Struggles and others v Lloyds TSB plc: TCC 10 Feb 2000

A mineral quarry was repossessed under a mortgage and attempts were made to sell it. A claim that it had been sold at an undervalue was defeated. The valuation of such an asset was to make allowance for capitalisation of the income stream from mineral royalties. The sale of the property had been delayed long enough to allow a proper valuation, and a further sale would have put the bank at risk of other allegations. The bank had obtained the best price reasonably obtainable.

Citations:

Gazette 10-Feb-2000

Land, Banking

Updated: 10 April 2022; Ref: scu.89596

Target Home Loans Ltd v Iza Ltd: CC 20 Jan 2000

(Central London County Court) The bank recovered possession of leasehold premises. The landlord served a notice requiring repairs on the tenant, but refused to allow the mortgage in possession a key to enter the property. They then claimed to have recovered possession peacefully. The bank applied for relief from forfeiture and succeeded. The notice was pointlessly served on the tenant who no longer had access to carry out any repairs, and the counter-notice was effective.

Citations:

Gazette 20-Jan-2000

Statutes:

Leasehold Property (Repairs) Act 1938

Landlord and Tenant, Land

Updated: 10 April 2022; Ref: scu.89719

Attwood and Another v Bovis Homes Ltd: ChD 18 Apr 2000

The dominant land, which had always been used for agricultural purposes, had a prescriptive right to drain surface water over neighbouring land. Though the proposed development of a housing estate on the dominant land, would be very substantial, the right could still be enjoyed and would not be lost. An easement had been acquired by prescription, but after such acquisition, the nature of the use of the dominant tenement changed, substantially increasing the burden of the easement.
Held: Such increased usage could lead to a loss or suspension of the easement. The result might however differ according to the nature of the easement. It would be more readily follow in right of way cases than in rights of support. In this case a right of discharge of water from land developed from agricultural use would not lead to a loss of the easement.

Citations:

Times 18-Apr-2000, Gazette 18-May-2000, [2001] Ch 371

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedMcAdams Homes Ltd v Robinson and Another CA 27-Feb-2004
The defendant blocked the line of a sewer. The claimant alleged that it had an easement and sought the cost of building the alternative pipe. The question to be answered was ‘Where an easement is granted by implication on the sale of a property, . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land

Updated: 10 April 2022; Ref: scu.78022

Regina v Secretary of State for Wales Ex Parte Emery: QBD 24 Jun 1996

A public enquiry is necessary where there is a real dispute over the existence of a public right of way.

Citations:

Times 24-Jun-1996

Statutes:

Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981 Sch 14

Cited by:

Appeal fromRegina v Secretary of State for Wales Ex Parte Emery CA 9-Jul-1997
The applicant had sought to have included in the definitive map, a local footpath, and now challenged refusal to include it.
Held: A public right of way may be created by dedication or it may be deemed after actual use by the public over . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land

Updated: 10 April 2022; Ref: scu.87976

Anglo Continental Educational Group (GB) Ltd v Capital Homes (Southern) Ltd: ChD 2 Jul 2008

The parties disputed the effect of clauses in a contract for the sale of land.

Judges:

David Donaldson QC DHCJ

Citations:

[2008] EWHC 2201 (Ch), [2008] 3 EGLR 96, [2008] 46 EG 116, [2008] 27 EG 117

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

Appeal fromAnglo Continental Educational Group (GB) Ltd v Capital Homes (Southern) Ltd CA 17-Mar-2009
The two parties to this appeal are locked in battle over a contractual provision for a discount in the calculation of the purchase price for two properties.
Arden LJ said: that ‘if the agreement is susceptible of an interpretation which will . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land

Updated: 10 April 2022; Ref: scu.341726

Regina v City of London Corporation and Another Ex Parte Mystery of the Barbers of London: QBD 28 Jun 1996

The authority acquired several plots of land at different times, some compulsorily, and others pursuant to purchase notice. It granted a lease to the second respondent who built on it. In 1969 the Council granted the applicants an area of adjoining land and by the transfer covenanted not to interfere with light or air passing through any windows of the Hall thereon built. Subsequently, the building leased to the Second Respondents was demolished and planning permission was granted for a redevelopment of the site. The Council contended that interference with the rights of light and air granted to the Hall by the transfer in 1969 were overridden by section 237 by virtue of the acquisition of the land between 1954 and 1959, despite the lack of apparent connection between the original acquisition and the proposed redevelopment.
Held: The Council was correct. The words ‘for planning purposes’ do not require the redevelopment to be linked to the initial purpose of the acquisition or appropriation. The words were quite general distinguished the case from one where an acquisition was made for other purposes. The concept of initial development followed by a cyclical redevelopment of the site was hardly esoteric and if Parliament had intended to apply a restriction to section 237 to the first development, then very different language would have been required. It must have been intended that a Local Authority should be able to develop a site which it had acquired for planning purposes from time to time whenever an occasion for redevelopment arose. There was no rational basis for restricting the operation to the first development after acquisition or appropriation, as buildings become obsolete and have to be redeveloped from time to time, thus requiring the Local Authority to retain a power to override third party rights from time to time. The Local Authority could rely on section 237 to override rights which had arisen after the first redevelopment and which were not connected to it.

Judges:

Dyson J

Citations:

Times 28-Jun-1996, [1996] 2 EGLR 128

Statutes:

Town and Country Planning Act 1990 237(1)

Cited by:

CitedMidtown Ltd v City of London Real Property Company Ltd ChD 20-Jan-2005
Tenants occupied land next to land which was to be developed after compulsory acquisition. The tenants and the landlords asserted a right of light over the land, and sought an injunction to prevent the development. The developer denied that any . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land

Updated: 09 April 2022; Ref: scu.86382

in Re Pavlou (A Bankrupt): ChD 17 Mar 1993

Mr and Mrs Pavlou bought a house for andpound;12,500 with a mortgage of andpound;9,500. After the husband left, the wife remained in sole occupation, and paid the mortgage instalments as they fell due. Thirteen years after the marriage Mrs Pavlou obtained a decree nisi of divorce, and less than a year later the husband was made bankrupt. The joint tenancy was thereby severed, and they then owned the property as tenants in common in equal shares. It was agreed that there would have to be an order for sale and an equitable accounting.
Held: There would have to be an inquiry whether an occupation rent should be set-off against the mortgage interest payments. A court of equity will order an inquiry and payment of occupation rent, not only in the case where the co-owner in occupation has ousted the other, but in any other case in which it is necessary in order to do equity between the parties that an occupation rent should be paid. If a tenant in common leaves the property voluntarily, but would be welcome back and would be in a position to enjoy his or her right to occupy, it would normally not be fair or equitable to the remaining tenant in common to charge him or her with an occupation rent which he or she never expected to pay.
Millett J said: ‘The trustee in bankruptcy submits that there is no equitable accounting between beneficial joint tenants but only between tenants in common, on the ground that beneficial joint tenants own the entire property per mie et per tout, so that expenditure by one is expenditure on his or her own property, and cannot be described as laid out in part in the improvement of the share of the other co-owner. Accordingly, he submits, the wife is not entitled to be reimbursed for any expenditure by her before the date of the bankruptcy order.
In my judgment there is no distinction between a beneficial tenancy in common and a beneficial joint tenancy. In neither case could a co-owner obtain contribution from his or her co-owner; any reimbursement had to wait a suit for partition or an order by the court for sale of property. On a partition suit or an order for sale, adjustments could be made between the co-owners, the guiding principle being that neither party could take the benefit of an increase in the value of the property without making an allowance for what had been expended by the other in order to obtain it: see Leigh v Dickeson (1884) 15 QBD 60, [1881-5] All ER Rep 1099. That was a case of tenants in common, but in my judgment the same principle must apply as between joint tenants; the question only arose on a partition or on the division of the proceeds of sale, the very point of time at which severance occurred if there was a joint tenancy. The guiding principle for the court of equity is that the proportions in which the entirety should be divided between former co-owners must have regard to any increase in its value which has been brought about by means of expenditure by one of them.’
As to occupation rents, Millet J said: ‘I take the law to be to the following effect. First, a court of equity will order an inquiry and payment of occupation rent, not only in the case where the co-owner in occupation has ousted the other, but in any other case in which it is necessary in order to do equity between the parties that an occupation rent should be paid. The fact that there has not been an ouster or forceful exclusion therefore is far from conclusive. Secondly, where it is a matrimonial home and the marriage has broken down, the party who leaves the property will, in most cases, be regarded as excluded from the family home, so that an occupation rent should be paid by the co-owner who remains. But that is not a rule of law; that is merely a statement of the prima facie conclusion to be drawn from the facts. The true position is that if a tenant in common leaves the property voluntarily, but would be welcome back and would be in a position to enjoy his or her right to occupy, it would normally not be fair or equitable to the remaining tenant in common to charge him or her with an occupation rent which he or she never expected to pay.’

Judges:

Millett J

Citations:

Gazette 17-Mar-1993, [1993] 1 WLR 1046, [1993] 3 All ER 955

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedLeigh v Dickeson 1884
The principles of equitable accounting apply equally to beneficial tenancies in common and beneficial joint tenancies. The guiding principle is that neither party can take the benefit of an increase in the value of the property without making an . .

Cited by:

CitedByford v Butler; In re Byford deceased ChD 10-Jun-2003
The house was owned in joint names. The husband became bankrupt, and the wife continued to pay the mortgage as to interest and capital. The trustee sought a declaration as to the ownership of the interests in the house. After the husband died, the . .
CitedGrimm v Newman and Another ChD 1-Nov-2001
Mr Grimm was given advice about the tax consequences of bring foreign investments into the country as a gift to his wife so that she could purchase property. He was advised that it would not have adverse tax consequences, but after the event he was . .
CitedClarke v Harlowe ChD 12-Aug-2005
The parties lived together. They acquired between them several properties of which the last was declared to be held as joint tenants. The relationship broke down. The parties now sought a declaration as to the destination of the proceeds of sale, . .
CitedMurphy v Gooch CA 27-Jun-2007
The unmarried parties had sought an order from the court as to their respective interests in their former family home.
Held:The judge had been incorrect to make his decsion based on the principles of equitable accounting. He should have used . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Insolvency, Land, Equity

Updated: 09 April 2022; Ref: scu.85852

Regina v Secretary of State for the Environment, Ex Parte Plymouth City Airport: QBD 17 Feb 2000

The airport was the operator liable for compensation. The apron was extended to allow for two helicopters to be based at the airport, and a neighbouring householder claimed compensation for loss to the value of his house. Whether the development was substantial, was not absolute, but relative to the size of the airport, and the important time was the time of the development works. The certificate from the Secretary of State that the works were apron alterations stood.

Citations:

Gazette 17-Feb-2000

Land

Updated: 09 April 2022; Ref: scu.85500

Regina v Secretary of State for the Environment Transport and the Regions, Ex Parte Wheeler: QBD 29 Jun 2000

The minister decided that upon land which had been compulsorily purchased, but which was no longer needed being sold, it should not first be offered back to the original owners. The owner complained that the decision was in breach of the rules, which required such an offer unless it was a very exceptional case with strong and urgent reasons of public interest. They argued that this required a risk to life or limb. This was too close a definition. For such a decision to be intrinsically perverse, it had to defy comprehension. In this case, the secretary had asked himself the right questions, and the challenge failed.

Citations:

Gazette 29-Jun-2000, Gazette 20-Jul-2000, Times 04-Aug-2000

Statutes:

Crichel Down Rules 1992

Land, Administrative

Updated: 09 April 2022; Ref: scu.85497

Regina v Secretary of State for Defence, Ex Parte Wilkins: QBD 13 Jul 2000

Land had been acquired compulsorily, but was now no longer required. The Minister asserted that the character of the land had changed and that there was no need first to re-offer it to the previous owner. The secretary contended that all the parcels of land should be considered together, and the former owners sought consideration of each parcel separately. The court said that the question related to the plot of land now to be sold, rather than the separate plots which had been purchased.

Citations:

Gazette 13-Jul-2000

Statutes:

Crichel Down Rules 1992

Land

Updated: 09 April 2022; Ref: scu.85476

Regina v Anglian Water Servies, ex Parte Three Valleys Water Plc: QBD 20 Jan 2000

The respondent was successor to the owners of a reservoir, and the applicants sought to increase the amount of water they could draw daily. It was agreed that the respondent was not a statutory water undertaker, and the extent of the applicants right of supply was governed by the Act establishing the right to draw water. Still, the applicants were not entitled to the full amount of water supply they sought.

Citations:

Gazette 20-Jan-2000

Land, Environment, Utilities

Updated: 09 April 2022; Ref: scu.85113

Overseas Investment Services Ltd v Simcobuild Construction Ltd and Another: CA 21 Apr 1995

Grant of s38 rights in a Highways agreement didn’t operate as grant of future public rights of way, nor create an overriding interest.

Citations:

Ind Summary 12-Jun-1995, Times 21-Apr-1995

Statutes:

Highways Act 1980 38(3)(b), Land Registration Act 1925 70(1)(a)

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

Appeal fromOverseas Investment Services Ltd v Simcobuild Construction Ltd and Another ChD 2-Nov-1993
A section 38 agreement was an overriding interest, and created a public right which was binding on purchaser. . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land, Registered Land

Updated: 09 April 2022; Ref: scu.84497

Mortgage Corporation v Lambert and Co (A Firm) and Another: CA 24 Apr 2000

If it was alleged that a lender could should have been aware of an overvaluation of a property so as to start the limitation clock, the owner must satisfy the court that it was reasonable at the time alleged for the lender have become obliged to obtain a retrospective valuation. That burden was not carried in this case.

Citations:

Times 24-Apr-2000, [2000] PNLR 820

Statutes:

Limitation Act 1980 14A(10)

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

Appeal froomMortgage Corporation v Lambert and Co (A Firm) and Another ChD 11-Oct-1999
Estimates of the real values of houses which had been taken as security for loans were not sufficiently precise to forewarn a lender of the damage resulting from earlier negligent valuations, and accordingly the lender was not fixed with notice by . .

Cited by:

Appealed toMortgage Corporation v Lambert and Co (A Firm) and Another ChD 11-Oct-1999
Estimates of the real values of houses which had been taken as security for loans were not sufficiently precise to forewarn a lender of the damage resulting from earlier negligent valuations, and accordingly the lender was not fixed with notice by . .
CitedAdams v Bracknell Forest Borough Council HL 17-Jun-2004
A attended the defendant’s schools between 1977 and 1988. He had always experienced difficulties with reading and writing and as an adult found those difficulties to be an impediment in his employment. He believed them to be the cause of the . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land, Limitation, Professional Negligence

Updated: 09 April 2022; Ref: scu.83872

Mortgage Corporation v Lambert and Co (A Firm) and Another: ChD 11 Oct 1999

Estimates of the real values of houses which had been taken as security for loans were not sufficiently precise to forewarn a lender of the damage resulting from earlier negligent valuations, and accordingly the lender was not fixed with notice by the estimates, and time did not begin to run against them.

Citations:

Times 11-Oct-1999

Statutes:

Limitation Act 1980 14A(10)

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

Appealed toMortgage Corporation v Lambert and Co (A Firm) and Another CA 24-Apr-2000
If it was alleged that a lender could should have been aware of an overvaluation of a property so as to start the limitation clock, the owner must satisfy the court that it was reasonable at the time alleged for the lender have become obliged to . .

Cited by:

Appeal froomMortgage Corporation v Lambert and Co (A Firm) and Another CA 24-Apr-2000
If it was alleged that a lender could should have been aware of an overvaluation of a property so as to start the limitation clock, the owner must satisfy the court that it was reasonable at the time alleged for the lender have become obliged to . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Limitation, Land

Updated: 09 April 2022; Ref: scu.83871

Mark Wilkinson Furniture Ltd v Construction Industry Training Board: QBD 10 Oct 2000

The operation of installing kitchens could amount to work altering a building. Accordingly firms carrying out such installations were liable to pay a levy as a contribution to the industry’s training scheme. Although in many cases fittings might only be attached to buildings by screws, the fittings were intended to alter the character of a building, and counted as such.

Citations:

Times 10-Oct-2000

Statutes:

Industrial Training Levy (Construction Board) Order 1999 159

Citing:

See AlsoMark Wilkinson Furniture Limited and Construction Industry Training Board Admn 12-Jan-2000
. .

Cited by:

See alsoMark Wilkinson Furniture Limited and Construction Industry Training Board Admn 12-Jan-2000
. .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land, Construction, Employment

Updated: 09 April 2022; Ref: scu.83411

Lewin (Trading Standards Officer) v Barratt Homes Ltd: QBD 1 Dec 1999

New houses were advertised for sale. Pictures of the house were available, with some disclaimers as to minor variations, but the houses actually built had greater deviation. The builder claimed the statements were not descriptions of existing properties, but they knew they could not build the houses as described.
Held: The case was remitted to the magistrates with a direction to convict.

Citations:

Gazette 01-Dec-1999

Statutes:

Property Misdescriptions Act 1991

Crime, Land

Updated: 09 April 2022; Ref: scu.83042

Jordan v Norfolk County Council: ChD 25 May 1994

An order to replace trees ‘as reasonably practical’ was to include cost considerations, and it could be varied where the costs exceeded those expected. The mandatory order was varied. When considering what was meant by ‘reasonably practical’ ‘. . there is very little nowadays which is not physically feasible if enough money is spent. Hence in this context the phrase is apt to include financial considerations.’

Judges:

Sir Donald Nicholls VC

Citations:

Times 25-May-1994, Ind Summary 20-Jun-1994, Gazette 03-Aug-1994, [1994] 4 All E R 218, [1994] 1 WLR 1353

Cited by:

CitedMidtown Ltd v City of London Real Property Company Ltd ChD 20-Jan-2005
Tenants occupied land next to land which was to be developed after compulsory acquisition. The tenants and the landlords asserted a right of light over the land, and sought an injunction to prevent the development. The developer denied that any . .
CitedCalgin, Regina (on the Application of) v London Borough of Enfield Admn 29-Jul-2005
The claimant complained that having applied for housing in the borough they had in fact housed him outside the borough.
Held: The authority had a duty to house the applicant so far it was reasonably practicable within its borders. The policy . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Litigation Practice, Land, Environment

Updated: 09 April 2022; Ref: scu.82627

Jenmain Builders and Others v Steed and Steed (A Firm): CA 20 Mar 2000

The defendant firm of solicitors acted on the sale of property, but failed to notify a purchaser that he was in a contract race and that another contract had been sent out. The claimant would have been able to exchange, and to have acquired the property.
Held: The defendants had failed to follow their own professional rules and were liable, even though in this case the damages were minimal in the absence of any proof of loss of profits.
Chadwick LJ said: ‘This was a property with development potential. It is common ground that this property was no longer to be used as a village hall. It would have to be used for some other purpose; and there would have to be some development so that it could be used for that purpose. The question was: for what development could planning permission be obtained and how valuable would the property be on completion of that development? But those are the factors which a properly informed market will take into account in fixing the market value of property. The profit potential of the property is an element to be taken into account in fixing its market value. It is not suggested that there was anything special about this property to the appellants as purchasers. It is not suggested that there were not other developers in the market for property of this nature who could have made a proper assessment of the value of this property. The problem for the appellants in the present case is that they never sought to persuade the judge – and never adduced evidence to establish – that the market value of this property, Dukes Hall, was anything greater than the pounds 67,500 which the Parish Council was seeking. It is for those reasons that the claim for loss of profits is one which the court could not entertain in this case. . . In the present case, there is no evidence that these appellants would not have been able to purchase other property in the market which they could develop profitably with the use of the money which they did not lay out in the purchase of Dukes Hall. There is no evidence that the respondents, insofar as their duty lay in contract, were aware of any special circumstances which made it impossible for the respondents to employ their funds in the ordinary course of their business, or of any circumstances which suggested that this property was being sold at an under-value. Indeed, in the circumstances that they were acting for the vendors, the Parish Council, it would be most unlikely that they would regard the property as being sold at an under- value rather than at market price’.

Judges:

Chadwick LJ

Citations:

Gazette 30-Mar-2000, 2000 BNLR 616

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedJoyce v Bowman Law Ltd ChD 18-Feb-2010
The claimant asserted negligence by the defendant licensed conveyancers in not warning him of the effect of an option in the contract. He had been advised that it would allow him to choose to buy additional land, but it was in fact a put option. The . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Professional Negligence, Land, Damages

Updated: 08 April 2022; Ref: scu.82513

Enterprise Inns Plc v Secretary of State for the Environment, Transport and the Regions: QBD 18 May 2000

A compulsory purchase order was made. The land owner applied for confirmation by the inspector. They issued an application to challenge the inspector’s recommendation, but did so before it was actually published. The statute required the challenge to be made within six weeks of the publication of the recommendation. The authority said the six weeks was the only window of time in which an application could be submitted.
Held: An application outside that six weeks window gave no jurisdiction to be heard.

Citations:

Gazette 18-May-2000

Statutes:

Acquisition of Land Act 1981 23

Land

Updated: 08 April 2022; Ref: scu.80335

Cottingham and Another v Attey Bower and Jones (A Firm): ChD 19 Apr 2000

A solicitor acted on a purchase in 1993. He asked for but did not receive copies of building regulations consents from 1985. He went ahead anyway.
Held: He had been negligent. He had been under a duty to continue the investigation, and to advise his clients that the replies relating to these consents appeared to be misleading. Some consents had been refused, and there remained a small risk of proceedings by the local authority for an injunction under section 36 (6) of the Building Act 1984, even though time limits had expired for other enforcement purposes. A solicitor is generally under a duty to provide specific information or advice, and not to advise on the wisdom of transactions in general. The fact that the claimant would not have purchased the property but for his negligence did not mean that the defendant was liable for every consequences which would not have happened but for the negligence. The loss for which he is responsible will normally be limited to the consequences of the specific information being inaccurate. Damages were awarded on the basis of the cost of rectifying the defect.

Judges:

Rimmer J

Citations:

Times 19-Apr-2000, Gazette 11-May-2000, [2000] EGCS 48, [2000] Lloyds Rep PN 591

Statutes:

Building Act 1984 36(1) 36(2)

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Land, Professional Negligence, Legal Professions

Updated: 08 April 2022; Ref: scu.79527

Cheltenham and Gloucester Building Society v Grant: CA 23 May 1994

The District Judge is to exercise his discretion informally on suspending possession, and need not apply the rules of evidence rigidly. He may consider that the defendant has sufficent means to support a clearance of the arrears over a reasonable period of time and thus to suspend the rder for possession, without taking direct evidence from him.

Citations:

Ind Summary 23-May-1994, Times 09-May-1994

Statutes:

Administration of Justice Act 1970, Administration of Justice Act 1973 8

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Housing, Litigation Practice, Land, Evidence

Updated: 08 April 2022; Ref: scu.79010

Barclays Bank Plc v Weeks Legg and Dean: ChD 26 Feb 1996

The failure by a conveyancer to disclose a right of way either to his lay client or to the lender was not a breach of his undertaking to acquire a good and marketable title. The Solicitor had applied the money in accordance with the undertaking even though, through no fault of his own, no title was obtained. The action was dismissed.

Judges:

Moseley J QC

Citations:

Times 28-Feb-1996, Ind Summary 26-Feb-1996

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedRe Stirrup’s Contract 1961
The parties disputed whether good title had been shown when an assent under seal had been used where a conveyance ordinarily should have been used.
Held: Good title had been shown. Though the law is concerned with substance rather than form, . .

Cited by:

Appeal fromBarclays Bank Plc v Weeks Legg and Dean (a Firm); Barclays Bank Plc v Lougher and Others; Barclays Bank Plc v Hopkin John and Co CA 21-May-1998
The defendant solicitors had each acted for banks in completing charges over property. They had given the standard agreed form of undertaking to secure a good and marketable title, and the banks now alleged that they were in breach because . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Legal Professions, Land

Updated: 08 April 2022; Ref: scu.78221

Barclays Bank Plc v Estates and Commercial Ltd and Another: CA 20 Mar 1996

An unpaid vendor’s lien was not subordinated to the plaintiff’s charge without clear consent.
Millett LJ said: ‘As soon as a binding contract for sale of land is entered into the vendor has a lien on the property for the purchase money and a right to remain in possession of the property until payment is made. The lien does not arise on completion but on exchange of contracts. It is discharged on completion to the extent that the purchase money is paid: In re Birmingham, decd.; Savage v. Stannard [1959] Ch. 523, cited with approval in London and Cheshire Insurance Co. Ltd. v. Laplagrene Property Co. Ltd. [1971] Ch. 499, 514. Even if the vendor executes an outright conveyance of the legal estate in favour of the purchaser and delivers the title deeds to him, he still retains an equitable lien on the property to secure the payment of any part of the purchase money which remains unpaid. The lien is not excluded by the fact that the conveyance contains an express receipt for the purchase money.
The lien arises by operation of law and independently of the agreement between the parties. It does not depend in any way upon the parties’ subjective intentions. It is excluded where its retention would be inconsistent with the provisions of the contract for sale or with the true nature of the transaction as disclosed by the documents. It is also excluded where, on completion, the vendor receives all that he bargained for: Capital Finance Co. Ltd. v. Stokes [1969] 1 Ch. 261 and Congresbury Motors Ltd. v. Anglo-Belge Finance Co. Ltd. [1971] Ch. 81. In each of those cases the vendor took a legal charge to secure payment. The unpaid vendor’s lien was held to be excluded notwithstanding that the charge later became void for want of registration.’

Judges:

Millett LJ

Citations:

Gazette 20-Mar-1996, [1997] 1 WLR 415

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedCook v The Mortgage Business Plc CA 24-Jan-2012
The land owners sought relief from possession orders made under mortgages given in equity release schemes: ‘If the purchaser raises all or part of the purchase price on mortgage, and then defaults, the issue arises whether the mortgagee’s right to . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land

Updated: 08 April 2022; Ref: scu.78199

Gaskell v Gosling: HL 1897

Affirmed

Citations:

[1897] AC 575

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

Appeal fromGaskell v Gosling CA 28-Apr-1896
The agency of a receiver for the mortgagor is one where the principal, the mortgagor, has no say in the appointment or identity of the receiver and is not entitled to give any instructions to the receiver or to dismiss the receiver. ‘For valuable . .

Cited by:

CitedRhodes v Allied Dunbar Pension Services Ltd CA 1989
The intermediate tenant had charged the lease to the bank, which appointed receivers. Both the sub rent and the head rent fell into arrears. The head landlord then served a notice direct on the subtenant requiring him to pay the rent direct to the . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land

Updated: 08 April 2022; Ref: scu.264583

Rhodes v Allied Dunbar Pension Services Ltd: CA 1989

The intermediate tenant had charged the lease to the bank, which appointed receivers. Both the sub rent and the head rent fell into arrears. The head landlord then served a notice direct on the subtenant requiring him to pay the rent direct to the head landlord. The receiver then levied distress againt the sub tenant. The court held that the right to recover rent was a chose in action, which as a result of the appointment of the recivers assigned the right to receive the rent to the receivers. Because the head landlord knew of the appointment that assignment on the appointment took priority over the head landlord’s own notice (Dearle -v- Hall).
Held: The head landlord’s appeal succeeded. The bank had never gone into possession, and the intermediate tenant was therefore entitled to continue receiving the rents, and the head landlord was able to serve the notice. The appointment of receivers and crystallisation of the bank’s floating charge made no effective difference.
In the context of the mortgagor’s right to receive and retain the income of the mortgaged property without any liability to account to the mortgagor for it, the mortgagor remains in possession of the property ‘only by leave and licence of the mortgagee.’

Judges:

Nicholls LJ

Citations:

[1989] EG 70, [1989] 1 WLR 800

Statutes:

Law of Distress Amendment Act 1908 6

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedDearle v Hall 1828
. .
CitedKnill v Prowse 1884
An assignee of land may sue the tenant for the rent. . .
CitedGaskell v Gosling CA 28-Apr-1896
The agency of a receiver for the mortgagor is one where the principal, the mortgagor, has no say in the appointment or identity of the receiver and is not entitled to give any instructions to the receiver or to dismiss the receiver. ‘For valuable . .
CitedWallrock v Equity and Law Life Assurance Society 1942
. .
CitedInd, Coope and Co 1911
. .
CitedTurner v Walsh CA 1909
The landlord sought to enforce the tenant’s repairing covenants. After the tenancy had been created, he had charged his interest. The tenant said that, since the lessor had conveyed his interest by way of mortgage, the right to sue lay exclusively . .
CitedGaskell v Gosling HL 1897
Affirmed . .
CitedChalloner v Robinson 1908
A landlord entitled to distrain for rent, could seize all goods and chattels found on the tenant’s premises whether they were the property of the tenant or a stranger. . .
MentionedRatford v Northavon District Council CA 1986
The reality of the agency of a receiver is reflected in the continuity, after the appointment of receivers, of the rateable occupation of the mortgagor through the agency of the receivers. The possession of an agent is to be attributed to that of . .

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, Landlord and Tenant

Updated: 08 April 2022; Ref: scu.264292

Lloyds Bank Limited v Marcan: CA 1973

The mortgagor, knowing of the bank’s application for possession of the property, granted a lease to his wife for a term of twenty years. He intended to deprive the mortgagee bank of the ability to obtain vacant possession of the property as and when a possession order was made.
Held: Before section 172 could be used to avoid a transaction, dishonesty had to be shown. This transaction was dishonest. Russell LJ said:- ‘If he disposes of an asset which would be available to his creditors with the intention of prejudicing them by putting it, or its worth, beyond their reach, he is in the ordinary case acting in a fashion not honest in the context of the relationship of debtor and creditor.’
Cairns LJ said that:- ‘a conveyance for good consideration would be regarded as fraudulent if made with the deliberate intention of hindering creditors and for the benefit of the debtor himself rather than as a bona fide . . arrangement’

Judges:

Russell LJ, Cairns LJ

Citations:

[1973] 1 WLR 1387, [1973] 3 All ER 754

Statutes:

Law of Property Act 1925 172

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Equity, Land

Updated: 08 April 2022; Ref: scu.259221

Regina v Somerset County Council ex parte Fewings and Others: QBD 10 Feb 1994

A Local Authority could include ethical considerations in making a decision to ban hunting over land which it owned if the power which it sought to use was in the Act.

Citations:

Times 10-Feb-1994, Independent 16-Feb-1994

Statutes:

Local Government Act 1972 120(1)(b)

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

Appeal fromRegina v Somerset County Council Ex Parte Fewings and Others CA 22-Mar-1995
The local authority had accepted the argument that stag hunting was cruel and had banned it from the land it owned in the Quantocks. The ban was challenged.
Held: The ban was unlawful. The decision had been reached on moral, and not on . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Local Government, Animals, Land

Updated: 07 April 2022; Ref: scu.88071

Loose v Castleton: CA 1978

The foreshore owner, and owner of fisheries rights sought damages from fishermen who had come from the sea to take mussels.
Held: The defendants’ appeals failed.
Bridge LJ stated: ‘That, then, being the law, one must next turn to see what were the facts in so far as they bore on the question of the seaward boundary of the le Strange several fishery. First, there were the series of leases of fishery rights that had been granted at various dates ranging from 1857 up to 1970. If one looks at the earliest and latest of the leases in that series, one finds this. There is a lease from 1857 to 1867 that defines the seaward boundary of the fishery rights that were demised as ‘the extreme low-water mark of the sea on the extreme west.’ The two latest leases are one from 1965 to 1970, in which the demise was of ‘ the foreshore and so much of the seabed as belongs to the landlord,’ and, finally, the current lease under which the plaintiff in this action claims, which defines the seaward boundary in these words: ‘ … as far as can be worked without boats at extreme low water which lie within the landlord’s fishery.’ Those are the first pieces of evidence supporting the view, for which the plaintiff contended and which the judge accepted, that the seaward boundary extended at least to the mean low-water mark of spring, as opposed to ordinary, tides. Secondly, there was evidence, in particular from a Mr. Thursby, who was very familiar with the rights as they had in fact been exercised, that de facto the le Strange estate and its lessees had claimed and worked the mussel scalps between the low-water mark of ordinary tides and the low-water mark of spring tides for at least 17 years prior to this litigation. Finally, however, and perhaps most importantly of all, there was clear evidence, which the judge accepted, that the best mussel grounds, the favourite habitat of the mussel on this length of coast, lay between the low-water mark of ordinary tides and the low-water mark of spring tides. In the light of that evidence, one is entitled to ask oneself the question: is it really to be supposed that, when the Crown was granting to favoured subjects a valuable right such as a several fishery relating to shellfish in the tenth or the eleventh century, it was doing so by reference to an artificial line on a map – mean low water at ordinary tides – that, so far as I am aware, is a purely modern concept that emerged in the nineteenth century, and doing so in order to deny to the favoured subjects the primary benefit that one would suppose was intended to be conferred on them, namely the benefit of exploiting the fishery where it could best be exploited? The answer to this question is, obviously: ‘no, one would not suppose that.’

Judges:

Bridge, Megaw and Ormrod LJJ

Citations:

(1978) 41 P and CR 19

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: 06 April 2022; Ref: scu.606892

Gaia Ventures Ltd v Abbeygate Helical (Leisure Plaza) Ltd: ChD 31 Jan 2018

The court was asked whether a developer used ‘reasonable endeavours’ to achieve ‘as soon as reasonably practicable’ the satisfaction of certain conditions upon the fulfilment of which the developer became obliged to make an overage payment of pounds 1.4 million: and if it did not, then whether the overage payment or damages in lieu are payable.

Judges:

Norris J

Citations:

[2018] EWHC 118 (Ch)

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Contract, Land

Updated: 04 April 2022; Ref: scu.604191

Mistral Asset Finance Ltd v Registrar of Companies and Another: ChD 12 Nov 2020

The Claimant sought a declaration that it remains entitled to a legal mortgage of leasehold property following the dissolution of the mortgagor, Buzzlines Coaches Limited.

Judges:

His Honour Judge Halliwell sitting as a Judge of the High Court

Citations:

[2020] EWHC 3027 (Ch)

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Companies Act 2006 1017

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Company, Land, Insolvency

Updated: 03 April 2022; Ref: scu.655674

School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS) v Persons Unknown: ChD 25 Nov 2010

Application brought by the School of Oriental and African Studies, seeking possession on an urgent basis of part of its campus, one of the principal buildings comprising the London campus of the school. Students of SOAS had been in occupation of the Brunei Suite conducting a ‘sit-in’ as part of their protest against the Coalition Government’s spending plans in relation to higher education.

Judges:

Henderson J

Citations:

[2010] EWHC 3977 (Ch)

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Land

Updated: 02 April 2022; Ref: scu.601930

Patrick v Mckinley: CA 8 Dec 2017

Appeals from the dismissal of claims for a declaration of a proprietary interest in two freehold properties and in the shares of a company owning a third property or, in the alternative, for payment for work done by him on the properties on a quantum meruit basis.

Judges:

Lloyd-Jones L, David Richards LJ

Citations:

[2017] EWCA Civ 2068

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Land, Trusts

Updated: 02 April 2022; Ref: scu.601141

Ong and Others v Ping: CA 12 Dec 2017

Judges:

Sir Brian Leveson P QBD, Underhill LJ, Sir Colin Rimer

Citations:

[2017] EWCA Civ 2069

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedOng and Others v Ping ChD 17-Jun-2015
The parties disputed the beneficial interests in the proceeds of sale of a substantial property. Litigation had now continued for over twenty years. . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Trusts, Land

Updated: 02 April 2022; Ref: scu.601140

Pendennis Shipyard (Holdings) Ltd and Another v A and P Falmouth Ltd and Others Re: Falmouth Dockyard: UTLC 24 Nov 2017

UTLC RESTRICTIVE COVENANTS – Modification – Falmouth Dockyard – Application to modify restrictions so as to align covenants with those on adjoining land owned by the applicants and to allow work on commercial and military craft – potential for effect on objectors’ businesses – whether objectors enjoy practical benefits of substantial value or advantage – application succeeding in part – Section 84(1)(aa) and (c) Law of Property Act 1925

Citations:

[2017] UKUT 430 (LC)

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Law of Property Act 1925 84

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Land

Updated: 02 April 2022; Ref: scu.599749

Barter Re Ivy House: UTLC 22 Nov 2017

UTLC RESTRICTIVE COVENANTS – DISCHARGE – application by original covenantor to discharge covenant of recent origin – local authority covenantee not consenting but choosing not to participate – application dismissed

Citations:

[2017] UKUT 451 (LC)

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Land

Updated: 01 April 2022; Ref: scu.599590

Robson v Hallett: CA 1967

A police officer had been impliedly invited onto land, and was asked to leave, but was then assaulted before he had chance to leave.
Held: The conviction was upheld.
There is an implied licence available to members of the public on lawful business to approach the front door of a house and seek entry. The occupier will not however be heard to say that while he or she had neither done nor said anything to negate or revoke any such licence, it should not be implied because subjectively he or she had not intended to give it
Where an unwanted visitor who presents himself at the front door, is asked in but then told to go, he must leave immediately, taking the quickest route back to the highway and not delaying. His period of grace may be measured in minutes
Lord Parker CJ: ‘It seems to me that when a licence is revoked as a result of which something has to be done by the licensee, a reasonable time must be implied in which he can do so, in this case to get off the premises; no doubt it will be a very short time, but he was doing here his best to leave the premises.’
Diplock LJ: `When a householder lives in a dwelling house to which there is a garden in front and does not lock the gate of the garden, it gives an implied licence to any member of the public who has lawful reason for doing so to proceed from the gate to the front door or back door and to inquire whether he may be admitted and to conduct his lawful business’. And ‘The points are so simple that the combined researches of counsel have not revealed any authority upon them. There is no authority because no one has thought it plausible up till now to question them.’ and ‘the sergeant had a reasonable time to leave the premises by the most appropriate route for doing so, namely, out of the front door, down the steps and out of the gate, and, provided that he did so with reasonable expedition, he would not be a trespasser while he was so doing.’

Judges:

Diplock LJ, Lord Parker CJ

Citations:

[1967] 2 QB 939, [1967] 2 All ER 407, (1967) 51 Cr App R 30, [1967] 3 WLR 28

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedWayne Fullard, Ryan Roalfe, Regina (on the Application Of) v Woking Magistrates’ Court Admn 16-Nov-2005
The defendants challenged convictions for assaulting police officers acting in the course of their duty. They said the officers were not so acting. The first defendant had been stopped in a vehicle which had left the scene of an accident. At the . .
CitedMcConnell v Chief Constable of Greater Manchester Police CA 1990
The plaintiff sought damages from the police. She had gone into a store and refused to leave when so requested. The police officer escorted her from the premises. She tried to re-enter the premises, and the officer exercised his common law right to . .
MentionedHumberside Police v McQuade CA 12-Jul-2001
Defendant’s appeal against an order giving judgment for the claimant in the action for damages to be assessed for wrongful arrest and personal injury. The claimant had been arrested in his home, purportedly for a breach of the peace. There was no . .
CitedGibson v Douglas and Another CA 8-Dec-2016
Appeal against rejection of claim for damages for wrongful eviction and damages to goods.
Held: The judge had found not that the defendant had failed to give appropriate notice, but that he had not been personally involved other than as an . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land, Crime

Updated: 01 April 2022; Ref: scu.241688

Pepper (UK) Ltd v Burnley Borough Council (Compensation – Compulsory Purchase): UTLC 27 Oct 2020

COMPENSATION – Compulsory Purchase – vacant house in disrepair acquired by General Vesting Declaration – negative equity – claim by mortgagee – unresponsive mortgagor named as interested party – compensation determined at pounds 20,000 – section 15, Compulsory Purchase Act 1965

Citations:

[2020] UKUT 295 (LC)

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Land

Updated: 01 April 2022; Ref: scu.655178

Khan v Stockton-On-Tees Borough Council: UTLC 2 Nov 2017

UTLC COMPENSATION – Compulsory Purchase – house acquired as part of wider regeneration programme – property in derelict condition – market value – cost of repair works – residual value – loss of rental income – whether basic loss payment calculated by reference to market value or whole claim – Land Compensation Act 1961 section 5 rule (5) – compensation determined at pounds 16,413

Citations:

[2017] UKUT 432 (LC)

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Land

Updated: 01 April 2022; Ref: scu.598459

Hennessey v Kent, Re High View, Church Street: UTLC 23 Aug 2017

RESTRICTIVE COVENANT – modification – consent restriction – replacement house built without objector’s prior approval – density restriction – whether practical benefits of substantial value or advantage – effect of proposed new houses on the view from objector’s property – applicant planting Leylandii trees to obstruct view – exercise of discretion – application allowed under s.84(1)(aa), Law of Property Act 1925 – compensation assessed at pounds 21,000

Citations:

[2017] UKUT 243 (LC)

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Law of Property Act 1925

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Land

Updated: 31 March 2022; Ref: scu.597395

Derreb Ltd v Blackheath Cator Estate Residents Ltd and Others, Re Manor Way: UTLC 5 Sep 2017

Restrictive Covenants – Modification – RESTRICTIVE COVENANTS – Modification – Law of Property Act 1925 s.84 – restriction limiting use of land to use for a sports ground or for the erection of detached houses for use as private residences only – land derelict – no prospect of future use for sports ground – land zoned for residential development – no prospect of planning permission being given for a development of solely detached houses – applicant willing to accept the addition of further provisions restricting use of land under section 84(1C) – application succeeds in part under paragraph (a) and in part under paragraph (aa) of section 84(1)

Citations:

[2017] UKUT 209 (LC)

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Law of Property Act 1925 84

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Land

Updated: 31 March 2022; Ref: scu.597396

Glasspool v London Borough of Southwark: UTLC 12 Oct 2017

COMPENSATION – compulsory purchase – acquisition of maisonette on blighted estate – choice of comparables to assess open market value – valuation methodology – adjustments – disturbance – Crawley costs where no alternative property yet acquired – compensation determined at pounds 322,070

Citations:

[2017] UKUT 373 (LC)

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Land, Damages

Updated: 31 March 2022; Ref: scu.597399

Bishop v Transport for London: UTLC 18 Oct 2017

COMPENSATION – COMPULSORY PURCHASE – lessees permitting companies of which they were directors to conduct scrap metal businesses from land – history of repeated business failures – leasehold land taken for Crossrail project – claim by directors for loss of personal remuneration for unexpired term of lease – whether any loss suffered

Citations:

[2017] UKUT 405 (LC)

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Land

Updated: 31 March 2022; Ref: scu.597397

Behic and Others v Northumberland County Council, Re Station Street, Blyth: UTLC 4 Aug 2017

UTLC COMPENSATION – Compulsory Purchase – Acquisition of land and premises in connection with town centre redevelopment scheme – valuation – disturbance – business extinguishment – Land Compensation Act 1961 section 5 rules (2) and (6) – Compensation determined at pounds 201,073

Judges:

Paul Francis FRICS

Citations:

[2017] UKUT 269 (LC)

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Land Compensation Act 1961

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

See AlsoBehic and Others v Northumberland County Council, Re Station Street, Blyth UTLC 23-Jun-2017
UTLC COMPENSATION – Compulsory Purchase – Acquisition of land and premises in connection with town centre redevelopment scheme – valuation – disturbance – business extinguishment – Land Compensation Act 1961 . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land

Updated: 31 March 2022; Ref: scu.597394

Watt v Dignan and Others: CA 5 Oct 2017

The parties disputed the continued existence of rights to use a toilet. The servient owner sought to establish an estoppel.
Held: The appeal failed.

Judges:

Gloster VP CA, Lewison LJJ

Citations:

[2017] EWCA Civ 1390

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedRoutestone Ltd v Minories Finance ChD 1996
A receiver’s management duties will ordinarily impose on him no general duty to exercise the power of sale, or to ‘work’ an estate by refurbishing it before sale. Speaking of the role of an expert witness ‘What really matters in most cases are the . .
CitedLester and Another v Woodgate and Another CA 9-Mar-2010
Sherwell was entitled to a right of way over land belonging to Mr Mees. Mr Mees carried out work to the route over which the right of way ran which made it unusable. The work that he carried out amounted to an actionable nuisance. Sherwell made no . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land, Estoppel

Updated: 30 March 2022; Ref: scu.595819

Chiver v St Helens Borough Council: UTLC 9 Nov 2020

Compulsory Purchase – Business Extinguished By CPO – separate car showroom building not acquired – claim for lease breakage – whether evidence sufficient to show loss – pre-reference costs determined at pounds 198,959.65 – section 5, Land Compensation Act 1961

Citations:

[2020] UKUT 303 (LC)

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Land Compensation Act 1961 5

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Land

Updated: 30 March 2022; Ref: scu.655561

Jones, Regina (on the Application Of) v The Environment Agency: Admn 13 Jul 2005

The Environment Agency sought to persuade the claimants that they must pay for licences for their moorings for craft on the Thames. The boat owners said that they had placed poles in the banks for many years, and that because the moorings were not in the water, no licence fee was payable.
Held: The intention of the poles was to keep the boats from coming over the bank in flooding conditions. They would not therefore be placed far from the water’s edge. ‘I find as a matter of fact that the part of the structures struck at by the notice, save for the gangplank which requires specific consideration, were originally placed in the bed of the River Thames. There is a very interesting issue of law as to whether if they had not been so placed the removal powers would have bitten at all. ‘ They were liable to be moved unless a licence fee was paid. Notices had been served by the agency requiring the removal of the moorings. After they had been there for so long, and given what would have to be done to make alternative arrangements the period of 28 days was manifestly too short. As to what constituted the bed of the river (in this non-tidal section) ‘ I regard the ‘bed’ as being the soil along which the non-tidal Thames flows at average winter water level. To that extent it will include side slopes which are thus underwater. The ‘bed’ is not sensibly confined to the purely horizontal layer normally covered by water in non-tidal waters, i.e. to the bed within the phrase ‘bed and shores’ where it applies. ‘Bed’ extends to the slopes similarly covered, and I do not think that for these purposes any relevant distinction can be drawn between the horizontal base of any cross-section and the more or less gradually steepening side slopes normally covered by water. ‘Bed’ should include those slopes which in the non-tidal stretch resemble shores in the tidal stretch. I select winter levels in order to fit best with the high-water marks used in the definition of ‘shores’ in the tidal part. ‘

Judges:

Ouseley J

Citations:

[2005] EWHC 2270 (Admin)

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Thames Conservancy Act 1932 67

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedConservators of the River Thames v Smeed Dean and Co CA 1897
The erection of a lock or pound lock otherwise than for the maintenance or improvement of navigation would be ultra vires by a Navigation Authority and in all likelihood a nuisance. Chitty LJ said: ‘The Conservators are a statutory body brought into . .
CitedRowland v The Environment Agency CA 19-Dec-2003
The claimant owned a house by the river Thames at Hedsor Water. Public rights of navigation existed over the Thames from time immemorial, and its management lay with the respondent. Landowners at Hedsor had sought to assert that that stretch was now . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land

Updated: 30 March 2022; Ref: scu.234564

Greenock Harbour Trustees v Glasgow and South-Western Railway Co: HL 28 Jun 1909

In 1881 Harbour Trustees made an agreement with a railway company whereby each was to convey to the other for their respective undertakings certain lands which were to be acquired or had already been acquired. The agreement provided the mode in which, calculated according to the cost of acquisition of the lands to be acquired, the price chargeable to the parties for the lands to be conveyed to them respectively was to be fixed. By 1885 the parties were in possession of the respective lands, but owing to disagreement arising out of the terms of the agreement and from the fact that difficulties unforeseen at its date had had to be surmounted, no conveyanoes had been executed and no adjustment of accounts had been made. In 1906 the Harbour Trustees brought an action to have the agreement finally implemented and to recover a sum alleged to be due to them on a balancing of accounts. They claimed interest.
Held (dub. the Lord Chancellor and Lord James) that the circumstances of the case disclosed no specialties sufficient to take it out of the established rule that where a purchaser of heritage entered into possession before the purchase price was paid, interest on the price from the date at which he had obtained full possession ran in favour of the vendor, and that the rate of interest to be charged in the particular case should be 31/2 per centum.

Judges:

Lord Chancellor (Loreburn), Lord Ashbourne, Lord James of Hereford, Lord Gorell, and Lord Shaw of Dunfermline

Citations:

[1909] UKHL 1014, 46 SLR 1014

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Land, Contract

Updated: 30 March 2022; Ref: scu.620581

South Gloucestershire Council v Burge and Another: CA 8 Sep 2017

Did the Upper Tribunal (Lands Chamber) err in its approach to an award of compensation for loss incurred as a consequence of consent being refused for the felling of a tree protected by a Tree Preservation Order, whose roots were causing damage to a conservatory attached to a dwelling-house nearby?

Judges:

Lindblom, Irwin LJJ

Citations:

[2017] EWCA Civ 1313

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Land, Damages

Updated: 30 March 2022; Ref: scu.594995