![]() |
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | |
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Hall v Harris & Ors [2012] EWCA Civ 671 (22 May 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2012/671.html Cite as: [2012] EWCA Civ 671 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
ON APPEAL FROM THE WORCESTER COUNTY COURT
His Honour Judge Pearce-Higgins QC
7WR00149/7WR00150/9WR02352
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
COURT OF APPEAL, CIVIL DIVISION)
LORD JUSTICE RICHARDS
and
LORD JUSTICE KITCHIN
____________________
Mr Colin Hall |
Appellant |
|
- and - |
||
(1) Gerald Harris (2) Mrs Cynthia Harris (3) Mrs Shirley Moore |
Respondents |
____________________
WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7404 1424
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
John Randall QC and Giles Harrison-Hall (instructed by Stallard March & Edwards)
for the Respondents Mr & Mrs Harris
(and instructed by Masefields Solicitors) for the Respondent Mrs Shirley Moore
Hearing dates: 26/27 April 2012
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Kitchin:
Introduction
The claims
"1. Commoners with a registered right of Common over Worcestershire common CL77 have the right to exercise the registered rights of common over field numbers 9758 and 0567 (formerly SO502) (known as Luckwards Hill) one year in three, with 2009 being a commonable year.
2. By virtue of his tenancy of the land currently comprising Moat House Farm, Powick, the Claimant has a right of common over Worcestershire common CL77 to graze 53 cattle or 106 yearling cattle or 26 horses or 212 sheep.
3. There be a Declaration that the Claimant may not exercise the said rights of common:
(i) by bringing vehicles onto the said Luckwards Hill save for the purpose of removing a dead or sick animal;
(ii) by cutting and or removing anything growing on the said Luckwards Hill except "by the mouths of his animals", and that right is limited to commonable years;
(iii) by attempting any form of cultivation on Luckwards Hill.
4. There be a Declaration that the Defendants are entitled to fence around their respective holdings, subject to ensuring that access to the common at Luckwards Hill from Jennet Tree Lane is not impeded, and there be a gate on the boundary between the land owned [by] Mr & Mrs Harris and Mrs Moore.
5. There be Judgment for Mr & Mrs Harris and the Claimant do pay to the Defendants, Mr & Mrs Harris £5 damages in respect of the crop removed in 2009 …."
The judge also ordered Mr Hall to pay to the respondents their costs to be assessed on the standard basis.
The appeal
The scope of the right
66. It is, moreover, common ground that not every limitation or restriction on the exercise of a right of common was required by the 1965 Act and the 1966 Regulations to be stated on the register. Mr Wonnacott accepted, for example, that customary limitations as to the time at which a right might be exercised, such as where it might be exercised only in certain years or certain times of the year, would continue to apply even though not stated in the register. Significantly, that concession is made, and correctly made, even though part 5 of the application form specified in the 1966 Regulations expressly required particulars to be given if the rights were exercisable only during limited periods …
67. If, as I consider, that was the position under the 1965 Act and the 1966 Regulations in relation to entry No 108 in the rights section of CL 161, it was not changed by the 2006 Act or the 2008 Regulations. The 2006 Act was not enacted to make the register even more conclusive than before, but rather the reverse, in recognition that its conclusiveness under the 1965 legislative scheme had resulted in unfairness and unintended alterations of former legal rights …
68. Indeed, section 18(5) of the 2006 Act provides for the first time express statutory recognition of what was implicit in the 1965 statutory scheme, namely that the register is not conclusive as regards the absence of constraints on the exercise of a right of common if no such constraints are registered …"
"LUCKER'S HILL and LONGFIELD having a right to be Common every third year, being then fallow."
Mr Bredemear acknowledged that this document had a date earlier than that of the registration but submitted the judge should not have relied upon it because its authenticity was not established and Mr Floyd explained in the course of his evidence that decisions of Court Baron were relatively informal. Moreover, it would appear from an updated version of the rules and customs that, in some respects, the bye-laws and description of customary practices have been altered. Mr Bredemear also suggested that the "LUCKER'S HILL" referred to might not correspond to the Luckwards Hill in issue in these proceedings.
"According to the Rules and Customs of the Manor the Owners of Luckers Hill may crop the land two years out of three. In the third year being then fallow it shall be Common the fallow year starting in 1985."
So also, the memorandum of sale to Mr and Mrs Harris noted that the land to be sold to them was subject to a commoner's right to graze every third year, as did the particulars of sale of the remaining portion of Luckwards Hill ultimately sold to Mrs Moore.
Ancillary rights
"3. There be a declaration that the Claimant may not exercise his said right of common:
(i) by bringing vehicles onto the said Luckwards Hill save if necessary (and not merely convenient) for the purposes of removing a dead or sick animal or otherwise directly to protect the welfare of a particular animal or animals lawfully grazing on Luckwards Hill pursuant to his said right of common;"
"3. There be a Declaration that the Claimant may not exercise his said rights of common:
…
(ii) by cutting, removing or preventing the spread of anything growing on the said Luckwards Hill, save:
a. by the mouths of his animals; or
b. in the event that there are noxious or injurious weeds (as defined in the Weeds Act 1959, or other regulations having statutory force) present at the said Luckwards Hill, and if necessary to do so for the reasonable enjoyment of his right of common, and having first given at least 1 month's written notice to the freehold owner(s) of the areas of Luckwards Hill alleged to be affected of what such weed(s) are there present and of his intended steps to cut, remove or prevent the same should the freehold owner(s) not first deal with the same;"
Restrictions on access
"4. There be a Declaration that the Defendants are entitled to fence around their respective holdings, subject to ensuring that, during commonable years:
(i) access to the common at Luckwards Hill from the track leading to Jennet Tree Lane is not impeded by them;
(ii) access to the said common through gates B and C on the said plan annexed hereto is not impeded by them for so long as (a) the Claimant remains entitled to bring his animals onto the land and fields adjoining the said common at/immediately to the east of the said gates B and C, being the fields numbered 1574 and 1354 on the said plan; and (b) the Claimant ensures that the gates B and C are kept shut (save only, during commonable years, for allowing his animals to pass through the same before or after lawfully grazing on Luckwards Hill pursuant to his said right of common);
(iii) there be two gates on the boundary between the land owned by Mr and Mrs Harris and the land owned by Mrs Moore."
Mr Hall's activities in 2009
Conclusion
Lord Justice Richards
Lord Justice Maurice Kay