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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Dorset County Council, R (on the application of) v Secretary Of State For Environment, Transport & Regions [1999] EWHC Admin 582 (22nd June, 1999)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/1999/582.html
Cite as: [1999] EWHC Admin 582, [1999] NPC 72, [2000] JPL 396

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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR ENVIRONMENT, TRANSPORT AND REGIONS Ex parte DORSET COUNTY COUNCIL, R v. [1999] EWHC Admin 582 (22nd June, 1999)

IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE CO/814/98
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
CROWN OFFICE LIST
Royal Courts of Justice
Strand
London WC2


Tuesday 22nd June 1999


B e f o r e:

MR JUSTICE DYSON

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REGINA


-v-


SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE ENVIRONMENT, TRANSPORT AND THE REGIONS

Ex parte DORSET COUNTY COUNCIL

- - - - - -
(Handed Down Transcript of Smith Bernal Reporting Limited,
180 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2HD
Tel: 0171 831 3183
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
- - - - - -

MR J FINDLAY (Instructed by the Solicitor for the Dorset County Council) appeared on behalf of the Applicant.

MR J HOBSON and MS RHEE (Instructed by the Treasury Solicitor) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.

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J U D G M E N T
(As Approved by the Court )
Crown Copyright
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Mr Justice Dyson:
Dorset County Council

Introduction

1. The Dorset County Council ("the Council") seeks to quash the decision of the Respondent's inspector in a letter dated 26 January 1998, acting pursuant to paragraph 10(1) of Schedule 15 to the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981, not to confirm the Dorset County Council (Footpath at Winterborne Clenston) Definitive Map and Statement Modification Order 1996 ("the Order"). The effect of the Order, if confirmed (without modification) would have been to modify the Dorset County Council Definitive Map and Statement of Rights of Way ("the Map") by adding a footpath shown by a broken black line between points A and B on the Order map, running in a generally northern direction and connecting Bridleway 22 in Winterborne Whitechurch and Bridleway 5 in Winterborne Clenston.


The factual background

2. In 1973, the British Horse Society made an application to add a bridleway to the Map. A proposal for revision of the Map was put forward, showing a bridleway along the line of the footpath which is the subject of the decision that is under challenge in these proceedings. In April 1975, the landowners wrote to the Department of the Environment objecting to the proposed revision of the Map, stating that there was "no evidence of dedication or of user by public as of right". A copy of this notice was sent by the Department to the Council. In October 1977, the landowners were informed by the Department that the objection was valid, and that a local inquiry was likely to be forthcoming. In November 1986, however, the Council and the Department informed the owners that the Review had been abandoned in view of the obligation on the Council of continuous review imposed by the 1981 Act. Accordingly, the claimed route was not subsequently shown on the edition of the Definitive Map that was published in 1989. In March 1995, an application was made for a bridleway along the proposed Order route. In August 1995, the landowners made a deposit under section 31(6) of the Highways Act 1980 ("the Act"), indicating that no right of way at all existed along the proposed route.


3. In February 1996, the Council's Committee decided to make an Order modifying the Map by adding only a footpath. The Order itself was made on 25 October 1996, and was objected to by the landowners in November 1996. A public inquiry was held in December 1997. By his letter dated 26 January 1998, the Inspector decided not to confirm the Order.


Section 31 of the Highways Act 1980

4. So far as material, it provides:


“31. (1) Where a way over any land, other than a way of such a character
that use of it by the public could not give rise at common law to any
presumption of dedication, has been actually enjoyed by the public as of
right and without interruption for a full period of 20 years, the way is to
be deemed to have been dedicated as a highway unless there is sufficient
evidence that there was no intention during that period to dedicate it.

(2) The period of 20 years referred to in subsection (1) above is to be
calculated retrospectively from the date when the right of the public to
use the way is brought into question, whether by a notice such as is
mentioned in subsection (3) below or otherwise.

(3) Where the owner of the land over which any such way as aforesaid
passes --
(a) has erected in such manner as to be visible to persons using the
way a notice inconsistent with the dedication of the way as a
highway, and
(b) has maintained the notice after 1st January 1934, or any later date
on which it was erected,
the notice, in the absence of proof of a contrary intention, is sufficient
evidence to negative the intention to dedicate the way as a highway.

.......

(6) An owner of land may at any time deposit with the appropriate council --
(a) a map of the land on a scale of not less than 6 inches to 1 mile, and
(b) a statement indicating what ways (if any) over the land he admits to
have been dedicated as highways;
and, in any case in which such a deposit has been made, statutory declarations
made by that owner or by his successors in title and lodged by him or them
with the appropriate council at any time --
(i) within six years from the date of the deposit, or
(ii) within six years from the date on which any previous declaration was
last lodged under this section
to the effect that no additional way (other than specifically indicated in the
declaration) over the land delineated on the said map has been dedicated as
a highway since the date of the deposit, or since the date of the lodgment of
such previous declaration, as the case may be, are in the absence of proof of
a contrary intention, sufficient evidence to negative the intention of the owner
or his successors in title to dedicate any such additional way as a highway.”

The Inspector's decision

5. Having regard to the nature of the challenges, It is necessary for me to set out his conclusions in full.


“CONCLUSIONS
32. It is common ground that this matter turns upon the evidence of long user
and not historical evidence though it is not without significance that the claimed
route has been in existence and shown on O.S. maps and others for over 100
years and although no public rights of way over it are recorded, the claimed
route is a link between the networks of public bridleways at each end.

33. It is claimed the level and manner of use is sufficient to justify deemed
dedication of the claimed route as a public footpath under S.31 of the
Highways Act 1980 in that it was actually enjoyed by the public, as of right
and without interruption for a full period of 20 years and there is
insufficient evidence of intention not to dedicate. In support of this is the
evidence contained in the 32 forms, the evidence produced at the time of
the 1973 Review of the Definitive Map and the evidence submitted to the
inquiry. This is countered by the landowners and others who claim it was
not a right of way, the route was used in the main by the landowners
themselves, their tenants, employees and persons with specific permission
and that throughout most of the relevant period, the land was let to the
Forestry Commission. The Forestry Commission evidence supports the
landowners and suggests the woods generally were little used by the public.

34. However it was not disputed that the 32 users and others did in fact
walk the route, openly and freely and without interruption and in the belief
that it was a public right of way. This was in addition to use by employees,
tenants and those with specific authority and the landowners conceded
their respective families had always taken a relaxed attitude towards any
use of the woods. It would appear there was little or no interference with
anyone’s use. There was some conflict in the evidence as to whether anyone
was ever ordered off the claimed route but the 32 User Forms are clear that
none of those users was ever stopped. Many of the users say their use was
in fact infrequent and with the area being relatively remote, I believe the use
of the claimed route by the public was light though it extended back over
many years. The use by anyone would seem to have been tolerated by the
landowners and in my view such acquiescence could amount to a deemed
dedication unless there is sufficient evidence that there was no intention to
dedicate. I do not accept that the presence of the Forestry Commission
notices and the waymarks indicating accepted public routes were a denial of
public rights on other routes.

35. The crux of the matter therefore is whether there has been a 20 year period
of use by the public back from when the right of the public was brought into
question. In my view the right was questioned when the landowners objected
to the present Order in November 1996, when a S.31 (6) Deposit was made
by two of the landowners in August 1995 and also in April 1975 at the time
of the Review of the Definitive Map when the then landowners objected to
the inclusion of the claimed route in the Revised Draft Definitive Map as a
bridleway. S.31 of the Highways Act 1980, repeating earlier legislation,
specifically states that a right can be questioned by a S.31 (6) deposit “or
otherwise”. In my view an objection to the Department of the Environment
which was in turn passed onto the council as Highway Authority stating
expressly there is no evidence of dedication or of use by the public as of
right, is a sufficient public statement and an effective means of bringing
into question the public right claimed.

36. I have considered the effect of each of these events. The 1975 Review
was eventually abandoned although the evidence of user and the objection
were not tested at public inquiry and the claimed route was not subsequently
shown on the edition of the Definitve Map published in 1989. The evidence
of use available prior to April 1975 is not sufficient to persuade me it amounted
to a deemed dedication. Some 5 of the 32 users who completed forms claimed
to have used for 20 years prior to 1975 but the only other information available,
that submitted in support of the 1973 application for bridleway rights was too
imprecise to be of value. In my view therefore public rights had not been
established over the claimed route when such rights were brought into question
by the landowners objection in 1975.

37. In considering the 20 year period back from August 1995 and whether there
is evidence of the intention of the landowners not to dedicate, it is necessary to
consider whether the April 1975 objection by the landowners had any on-going
effect beyond April 1975 so as to prevent a full 20 year user period being claimed
back from August 1995. The landowner’s solicitors were informed by the
Department for the Environment in October 1977 that the 1975 objection had
been accepted by the Council as a valid objection and that there would eventually
be a local inquiry to consider the situation. The Council informed the solicitors
in November 1986 that the Review had been abandoned, in terms that suggested
the 1975 objection had remained valid and effective until the abandonment or until
the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981 took effect. I am inclined to the view that
the 1975 objection did have an on-going effect until November 1986 at least in
much the same way as a S.31(6) Deposit continues to be effective for 6 years from
the date of the submission of Statutory Declarations. On this basis a 20 years
period of use back from August 1995, and also back from November 1996,
without an intention being shown not to dedicate the claimed route, has not
been established and accordingly the requirements of S.31 of the Highways
Act 1980 have not been fulfilled.

38. Although no minimum period of use is required to establish dedication
at Common Law the landowners by their various actions between 1975 and

1996 have shown clearly their intention not to dedicate a public right of way
over the claimed route. This is not a situation where landowners have done
nothing, as I have detailed above. The use has not been heavy, tenants,
employees and others were permitted to use the route and the land was
subject to a lease to the Forestry Commission. I am not persuaded that
the degree and manner of use and other circumstances justify an implied
dedication at Common Law. In my view the case has not been made for
adding the claimed route to the Definitive Map as a footpath.

39. I have had regard to all other matters raised at the inquiry or in written
representations but they are insufficient to outweigh the considerations
which have led me to my decision.”



6. In summary, the Inspector decided the issue adversely to the Council on three alternative bases. These were:

(i) on the footing that (as he held to have occurred) the right to use the way was called into question in April 1975, there was insufficient use in the 20 years up to April 1975 to amount to enjoyment by the public as of right and without interruption (paragraph 36);

(ii) on the footing that the right to use the way was called into question in August 1995 when the section 31(6) deposit was made, there was sufficient use in the 20 years up to August 1995 to satisfy the enjoyment requirements of section 31(1) (paragraph 34). But the case for a highway was defeated by the proviso to that subsection, since the objection of April 1975 and the subsequent correspondence amounted to sufficient evidence that there was no intention during that period to dedicate the way as a highway (paragraph 37); and

(iii) on the footing that the right to use the way was called into question when the owners objected to the Order in November 1996, then the case for a highway was defeated for the same reasons as was the case based on the way having been called into question in August 1995, (paragraph 37).





The grounds of challenge

7. There are four issues:


(i) Did the Inspector err in finding that the right to use the way had been called into question within the meaning of section 31(2) of the Act when in April 1975 the owners made objection to the Department of the Environment?

(ii) Did the Inspector give adequate or intelligible reasons for rejecting the claim of 20 years use prior to April 1975?

(iii) Was there evidence capable of demonstrating that there was no intention to dedicate the way as a highway within the meaning of the proviso to section 31(1)?

(iv) Did the Inspector err in considering that the objection in April 1975 had a continuing effect?

8. I have set out the issues in a different order from that in which they were presented to me. Issues (i) and (ii) go to the validity of the Inspector's decision in relation to the 20 year period up to April 1975. Issues (iii) and (iv) go to the validity of his decision in relation to the 20 year period up to August 1995 or November 1996.


The first issue: bringing into question

9. Mr Findlay submits that a right to use a way over land is not brought into question unless the landowner brings his challenge home to the users so that they may be apprised of it. It is not sufficient that the objection is made to someone who is not concerned to assert that right. At one stage of his submissions, he contended that the only way in which a challenge may be brought home to the users is by physically interrupting their use of the way. Later, however, he adopted a less extreme position, and accepted that a notice of objection, say, in a local newspaper may suffice.


10. Mr Findlay cited a number of authorities which deal with the question of what constitutes "interruption" within the meaning of section 31(1) of the Act. These included Mersham Manor Limited v Coulsdon and Purley UDC [1937] 2 KB 77, Jones v Bates [1938] 2 AER 237, and Lewis v Thomas [1950] 1 KB 438. But none of these authorities seems to me to be relevant to the issue of what is required to bring into question the right of the public to use a way within the meaning of section 31(2) of the Act. The corresponding issue arising under section 1(6) of the Rights of Way Act 1932 was, however, the subject of decision in Fairey v Southampton County Council [1956] QB 439. It is common ground that there is no material difference between section 1(6) of the 1932 Act and section 31(2) of the 1980 Act.


11. The following passages in the judgment of Denning LJ are material:


12. “...I think that in order for the right of the public to have been “brought into

question,” the landowner must challenge it by some means sufficient to bring
it home to the public that he is challenging their right to use the way, so that
they may be apprised of the challenge and have a reasonable opportunity of
meeting it. The landowner can challenge their right, for instance, by putting
a barrier across the path or putting up a notice forbidding the public to use
the path. When he does so, the public may meet the challenge. Some village

13. Hampden may push down the barrier or tear down the notice: the local

council may bring an action in the name of the Attorney - General against
the landowner in the courts claiming that there is a public right of way: or
no one may do anything, in which case the acquiescence of the public tends
to show that they have no right of way.

14. But whatever the public do, whether they oppose the landowner’s action

or not, their right is “brought into question” as soon as the landowner puts
up a notice or in some other way makes it clear to the public that he is
challenging their right to use the way.....

....

15. He ought at least to make it clear to the villagers of Bossington, Houghton

and Horsebridge. They were the members of the public most concerned to
assert the right, because they were the persons who used the path. They
knew - better than the landowner himself - how long they had used it. They
were the persons to tell. It was no good the landowner speaking to a
stranger who would know nothing of the public right and would not be
concerned to assert it.” ..

16. Mr Hobson accepts that the test that had to be applied by the Inspector was the test as explained by Denning LJ. He submits that it was a question of fact for the Inspector to decide whether the means of challenge employed by the owners were sufficient to bring it home to the users that they were challenging their right to use the way. The words "or otherwise" in section 31(2) make it clear that no particular method of challenge is required. The Inspector was entitled to conclude as a matter of fact that the objection made in April 1975 brought into question the use of the right of way. Apart from the erection of notices in accordance with section 31(3), one of the most common ways in which a way becomes called into question is when objection is made to a proposal to modify the Map. The fact that in the instant case the proposals were abandoned and the matter did not proceed to inquiry cannot affect the conclusion that the making of these objections constituted a bringing into question of the right.


17. It is agreed that the relevant test was that explained by Denning LJ, and that its application is a question of fact. The challenge must therefore be brought home to the users. Leaving aside the statutory means provided by section 31(3), what does this mean? It clearly does not require that every user should be told by the owner of the challenge, or even that it be shown that every user has been made aware of the challenge by other means, for example, by reading a notice in a local newspaper. But whatever means are employed, they must be sufficient at least to make it likely that some of the users are made aware that the owner has challenged their right to use the way as a highway. Anything less will not satisfy the need identified by Denning LJ to bring home to the users the owner's challenge, so that they are given an opportunity to meet it. The persons to whom the challenge has to be brought home are the users of the way. Thus, it is no good for the owner to speak to a complete stranger, who as Denning LJ said, would know nothing of the public right, and would not be concerned to assert it.


18. If he applied this test to the present case, the Inspector must have concluded that the April 1975 objection was sufficient to bring home to the users that the owner was challenging their right to use the way. The objection was sent by the Department to the Council in April 1975, and it is the notification to the Council which Mr Hobson submits the Inspector was entitled to find was sufficient to bring home the challenge to the users. But there was no evidence that the Council conveyed the existence or details of the objection to the users at any time before the proposals were abandoned. In my judgment, it was not open to the Inspector reasonably to rely on the notification of the objection to the Department and the Council as sufficiently bringing home to the users the owner's challenge. Neither of these bodies had any interest in asserting the existence of the right of way. It is true that they were interested in whether a footpath was deemed to have been dedicated along the route in question and had statutory functions to perform in relation to the Map. Moreover, if a right of way had been acquired by prescription, they were interested to ensure that it was not obstructed. But they were not persons who might wish to assert and defend their right to use the way. Mr Hobson suggested that the Council received the objection as agent for the users. I do not agree. The Council was not under any duty to communicate the objection to the users unless an inquiry was held, and it seems that it did not do so.


19. I accept that it was a question of fact for the Inspector to decide whether the April 1975 objection sufficiently brought home to the users the owner's challenge. If the Inspector applied the correct test, namely that elucidated by Denning LJ (and it is not clear what test he did apply), then in my view he arrived at a conclusion which was no reasonable Inspector could have reached.


The second issue: reasons for rejecting the claim of 20 years use prior to April 1975

20. In view of my decision on the first issue, this issue does not arise. I shall nevertheless deal with it briefly. Mr Findlay submits that the reasons given in paragraph 36 were insufficient. Five statements had been put forward in support of the claim of enjoyment as of right and without interruption during the 20 year period up to April 1975. Mr Findlay submits that it is not clear whether the Inspector accepted the evidence in those statements, or whether he found it to be deficient in some respect. In my view, on a fair reading of the paragraph, the Inspector did accept the truth of what was contained in the five statements, but said that the use proved by those statements was insufficient to satisfy the statutory test. If he had regarded the evidence as unreliable in some way, I am sure that he would have said so. Where he was critical of the quality of evidence, he said so. Thus, he rejected as being “too imprecise to be of value” the information submitted in support of the 1973 application for bridleway rights. I would, therefore, reject the reasons challenge.


21. Mr Findlay also submits that the Inspector misdirected himself in paragraph 36 by addressing the question whether an intention to dedicate had been established, which is not what section 31(1) requires to be proved. I do not read paragraph 36 in this way. It is true that the Inspector said that the evidence of use was not sufficient to persuade him that it amounted to a “deemed dedication”. But the phrase “deemed dedication” was no more than shorthand for section 31(1).


22. I would, therefore, determine the second issue in favour of the Secretary of State.


The third issue: the proviso to section 31(1)

23. The starting point is to decide what has to be shown by an owner who wishes to adduce "sufficient evidence that there was no intention during [the 20 year] period to dedicate" the way as a highway. There was considerable argument before me as to the correctness of certain obiter dicta, by Denning LJ in Fairey and by Sullivan J in R v Secretary of State for the Environment ex parte Billson [1998] 3 WLR 1240. In short, Denning LJ said (p458) that the test was the same as in relation to the predecessor of section 31(2), ie that the owner must bring home to the users that he does not intend to dedicate. Sullivan J said (p1259) that Denning LJ went too far, and that all that was required was some overt act on the part of the owner which sufficiently evidenced the intention of the owner not to dedicate.


24. Before I turn to counsel's submissions, I should refer to the relevant authorities. In Fairey, Denning

25. LJ said this at page 458:


“In this connexion I would also mention the finding of quarter sessions that
in and from 1931 the landowner, by turning off strangers, showed an
intention not to dedicate the path as a highway for the use of members
of the public at large. This raises the same point. In my opinion a landowner
cannot escape the effect of 20 years’ prescription by saying that, locked in
his own mind, he had no intention to dedicate: or by telling a stranger to
the locality (who had no reason to dispute it) that he had no intention to
dedicate. In order for there to be sufficient “evidence that there was no
intention” to dedicate the way, there must be evidence of some overt acts
on the part of the landowner such as to show the public at large - the public
who used the path, in this case the villagers - that he had no intention to
dedicate. He must, in Lord Blackburn’s words, take steps to disabuse those
persons of any belief that there was a public right: see Mann v Brodie [1885]
10 App.Cas. 378,386. Such evidence may consist, as in the leading case
of Poole v Huskinson [1843] 11 M and W 827, of notices or a barrier:
or the common method of closing the way one day a year.
That was not done here; but we must assume that the landowner
turned off strangers in so open and notorious a fashion that it was clear
to everyone that he was asserting that the public had no right to use it. On
this footing there was sufficient evidence to show that there was no
intention to dedicate.”

In R v Secretary of State for the Environment ex parte Blake [1984] JPL 101, Walton J had to consider the proviso to section 31(1). He said (page 102) that the landowner's intention had to manifested by "sufficient overt or notorious acts". It is clear from his judgment (pages 102-104) that he considered that what was required was an act or statement which did or was likely to come to the notice of the users. He even hesitated to say that what was stated in public at a council meeting would be sufficient to bring home to the users of a way the owner's intention.

In R v Secretary of State for the Environment ex parte Cowell [1993] JPL 851, the Court of Appeal expressed some obiter dicta on the proviso point. Reference was made to the passage in Denning LJ's judgment at page 458. No criticism was made of it. Rose LJ said that whether there was sufficient evidence of a lack of intention to dedicate was a matter of fact to be determined by the tribunal of fact, and susceptible to challenge only on Wednesbury grounds. Staughton LJ said that there were dicta in Fairey that "it was not sufficient for the landowner to have an intention not to dedicate in pectore. He had to manifest that intention by some overt act. That was not said in the section itself, but seems a sensible rule. Sub-sections (3)(5)and (6) all dealt with acts which were, to a greater or lesser extent overt; those were examples of how sufficient intention might be demonstrated. So perhaps it was right to say that evidence of intention had always to be in the form of overt acts".

In Jacques v Secretary of State for the Environment [1995] JPL 1031, 1037, Laws J said:

“Quite plainly, the second part of section 31(1) imported a further requirement.
It meant that even if use of the required quality was proved, the status of right
of way would not be established if the landowner demonstrated an intention not
to dedicate. The logical relationship between the two parts of the subsection
entailed that proof of an intention not to dedicate could be constituted by
something less than proof of facts which had to have made it clear to the public
that they had no right to use the way: otherwise, once the interested public had
established their case under the first part of the subsection, there would be no
room for the operation of the second part. That was not a very satisfactory
state of affairs. It was plain that the landowner had to disprove an intention
to dedicate by overt acts directed to the members of the public in question,
but equally plain that they need not actually bring home to the public that
there was no right to use the way. He could only conclude that any
sufficiently overt act or series of acts indicating an intention to keep the way
private would be enough for the landowner’s purposes in relation to the
second part of the subsection, though they did not in fact bring home to
the public his objection to their using his land.”

In O'Keefe v Secretary of State for the Environment and Isle of Wight County Council [1996] JPL 42, 58, Pill J reviewed the authorities, and referred to the passage in the judgment of Denning LJ as being of "high persuasive authority". He drew from it and the other authorities the requirement that the intention be made manifest by "contemporaneous and overt acts". He did not consider separately the question whether those acts had to bring the owner's intention home to the users.

Finally, Billson. In that case, the owner had executed a deed giving permission for the public to use certain tracks on a common. The users were unaware of this licence , and believed that their use of the tracks was as of right. Sullivan J held that the users were enjoying the ways by licence and not as of right. That was sufficient to dispose of the case. But he went on (obiter) to consider the proviso as well, and ask whether the deed was sufficient evidence of the landowner's intention although it was not publicised or made manifest to the users of the way. At page 1258H he said this:

“The authorities cited by Mr Laurence, Ex parte Blake [1984] JPL 101,
Ex parte Cowell [1993] JPL 851, Ward’s case, 70 P & CR 585 and
O’Keefe’s case [1996] JPL 42, all of which I have referred to above,
do no more, in my view, than establish the proposition that evidence
of the landowner’s intention must be overt and contemporaneous.
Thus, it will not avail the landowner to assert after the event that he
had no intention to dedicate, but he is not required to publicise his
intention to users of the way.

The only dicta to the contrary are those of Denning LJ in Fairey v
Southampton County Council [1956] 2 QB 439. Mr Laurence accepts
that they were obiter. In so far as they equate the evidence necessary
to satisfy the proviso with the evidence necessary to bring home to the
public that their right to use the way is being called into question, they
go too far, in my view.

Implicit in Mr Laurence’s submissions is the existence of a very fine line
between acts that are sufficiently “open and notorious” to be capable of
bringing the landowner’s intention not to dedicate to the attention of the
public, and those which are not so open and notorious that they succeed
in bringing the user of the way into question. His approach seems to me
to leave little if any scope for the operation of the proviso. The landowner
must not keep his intention locked in his own mind, but whether his acts
are fairly described as overt or covert must be a question of fact for the
inspector. One can imagine far-fetched hypothetical examples: writing a
letter to oneself and placing it in one’s desk drawer; but the inspector was
entitled to conclude in this case that the formal execution of a deed
addressed to “all men” and depositing that deed with the appropriate
government department was a sufficiently overt act.

I accept that the analogy with section 31(6) is not precise, because
Parliament created a specific means of negativing intention, and the
declaration has to be deposited with a highway authority and renewed
every six years, but it is fair to observe that Parliament did not feel that
it was necessary to bring the existence of such a declaration to the
attention of the public using the way. It is true that in order to be
effective under section 31(3) the notice has to be visible to persons
using the way, but erecting such a notice is merely one way of
establishing a contrary intention, and is deemed to be sufficient in the
absence of proof of a contrary intention. One would expect that the
evidential threshold required to bring the landowner within such a
deeming provision would be relatively high.”

26. Mr Hobson submits that all that is required to bring the proviso into play is that there be an overt contemporaneous act which evidences the owner's intention not to dedicate. The rationale for this is that it is needed in order to prevent a landowner retrospectively asserting a lack of intention to dedicate in circumstances where he has said or done nothing during the relevant period. Thus, the requirement relates to an evidentiary concern, and not, as in section 31(2), to the need to bring the matter to public attention. Mr Hobson adopts the reasoning of Sullivan J that, if the wider requirement suggested by Denning LJ is demanded by the proviso, then, having regard to section 31(2), the proviso has no role to play at all.


27. Mr Findlay contends for the approach of Laws J in Jacques. He does not, therefore, fully adopt Denning LJ’s approach. He concedes that it is not necessary for the owner to bring home to the users his intention not to dedicate, but the act must be directed at the users. He suggests that on this interpretation, a role can be found for the proviso. Suppose that a way is closed for one day, and none of the users tries to use it on that day, and none of them becomes aware of the one day closure. On the interpretation of section 31(2) which I have already accepted, the closure in such circumstances would not bring the right into question, since the owner's challenge would not be brought home to the users. But, submits Mr Findlay, the overt act of closure would be sufficient evidence of the owner's intention not to dedicate. The important feature of such an overt act is that it is directed at the users.


28. I prefer the submissions of Mr Hobson. On the face of it, the language of the proviso is straightforward. All that is required is that there be sufficient evidence of lack of intention to dedicate. Coming to the matter untutored by previous authority, one may be forgiven for thinking that what Parliament intended was that the tribunal of fact simply decide as a matter of fact whether there is or is not sufficient evidence of intention to dedicate. Indeed, in Cowell, Rose LJ emphasised that it is a question of fact. Staughton LJ made the point that the need for an overt act is not to be found in the statute. In O'Keefe, Pill J referred to the danger of putting a gloss on the word "intention". I accept that as a matter of fact the tribunal of fact will rarely, if ever, find that there is sufficient evidence of lack of intention to dedicate in the absence of overt and contemporaneous acts on the part of the owner. I do not, however, think that such a requirement can be spelled out of section 31(1) as a matter of construction .


29. In my judgment, Parliament left it to the tribunal of fact to decide whether the evidence in any given case is sufficient for the purposes of negativing the intention to dedicate. The section states no criteria as to what constitutes "sufficient evidence", although in section 31(3) and (6) two particular examples are given as to what will suffice. Section 31(3) provides that a notice "visible to persons using the way", in the absence of proof of a contrary intention, is sufficient evidence to negative the intention to dedicate. Section 31(6) provides that the deposit of a map and statement, if the other conditions are met, is also, in the absence of proof of a contrary intention, sufficient evidence. Mr Findlay submits that these two examples of what constitutes sufficient evidence for the purposes of the proviso show that evidence has to be directed at the users; the mere fact that there are overt acts, or even overt contemporaneous acts, is not enough. But as Sullivan J pointed out, the argument based on section 31(6) can be relied on to support Mr Hobson's argument. This is because the section does not require the deposited map and statement to be brought to the attention of the users, although it is true that by virtue of section 228 of the Local Government Act 1972, these documents must be kept available for public inspection.


30. In any event, it cannot be suggested that subsections (3) and (6) are exhaustive of the circumstances in which there will be sufficient evidence. They are (the only) two examples of what, as a matter of law, will amount to sufficient evidence.


31. I would, therefore, not place any gloss on the proviso at all. But if a gloss is justified, it seems to be common ground that it cannot be that advocated by Denning LJ. As explained by Sullivan J (and accepted by Mr Findlay), the intention not to dedicate does not have to be brought home to the users, since otherwise, in view of section 31(2), there would be no role for the proviso at all. Furthermore, as explained by Laws J, the relationship between the two parts of section 31(1) itself demands that, in disproving an intention to dedicate, the owner need not bring home to the users that there was no right to use the way.


32. Mr Findlay submits that there must be evidence of overt acts directed at the users , even though they do not bring home to them that the owner objects to their use of the way. The phrase “directed at the users” was used by Laws J in the passage that I have already cited. It does not appear in the sub-section. This phrase could mean that the acts are intended to bring home the owner’s intention to the users, but fail in their object. Or it could simply mean that the acts must relate to, or be concerned with, the use of the way by the members of the public in question. It would be quite wrong to construe the language used by Laws J as a statute. I see no reason to suppose that he had in mind the rather special situation of an owner’s unsuccessful attempts to bring home his objection to the users.


33. It is necessary to stand back from the textual criticism to which the various obiter dicta have been subjected, and seek to ascertain the purpose of the proviso. It is clearly to protect the landowner, by enabling him to defeat a claim of presumed dedication by proving that he did not intend to dedicate. The only requirement imposed by Parliament is that there should be sufficient evidence of that intention. In my view, there is no reason in logic or policy why the only evidence that can be sufficient is of overt acts which are aimed at the users, but which do not bring home to them the owner’s objection. As Staughton LJ pointed out in Cowley, the overt acts rule (if that is what it is) is a sensible rule of evidence, since it prevents a landowner from asserting after the event that he had no intention to dedicate. The rule that the owner must bring his objection home to the users is relevant to section 31(2), since, as Denning LJ made clear in Fairey, one of the objects of that subsection is to give users the opportunity to meet the owner’s challenge. But I can see no reason to construe the proviso to section 31(1) as imposing a requirement that falls somewhere between what I have called the overt acts rule and that which is required for the purposes of section 31(2).


34. I would respectfully adopt the reasoning of Sullivan J as to the meaning of the proviso. I turn, therefore, to consider whether there was evidence capable of demonstrating that there was no intention to dedicate the way as a highway in the 20 years up to August 1995.


35. Mr Findlay submits that the objection of April 1975 was essentially a private act until a public inquiry was called, and was not, with or without the subsequent correspondence, of sufficient quality to be capable of demonstrating a lack of intention to dedicate. As for the reliance placed by the Inspector on the continuing effect of the April 1975 objection, Mr Findlay submits that the Inspector was wrong to base his reasoning on an analogy with section 31(6), whose 6 year “effect” is a creature of statute. Moreover, the only act of the owners was the objection in April 1975; all later acts were those of the Secretary of State or the Council, and could not be described as evidence of the owners’ intention.


36. I cannot accept these submissions. The challenge to the Inspector’s findings on intention can only be challenged on Wednesbury grounds. In the light of my decision on the meaning of the proviso, it seems to me that Mr Findlay has an impossible task. The objection of April 1975 was the clearest overt act which evidenced the owners’ intention not to dedicate. It was also a contemporaneous act. Thus, the overt acts rule was amply satisfied at that time. The only remaining question is whether the decision of the Inspector that the April 1975 objection had continuing effect into the 20 year period ending in August 1995 can be challenged as unreasonable in the Wednesbury sense. The key document is the letter dated 10 October 1977 from the Department to the owners’ solicitors, in which they said:


“ A copy of your objection was, as you know, referred to the Council who
have now confirmed that it is valid and duly made ..... You may be assured,
however, that your objection will be dealt with at the appropriate time and
that you will be given as long notice as possible of the local inquiry.”

37. There is no evidence that the owners ever resiled from this position. On 5 November 1986, the Department wrote to the owners’ solicitors saying that the Secretary of State had directed the Council to abandon the inquiry in 1983. The letter referred to the fact that the owners’ objections were to be treated as objections to any subsequent order made under the 1981 Act. In other words, even in 1986, so far as the Department was concerned, the April 1975 objection was still being maintained.


38. Paragraph 37 of the Inspector’s decision letter is admittedly rather compressed, but it cannot be doubted that he was saying that he considered that the letter of 10 October 1977 was sufficient evidence of the owners’ continuing intention not to dedicate the way. That was sufficient evidence that there was no intention to dedicate during the 20 year period ending in August 1995. In my view, it is impossible to impugn the Inspector’s decision on this point. Indeed, it is difficult to see how the Inspector could reasonably have reached any other conclusion. In fact, he went further and said that he was “inclined to the view” that the 1975 objection had effect until November 1986. That was not necessary for his decision, but in my view he was entitled to reach this conclusion as well.


The fourth issue: the continuing effect of the April 1975 objection

39. In considering the question whether there was evidence capable of demonstrating that there was no intention to dedicate the way as a highway in the 20 years up to August 1995, I have already dealt with the fourth issue. For the reasons given, I do not accept that the Inspector erred in deciding that the April 1975 objection had a continuing effect.


Conclusion

40. It follows that, although the Council succeeds on the first issue, it fails on the remaining issues, and this application must be dismissed.



41. MR JUSTICE DYSON: For the reasons set out in the judgment which has been handed down, this application is dismissed.


42. MS RHEE: My Lord, in the circumstances, I would ask for your Lordship to make an order as to the respondent's costs. Does your Lordship have a copy of the revised schedule of costs which I served on the appellants yesterday morning?


MR JUSTICE DYSON: Yes.

43. MR FINDLAY: There is no dispute as to the figure. The appellants are content that your Lordship makes an order in the sum requested of £5,238.


MR JUSTICE DYSON: £5,238?

MR FINDLAY: Yes, my Lord.

MR JUSTICE DYSON: Thank you.

44. MR FINDLAY: My Lord, I do have an application for leave to appeal. Your Lordship's judgment is the first clear judgment on the point one way or the other and your Lordship has certainly indicated there are dicta in the previous cases that go both ways. It is a matter of some importance for the County Council. Your Lordship knows the facts that gave rise to this case arose out of the abandonment of a review of a Definitive Map and I am told there are in the order of some 100 other objections which would have the same effect as the objections here. It is a matter of some importance to this authority alone that the matter is sorted out. My Lord, without wishing to elaborate, whilst I accept your Lordship's judgment was against me, in my submission, it is feasible to imagine that the Court of Appeal may come to a different decision.


45. MR JUSTICE DYSON: Do you want to say anything on this?


46. MS RHEE: My Lord, it is my submission that the principle confirmed by your Lordship is sufficiently clearly established in R. v. Secretary of State for the Environment ex parte Billson [1998] 3 WLR 1240 in which Sullivan J reviewed the authorities. It is our submission it is not a matter appropriate for the consideration for the Court of Appeal.


47. MR JUSTICE DYSON: I think I should give leave to appeal. What I call the third issue seems to me to be worthy of consideration by the Court of Appeal.


48. MR FINDLAY: I am much obliged to your Lordship.




© 1999 Crown Copyright


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