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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Worrall & Anor v Topp [2007] EWHC 1809 (Ch) (31 July 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2007/1809.html Cite as: [2007] EWHC 1809 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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GEORGE WORRALL JOSEPHINE WORRALL |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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IVOR TOPP |
Respondent |
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Desmond Kilcoyne (instructed by Reynolds Parry-Jones) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 17 July 2007
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Kitchin :
Introduction
"4. The parties shall be at liberty to set out their factual evidence in support of their contentions as to the position of the boundary by a date to be agreed or determined by the surveyor but will not be permitted to rely on any other expert evidence.
5. The surveyor shall determine the position of the remainder of the boundary between 73 and 79 Lincoln Park, save for the area of the garage but including the area of its foundations and/or footings, having considered the evidence and documents placed before him and the position on the ground.
6. The surveyor shall provide the parties with a plan delineating the boundary between the properties in accordance with his determination thereof.
7. The decision of the surveyor shall be binding between the parties (save in relation to any issues of law) and the parties acknowledge and agree that they will accept the said decision as being the true position of the remainder of the boundary."
"Mr Topp has e mailed me certain plans, which are attached to this e mail. These are:
1) A portion of the plan in Miss Abrahams' conveyance of 79 Lincoln Park to Mia Redding.
2) A plan provided by Chiltern DC in November 2000.
3) Mr Topp's own software plan of No 79.
4) An enlarged view of the position of the chain link fence erected by No 27 Little Reeves.
These illustrate that the chain link fence erected between 79 and Little Reeves is not in fact on the boundary as shown in the conveyancing documents, but on the Little Reeves side of the boundary, and Mr Topp would like to be sure that you appreciate this, as he believes you carried out measurements in this area when you visited the property on 3rd February."
"3.5.3 That the original mild steel angle post at the rear end of the boundary between 25 and 26 Little Reeves Avenue is behind the front of the garage whereas the best copies of title plans show the boundary (between 25 and 26 Little Reeves Avenue) to be in line or a little in front of the garage front wall. There is therefore an apparent discrepancy between the position on the ground and information on the plan. However, I do not consider this can be taken as evidence that the front of the garage was built in advance of "the boundary". Features such as Nos. 73 and 79 Lincoln Park, the garage and the boundary between 25 and 26 Little Reeves Avenue were all in their present positions when they were surveyed for the Ordnance Survey map from which the title plans are taken. The relative position of these features shown by the O.S. is the best indication possible within surveying and mapping constraints and it cannot be the case that the front of the garage has crept forward independently across "the boundary". As made clear by Land Registry Public Guide 7 "…the title plan only shows the general position of the property's boundaries and not the exact line".
…..
3.5.5 On behalf of the Claimants, it has been suggested that "the boundary" should be considered to run from the metal boundary marker between Nos. 25 and 26 Little Reeves Avenue joining the garage wall at a right angle; then along the outside surfaces of the garage walls and door to the front left gate post; across to the front face of the right hand post; along the curved wooden fence and then in a straight line to the footpath."
"3.7 In a further attempt to resolve the assertion at 3.5, and as requested on behalf of the Claimants, I have also considered and measured the North side boundary of 79 Lincoln Park which adjoins the rear of properties in Little Reeves.
3.7.1 Plan No.1 at Appendix 8 is the best copy of the plan used in the Conveyance of 73 Lincoln Park. That plan shows a measured dimension of 138 feet - 42.06m say 42 metres – for the said North side boundary.
3.7.2 The Defendant's plans at Annex 8 suggest a total of 45.06m, say 45 metres.
3.7.3 Both Land Registry plans scale 45m at 1:1250.
3.7.4 The total length based on site measurements taken by me is also close to 45 metres.
3.7.5 I consider the 138 feet (42 metres) dimension noted on Plan No.1 at Appendix 8 to be less reliable than the 45 metre measurement, it is the odd one out the rear corner of the site has been altered and probably extended over the years.
3.7.6 I am not convinced that any aspect of the further research I have carried out into the said North boundary is sound evidence that the garage is set too far forward and that the land to the sides of the front of the garage is therefore rightfully in the ownership of No. 73 Lincoln Park."
"(b) please clarify why the Defendant's measurements (paragraph 3.7.2 of your report) have any relevance to your conclusions in circumstances where you have produced your own measured survey of the site?
...
(d) as a matter of law, please clarify why you consider the 138ft measurement identified in the key conveyance of number 79 to be less reliable than the Defendant's own plans."
"(b) the Defendant made representations with regards to this boundary. I think it right to consider and report on these as has been done with the representations from the Claimants.
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(d) the title plan which has a roughly written "138 feet" measurement, shows a different shaped rear corner to later plans, the measurement is not confirmed in the text and on balance I prefer my site measurement - despite intervening trees and other vegetation."
In relation to the further question concerning his conclusion as to the extension of the corner of the site, he observed that the fencing to the rear corner of the site was relatively new, the shape of the corner was not as indicated on the title plans and "it may be that the length of this boundary had been extended over the years".
Decision of HH Judge Elly
"12. As I have said, this document of the 11th May 2006 only stands if I am satisfied that it has not been influenced in some way unfairly. Is it unfair? What is said by the claimants is that it is unfair because the expert took into account information gleaned from copies of plans sent to him by the defendant's solicitors in March 2006, which had not been copied to them and they were unaware of the fact that they had been sent. A great deal of the submissions on this point turn primarily on a plan which was attached to a conveyance of the property now owned by the defendant, which is dated the 19th July 1972, and was made between Marjorie Anne Abrahams, the vendor, and Cyril John Redding, Mair Redding, his wife, and James Redding, who are collectively the purchasers, and there is a plan attached to that document which shows that one of the boundaries of the property is 138 feet. On measurement that boundary is said to be 45 metres, or thereabouts, which is a difference of about 3 metres between what is indicated on the conveyance as the length of the boundary and what Mr. Caruth measured on the site. Mr. Caruth's measurement also agrees with the measurement which was made by the defendant and which was shown on another of the plans which was sent in at that stage. It is said that had the claimants realised that this document was being sent in they would have focused their attention on it, because of course it does support their case. If it is indeed only 138 feet from front to back then their case is the stronger, and to start with, as I have said, submissions were being made that it was unfair that this document had been sent in. Unfortunately for the claimants, however, it becomes clear on further inspection of the court file that this document was indeed a document which was attached to the consent order, and is referred to in the consent order but in schedule 1, so it is quite clear that that document was attached there, and although I appreciate that copies of it become increasingly faint in the recopying process it seems to me that the figure of 138 feet is visible on the document which is on the court file.
13. The claimants then argued that, looking at the document on the court file, it was not at all clear that there was a kink in the boundary around the place where the front of the garage is, and that that may have been something relied upon by Mr. Caruth in his consideration. That is quite right, the poor copy of the plan on the court file does not make the kink clear although it is clear on the copy which was sent on the 1st March 2006. However, their submissions upon that point are undermined by Mr. Caruth's decision letter of the 11th May, because in para.3.2.1 he actually refers to this document and to the fact that there had been correspondence in July 2005 between the defendant's then solicitors and the claimants' solicitors as to this particular kink, and indeed the expert very sensibly inspected the original document and was able to confirm that the original conveyance does show that that line is kinked. It seems to me that the claimants have had plenty of opportunity of considering the effect of this document, the kink, the measurement, and everything else which is shown on that plan upon which they would now wish to rely to support their case. There was the opportunity for an inspection of the original if there was any disagreement between the solicitors as to the interpretation of it, and it seems to me that on that point, so far as that plan is concerned, certainly it cannot be unfair that a copy was sent in on the 1st March 2006.
14. As to the other plans which were sent in, one was a copy of a plan taken from the possession of Chiltern District Council, which appears to be based on the Ordnance Survey plan, and which does not seem to have been relied upon by Mr. Caruth in his decision, and, as far as the other two plans are concerned, they are the ones prepared by Mr. Topp himself and, in response to questions, Mr. Caruth merely says that he was referring to them for completeness as representations made by Mr. Topp. Certainly he does not seem to rely upon those plans, and indeed not surprisingly, since he carried out a measurement of the boundary himself, albeit that it produced the same figure or broadly the same figure, and certainly none of the plans appear to therefore have been decisive in the decision-making process. Indeed, he has rejected the measurement on the plan on the conveyance of the 19th July 1972.
15. It does seem to me that it would have been sensible if communicating with an expert who is jointly instructed, and particularly one here, who has been asked to make a determination as opposed to give an opinion for the benefit of the court, to have copied any documentation which was sent to him, but it does not appear to me that from these plans, certainly as far as the first one is concerned, that it should have come as any surprise to the claimants because it was always available to them, and is indeed referred to, according to Mr. Caruth, both in solicitors' correspondence and also, as I said, a copy of it is attached to the consent order lodged with the court on the 25th August 2004. It does not seem to me that any of the other plans have in any sense influenced the decision which has been reached by Mr. Caruth. Therefore I cannot see that there is any unfairness which has actually been caused by the fact that those plans were sent in by Mr. Topp's solicitors without, as I say, taking the sensible course of copying them to the other side. What the claimants seem to be complaining about mainly is the fact that more emphasis was not put by them on this 138 foot measurement in the 1972 conveyance, but that, as I said, is a matter which they could have raised at any stage as they were well aware of it, and I cannot see that there is any unfairness caused in that respect as a result of any actions taken by the defendant."
The Appeal