BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[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 >> Emmett v Sisson [2014] EWCA Civ 64 (03 February 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2014/64.html Cite as: [2014] EWCA Civ 64 |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
ON APPEAL FROM HEREFORD COUNTY COURT
HHJ PEARCE-HIGGINS QC
2HR00001
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
PRESIDENT OF THE QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
LORD JUSTICE AIKENS
and
LADY JUSTICE MACUR
____________________
Emmett |
Appellant |
|
- and - |
||
Sisson |
Respondent |
____________________
WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Nicholas Isaac (instructed by Beaumonts Solicitors) for the Respondent
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Aikens :
The background facts.
"…a right of way for the owner of owners for the time being of the Property with or without vehicles and for all reasonable purposes in connection with the proper use of the Property as a dwelling house over and along the access way the approximate position of which is shown by a red and black dotted line on plan number 2 subject to the payment by such owner or owners as aforesaid of the property hereby conveyed of the following namely (1) one eighth of the cost of maintaining the said access way from the County maintained road at the point A to point B on plan number 2…"
Schedule 5 imposed an obligation on the purchasers (the respondents):
"…within three months from the date hereof to erect and at all times thereafter keep in good and substantial repair stock proof fences of a type and height and consisting of materials previously approved in writing by the Vendors to the whole length of all external boundaries between the points marked A B C and D on the said plan number 1 annexed hereto".
Events leading up to the current proceedings.
The current proceedings
(1) Whether the northernmost boundary of the easement over the Driveway Land is: (a) entirely coterminous with the southernmost boundary of River View Barn; or (b) largely just to the south of the common boundary between the Driveway Land and River View Barn, leaving an interstitial space of land along the northernmost boundary of the Driveway Land which belongs to the Appellants, and over which the respondents do not have a right of way.(2) If the easement is entirely coterminous with River View Barn, whether: (a) the respondents were entitled to gain access to their property from any and all points along that coterminous boundary, so that a brick wall such as the appellants proposed to build would be an actionable interference in their right of way; or (b) whether, if the appellants offered to allow a single, gated point of access through the brick wall, were carried out, that would mean that the brick wall would not amount to an actionable interference with the respondents' right of way.
a) the fencing obligation in Schedule 5 of the Conveyance did not include the stretch of the boundary D-A (§7);b) the dotted lines on the plan attached to the conveyance (being of poor quality and not to scale) were not contractually representative of the easement (§§14-15);
c) the clear intention of the parties in the Conveyance was to provide for maximum flexibility of entrance and egress prior to renovation works, and that the boundary of the easement ran coterminous with the boundary of River View Barn (§17);
d) the Respondents' had the right to access their land from any point along the Driveway Land (§24); and
e) what the Appellants proposed by way of a brick wall was an unreasonable interference with such right (§24).
(1) The northern boundary of the accessway [Driveway Land] (over the full-width of which the Claimants have an express right of way with our [sic: or] without vehicles and for all reasonable purposes…) is coterminous with the southern boundary of … River View Barn;(2) The Claimants have a right to access River View Barn from the said access way at any point along it.
The appeal and the arguments of the parties
(1) To entitle them to create the wall or fence along the common boundary of the Driveway Land and River View Barn;(2) To entitle the respondents to require (on reasonable notice) a single vehicular access (which may be gated) to be made in the wall or fence.
This is a case a right of way that has been created by an express grant in the Conveyance. Mummery LJ, an acknowledged master of the law in this area, stated the principles by which the nature of the extent of such an express grant will be determined in a decision of this court in: West v Sharp [2000] 79 P & C Reports 327 at page 327 at 332. He said:
"The nature and extent of a right of way created by an express grant depends on the language of the deed of grant, construed in the context of the circumstances surrounding its execution, including the nature of the place over which the right was granted….".
"There is nothing in the original grant of the way which expressly limits the grantee to one line of access or to access only at the points, if any where his land actually adjoined the new way. And the parties certainly acted from the first upon the construction that the grantee was not limited to the shorter line of access, for the track always in fact used was not the shortest. In the absence of any such express limitation and of anything to shew that the right as claimed is unreasonable or destructive of the object of the grant I am unable to see any ground on which any obligation to elect one particular line of access can be implied".
Mr Warner accepted that as being a correct statement of principle.
On the basis that the respondents have the right to have linear access to their property from the Driveway Land, the question that remains is whether the proposed 2 metre high wall (even if it provides for one or more points of access to the respondents' land) is an actionable interference with the right of way granted by the Conveyance? As noted, Mr Warner submitted that the judge approached this question from the wrong angle by asking and finding that the proposed action of the appellants was unreasonable, instead of asking whether the insistence of the appellants, as the owner of the dominant tenement, was unreasonable or perverse: see Megarry & Wade The Law of Real Property para 30-004 in 8th Ed (2012).
"Not every interference with an easement, such as a right of way, is actionable. There must be a substantial interference with the enjoyment of it. There is no actionable interference with a right of way if it can be substantially and practically exercised as conveniently after as before the occurrence of the alleged obstruction. Thus the grant of a right of way in law in respect of every part of a defined area does not involve the proposition that the grantee can in fact object to anything done on any part of the area which would obstruct passage over that part. He can only object to such activities, including obstruction, as substantially interfere with the exercise of the defined right as for the time being is reasonably required by him".
Mummery LJ referred for that proposition to the judgments of Russell LJ in Keefe v Amor [1965] 1 QB 334 at 337 and Scott J in Celsteel Ltd v Alton House Ltd [1985] 1 WLR 204 at 217.
"In short, the test…is one of convenience and not necessity or reasonable necessity. Provided that what the grantee is insisting on is not unreasonable, the question is: can the right of way be substantially and practically exercised as conveniently as before?".
"…in my judgment it is quite clear to me that what the defendants propose is wholly unreasonable….it would be a wholly unreasonable obstruction and interference with the right that the claimants have to access their land from any point along this right of way and there is no legitimate reason really put forward for that proposed obstruction".
Lady Justice Macur:
President of the Queen's Bench Division: