‘I think, accordingly, that this is pre-eminently a case for the application of the principles of the case of Goodman v. Saltash Corporation. I do not see my way to hold that the right thus asserted and enjoyed for centuries must now be declared to be void and of no effect because it is inconsistent with legal concepts. It appears to me, on the contrary, that the rights of fishing as asserted and enjoyed by these freeholders may, on the principles of Goodman’s Case, with perfect propriety be presumed to have had a legal origin.’

Judges:

Earl Loreburn LC, Shaw of Dunfermline, Ashbourne LL

Citations:

[1911] AC 623

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

At ChDLord Chesterfield v Harris ChD 18-Nov-1906
A claim was made to an unlimited right of fishing on the River Wye, said to be vested in the freehold tenants of the manor and to have been acquired by prescription.
Held: The claim was to a right in the nature of a profit a prendre, and was . .
At CALord Chesterfield v Harris CA 27-Jun-1908
The court considered the acquisition of a profit a prendre of fishing, by prescription over a stretch of the River Wye.
Held: Lord Chesterfield’a appeal succeeded. To be valid, a profit appurtenant must, as I have said, be limited and that . .
CitedGoodman v Mayor of Saltash HL 1882
A gift was made of a right to fish to the freemen of the Borough of Saltash.
Held: The gift was as valid as a charitable gift as would be a gift to the inhabitants of the locality in general. When long and continuous enjoyment is established, . .

Cited by:

CitedBettison and others v Langton and others HL 17-May-2001
A right to pasture animals on a common had been levant and couchant, and as such was inalienable as a separate asset from the land where the animals were kept. The right was registered under the Act, and was thereby transformed into a right to graze . .
CitedBarton v The Church Commissioners for England ChD 15-Dec-2008
The commissioners claimed a right by prescription to all fish to be taken in a stretch of the River Wye. The claimant was to moor a barge on the river.
Held: The court explained the nature and legal status of fisheries in the law going back to . .
CitedLynn Shellfish Ltd and Others v Loose and Another SC 13-Apr-2016
The court was asked as to the extent of an exclusive prescriptive right (ie an exclusive right obtained through a long period of use) to take cockles and mussels from a stretch of the foreshore on the east side of the Wash, on the west coast of . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.279921

Tilbury v Silva: 1890

The evidence of user necessary to induce the court to presume a lost modern grant should be stronger than that upon which the court will presume a grant based on immemorial user.

Judges:

Bowen LJ

Citations:

(1890) 45 Ch D 98

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedBarton v The Church Commissioners for England ChD 15-Dec-2008
The commissioners claimed a right by prescription to all fish to be taken in a stretch of the River Wye. The claimant was to moor a barge on the river.
Held: The court explained the nature and legal status of fisheries in the law going back to . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.279916

Lord Chesterfield v Harris: ChD 18 Nov 1906

A claim was made to an unlimited right of fishing on the River Wye, said to be vested in the freehold tenants of the manor and to have been acquired by prescription.
Held: The claim was to a right in the nature of a profit a prendre, and was legally capable of proof.

Judges:

Neville J

Citations:

[1908] 1 Ch 230

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

At ChDLord Chesterfield v Harris CA 27-Jun-1908
The court considered the acquisition of a profit a prendre of fishing, by prescription over a stretch of the River Wye.
Held: Lord Chesterfield’a appeal succeeded. To be valid, a profit appurtenant must, as I have said, be limited and that . .
At ChDLord Chesterfield v Harris HL 17-Jul-1911
The House considered the nature and ownership of fishing rights on the River Wye. Freeholders in adjoining parishes had been fishing a non-tidal portion of the river for centuries, not by stealth or indulgence, but openly, continuously, as of right . .
CitedBarton v The Church Commissioners for England ChD 15-Dec-2008
The commissioners claimed a right by prescription to all fish to be taken in a stretch of the River Wye. The claimant was to moor a barge on the river.
Held: The court explained the nature and legal status of fisheries in the law going back to . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.279919

Hughes v Kelly: 1843

(Ireland)

Judges:

Lord St Leonards

Citations:

(1843) 3 D and War 482

Cited by:

CitedYorkshire Bank Finance Ltd v Mulhall and Another CA 24-Oct-2008
The bank had obtained a judgement against the defendant, and took a charging order. Nothing happened for more than twelve years, and the defendant now argued that the order and debt was discharged.
Held: The enforcement of the charging order . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.277166

Fairclough v Marshall: CA 1878

The plaintiff owned land charged by a previous owner who had rented it subject to the defendant’s predecessor subject to a covenant not to use it as an beerhouse. The defendant now used it as a beerhouse, and said that since the plaintiff had mortgaged his interest he had no right to enforce the covenant.
Held: The plaintiff could enforce the covenant under the 1873 Act and under the general principles of equity, and did not have to join in his mortgagee.

Judges:

Bramwell LJ

Citations:

(1878) 4 Ex D 37, [1878] 48 LJQB 146, [1878] 39 LT 389, [1878] 27 WR 145

Statutes:

Judicature Act 1873 25(5)

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedScribes West Ltd v Relsa Anstalt and others CA 20-Dec-2004
The claimant challenged the forfeiture of its lease by a freeholder which had acquired the registered freehold title but had not yet registered its ownership. The second defendant had forfeited the lease by peacable re-entry for arrears of rent, and . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.276788

Selby v Whitbread and Co: 1917

McCardie J considered the tension between the common law and statute: ‘An examination of the code shows that common law rights are dealt with in a revolutionary manner. The two sets of rights . . are quite inconsistent with one another. The plaintiff’s common law rights are subject to the defendant’s statutory rights. A new series of respective obligations have been introduced, the common law was seen to be insufficient for the adjustment of modern complex conditions. Hence I think the Act . . is not in addition to but in substitution for the common law for matters which fall within the Act. It is a governing and exhaustive code and the common law is, by implication, repealed.’

Judges:

McCardie J

Citations:

[1917] 1 KB 735

Cited by:

CitedLouis and Another v Sadiq CA 12-Nov-1996
There was a two-storey end of terrace house in North London owned by Mr Sadiq and his neighbours, Mr and Mrs Louis. The appellant had commenced substantial works to his house, which caused damage to the party wall. The appellant had not complied . .
CitedRodrigues v Sokal TCC 30-Jul-2008
The parties owned either half of a semi-detached residence. The defendant had undertaken substantial redevelopment works, and the claimant sought damages under the 1996 Act for his failures to follow that Act. The issues had been taken to . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.272862

Visionhire Ltd v Britel Fund Trustees Ltd: 1991

Citations:

1991 SLT

Cited by:

CitedSimmers v Innes HL 16-Apr-2008
The House was asked whether an option to purchase certain land had been validly exercised. The farm assets had been transferred into a company in order to generate cash. Mr Simmers was apparently gven a right for five years to purchase the business. . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Scotland, Land

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.271071

Lloyds Bank Plc v Carrick and Another: CA 17 Apr 1996

Mrs Carrick was a widow who orally agreed with her brother in law, a builder, to sell her house and pay him the proceeds, for which he would provide her with a new house. She did so and moved into the new house, which remained in the brother-in-law’s name; later he mortgaged it to the bank. Mrs Carrick’s rights were postponed to the bank because they had not been registered as an estate contract.
Held: A beneficial owner under a bare trust had no defence against a mortagee in possession. ‘In this case there was a trust of the maisonette for the benefit of Mrs Carrick precisely because there had been an agreement between her and Mr Carrick which, for her part, she had substantially if not wholly performed. As between her and Mr Carrick such trust subsisted at all times after November 1982. I agree with counsel for the bank that there is no room in those circumstances for the implication or imposition of any further trust of the maisonette for the benefit of Mrs Carrick. In Lloyds Bank plc v Rosset there was no contract which conferred any interest in the house on the wife. As with all statements of principle the speech of Lord Bridge of Harwich must be read by reference to the facts of the case. So read there is nothing in it to suggest that where there is a specifically enforceable contract the court is entitled to superimpose a further constructive trust on the vendor in favour of the purchaser over that which already exists in consequence of the contractual relationship.
It is true that on this footing the ultimate position of Mrs Carrick with the benefit of a specifically enforceable contract may be worse than it would have been if there had been no contract. But that is because she failed to do that which Parliament has ordained must be done if her interest is to prevail over that of the bank, namely to register the estate contract. Her failure in that respect cannot, in my view, justify the implication or imposition of a trust after the execution of the charge when the dealings between Mr Carrick and Mrs Carrick before such execution did not.’

Judges:

Morritt LJ, Beldam LJ and Sir Ralph Gibson

Citations:

Gazette 17-Apr-1996, [1996] 4 All ER 630

Statutes:

Land Charges Act 1972 4(6)

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedYaxley v Gotts and Another CA 24-Jun-1999
Oral Agreement Creating Proprietory Estoppel
The defendant offered to give to the Plaintiff, a builder, the ground floor of a property in return for converting the house, and then managing it. They were friends, and the oral offer was accepted. The property was then actually bought in the name . .
CitedKilcarne Holdings Ltd v Targetfollow (Birmingham) Ltd, Targetfollow Group Ltd ChD 9-Nov-2004
The defendant entered into an agreement for lease, incurring substantial obligations. When it could not meet them it sought assistance from the claimant, who now claimed to have an interest in a joint venture. The draft documentation originally . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.83108

Mid-Glamorgan County Council v Ogwr Borough Council and Others: HL 3 Feb 1995

Land remained common land despite the individual rights having been compulsorily purchased by the local Authority. Once abandoned, it remained registerable.

Citations:

Gazette 08-Mar-1995, Times 03-Feb-1995

Statutes:

Compulsory Purchase Act 1965

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

Appeal fromMid-Glamorgan County Council v Ogwr Borough Council and Others CA 5-Nov-1993
There was no need to serve a notice to treat on each commoner for a compulsory purchase order to proceed. . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.83703

Lancashire County Council, Regina (on The Application of) v SSEFRA and Another: SC 11 Dec 2019

Two appeals as to the circumstances in which the concept of ‘statutory incompatibility’ will defeat an application to register land as a town or village green where the land is held by a public authority for statutory purposes. In the first case, five plots in Lancaster were owned by LCC who objected to an application for registration as a village green based on 20 years use. As to four, the inspector was not satisfied that the land had been acquired for educational purposes, and even if so, there was no good statutory incompatibility defence. The second site was at Leatherhead owned by NHS. Surrey CC had registered it against the recommendation of the inspector, but this was quashed at first instance, distinguishing the LCC case saying that SCC had failed properly to consider statutory incompatibility. The Court of Appeal upheld both decisions to register, and LCC and the NHS now appealed.
Held: The appeal succeeded (Arden L dissenting in part, and Wilson L dissenting) Newhaven was authoritative and where land is acquired for defined statutory purposes by a public authority, the Act does not enable the public to acquire rights over that land by registering it as a green where such registration would conflict with those statutory purposes.
Here there was an incompatibility between the statutory purposes for which it was held and its use as a Green and therefore the Act did not apply.
Typically land acquired under general powers was not subject to specific purposes tests, as opposed to land acquired compulsorily.
There was no indication that the Act’s general provisions regarding registration as a Green were intended to prevent use of land held by a public authority for specific public purposes defined in statute.
This has particular force as to land held after compulsory purchase since the powers are created for circumstances where there is an especially strong public interest that land should be used for particular purposes.
There was statutory incompatibility in each case. The issue of incompatibility has to be decided by reference to the statutory purposes for which the land is held, not by reference to how the land happens to be used at a particular time.
Lords Carnwath and Sales said: ‘In our view, Ouseley J’s approach to the natural inferences to be drawn from the material before the inspector was correct, but he was wrong to be deflected by deference to the inspector’s fact-finding role. The main difference between them was in the weight given by the inspector to the absence of specific resolutions, from which she found it ‘not possible to be sure’ that the land had been acquired and held for educational purposes. On its face the language appears to raise the threshold of proof above the ordinary civil test to which she had properly referred earlier in the decision. But even discounting that point, she was wrong in our view to place such emphasis on the lack of such resolutions. Her task was to take the evidence before her as it stood, and determine, on the balance of probabilities, for what purpose the land was held. On that approach, Ouseley J’s own assessment was in our view impeccable.’

Judges:

Lord Wilson, Lord Carnwath, Lady Black, Lady Arden, Lord Sales

Citations:

[2020] 2 WLR 1, [2020] WLR(D) 18, [2019] UKSC 58, [2021] AC 194, [2020] JPL 613, [2020] 2 All ER 925, UKSC 2018/0094

Links:

Bailii, Bailii Summary, WLRD, SC, SC Summary, SC Summary Video, SC 2019 Jul 15 am Video, SC 2019 Jul 16 am Video, SC 2019 Jul 16 pm Video

Statutes:

Commons Act 2006 1

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

At AdmnLancashire County Council v The Secretary of State for The Environment, Food and Rural Affairs and Another Admn 27-May-2016
Ouseley J he said that he would have arrived at a different conclusion from the Inspector as to the purpose for which the Authority had acquired the land at issue; but considered that that did not entitle him to interfere with the inspector’s . .
At CALancashire County Council, Regina (on The Application of) v Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs and Another CA 12-Apr-2018
The court was asked: ‘Did the concept of ‘statutory incompatibility’ defeat an application for the registration of land as a town or village green under section 15 of the Commons Act 2006? ‘ At first instance, the judge had held that he could not . .
CitedRegina v Suffolk County Council Ex Parte Steed and Steed Admn 1995
Judicial review was sought of the Council’s decision to refuse to register a park as a Town or Village Green.
Held: Carnwath J looked at the procedure to be followed by a council receiving an application for registration of commons right: ‘it . .
AuthorititiveNewhaven Port and Properties Ltd, Regina (on The Application of) v East Sussex County Council and Another SC 25-Feb-2015
The court was asked: ‘whether East Sussex County Council . . was wrong in law to decide to register an area . . known as West Beach at Newhaven . . as a village green pursuant to the provisions of the Commons Act 2006. The points of principle raised . .
CitedOxfordshire County Council v Oxford City Council and Another CA 24-Feb-2005
The court was asked as to the power to amend an application for registration of land as a village green, in the absence of any specific provision in the regulations permitting amendment. Guidance was sought for practitioners.
Held: The 1965 . .
CitedJones v Bates CA 1938
The court considered whether there had been an act by the landowner sufficient to amount to a dedication a path as a public right of way. Scott LJ said that actual dedication was ‘often a pure legal fiction [which] put on the affirmant of the public . .
CitedNew Windsor Corporation v Mellor CA 1975
The respondent had obtained registration of land, Bachelors’ Acre, a grassed area of land in New Windsor, now used as a car park in the register of town and village greens under the Act as a customary green. It had been used for archery in mediaeval . .
CitedRegina v Oxfordshire County Council and Another, Ex Parte Sunningwell Parish Council HL 25-Jun-1999
When setting out to establish that a piece of land has become a village green with rights of common, the tests are similar to those used in the law of prescription and adverse possession. Accordingly, there is no need to establish a belief in those . .
CitedLewis, Regina (on The Application of) v Redcar and Cleveland Borough Council and Another SC 3-Mar-2010
The claimants sought to have land belonging to the council registered as a village green to prevent it being developed. They said that it had for more than twenty years been used by the community for various sports. The council replied that it had . .
CitedWiltshire Council v Cooper Estates Strategic Land Ltd CA 16-May-2019
The issue on this appeal is what it takes in a development plan document to identify land for potential development. If land is so identified, the right to apply for registration of a town or village green is suspended.
Lewison LJ said of these . .
CitedEdwards (Inspector of Taxes) v Bairstow HL 25-Jul-1955
The House was asked whether a particular transaction was ‘an adventure in the nature of trade’.
Held: Although the House accepted that this was ‘an inference of fact’, on the primary facts as found by the Commissioners ‘the true and only . .
CitedBarkas, Regina (on The Application of ) v North Yorkshire County Council and Another SC 6-Mar-2014
The Court was asked as to the registration of a playing field as a ‘town or village green’. Local residents asserted that their use of the land, having been ‘as of right’ required the registration. They now appealed against rejection of that . .
CitedE v Secretary of State for the Home Department etc CA 2-Feb-2004
The court was asked as to the extent of the power of the IAT and Court of Appeal to reconsider a decision which it later appeared was based upon an error of fact, and the extent to which new evidence to demonstrate such an error could be admitted. . .
CitedEllice’s Trustees v The Commissioners of The Caledonian Canal SCS 28-Jan-1904
The commissioners of the canal did not have the power to grant a right of way which was not compatible with the exercise of their statutory duties, and that this also meant that no private right of way or servitude could arise by virtue of user of . .
CitedRegina v City of Sunderland ex parte Beresford HL 13-Nov-2003
Land had been used as a park for many years. The council land owner refused to register it as a common, saying that by maintaining the park it had indicated that the use was by consent and licence, and that prescription did not apply.
Held: . .
CitedThe Lord Provost, Magistrates, and Council of The City of Edinburgh v North British Railway Co SCS 12-May-1904
It was not possible that a public right of way ‘which it would be ultra vires to grant can be lawfully acquired by user’ . .
CitedThe King v The Inhabitants Of Leake KBD 1833
The issue was whether villagers in the fenlands were obliged to repair a road. If it had been dedicated as a public highway, they were obliged to do so. The land on which the road had been constructed was owned by commissioners who had bought it . .
CitedTW Logistics Ltd v Essex County Council and Another CA 5-Oct-2018
The Court was asked whether part of the working port of Mistley has been properly registered as a town or village green.
Held: The 19th century statutes, as applied to a registered modern green, are not to be construed as interfering with the . .
CitedWinterburn and Another v Bennett and Another CA 25-May-2016
The court was asked as to the steps which an owner of land must take to prevent others, who were using the land without permission, acquiring rights over the land. The claimants here had ignored clear signs placed on the land which asserted the . .
CitedTabernacle Permanent Building Society v Knight 1892
The court considered (obiter) it’s lack of jurisdiction to make an order directing arbitrators to state their award in the form of a special case, at a time when the award had already been published earlier on the same day and the arbitrators . .
CitedNewhaven Port and Properties Ltd v East Sussex County Council and Others Admn 21-Mar-2012
The company objected to the proposed registration by the defendant Council of a strip of beach land as a common. They said that it was not a ‘town or village green’ within the 2006 Act.
Held: The court rejected all grounds of objection, save . .
CitedRegina v City of Sunderland ex parte Beresford HL 13-Nov-2003
Land had been used as a park for many years. The council land owner refused to register it as a common, saying that by maintaining the park it had indicated that the use was by consent and licence, and that prescription did not apply.
Held: . .
CitedAshworth Frazer Limited v Gloucester City Council HL 8-Nov-2001
A lease contained a covenant against assignment without the Landlord’s consent, such consent not to be unreasonably withheld. The tenant asserted, pace Killick, that the landlord could not refuse consent on the grounds that the proposed tenant might . .

Cited by:

CitedAdamson, Regina (on The Application of) v Kirklees Metropolitan Borough Council CA 18-Feb-2020
Appropriation was not in sufficient form
The claimants had challenged an order supporting the decision of the Council to use their allotments for a new primary school, saying that the land had be appropriated as allotment land, and that therefore the consent of the minister was needed.
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.645782

Regina v City of Sunderland ex parte Beresford: HL 13 Nov 2003

Land had been used as a park for many years. The council land owner refused to register it as a common, saying that by maintaining the park it had indicated that the use was by consent and licence, and that prescription did not apply.
Held: Qualifying user having been found, there was nothing in the material before the council to support the conclusion that such user had been otherwise than as of right within the meaning of section 22 of the 1965 Act. ‘The fact that the . . Council were willing for the land to be used as an area for informal sports and games, and provided some minimal facilities (now decaying) in the form of benches and a single hard cricket pitch, cannot be regarded as overt acts communicating permission to enter. Nor could the regular cutting of the grass, which was a natural action for any responsible landowner. To treat these acts as amounting to an implied licence, permission or consent would involve a fiction’ User can be as of right even though it is not adverse to the landowner’s interests.

Judges:

Lord Bingham of Cornhill Lord Hutton Lord Scott of Foscote Lord Rodger of Earlsferry Lord Walker of Gestingthorpe

Citations:

[2003] UKHL 60, Times 14-Nov-2003, [2003] 3 WLR 1306, [2004] 1 AC 889, [2004] 1 All ER 160, [2004] 2 P and CR 23, [2004] JPL 1106, [2003] NPC 139, [2003] 47 EGCS 155, [2004] 1 EGLR 94

Links:

House of Lords, Bailii

Statutes:

Commons Registration Act 1965 22, Open Spaces Act 1906

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

Appeal fromRegina (on the application of Beresford) v The City of Sunderland CA 26-Jul-2001
Local inhabitants requested the alteration of the Town and Village Green register to include land over which they claimed use as of right for more than twenty years. The difference between acquiescence, which would allow the claim, and tolerance or . .
CitedMills and Another v Silver and others CA 6-Jul-1990
A farm’s only vehicular access was over land which was only useable occasionally when dry. The defendants laid a stone track to facilitate constant access. At first instance it was held that the earlier use had been too intermittent to allow a . .
CitedRegina v Suffolk County Council Ex Parte Steed and Another CA 2-Aug-1996
Customary rights over land were not defeated by failure to register as common. ‘As of right’ meant that the right must be exercised in the belief that it is a right enjoyed by the inhabitants of the village to the exclusion of all other people. ‘it . .
CitedCumbernauld and Kilsyth District Council v Dollar Land (Cumbernauld) Ltd SCS 1992
(Inner House) When Cumbernauld town centre was built, a walkway was provided between the shopping centre and residential areas. It was used for many years, but then closed to prevent crime. The authority sought an interdict to keep it open as a . .
CitedCumbernauld and Kilsyth District Council v Dollar Land (Cumbernauld) Ltd HL 22-Jul-1993
A walkway had existed from the town centre to residential areas. When the land was acquired the defendant new owners sought to close the walkway. The authority asserted that a public right of way had been acquired.
Held: There was no need to . .
CitedAttorney-General v Poole 1938
Open space land had been conveyed to Poole Corporation ‘in fee simple to the intent that the same may for ever hereafter be preserved and used as an open space or as a pleasure or recreation ground for the public use.’
Held: There was no . .
CitedBridges v Mees ChD 1957
An overriding interest, namely an estate contract, was protected under s. 70(1) of the Act even though it could have been protected by a caution under s. 59. . .
CitedE R Ives Investments Ltd v High CA 14-Dec-1966
One exception to the requirement that an easement must be granted by a deed is that if permission to enjoy a right, capable of constituting an easement, is given by the landowner in terms likely to lead, and that do lead, the beneficiary of the . .
CitedGardner v Hodgson’s Kingston Brewery Co HL 1903
The party claiming a right of way through the yard of a neighbouring inn, and her predecessors in title, had for well over 40 years used the inn yard (the only means of access with carts and horses to her premises) and had paid the annual sum of 15 . .
CitedBurrows v Lang 1901
Discussing the book de legibus et consuetudinibus Angliae by Bracton, and its discussion of the meaning of ‘precario’ saying it was the same as de gratia, of grace, and in the context of a watercourse. The court asked ‘What is precarious?’ and . .
CitedNapier’s Trustees v Morrison 1851
Dealing with a public right of way, and holding that the defenders had possessed a road ‘by no trespass or tolerance, but as a public road’the court deprecated the citation in the Court of Session of authorities from England. He really wished, he . .
CitedSturges v Bridgman CA 1879
The character of the neighbourhood in which the plaintiff lives should, for the law of nuisance, include established features: ‘whether anything is a nuisance or not is a question to be determined, not merely by an abstract consideration of the . .
CitedMann v Brodie HL 1885
The court analysed the differences between Scottish and English land law with regard to rights acquired by prescription. Although in both countries a right of public way may be acquired by prescription, it was in England never practically necessary . .
CitedScottish Property Investment Company Building Society v Horne 1881
To warrant the remedy of summary ejection, the defender’s possession of premises has to be vicious, that is obtained by fraud or force, or precarious possession: ‘A precarious possession is a possession by tolerance merely.’ . .
CitedCumbernauld and Kilsyth District Council v Dollar Land (Cumbernauld) Ltd HL 22-Jul-1993
A walkway had existed from the town centre to residential areas. When the land was acquired the defendant new owners sought to close the walkway. The authority asserted that a public right of way had been acquired.
Held: There was no need to . .
CitedDalton v Henry Angus and Co HL 14-Jun-1881
The court explained the doctrine of lost modern grant. Where there has been more than 20 years’ uninterrupted enjoyment of an easement, and that enjoyment has the necessary qualities to fulfil the requirements of prescription, then unless, for some . .
CitedBeckett (Alfred F) v Lyons 1967
A claim was made that the inhabitants of the County Palatine of Durham had the right to take coal from the seashore.
Held: Dedication of a public right must be to the public at large or a sufficiently large section of the public at large and . .
CitedBritish Railways Board v Herrington HL 16-Feb-1972
Land-owner’s Possible Duty to Trespassers
The plaintiff, a child had gone through a fence onto the railway line, and been badly injured. The Board knew of the broken fence, but argued that they owed no duty to a trespasser.
Held: Whilst a land-owner owes no general duty of care to a . .
CitedHall v Beckenham Corporation 1949
A claim was made in nuisance against the local authority, the owner of a public park, in which members of the public flew noisy model aircraft.
Held: The local authority were not liable as the occupiers of the park for an alleged nuisance that . .
At First InstanceRegina v City of Sunderland, ex parte Beresford Admn 14-Nov-2000
A recreational area was claimed to be a common. The council considered that there was evidence, which it accepted, of an implied licence, thus enabling the inference to be drawn that the use by local inhabitants for statutory purposes had not been . .
CitedBritish Transport Commission v Westmorland County Council HL 1958
The question whether the statutory purposes for which the land is held are incompatible with its use by the public as a public highway is one of fact and to be determined on the basis of the facts as they are and can reasonably be foreseen to be. . .

Cited by:

CitedOxfordshire County Council v Oxford City Council, Catherine Mary Robinson ChD 22-Jan-2004
Land had been registered in part as a common. The council appealed.
Held: The rights pre-existing the Act had not been lost. The presumption against retrospectively disapplying vested rights applied, and the application had properly been made. . .
CitedBakewell Management Limited v Brandwood and others HL 1-Apr-2004
Houses were built next to a common. Over many years the owners had driven over the common. The landowners appealed a decision that they could not acquire a right of way by prescription over the common because such use had been unlawful as a criminal . .
CitedOxfordshire County Council v Oxford City Council and others HL 24-May-2006
Application had been made to register as a town or village green an area of land which was largely a boggy marsh. The local authority resisted the application wanting to use the land instead for housing. It then rejected advice it received from a . .
CitedLewis, Regina (on The Application of) v Redcar and Cleveland Borough Council and Another SC 3-Mar-2010
The claimants sought to have land belonging to the council registered as a village green to prevent it being developed. They said that it had for more than twenty years been used by the community for various sports. The council replied that it had . .
CitedLondon Tara Hotel Ltd v Kensington Close Hotel Ltd ChD 1-Nov-2010
The defendant asserted that it had acquired the right to use a private access road over the claimant’s land. There had been a licence granted under which an earlier owner had been said to have used the land. The defendant claimed under the 1832 Act . .
CitedPaddico (267) Ltd v Kirklees Metropolitan Council and Others ChD 23-Jun-2011
The company sought the rectification of the register of village greens to remove an entry relating to its land, saying that the Council had not properly considered the need properly to identify the locality which was said to have enjoyed the rights . .
CitedBarkas v North Yorkshire County Council CA 23-Oct-2012
The court was asked: ‘When local inhabitants indulge in lawful sports and pastimes on a recreation ground which has been provided for that purpose by a local authority in the exercise of its statutory powers, do they do so ‘by right’ or ‘as of . .
CitedAdamson and Others v Paddico (267) Ltd SC 5-Feb-2014
Land had been registered as a town or village green but wrongly so. The claimant had sought rectification, but the respondents argued that the long time elapsed after registration should defeat the request.
Held: The appeal were solely as to . .
Not to be relied onBarkas, Regina (on The Application of) v North Yorkshire County Council and Scarborough Council Admn 20-Dec-2011
The claimants sought to have registered as a town or village green land in Whitby which had been provided as a playing field by the Local Authority since 1934. The inspector had found that the use had not been ‘as of right’ as required by the 2006 . .
OverruledBarkas, Regina (on The Application of ) v North Yorkshire County Council and Another SC 6-Mar-2014
The Court was asked as to the registration of a playing field as a ‘town or village green’. Local residents asserted that their use of the land, having been ‘as of right’ required the registration. They now appealed against rejection of that . .
CitedNewhaven Port and Properties Ltd, Regina (on The Application of) v East Sussex County Council and Another SC 25-Feb-2015
The court was asked: ‘whether East Sussex County Council . . was wrong in law to decide to register an area . . known as West Beach at Newhaven . . as a village green pursuant to the provisions of the Commons Act 2006. The points of principle raised . .
CitedAdamson, Regina (on The Application of) v Kirklees Metropolitan Borough Council CA 18-Feb-2020
Appropriation was not in sufficient form
The claimants had challenged an order supporting the decision of the Council to use their allotments for a new primary school, saying that the land had be appropriated as allotment land, and that therefore the consent of the minister was needed.
CitedBowen and Others v Isle of Wight Council ChD 3-Dec-2021
What makes a road a Road?
The Court was asked whether a Road was a ‘road’ for the purposes of the 1984 Act’
Held: It has often been said that the public access mentioned in the definition of ‘road’ must be both actual access and legal or lawful access. However, simple . .
CitedLancashire County Council, Regina (on The Application of) v SSEFRA and Another SC 11-Dec-2019
Two appeals as to the circumstances in which the concept of ‘statutory incompatibility’ will defeat an application to register land as a town or village green where the land is held by a public authority for statutory purposes. In the first case, . .
CitedLancashire County Council, Regina (on The Application of) v SSEFRA and Another SC 11-Dec-2019
Two appeals as to the circumstances in which the concept of ‘statutory incompatibility’ will defeat an application to register land as a town or village green where the land is held by a public authority for statutory purposes. In the first case, . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land, Limitation

Leading Case

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.187760

Newhaven Port and Properties Ltd v East Sussex County Council and Others: Admn 21 Mar 2012

The company objected to the proposed registration by the defendant Council of a strip of beach land as a common. They said that it was not a ‘town or village green’ within the 2006 Act.
Held: The court rejected all grounds of objection, save that registration was incompatible with NPP’s statutory powers and duties.
One issue was whether rights of ‘a significant number of inhabitants of any locality . . [to indulge in] lawful sports and pastimes on the land for a period of at least 20 years’ could exist in respect of land to which the public had no right of access. Ouseley J considered that the absence of any right of access was not determinative of the issue as to whether there was a right to perform sports and pastimes: it would be merely evidence that there was no such right.

Judges:

Ouseley J

Citations:

[2012] EWHC 647 (Admin), [2012] 3 WLR 709, [2012] WLR(D) 94, [2012] ACD 85, [2012] 14 EG 63, [2012] 3 All ER 1361

Links:

Bailii, WLRD

Statutes:

Commons Act 2006, The Newhaven Harbour and Ouse Lower Navigation Act 1847, Newhaven Harbour Improvement Act 1878

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedOxfordshire County Council v Oxford City Council and others HL 24-May-2006
Application had been made to register as a town or village green an area of land which was largely a boggy marsh. The local authority resisted the application wanting to use the land instead for housing. It then rejected advice it received from a . .

Cited by:

Appeal fromNewhaven Port and Properties Ltd, Regina (on The Application of) v East Sussex County Council and Another CA 27-Mar-2013
The port challenged the proposed registration of part of the beach at Newhaven as a village green, saying that the result would be inconsistent with their performance of their statutory duties. . .
Appeal fromNewhaven Port and Properties Ltd, Regina (on The Application of) v Secretary of State for The Environment Food and Rural Affairs CA 14-Jun-2013
. .
At first instanceNewhaven Port and Properties Ltd, Regina (on The Application of) v East Sussex County Council and Another SC 25-Feb-2015
The court was asked: ‘whether East Sussex County Council . . was wrong in law to decide to register an area . . known as West Beach at Newhaven . . as a village green pursuant to the provisions of the Commons Act 2006. The points of principle raised . .
CitedKotegaonkar v Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs and Another Admn 19-Jul-2012
The court was asked: ‘can a way which is not connected to another public highway, or to some other point to which the public have a right of access, itself be a public highway?’ A path had been registered over part of te claimant’s land, but with no . .
CitedLancashire County Council, Regina (on The Application of) v SSEFRA and Another SC 11-Dec-2019
Two appeals as to the circumstances in which the concept of ‘statutory incompatibility’ will defeat an application to register land as a town or village green where the land is held by a public authority for statutory purposes. In the first case, . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.466299

Barkas, Regina (on The Application of ) v North Yorkshire County Council and Another: SC 6 Mar 2014

The Court was asked as to the registration of a playing field as a ‘town or village green’. Local residents asserted that their use of the land, having been ‘as of right’ required the registration. They now appealed against rejection of that argument.
Held: The basic issues was ‘where land is provided and maintained by a local authority pursuant to section 12(1) of the Housing Act 1985 or its statutory predecessors, is the use of that land by the public for recreational purposes ‘as of right’ within the meaning of section 15(2)(a) of the Commons Act 2006?’
Held: The residents’ appeal failed. The local residents were enjoying the rights over the land ‘by right’ and not ‘as of right’ and the land was not registrable under the 2006 Act as a town or village green.
Lord Neuberger said: ‘So long as land is held under a provision such as section 12(1) of the 1985 Act, it appears to me that members of the public have a statutory right to use the land for recreational purposes, and therefore they use the land ‘by right’ and not as trespassers, so that no question of user ‘as of right’ can arise.’ and ‘ a reasonable local authority in the position of the Council would have regarded the presence of members of the public on the Field, walking with or without dogs, taking part in sports, or letting their children play, as being pursuant to their statutory right to be on the land and to use it for these activities, given that the Field was being held and maintained by the Council for public recreation pursuant to section 12(1) of the 1985 Act and its statutory predecessors.’
. . And: ‘ if the landowner has in some way actually communicated agreement to what would otherwise be a trespass, whether or not gratuitously, then he cannot claim it has been or is unlawful – at least until he lawfully withdraws his agreement to it. For the same reason, even if such an agreed arrangement had continued for 20 years, there can be no question of it giving rise to a prescriptive right because it would clearly have been precario, and therefore ‘by right’.’

Judges:

Lord Neuberger, President, Lady Hale, Deputy President, Lord Reed, Lord Carnwath, Lord Hughes

Citations:

[2014] 3 All ER 178, [2014] UKSC 31, [2014] HLR 36, [2014] 2 WLR 1360, [2014] WLR(D) 228, [2014] BLGR 459, UKSC 2013/0035, [2015] 1 AC 195, [2014] HLR 36

Links:

Bailii, Bailii Summary, WLRD, SC Summary, SC

Statutes:

Commons Act 2006 15

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedHE Green and Sons v Minister of Health (No 2) 1948
On an application under the 1936 Ac, provided that the field benefited council tenants (which it clearly did) it did not matter that it also benefited other people within the local community.
Denning J said: ‘The next question is whether the . .
At AdminBarkas, Regina (on The Application of) v North Yorkshire County Council and Scarborough Council Admn 20-Dec-2011
The claimants sought to have registered as a town or village green land in Whitby which had been provided as a playing field by the Local Authority since 1934. The inspector had found that the use had not been ‘as of right’ as required by the 2006 . .
OverruledRegina v City of Sunderland ex parte Beresford HL 13-Nov-2003
Land had been used as a park for many years. The council land owner refused to register it as a common, saying that by maintaining the park it had indicated that the use was by consent and licence, and that prescription did not apply.
Held: . .
Appeal fromBarkas v North Yorkshire County Council CA 23-Oct-2012
The court was asked: ‘When local inhabitants indulge in lawful sports and pastimes on a recreation ground which has been provided for that purpose by a local authority in the exercise of its statutory powers, do they do so ‘by right’ or ‘as of . .
CitedHall v Beckenham Corporation 1949
A claim was made in nuisance against the local authority, the owner of a public park, in which members of the public flew noisy model aircraft.
Held: The local authority were not liable as the occupiers of the park for an alleged nuisance that . .
CitedRegina v Oxfordshire County Council and Another, Ex Parte Sunningwell Parish Council HL 25-Jun-1999
When setting out to establish that a piece of land has become a village green with rights of common, the tests are similar to those used in the law of prescription and adverse possession. Accordingly, there is no need to establish a belief in those . .
CitedLewis, Regina (on The Application of) v Redcar and Cleveland Borough Council and Another SC 3-Mar-2010
The claimants sought to have land belonging to the council registered as a village green to prevent it being developed. They said that it had for more than twenty years been used by the community for various sports. The council replied that it had . .
CitedGardner v Hodgson’s Kingston Brewery Co HL 1903
The party claiming a right of way through the yard of a neighbouring inn, and her predecessors in title, had for well over 40 years used the inn yard (the only means of access with carts and horses to her premises) and had paid the annual sum of 15 . .
CitedDalton v Henry Angus and Co 1877
Fry J said: ‘ . .I cannot imagine any case of acquiescence in which there is not shown to be in the servient owner: 1, a knowledge of the acts done; 2, a power in him to stop the acts or to sue in respect of them; and 3, an abstinence on his part . .
CitedLawrence and Another v Fen Tigers Ltd and Others CA 2012
Jackson LJ set out the way in which planning consents would affect whether actions amounted to a nuisance: ‘I would summarise the law which is relevant to the first ground of appeal in four propositions. (i) A planning authority by the grant of . .
CitedLambeth Overseers v London County Council HL 1897
The House was asked whether the county council, which owned and maintained a park under a power accorded by a local Act of Parliament, were in rateable occupation of it.
Held: Lord Halsbury said that: ‘there is no possibility of beneficial . .
CitedMills and Another v Silver and others CA 6-Jul-1990
A farm’s only vehicular access was over land which was only useable occasionally when dry. The defendants laid a stone track to facilitate constant access. At first instance it was held that the earlier use had been too intermittent to allow a . .
CitedCumbernauld and Kilsyth District Council v Dollar Land (Cumbernauld) Ltd SCS 1992
(Inner House) When Cumbernauld town centre was built, a walkway was provided between the shopping centre and residential areas. It was used for many years, but then closed to prevent crime. The authority sought an interdict to keep it open as a . .
CitedCumbernauld and Kilsyth District Council v Dollar Land (Cumbernauld) Ltd HL 22-Jul-1993
A walkway had existed from the town centre to residential areas. When the land was acquired the defendant new owners sought to close the walkway. The authority asserted that a public right of way had been acquired.
Held: There was no need to . .
ApprovedRegina v City of Sunderland, ex parte Beresford Admn 14-Nov-2000
A recreational area was claimed to be a common. The council considered that there was evidence, which it accepted, of an implied licence, thus enabling the inference to be drawn that the use by local inhabitants for statutory purposes had not been . .

Cited by:

CitedNewhaven Port and Properties Ltd, Regina (on The Application of) v East Sussex County Council and Another SC 25-Feb-2015
The court was asked: ‘whether East Sussex County Council . . was wrong in law to decide to register an area . . known as West Beach at Newhaven . . as a village green pursuant to the provisions of the Commons Act 2006. The points of principle raised . .
CitedWinterburn and Another v Bennett and Another CA 25-May-2016
The court was asked as to the steps which an owner of land must take to prevent others, who were using the land without permission, acquiring rights over the land. The claimants here had ignored clear signs placed on the land which asserted the . .
CitedAdamson, Regina (on The Application of) v Kirklees Metropolitan Borough Council CA 18-Feb-2020
Appropriation was not in sufficient form
The claimants had challenged an order supporting the decision of the Council to use their allotments for a new primary school, saying that the land had be appropriated as allotment land, and that therefore the consent of the minister was needed.
CitedLancashire County Council, Regina (on The Application of) v SSEFRA and Another SC 11-Dec-2019
Two appeals as to the circumstances in which the concept of ‘statutory incompatibility’ will defeat an application to register land as a town or village green where the land is held by a public authority for statutory purposes. In the first case, . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land, Local Government

Leading Case

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.526192

TW Logistics Ltd v Essex County Council and Another: CA 5 Oct 2018

The Court was asked whether part of the working port of Mistley has been properly registered as a town or village green.
Held: The 19th century statutes, as applied to a registered modern green, are not to be construed as interfering with the rights of the landowner to continue pre-existing uses so far as not inconsistent with the uses which led to registration

Judges:

Lord Justice Lewison
Lord Justice Lindblom
And
Lord Justice David Richards

Citations:

[2018] EWCA Civ 2172, [2019] Ch 243, [2019] 3 All ER 312, [2018] 3 WLR 1926, [2019] 1 P and CR 20

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Commons Registration Act 1965

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedLancashire County Council, Regina (on The Application of) v SSEFRA and Another SC 11-Dec-2019
Two appeals as to the circumstances in which the concept of ‘statutory incompatibility’ will defeat an application to register land as a town or village green where the land is held by a public authority for statutory purposes. In the first case, . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.625424

Barclays Bank Plc v Hendricks and Another: ChD 3 Nov 1995

The wife was co-owner of the family home. Her husband owed money to the bank. He separated from his wife and left the matrimonial home moving to another house owned by the wife. The bank obtained a charging order absolute against the husband’s interest in the matrimonial home and then sought an order under section 30 of the Law of Property Act, 1925 for the sale of the house. The Deputy Master made that order and the wife appealed asking the court to exercise its discretion to defer the sale of the house until all of the children of the family had reached the age of 18 or completed full time education.
Held: The court applied Abbey National -v- Moss and dismissed the appeal and confirmed the order made under s.30. The chargee was in the same position and subject to the same reasoning as Mrs Moss. She was unable, save in exceptional circumstances, to prevent the sale of a house by a chargee.

Judges:

Laddie J

Citations:

Independent 03-Nov-1995, [1996] 1 FLR 258

Statutes:

Law of Property Act 1925 30

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

FollowedAbbey National plc v Moss and Others CA 1994
Mrs Moss inherited the former matrimonial home. Her daughter (L) suggested that she transfer it into their joint names to ease its transfer on her mother’s death. It was agreed the house would never be sold during Mrs Moss’s lifetime. L borrowed . .

Cited by:

CitedBank of Baroda v Dhillon and Dhillon CA 17-Oct-1997
A property had been bought in the husband’s name. The wife made financial contributions to repayment of the charge, and thereby acquired an interest in it. The property was later charged by the paper owner to the claimant, who sought possession . .
CitedRegina v Braintree District Council ex parte Halls Admn 2-Jul-1999
Where a local authority had sold a property to a tenant, and the tenant later came back to request the release from one of the covenants given on the sale, the council was free to charge an appropriate sum for that release. It was not a covenant . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Banking, Land

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.78206

Neill v Duke of Devonshire: HL 1882

The House considered the right to a several fishery in the river Blackwater. There were letters patent granted by James I and Charles I. Held; Lord Selborne LC said: ‘These written titles (if the possession and enjoyment has been consistent with them) afford irresistible ground for a presumption that the fishery, either in all the tidal waters of the river Blackwater, or at all events in that part of them which is now immediately in question, was ‘put in defence’ before Magna Charta; and having become vested in the Crown by forfeiture of the private rights from time to time acquired in it, was well and effectually granted to the predecessor in title of the Duke of Devonshire . . Under the circumstances which I have stated, the real controversy in this case is as to the sufficiency of the evidence of possession and enjoyment, without which, even the clearest apparent title to a several fishery, on paper only, would not exclude the public right.’

Judges:

Lord Selborne LC

Citations:

(1882) LR 8 HL 135, (1882) 8 App Cas 135

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedCrown Estate Commissioners v Roberts and Another ChD 13-Jun-2008
The defendant claimed ownership as Lord Marcher of St Davids of historical rights in foreshores in Pembrokeshire. The claimants sought removal of his cautions against first registration.
Held: Lewison J explored the history of manorial . .
CitedBarton v The Church Commissioners for England ChD 15-Dec-2008
The commissioners claimed a right by prescription to all fish to be taken in a stretch of the River Wye. The claimant was to moor a barge on the river.
Held: The court explained the nature and legal status of fisheries in the law going back to . .
CitedLynn Shellfish Ltd and Others v Loose and Another SC 13-Apr-2016
The court was asked as to the extent of an exclusive prescriptive right (ie an exclusive right obtained through a long period of use) to take cockles and mussels from a stretch of the foreshore on the east side of the Wash, on the west coast of . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.269746

Lancashire County Council v The Secretary of State for The Environment, Food and Rural Affairs and Another: Admn 27 May 2016

Ouseley J he said that he would have arrived at a different conclusion from the Inspector as to the purpose for which the Authority had acquired the land at issue; but considered that that did not entitle him to interfere with the inspector’s evaluation of the evidence: ‘I can see no real reason not to conclude, on that basis, that the acquisition was for educational purposes. No other statutory purpose for the acquisition was put forward; there was no suggestion that the parcels were acquired for public open space. I would have inferred that there were resolutions in existence authorising the acquisitions for that contemporaneously evidenced intended purpose, which simply had not been found at this considerable distance in time. It would be highly improbable for the lands to have been purchased without resolutions approving it. The presumption of regularity would warrant the assumption that there had been resolutions to that effect, and that the purpose resolved upon would have been the one endorsed on the conveyances. This is reinforced by the evidence in DL para 116, which shows the property, after acquisition, to be managed by or on behalf of the Education Committee. The actual use made of some of the land is of limited value in relation to the basis of its acquisition or continued holding.’

Judges:

Ouseley J

Citations:

[2016] EWHC 1238 (Admin)

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

Appeal fromLancashire County Council, Regina (on The Application of) v Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs and Another CA 12-Apr-2018
The court was asked: ‘Did the concept of ‘statutory incompatibility’ defeat an application for the registration of land as a town or village green under section 15 of the Commons Act 2006? ‘ At first instance, the judge had held that he could not . .
CitedAdamson, Regina (on The Application of) v Kirklees Metropolitan Borough Council CA 18-Feb-2020
Appropriation was not in sufficient form
The claimants had challenged an order supporting the decision of the Council to use their allotments for a new primary school, saying that the land had be appropriated as allotment land, and that therefore the consent of the minister was needed.
At AdmnLancashire County Council, Regina (on The Application of) v SSEFRA and Another SC 11-Dec-2019
Two appeals as to the circumstances in which the concept of ‘statutory incompatibility’ will defeat an application to register land as a town or village green where the land is held by a public authority for statutory purposes. In the first case, . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land, Local Government

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.565341

Keech v Hall: 1778

The tenant resisted ejectment by the landlord’s mortgagee. His tenancy had been created after the mortgage.
Held: The mortgagee seeking ejectment did not first need to give a tenant a notice to quit. Mansfield CJ said: ‘Whoever wants to be secure when he takes a lease should inquire after and examine the title deeds.’ For time to run against a mortgagee and bar his right to recovery of the mortgaged land, the mortgagor must be in adverse possession of the land being in possession without any right and without the consent, express or implied, of his mortgagee.

Judges:

Mansfield CJ

Citations:

(1778) 1 Doug KB 21, [1775-1802] All ER Rep 116, [11778] 99 ER 17

Cited by:

CitedNational Westminster Bank Plc v Ashe (Trustee In Bankruptcy of Djabar Babai) CA 8-Feb-2008
The mortgagees had made no payments under the charge for more than twelve years, and had remained in possession throughout. They argued that the bank were prevented from now seeking to enforce the charge. The bank argued that the possession had not . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land, Limitation, Landlord and Tenant

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.264291

Lewis, Regina (on The Application of) v Redcar and Cleveland Borough Council and Another: SC 3 Mar 2010

The claimants sought to have land belonging to the council registered as a village green to prevent it being developed. They said that it had for more than twenty years been used by the community for various sports. The council replied that it had managed a golf course on the land without objection from the claimants, and that therefore the use of the land by the residents had not itself been as of right.
Held: The residents’ appeal succeeded, and the land should be registered as a green. The question whether user was as of right was to be determined solely by reference to the tripartite test: that the user must be nec vi, nec clam and nec precario. The fact that residents had accommodated the use of parts of the land as a golf course did not prevent their use being as of right. Although the local residents’ private beliefs as to their rights are irrelevant, the same is not true of their outward behaviour on the land in question.
The local inhabitants’ rights to use a green following registration could not interfere with competing activities of the landowner to a greater extent than during the qualifying period.
Lord Hope said: ‘the English theory of prescription is concerned with ‘how the matter would have appeared to the owner of the land’ . . But I have great difficulty in seeing how a reasonable owner would have concluded that the residents were not asserting a right to take recreation on the disputed land, simply because they normally showed civility (or, in the inspector’s word, deference) towards members of the golf club who were out playing golf. It is not as if the residents took to their heels and vacated the land whenever they saw a golfer. They simply acted (as all the members of the Court agree, in much the same terms) with courtesy and common sense. But courteous and sensible though they were (with occasional exceptions) the fact remains that they were regularly, in large numbers, crossing the fairways as well as walking on the rough, and often (it seems) failing to clear up after their dogs when they defecated. ‘
Lord Walker confirmed that: ‘ ‘as of right’ is sufficiently described by the tripartite test nec vi, nec clam, nec precario established by high authority’. Persons claiming to have acquired a right by prescription ‘must by their conduct bring home to the landowner that a right is being asserted against him, so that the landowner has to choose between warning the trespassers off, or eventually finding that they have established the asserted right against him’.

Judges:

Lord Hope, Deputy President, Lord Rodger, Lord Walker, Lord Brown, Lord Kerr

Citations:

[2010] UKSC 11, UKSC 2009/0127, [2010] NPC 27, [2010] 2 All ER 613, [2010] 10 EG 116, [2010] BLGR 295, [2010] 2 WLR 653, [2010] 2 AC 70

Links:

Bailii, SC, SC Cumm, Times

Statutes:

Commons Act 2006 15, Housing Act 1985

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

At First InstanceLewis, Regina (on the Application of) v Redcar and Cleveland Borough Council Admn 20-Dec-2007
The claimant sought registration of an open area as a Commons under the 2006 Act. Until 2002 it had been tenanted by a golf club. The inspector had recommended against registration, saying that the use by the public for lawful pastimes had been for . .
CitedRegina v Oxfordshire County Council and Another, Ex Parte Sunningwell Parish Council HL 25-Jun-1999
When setting out to establish that a piece of land has become a village green with rights of common, the tests are similar to those used in the law of prescription and adverse possession. Accordingly, there is no need to establish a belief in those . .
CitedRegina v City of Sunderland ex parte Beresford HL 13-Nov-2003
Land had been used as a park for many years. The council land owner refused to register it as a common, saying that by maintaining the park it had indicated that the use was by consent and licence, and that prescription did not apply.
Held: . .
CitedOxfordshire County Council v Oxford City Council and others HL 24-May-2006
Application had been made to register as a town or village green an area of land which was largely a boggy marsh. The local authority resisted the application wanting to use the land instead for housing. It then rejected advice it received from a . .
CitedRegina (Laing Homes Ltd) v Buckinghamshire County Council Admn 8-Jul-2003
Land was used for ‘low-level agricultural activities’ such as taking a hay crop at the same time as it was being used by the inhabitants for sports and pastimes.
Held: The Act was not intended to prevent the owner using the land in a way which . .
CitedHumphreys v Rochdale Metropolitan Borough Council Admn 18-Jun-2004
Acts of grazing and fertilising by the owner which would have contravened the 1857 and 1876 Acts if the land had been a village green at the time, prevented the land from satisfying the section 22 definition. . .
Appeal fromLewis, Regina (on the application of) v Redcar and Cleveland Borough Council and Another CA 15-Jan-2009
The claimants sought registration of land as a common, saying that it had been used by the local residents for social activities for many years. The council had licenced the land for use as a golf course for many years.
Held: The residents’ . .
CitedFitch v Fitch 1798
The defendants had trampled the grass on a common which the owner had mowed, thrown the hay about and mixed some of it with gravel.
Held: The court considered the rights arising from land being declared to be a common: ‘The inhabitants have a . .
CitedGodmanchester Town Council, Regina (on the Application of) v Secretary of State for the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs HL 20-Jun-2007
The house was asked about whether continuous use of an apparent right of way by the public would create a public right of way after 20 years, and also whether a non overt act by a landowner was sufficient to prove his intention not to dedicate the . .
CitedRegina v Suffolk County Council Ex Parte Steed and Another CA 2-Aug-1996
Customary rights over land were not defeated by failure to register as common. ‘As of right’ meant that the right must be exercised in the belief that it is a right enjoyed by the inhabitants of the village to the exclusion of all other people. ‘it . .
CitedGardner v Hodgson’s Kingston Brewery Co HL 1903
The party claiming a right of way through the yard of a neighbouring inn, and her predecessors in title, had for well over 40 years used the inn yard (the only means of access with carts and horses to her premises) and had paid the annual sum of 15 . .
CitedBright v Walker 1834
Where a way had been used adversely and under a claim of right, for more than twenty years, over land in the possession of a lessee who held under a lease for lives granted by the Bishop of Worcester. Held that under the act 2 and 3 Will. 4, c. 71, . .
MentionedHollins v Verney 1883
A private right of way was claimed under the 1832 Act by virtue of use to remove wood from an adjoining close. . .
CitedHollins v Verney CA 1884
A claim for a presumption of a lost modern grant must include an assertion that the enjoyment of the carriageway was continuous or uninterrupted. Lindley LJ said: ‘It is difficult, if not impossible, to enunciate a principle which will reconcile all . .
CitedBridle v Ruby CA 1989
The plaintiff was able to establish a right of way by prescription despite his personal belief that he had such a right by grant.
Ralph Gibson LJ said: ‘For mistake as to the origin of the right asserted by the user to be relevant, it seems to . .
CitedCumbernauld and Kilsyth District Council v Dollar Land (Cumbernauld) Ltd SCS 1992
(Inner House) When Cumbernauld town centre was built, a walkway was provided between the shopping centre and residential areas. It was used for many years, but then closed to prevent crime. The authority sought an interdict to keep it open as a . .
CitedCumbernauld and Kilsyth District Council v Dollar Land (Cumbernauld) Ltd HL 22-Jul-1993
A walkway had existed from the town centre to residential areas. When the land was acquired the defendant new owners sought to close the walkway. The authority asserted that a public right of way had been acquired.
Held: There was no need to . .
CitedHenderson v Volk 1982
(Court of Appeal of Ontario) Cory JA said: ‘It is different when a party seeks to establish a right-of-way for pedestrians over a sidewalk. In those circumstances the user sought to be established may not even be known to the owner of the servient . .

Cited by:

CitedLondon Tara Hotel Ltd v Kensington Close Hotel Ltd ChD 1-Nov-2010
The defendant asserted that it had acquired the right to use a private access road over the claimant’s land. There had been a licence granted under which an earlier owner had been said to have used the land. The defendant claimed under the 1832 Act . .
CitedPaddico (267) Ltd v Kirklees Metropolitan Council and Others ChD 23-Jun-2011
The company sought the rectification of the register of village greens to remove an entry relating to its land, saying that the Council had not properly considered the need properly to identify the locality which was said to have enjoyed the rights . .
CitedCoventry and Others v Lawrence and Another SC 26-Feb-2014
C operated a motor racing circuit as tenant. The neighbour L objected that the noise emitted by the operations were a nuisance. C replied that the fact of his having planning consent meant that it was not a nuisance.
Held: The neighbour’s . .
CitedCoventry and Others v Lawrence and Another SC 26-Feb-2014
C operated a motor racing circuit as tenant. The neighbour L objected that the noise emitted by the operations were a nuisance. C replied that the fact of his having planning consent meant that it was not a nuisance.
Held: The neighbour’s . .
CitedAdamson and Others v Paddico (267) Ltd SC 5-Feb-2014
Land had been registered as a town or village green but wrongly so. The claimant had sought rectification, but the respondents argued that the long time elapsed after registration should defeat the request.
Held: The appeal were solely as to . .
CitedBarkas v North Yorkshire County Council CA 23-Oct-2012
The court was asked: ‘When local inhabitants indulge in lawful sports and pastimes on a recreation ground which has been provided for that purpose by a local authority in the exercise of its statutory powers, do they do so ‘by right’ or ‘as of . .
CitedBarkas, Regina (on The Application of ) v North Yorkshire County Council and Another SC 6-Mar-2014
The Court was asked as to the registration of a playing field as a ‘town or village green’. Local residents asserted that their use of the land, having been ‘as of right’ required the registration. They now appealed against rejection of that . .
CitedLynn Shellfish Ltd and Others v Loose and Another SC 13-Apr-2016
The court was asked as to the extent of an exclusive prescriptive right (ie an exclusive right obtained through a long period of use) to take cockles and mussels from a stretch of the foreshore on the east side of the Wash, on the west coast of . .
CitedLancashire County Council, Regina (on The Application of) v SSEFRA and Another SC 11-Dec-2019
Two appeals as to the circumstances in which the concept of ‘statutory incompatibility’ will defeat an application to register land as a town or village green where the land is held by a public authority for statutory purposes. In the first case, . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.402003

Regina v Oxfordshire County Council and Another, Ex Parte Sunningwell Parish Council: HL 25 Jun 1999

When setting out to establish that a piece of land has become a village green with rights of common, the tests are similar to those used in the law of prescription and adverse possession. Accordingly, there is no need to establish a belief in those using the rights asserted beyond that the use is as of right. ‘As of right’ does not require that the inhabitants should believe themselves to have a legal right. For prescription purposes under the Prescription Act 1832, the Rights of Way Act 1932 and the 1965 Act ‘as of right’ means nec vi, nec clam, nec precario, that is, ‘not by force, nor stealth, nor the licence of the owner’ The purpose of the 1965 Act was ‘to preserve and improve common land and town and village greens. ‘ ‘Any legal system must have rules of prescription which prevent the disturbance of long-established de facto enjoyment.’
Lord Hoffmann said: ‘Any legal system must have rules of prescription which prevent the disturbance of long-established de facto enjoyment.’
By way of explanation of the need for the long user to be without force, secrecy or permission and therefore ‘as of right’, Lord Hoffmann said: ‘The unifying element in these three vitiating circumstances was that each constituted a reason why it would not be reasonable to expect the owner to resist the exercise of the right – in the first case, because rights should not be acquired by the use of force, in the second, because the owner would not have known of the user and in the third, because he had consented to the user, but for a limited period.’

Judges:

Lord Browne-Wilkinson, Lord Steyn, Lord Hoffmann, Lord Hobhouse of Wood-borough, Lord Millett

Citations:

Times 25-Jun-1999, Gazette 21-Jul-1999, [1999] UKHL 28, [2000] 1 AC 335, [1999] 3 ALL ER 385, [1999] 3 WLR 160, [1999] NPC 74, (2000) 79 P and CR 199, [1999] 2 EGLR 94, [1999] 31 EG 85, [1999] BLGR 651, [2000] JPL 384, [1999] EG 91

Links:

House of Lords, Bailii

Statutes:

Commons Registration Act 1965 13(b), Rights of Way Act 1932

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

Appeal fromRegina v Oxfordshire County Council ex parte Sunningwell Parish Council CA 24-Nov-1997
The Parish Council appealed against refusal of leave to seek judicial review of a decision to reject an application for certain land to be registered as a common. . .
At first instanceRegina v Oxfordshire County Council ex parte Sunningwell Parish Council Admn 11-Jul-1996
The Parish Council sought judicial review of the county council’s decision to reject a regristation of land as a Common on the ground that the user of the land by the villagers had not been shown to be ‘as of right.’
Held: Leave to bring the . .
WrongJones v Bates CA 1938
The court considered whether there had been an act by the landowner sufficient to amount to a dedication a path as a public right of way. Scott LJ said that actual dedication was ‘often a pure legal fiction [which] put on the affirmant of the public . .

Cited by:

CitedRoland Brandwood and others v Bakewell Management Ltd CA 30-Jan-2003
House owners had used vehicular access across a common to get to their houses for many years. The commons owner required them to purchase the right, and they replied that they had acquired the right by lost modern grant and/or by prescription.
CitedOxfordshire County Council v Oxford City Council, Catherine Mary Robinson ChD 22-Jan-2004
Land had been registered in part as a common. The council appealed.
Held: The rights pre-existing the Act had not been lost. The presumption against retrospectively disapplying vested rights applied, and the application had properly been made. . .
CitedBakewell Management Limited v Brandwood and others HL 1-Apr-2004
Houses were built next to a common. Over many years the owners had driven over the common. The landowners appealed a decision that they could not acquire a right of way by prescription over the common because such use had been unlawful as a criminal . .
CitedWhitmey, Regina (on the Application of) v the Commons Commissioners CA 21-Jul-2004
The applicant sought to leave to appeal against refusal of his challenge to the registration of land as a green.
Held: The 1965 Act did not limit the registration of greens to those which were registered by 3 January 1970. The Commons . .
CitedGodmanchester Town Council, Regina (on the Application Of) v Secretary of State for the Environment Food and Rural Affairs CA 19-Dec-2005
The court considered whether a pathway had become a public highway.
Held: ‘The main question for the Court is whether sufficiency of evidence of an intention not to dedicate necessary to satisfy the proviso requires, as a matter of law, that . .
CitedOxfordshire County Council v Oxford City Council and others HL 24-May-2006
Application had been made to register as a town or village green an area of land which was largely a boggy marsh. The local authority resisted the application wanting to use the land instead for housing. It then rejected advice it received from a . .
CitedGodmanchester Town Council, Regina (on the Application of) v Secretary of State for the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs HL 20-Jun-2007
The house was asked about whether continuous use of an apparent right of way by the public would create a public right of way after 20 years, and also whether a non overt act by a landowner was sufficient to prove his intention not to dedicate the . .
CitedOdey and Others v Barber ChD 29-Nov-2006
The claimants sought a declaration that they had two rights of way over a neighbour’s land. One was claimed by continuous use for twenty years, and the second was said to have been implied under the 1925 Act. No express grant was suggested. . .
CitedLewis, Regina (on The Application of) v Redcar and Cleveland Borough Council and Another SC 3-Mar-2010
The claimants sought to have land belonging to the council registered as a village green to prevent it being developed. They said that it had for more than twenty years been used by the community for various sports. The council replied that it had . .
CitedLondon Tara Hotel Ltd v Kensington Close Hotel Ltd ChD 1-Nov-2010
The defendant asserted that it had acquired the right to use a private access road over the claimant’s land. There had been a licence granted under which an earlier owner had been said to have used the land. The defendant claimed under the 1832 Act . .
CitedPaddico (267) Ltd v Kirklees Metropolitan Council and Others ChD 23-Jun-2011
The company sought the rectification of the register of village greens to remove an entry relating to its land, saying that the Council had not properly considered the need properly to identify the locality which was said to have enjoyed the rights . .
CitedAdamson and Others v Paddico (267) Ltd SC 5-Feb-2014
Land had been registered as a town or village green but wrongly so. The claimant had sought rectification, but the respondents argued that the long time elapsed after registration should defeat the request.
Held: The appeal were solely as to . .
CitedBarkas v North Yorkshire County Council CA 23-Oct-2012
The court was asked: ‘When local inhabitants indulge in lawful sports and pastimes on a recreation ground which has been provided for that purpose by a local authority in the exercise of its statutory powers, do they do so ‘by right’ or ‘as of . .
CitedBarkas, Regina (on The Application of ) v North Yorkshire County Council and Another SC 6-Mar-2014
The Court was asked as to the registration of a playing field as a ‘town or village green’. Local residents asserted that their use of the land, having been ‘as of right’ required the registration. They now appealed against rejection of that . .
CitedNewhaven Port and Properties Ltd, Regina (on The Application of) v East Sussex County Council and Another SC 25-Feb-2015
The court was asked: ‘whether East Sussex County Council . . was wrong in law to decide to register an area . . known as West Beach at Newhaven . . as a village green pursuant to the provisions of the Commons Act 2006. The points of principle raised . .
CitedWinterburn and Another v Bennett and Another CA 25-May-2016
The court was asked as to the steps which an owner of land must take to prevent others, who were using the land without permission, acquiring rights over the land. The claimants here had ignored clear signs placed on the land which asserted the . .
CitedLynn Shellfish Ltd and Others v Loose and Another SC 13-Apr-2016
The court was asked as to the extent of an exclusive prescriptive right (ie an exclusive right obtained through a long period of use) to take cockles and mussels from a stretch of the foreshore on the east side of the Wash, on the west coast of . .
CitedLancashire County Council, Regina (on The Application of) v SSEFRA and Another SC 11-Dec-2019
Two appeals as to the circumstances in which the concept of ‘statutory incompatibility’ will defeat an application to register land as a town or village green where the land is held by a public authority for statutory purposes. In the first case, . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land, Limitation

Leading Case

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.87505

NHS Property Services Ltd, Regina (on The Application of) v Surrey County Council and Another: Admn 13 Jul 2016

Judges:

Gilbart J

Citations:

[2016] EWHC 1715 (Admin), [2016] 4 WLR 130, [2016] WLR(D) 397, [2016] 4 WLR 128

Links:

Bailii, WLRD

Statutes:

Commons Act 2006, Commons (Registration of Town or Village Greens) (Interim Arrangements) (England) Regulations 2007

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Land, Human Rights

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.567207