The House considered the status of a pedestrian right of way through a caravan site to a beach, and the 1949 Act: ‘The sections which follow section 27 deal with the further steps which have to be taken before the definitive map is completed and published. They provide an elaborate procedure for enabling representations or objections to be made to the surveying authority (with a right of appeal to the minister) as to anything contained in or omitted from the draft map. Such representations and objections can be made not only by persons interested in the land, but also by members of the public, so that a person who alleges that a right of way as shown on the draft map ought to be upgraded from ‘footpath’ to ‘bridleway,’ or from ‘bridleway’ to ‘road used as a public path,’ has an opportunity at this stage of adducing evidence to make good his claim. The next step in the procedure is the preparation by the surveying authority of a provisional map incorporating any modifications to the draft which, as a result of representations, have been accepted by the surveying authority or upheld by the minister on appeal. The procedure for verifying the accuracy of what is eventually to be shown on the definitive map does not stop here; though the remaining step is not likely to bring to light the existence of more extensive rights of way than are shown on the provisional map. Its presence may, however, supply an explanation of why a reasonable allegation that a right of way of a particular kind exists is treated as sufficient justification for entering it on the draft map. The owner, lessee, or occupier of the soil over which any right of way shown on the provisional map passes has the right under section 31 to apply to quarter sessions (now the Crown Court) for declarations inter alia that a right of way shown on the provisional map either does not exist or is there shown as being more extensive than it really is; and, if he does so, the onus of proving the existence of the disputed right lies on the county council. But failing any proceedings in the Crown Court under this section, an entry of a right of way that originally appeared on the draft map on no firmer basis than that the surveying authority was of opinion that an allegation that it existed was a reasonable one is carried through to the definitive map unaltered.’
and ‘The way in which ramblers . . are to be benefited is by providing them with an easy and conclusive way of proving their rights to walk . . on particular routes’.
Lord Diplock also said: ‘The law of highways forms one of the most ancient parts of the common law. At common law highways are of three kinds according to the degree of restriction of the public rights of passage over them. A full highway or ‘cartway’ is one over which the public have rights of way (1) on foot, (2) riding on or accompanied by a beast of burden and (3) with vehicles and cattle. A ‘bridleway’ is a highway over which the rights of passage are cut down by the exclusion of the right of passage with vehicles and sometimes, though not invariably, the exclusion of the right of driftway, i.e., driving cattle, while a footpath is one over which the only public right of passage is on foot.
At common law too a public right of way of any of the three kinds has the characteristic that once it has come into existence it can be neither extinguished nor diminished by disuse, however long the period that has elapsed since it was last used by any member of the public – a rule of law that is the origin of the brocard ‘once a highway, always a highway.’
Judges:
Lord Diplock
Citations:
[1979] AC 705, [1979] 2 All ER 369
Statutes:
National Parks and Access to the Countryside Act 1949
Jurisdiction:
England and Wales
Cited by:
Cited – Todd, Bradley v The Secretary of State for Environment Food and Rural Affairs Admn 22-Jun-2004
Application was made to quash an order modifying the Council’s definitive map of public rights of way.
Held: Before the Secretary of State could confirm a Council’s modification of a right of way shown on the definitive map, where that . .
Cited – Todd, Bradley v The Secretary of State for Environment Food and Rural Affairs Admn 22-Jun-2004
Application was made to quash an order modifying the Council’s definitive map of public rights of way.
Held: Before the Secretary of State could confirm a Council’s modification of a right of way shown on the definitive map, where that . .
Cited – Boss Holdings Ltd v Grosvenor West End Properties and others HL 30-Jan-2008
The tenant sought to enfranchise the property under the 1967 Act. The freeholders replied that it was not a ‘house’ within the Act at the time of the notice. It had been built in the eighteenth century as a house, but the lower floors had been . .
Cited – Barrett v Director of Public Prosecutions Admn 10-Feb-2009
The defendant appealed against his conviction for driving whilst disqualified. He had driven on a roadway within a caravan park. A public footpath (a highway) went through the park. There were gates at the entrance but these were kept open. The . .
Cited – Ernstbrunner v Manchester City Council and Another Admn 16-Dec-2009
The appellant challenged by case stated a refusal of the Crown Court to order removal of a gate which he said obstructed a public footpath. The land-owner had persuaded the magistrates that the gate was not on the line of the footpath. The claimant . .
Cited – Smith, Regina (on The Application of) v Land Registry (Peterborough Office) and Another CA 10-Mar-2010
The appellant had lived in a caravan on the verge of a byway and had been here for more than twelve years. He appealed against rejection of his request for possessory title. He said that there was no support in law for the maxim that adverse . .
Cited – Fortune and Others v Wiltshire Council and Another CA 20-Mar-2012
The court considered the contnuation of public rights of way against the new system of the ending of certain unrecorded rights.
Held: he appeal failed. ‘As a matter of plain language, section 67(2)(b) does not, in our judgment, require the . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.
Land, Planning
Updated: 30 April 2022; Ref: scu.199309