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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Hamilton, Re Judicial Review [2007] ScotCS CSOH_96 (12 June 2007)
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Cite as: [2007] CSOH 96, [2007] ScotCS CSOH_96

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OUTER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION

 

[2007] CSOH 96

 

P1165/05

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

OPINION OF LORD GLENNIE

 

in the petition

 

BRIAN GREGORY HAMILTON

 

Petitioner;

 

for

 

Judicial Review of a Decision taken by the Planning and Environmental Services Committee of Dumfries & Galloway Council taken on 26 May 2005 in respect of a decision to "re-adopt" Road U62N

 

 

 

ญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญ________________

 

 

Petitioner: Henderson; Lindsays, WS

Respondents: Olson; Anderson Strathern, WS

 

12 June 2007

Introduction

[1] Section 1 of the Roads (Scotland) Act 1984, requires the local roads authority to manage and maintain all such roads in their area as are for the time being entered in a list (referred to as their "list of public roads") prepared and kept by them. The authority has power under that section to add to or delete from their list of public roads. The process of adding a road to the list of public roads is colloquially known as "adopting" a road.

[2] Section 16 of the Act provides that, provided a private road is of a certain standard, then, if application is made to the authority by the "requisite number of frontagers", the authority shall within 12 months of the application add the road to their list of public roads (i.e. adopt it). The "requisite number" of frontagers is identified in sections 16(5) and 1(7) of the Act, So far as is relevant here, the requisite number is (a) a majority of frontagers or (b) such number of frontagers as together own land which includes not less than half of the boundary fronting or abutting the road.

[3] The first and second respondents are the Dumfries and Galloway Council and its Planning and Environmental Services Committee. The Council is the local roads authority for the area. On 26 May 2005 the Committee decided to adopt a length of road ("the disputed section of road") which, when adopted, would become part of the U62N. The disputed section of road is marked on a plan appended to a report prepared by officials on 17 May 2005.

[4] In these proceedings for judicial review, the petitioner challenges the decision to adopt the disputed section of road. The respondents, for their part, challenge the petitioner's title and interest.

[5] The case came before me at a continued First Hearing, there having already been a debate at First Hearing on certain issues, details of which can be found in the Opinion issued on 14 July 2006 by Lord Kingarth under case reference [2006] CSOH 110. At the continued First Hearing the petitioner contended that the decision to adopt the road under section 16 of the Act was ultra vires the respondents because the application made to them was not made by the "requisite number of frontagers". The respondents argued that the petitioner did not have title and interest since he did not own the disputed section of road or any land adjoining it.

 

The disputed section of road and the surrounding land
[6] Nearly 20 years ago, the disputed section of road formed part of the B724 running approximately north-east south-west from Collin to Annan. In about 1989, a new section of the A75 was constructed, running approximately east west, bypassing Collin to the south and cutting across the Collin to Annan road. A new access road was built off it into Collin; and a number of roads were blocked off, including the B724 south of Collin at and adjacent to the point where the new section of the A75 cut across it. A part of the B724, north of and immediately adjacent to the new A75, was grassed over so as to form a permanent barrier between the B724 and the new road. A further short length of the former B724, extending north-east for about 36 metres from the grassed over part, was (as I understand it) deleted from the list of public roads. This 36 metre stretch is the disputed section of road. The remaining section of the B724 running north-east from that point into the centre of Collin, remained on the list but was reclassified as theU62N. There were also alterations to the B724 to the south of the new A75, giving rise to further disputes, but I am not concerned with these for present purposes.

[7] At the time when the new section of the A75 was constructed and the above-noted changes to the B724 were made, there was a field to the north of the new A75 and to the east and north-east of the disputed section of road and of theU62N continuing on from it. That field, measuring just over 8 hectares, directly abutted the road, in the sense that there was no footway between it and the road. It has since been developed for housing. The houses are laid out around a road, Townhead Park, which is internal to the development. Vehicular access into Townhead Park from the U62N has to the taken across the disputed section of road. There are properties at either side of the bell-mouth of Townhead Park. These are numbers 1 and 2 Townhead Park, and are owned respectively by a Mr Hyslop and Mr and Mrs Marshall. Between the edges of their gardens and the disputed section of road there is a now a pavement or footpath which, in fact, runs all along the edge of Townhead Park road into the middle of the development. That pavement or footpath was constructed as part of the development on land which was formerly part of the field.

[8] Counsel who appeared before me were in agreement that dispositions in 1995 - namely a disposition from various members of the Currie family in favour of the developers, Robison & Davidson Limited, dated 13 and 15 May 1995 (but recorded in the Register of Sasines only on 2 June 1995), and two dispositions from the developers in favour respectively of Mr Hyslop and Mr and Mrs Marshall, dated respectively on 28 April and 26 May 1995 (but again recorded in the Register of Sasines only on 2 June 1995) - bore to convey the whole field (and therefore the whole area of the development) to the developers. However, the prior disposition in 1992, from Ronald MacDonald Currie to those members of the Currie family, excluded a strip along the edge of the field adjacent both to the disputed section of road and the U62N. That excluded strip is the area now occupied by (a) that part of the pavement or footpath which abuts the road and (b) the bell-mouth of Townhead Park road where it abuts the disputed section of road. It is agreed that the consequence of this is that, so far as concerns that excluded strip, the 1995 dispositions were a non domino dispositions. At the time when the Council purported to adopt the disputed section of road, the 1995 dispositions had been recorded in the Register of Sasines for just under 10 years.

[9] I should add that the Scottish Executive claim to own the land to the south and west of the disputed section of road. The petitioner claims to own the solum of the disputed section of road, as well as the solum of a section of the U62N to the north of it and the grassed over section to which I have already referred.

 

Title and interest

(i) The relevant dispositions and parties submissions

[10] The respondents questioned whether the petitioner owns any relevant land, i.e. land adjoining the disputed section of road. I use the word "questioned" advisedly, since the respondents' case was simply that the title produced by the petitioner was not clear. They accepted that the petitioner's title derived from the estate. However, they submitted that prior to his purchase of the residual part of the estate, the road that ran through the estate (including all of what is now the disputed section of road, the grassed over part of the road and the south-eastern end of the U62N) had been sold off with the surrounding fields. It was questionable whether the petitioner had ever acquired title either to the solum of the disputed section of road or the grassed over part or the near end of the U62N.

[11] It was agreed that this identified the relevant question and counsel were therefore able to develop their arguments simply by reference to the two dispositions and accompanying plans which, so the respondents contended, bore to remove these parts from the estate lands to which the petitioner acquired title. Those dispositions were, first, a disposition by Sir Robert Gilbert White dated May 1920 in favour of Thomas and Robert Dickson and, second, a disposition in 1926 by Thomas Dickson in favour of William Callander.

[12] The 1920 disposition bore to dispone "all and whole the lands and farm of Braehead ... as presently occupied by the said Thomas Dickson and Robert Dickson as tenants thereof ... all as the said lands and farm and said cottages are separately delineated and coloured pink on the sketch or plan annexed and subscribed as relative hereto". The plan showed the area of land to be delineated as one whole and coloured pink, but the public roads running through it was not coloured in. Mr Olson, who appeared for the respondents, submitted that the disposition was of one piece of land. The roads were within the area delineated on the plan and must have been intended to pass with the disposition even though they were not coloured pink. Since the roads cut the land into separate parcels, had it been intended that the roads should not be disponed with the land, the disposition would have been of five separately delineated areas. He submitted that the failure to colour the roads should be regarded as an omission which did not affect the grant. He pointed out that the disposition expressly stated that "the accuracy [of the plan] is not warranted". Mr Henderson, for the petitioner, relied upon the fact that the roads were not coloured pink. He also took a more fundamental point. He pointed out that the description of the land disponed was that it was land "presently occupied" by the Dicksons as tenants. It was difficult, he submitted, to see how a tenant could occupy a public road running through the farm. The right of ownership is in the solum. It is an incident of the law of landlord and tenant that to be able to lease subjects the landlord had to be able to grant the tenant a right to use the subjects. The road being a public road, it would be impossible for the owner of the solum to grant a tenant any such right. Since the road could not have been leased to or occupied by the tenants, it could not have formed part of the lands disponed by the disposition.

[13] The 1926 disposition bore to dispone to William Callander certain lands "all as the said subjects hereby disponed are delineated and coloured pink on the Plan thereof hereunto annexed and subscribed by me ...". The Plan consisted of a sheet from the Ordnance Survey Map and was held to be "descriptive merely and not taxative". The disposition went on to say that the lands hereby disponed "consist of and comprehend enclosures Numbers 475, 476, 477, 478, 480, 481, 490, 491 and 493 on the foresaid Ordnance Sheet ...". Mr Olson argued, by reference to the Plan, that since the relevant part of the road running through the land did not have a separate enclosure number, in contrast to another stretch of public road on a different part of the Plan, that part of the road appeared to be treated as though it were part of the field and covered by the same enclosure number. Mr Henderson disputed this construction. He also pointed out that the 1926 disposition went on to describe the lands disponed as being the lands described in the 1920 disposition. If the 1920 disposition did not convey the roads running through the land, neither could the 1926 disposition.

 

(ii) Discussion

[14] On this question, I prefer the submissions of Mr Henderson. It is true, as Mr Olson submitted, that the delineation on the plan attached to the 1920 disposition encloses a single area of land to the disponed, and that within the single area there are a number of roads. However, the terms of the disposition show that the subjects intended to be disponed were not only delineated on the plan but were also coloured pink. Whilst the farm tracks within the delineated area are coloured pink, the public roads running through it are not. It is impossible, in my opinion, to regard this as an accidental omission. The pink colouring has been carefully carried out up to the edges of the size of the public roads running through the land. There can be no doubt, in my opinion, that the roads were deliberately excluded from the colouring on the plan so as to indicate that no interest in the roads was disponed. I do not think that anything turns on the wording in the disposition to the effect that the accuracy of the plan is not warranted. Such a disclaimer is intended to cover errors in the plan and also to make it clear, for example, that field boundaries may not be precisely drawn. But it does not to remove altogether the relevance of the plan. The plan is important, for example, to identify which fields are disponed. By the same token, it is relevant for the purpose of identifying that there is no intended disposition of any interest in the public roads running through the land.

[15] In light of this conclusion, it is unnecessary for me to reach any concluded view about Mr Henderson's more fundamental submission that a tenant cannot be said to occupy the solum of a public road running through the subjects, and that therefore the disposition, which describes the land disponed as being "occupied" by the then tenants, could not have been intended to include the public roads. Clearly the solum of a public road is capable of ownership. However, I think that Mr Henderson is correct in drawing a distinction between the ownership of the title holder and occupation by a tenant. It is difficult to see how a tenant under a lease can occupy the solum of a public road running through the land. He may use it, but if he uses it he does so by virtue of its being a public road. His use of the road is not suggestive of occupation. If it were a private farm road, there would be no such difficulty. He could park a tractor blocking the road, if he so chose, or use it for feeding livestock. He cannot lawfully use a public road in the same way. No other attributes of occupation were suggested. In terms of the 1920 disposition, therefore, it is difficult to see that the reference to lands "occupied" by the tenants could have been intended to include the public roads running through the land or the solum of those roads. For this reason also, had I had to decide the point, I would have found in favour of the petitioner.

[16] Since the description of the land disponed by the 1926 disposition expressly describes it as being the land disponed by the 1920 disposition, it must follow that, on its proper construction, the 1926 disposition bears to dispone no more than was disponed by the 1920 disposition. Since I have concluded that the 1920 disposition did not dispone this public road running through the land, it must follow that the 1926 disposition did not dispone the road either.

[17] Quite apart from that, however, it seems to me that there are other reasons why the 1926 disposition did not bear to dispone this road. Admittedly the road is coloured pink on the plan annexed to the 1926 disposition, but that plan (unlike the plan annexed to the 1920 disposition) is held to the "descriptive merely and not taxative". With such wording, any inference that might be drawn from the colouring of the plan is very weak. Of greater importance is the fact that the lands disponed by the disposition are said to consist of and comprehend certain enclosure numbers on the Ordnance Sheet on which the plan is drawn. Those enclosure numbers are Ordnance Survey numbers, and they refer to particular parcels of land identified on the Ordnance Survey map. Mr Olson pointed out that one of the public roads on the map has its own enclosure number, whereas the road containing the disputed section of road does not. The inference to be drawn, he submitted, is that since the road leading out of Collin to the south east (which includes the disputed section of road) does not have its own enclosure number, it is to be regarded as part of the field having enclosure number 491, and therefore as part of the land disponed. I cannot agree. The plan is drawn on a section only of the Ordnance Survey Map. Without seeing the whole Sheet, and maybe such neighbouring Sheets as are necessary to cover the whole length of the Collin to Annan road, one cannot say whether the public road in question has an Ordnance Survey enclosure number. There might be a number given for the road on another Sheet. But even if the road does not have such a number, the fact is that it is separated by lines from the fields either side. I accept, as Mr Olson pointed out, that the line on one side of the road is bolder than that on the other, but this means nothing, since the same is true of the road which does have its own enclosure number. Taking the disposition and plan as a whole, I do not think that it can possibly be said that the road is identified in the plan as part of one of the fields so as to be conveyed by the 1926 disposition.

[18] I therefore find for the petitioner on the question of title and interest.

 

Was the respondents' decision ultra vires

(i) The issue

[19] The decision to adopt the disputed section of road was taken under section 16 of the Roads (Scotland) Act 1984. No argument was addressed to me as to whether the respondents would have had power to adopt the road under any other section of the Act. For section 16 to apply, the application had to be made by either a majority of the frontagers or such number as together owned land which formed more than half the boundary between the disputed section of road and the land surrounding it. It is agreed between the parties that the Scottish Executive do not own half the boundary around the disputed section of road. An application only by them, therefore, would be insufficient to enable or require the respondents to adopt the road. Mr Hyslop and Mr and Mrs Marshall also joined in the application to the respondents. If they were "frontagers", the fact that they joined in the application would mean that the application was made by a majority of frontagers. It would also mean that the application was made by people who together owned land forming at least half the boundary around the disputed section of road. In either case, the requirements of section 16 of the Act would be satisfied and the decision taken by the respondents to adopt the road would be intra vires.

[20] The issue is, therefore, whether, at the material time, Mr Hyslop and Mr and Mrs Marshall were "frontagers" within the meaning of the Act.

 

(ii) The relevant statutory provisions

[21] Section 151(1) of the Roads (Scotland) Act 1984 defines a "frontager" in this way:

"'frontager', in relation to a road or proposed to road, means the owner of any land fronting or abutting it".

The word "owner" also has its own definition in that section. Only the first part is relevant. This reads as follows:

"'owner' -

(a) in relation to land means, subject to paragraph (b) below, the person for the time being entitled to receive, or who would, if the same were let, be entitled to receive, the rents of the land, ..."

It was not suggested that other provisions of that Act are relevant for present purposes.

[22] I was also referred to section 1 of the Prescription and Limitation (Scotland) Act 1973. This, so far as material, provides as follows:

"1(1) if the land has been possessed by any person, or by any person and his successors, for a continuous period of 10 years openly, peaceably and without any judicial interruption and the possession was founded on, and followed -

(a) the recording of the deed which is sufficient in respect of its terms to constitute in favour of that person a real right in -

(i) that land ...

...

then, as from the expiry of that period, the real right so far as relating to that land shall be exempt from challenge."

The submissions on this section focused particularly on the meaning of "possessed" and what was meant by "shall be exempt from challenge".

 

(iii) Submissions
[23
] Mr Henderson advanced two submissions on the half of the petitioner. His first was that, as at 26 May 2005, the date of the decision to adopt the disputed section of road, 10 years had not elapsed since the recording of the dispositions in the Register of Sasines. Therefore neither Mr Hyslop nor Mr and Mrs Marshall could demonstrate, as at that time, that they had good title to the land immediately abutting the disputed stretch of road, i.e. the pavement around the gardens and the notional strip across the entrance to Townhead Park.

[24] His second submission was that, whether or not 10 years had elapsed, Mr Hyslop and Mr and Mrs Marshall had not "possessed" the relevant strip of land so as to bring section 1 of the Prescription and Limitation (Scotland) Act into play. There were no averments of possession anent the strip across the entrance to Townhead Park, immediately adjacent to the disputed section of road. The best that could be said, presumably, was that they drove across it. The averments anent their possession of the pavement were simply that "they maintained the pavements by weeding them, sweeping them and clearing them of snow". This was not the sort of possession that indicated ownership so as to give rise to their a non domino title becoming exempt from challenge after 10 years. Mr Henderson emphasised, however, that his client did not seek to go back on his assurance, given to Mr Hyslop and Mr and Mrs Marshall, that he did not now challenge their title. His point was that as at the date of the decision, on 26 May 2005, neither Mr Hyslop nor the Marshalls were owners, and therefore frontagers within the meaning of the Act.

[25] Mr Olson, for the respondents, submitted that any act of possession had to be viewed against the nature of the land possessed. In certain circumstances, relatively minor acts, occasional in nature, might suffice: see Hamilton v McIntosh Donald Ltd. 1994 SC 304, a case involving the present petitioner. The test was whether the acts were "unequivocally referable" to the ownership claimed: per the Lord Justice-Clerk at p.322. What more could one do to indicate possession of a pavement or footpath running over one's land? But there was in fact more to it than that. The pavement had been built on the land by the developers. The continued existence of the pavement on the land was an act of possession by the developers and, subsequently by Mr Hyslop and by Mr and Mrs Marshall.

[26] Mr Olson submitted that the person with recorded title was the owner of the land for the purpose of the definition in the Roads (Scotland) Act, and was therefore the frontager. Mr Hyslop and Mr and Mrs Marshall had both recorded titles. It did not matter that their title was a non domino and might be vulnerable if challenged. So far as concerned the rest of the world, they were the people to whom rent would be paid because they were the people who had the recorded title. Any third party, a fortiori someone in the position of the respondents, had to be able to accept the recorded title in the Register of Sasines. It was not practical for the respondents to do otherwise. He accepted that this approach led to the possibility that an unscrupulous individual could, immediately before a relevant date, record any number of a non domino titles so as to secure a majority of frontagers. This, he said, was one of the defects in the system which was now replaced by land registration. Any prudent solicitor acting for a third party would simply check the title recorded in the Register of Sasines. However, in discussing this further, he accepted, as I understood it, that an ordinarily prudent solicitor would check the last recorded title dating back more than 10 years prior to the relevant date. Had such that notional prudent solicitor done that in the present case, he would have had his attention brought to the 1992 disposition and would have been put on notice that there was at least a question as to the Hyslop and Marshall titles to this narrow strip.

[27] Mr Olson further argued that none of that mattered, because section 1(1) of the Prescription and Limitation (Scotland) Act 1973 provided that after 10 years "the real right so far as relating to that land shall be exempt from challenge". This was retrospective in effect. It meant that the real right from the beginning of that 10 year period could no longer be challenged. This precluded any discussion now about who were the owners or frontagers at the time of the decision on 26 May 2005. It was no longer open to anyone to challenge the Hyslop and Marshall titles. He referred me to Johnston on Prescription and Limitation at paras.15-25 - 15-27. There was an irrebuttable presumption that the title was good. The effect of prescription was to exclude all inquiry into the validity of the prior title. It was not necessary to go farther than that and consider the theory of original acquisition.

[28] In a brief reply to Mr Olson's submission that it was enough simply to look to see who had the recorded title, Mr Henderson drew my attention to Trade Development Bank v David W. Haig (Bellshill) Ltd 1983 SLT 583 to vouch the point that the public registers gave public notice of what was contained in them. It was not enough simply to look at a disposition recorded less than 10 years before the relevant date. Everyone knew that it was necessary to look back beyond the 10 years. The information was all in the Register.

 

(iv) Discussion
[29
] Section 16 of the Roads (Scotland) Act 1984 imposes a duty on the respondents to adopt a road, assuming it to be of the required standard, if the application is by either a majority of the frontagers, i.e. a majority of the owners of land fronting or abutting the stretch of road in question; or by frontagers owning between them at least half of the land fronting or abutting the road or stretch of road. It is agreed that for either requirement to be satisfied in the present case, it must be shown that both Mr Hyslop and Mr and Mrs Marshall were frontagers.

[30] The answer to that question depends, in terms of the definition of owner in section 151 of the Act, upon whether they were the persons who, "for the time being", were entitled to receive the rents of the land or who would have been entitled to receive such a rents if the land were let. It seems to me that the phrase "for the time being" is intended to indicate that the inquiry must focus upon the particular time when, in terms of the Act, frontagers are called upon to act or their actions are to the assessed. The inquiry must, therefore, be whether on 25 May 2005 Mr Hyslop and the Marshalls were the persons at that time entitled to receive the rents of the land. If that question were asked and answered on any particular day, being a date less than 10 years after the recording of their titles, it seems to me that the answer would plainly be: No. At that date, both Mr Hyslop and Mr and Mrs Marshall had no more than a non domino titles. In a dispute over title, their titles would not have prevailed since they had not been recorded in the Register of Sasines for 10 years. It cannot, therefore, be said that on that day they were owners of the land or entitled to receive the rents of the land.

[31] Nor does it seem to me that any extended construction ought to be placed upon the words in the section to take account of practical difficulties which might be encountered by those wishing to know to whom they should pay rent. Mr Olson accepted that the ordinarily prudent solicitor wishing to find out who was the owner of land or to whom rent should be paid would look in the Register of Sasines as far as the last title recorded more than 10 years before his inquiry. This makes obvious sense. Such a solicitor would have discovered not only that the dispositions in favour of Mr Hyslop and Mr and Mrs Marshall, recorded less than 10 years before, bore to show that they had title to the whole land; but also that the disposition recorded immediately prior to that cast some doubt upon their titles to the strip of land immediately adjoining the disputed section of road. In other words, such a solicitor would have discovered without difficulty that, to put it at its lowest, the titles recorded in favour of Mr Hyslop and the Marshalls were a non domino titles. In those circumstances it would have been incumbent upon such a solicitor to delve deeper. Exactly the same is true of a solicitor acting for the respondents when presented with an application by persons claiming to be frontagers. Although no doubt cumbersome and time-consuming, the process presents no great difficulty.

[32] On the other hand, there are great practical difficulties with the construction advanced by Mr Olson. It would be open, if he were correct in his argument, for an unscrupulous frontager who wished a road to be adopted over the opposition of his neighbours to grant a non domino dispositions over small sections of land to enough individuals to constitute a majority of frontagers, and to record the dispositions in the Register of Sasines. The weakness of their titles would be irrelevant. The roads authority would be obliged to adopt the road and a person aggrieved by the act would be met by the answer that the recording of their title in the Register was conclusive on the point. This cannot be right. It would, in effect, allow the recording of an a non domino title to be conclusive for certain purposes even short of the 10-year prescription period set out in section 1 of the 1973 Act.

[33] It seems to me, if this analysis is right, that the discussion about whether or not Mr Hyslop and Mr and Mrs Marshall subsequently gained the benefit of prescription is beside the point. The effect of their having done so would be to make their titles exempt from challenge from that point on. But it would not have the effect of retrospectively validating actions which took place before the expiry of 10 years. Insofar as it is necessary to examine what occurred before the expiry of 10 years, that examination must proceed upon the basis of what the position was then. Otherwise one would have the absurd situation that the validity of a decision by the roads authority to adopt a road would alter merely by the passage of time. In the present case, the decision taken on 26 May 2005 would have been invalid at the time it was taken but, on Mr Olson's argument, would have become valid about a week later without anyone doing anything to achieve that. One can imagine a similar case where the decision was taken not one week before the expiry of 10 years but, say, only five years into the 10-year period of prescription; and that there were a number of different dispositions recorded in the Register of Sasines on different dates. The system would be unworkable if the effect of the exemption from challenge in section 1 of the 1973 Act had the effect of retrospectively validating prior acts.

[34] Having reached this conclusion, it is not strictly necessary for me to consider whether Mr Hyslop and Mr and Mrs Marshall did in fact "possess" the narrow strip of land abutting the disputed section of road so as to bring section 1 of the 1973 Act into play. The difficulty is in finding some act of "possession" which can be said to the "unequivocally referable" to their claimed titles of ownership. Driving out through Townhead Park does not fall within this category. Such an act is in no way referable to the claim to ownership. There were no doubt many others living within the development doing the same without pretending to any title; and equally Mr Hyslop and Mr and Mrs Marshall no doubt drove across the disputed section of road in precisely the same way without claiming title to that land. For similar reasons, I was not persuaded that the routine acts of sweeping the pavements, weeding them and clearing them of snow were unequivocally referable to the claim to ownership. However, the developers constructed the pavement at some time after 1992, and it seems to me that the act of constructing the pavement and keeping it there could be said to be an act of possession which was unequivocally referable to a claim to ownership. In those circumstances, had it been necessary for me to decide this point, I would, on balance, have held that by 2 June 2005 the title enjoyed by Mr Hyslop and Mr and Mrs Marshall was exempt from challenge.

 

Disposal

[35] For the reasons which I have set out, I consider that the respondents' challenge to the petitioner's title and interest fails. The petitioner has made good his contention that the adoption of the road by the respondents was ultra vires. I shall therefore grant declarator that the decision of the Dumfries and Galloway Council and the Planning and Environmental Services Committee thereof on 26 May 2005 to add to their list of public roads the section of road set out in the plan annexed to the report prepared by their officials on 17 May 2005 was ultra vires; and I shall reduce the said decision. I was asked to make other orders but it seems to me that the more appropriate course is to put the case out By Order to discuss whether any and, if so, what further procedure is necessary. I shall reserve all questions of expenses, in particular because the point on which the petitioner has been successful was raised only recently and it does not, therefore, follow that his success should carry with it the expenses of the whole action.

 

 

 

 

 


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