BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Mulvaney v Jackson & Ors [2002] EWCA Civ 1078 (24 July 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2002/1078.html Cite as: [2003] 4 All ER 83, [2002] 44 EG 175, [2003] 1 WLR 360, [2003] P & CR 16, [2002] EWCA Civ 1078 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Buy ICLR report: [2003] 1 WLR 360] [Help]
COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM PRESTON COUNTY COURT
(District Judge Ashton)
Strand, London WC2A 2LL | ||
B e f o r e :
Vice President of the Court of Appeal, Civil Division
LORD JUSTICE MANCE
LORD JUSTICE LATHAM
____________________
ELIZABETH CAROLE RACHEL MULVANEY (nee SCOTT) | Claimant/Respondent | |
and: | ||
COLIN GOUGH | ||
BRYAN HOLMES | ||
THOMAS HOLMES | ||
EMILY JACKSON | Defendants/Appellants |
____________________
(As handed down by the Court)
____________________
(AS HANDED DOWN BY THE COURT)
- - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - ----
CROWN COPYRIGHT
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Latham:
“.... a right of way at all time and for all purposes in common with the vendors and all persons having the like right over and above the open yard adjoining the said premises and coloured blue on the said plan (“the blue land”).”
“This case concerns the environment of a cottage known as 7, East View, Galgate, Lancashire, owned and occupied by the claimant. It is one of a group of cottages situated in East View and Chapel Street with an enclosed back yard. Most if not all of these cottages have been provided with modern amenities but they were originally served by water closets in the yard and such buildings still exist although now used for other purposes if at all. The cottages were acquired by Joseph Holmes in 1932 and occupied by tenants, but following his death in 1950 the trustees of the estate have progressively sold them and some have changed hands several times since. Although rights were not always expressed in the same way, the policy of the trustees was (when possible) to sell just the cottages with rights over the yard and to retain ownership of the water closets. Thus when No. 7 East View (the claimant’s cottage) was sold off to Mrs Plahatu in 1970 the conveyance merely included
“a right of way at all times for all purposes in common with the vendors or persons having the like right over and upon the open yard adjoining the said premises coloured blue on the said plans”.
Yet in 1959 when No 1 East View was sold the conveyance had included, in addition to express water supply and coal bunker rights:
“... A right of way and of use for drying purposes, over and in the said yard .... upon payment of a proportionate part of the expense of repairing and maintaining the same.”
And there was the standard agreement and declaration that all easements and quasi easements should remain as they existed under one ownership. In 1974 when No 9 Chapel Street was sold such provisions were reduced to:
“The joint use of the yard or ground to the rear of the said property coloured blue on the said plan.”
One may wonder whether any distinction was intended, but in practice none was adopted by the residents and development of the yard by the owners would be effectively prevented by the terms of the conveyance of 1950 (of which there were several). The many witness statements from existing and former residents testify not only to a “communal” yard on “the blue land” but also to happy relationships between all residents. I am satisfied that over the decades, and certainly predating these sales, the entirety of the yard was used by the residents as amenity and garden land on a shared basis. That would have been the intention when the cottages were built in the 19th Century and the way it was occupied when in common ownership. Nothing appears to have been done when the cottages were sold off to prevent this long established regime from continuing and no distinction appears to have been made as regards any part of the land invariably shown coloured blue on these deeds.
The evidence shows certain “ground rules” or understandings grew out of the need to avoid anarchy and this included provision of washing lines, space for dustbins and allocation of small flower beds so that the yard would resemble a domestic garden and be more attractive as an amenity enjoyed by all. To the extent the late Joseph Holmes and subsequently the trustees continued to own some of these properties they must have known and indeed acquiesced in what was going on and benefited from the higher prices that would be obtained when they came to sell individual properties. Whilst the yard regime was not spelt out in conveyances it was recounted to prospective purchases and I am satisfied that there was no systematic attempt by either the Holmes family to inform initial and successive owners that all this was done with their permission which could be revoked at any time on a whim. Purchases were inclined to take the situation on trust and not to insist that it was spelt out in the deeds.
In so far as pieces of land were allocated for cultivation adjacent to each cottage this was part of the overall scheme. Acceptance by all would be essential because these small flower beds inevitably obstructed the mutual rights of way over the yard. Whilst each registered resident could say: “That is my garden”, this would not be a claim to legal ownership but allocation as part of the overall scheme of the communal garden. During some period one occupier may have less time or be uninterested in the chore of garden maintenance and I have no doubt that an informal arrangement would be made with someone else for the upkeep of the allocated land. But generally each flower bed was regarded as being attributed to a particular cottage. The unallocated part of the yard was grassed over and there is evidence that people took it in turns to cut this and keep it tidy. There is an abundance of evidence, collected by the claimant in the form of both statements and photographs, of the enjoyment of the communal yard – now a garden – by the residents over many years. There is also evidence of steps being taken by certain residents to question anyone who “trespassed” there.
.....
I am satisfied that these communal rights have been acquired by prescription over the “blue land” by the claimant and those property owners to whom express rights as joint user were not granted. This long standing basis of user and occupation with the cottages does not depend upon the express consent of the Holmes family as they now seek to allege. It is the de facto situation based upon more than 50 years history.
......
The evidence of an already established communal yard is uncontested, not contestable now by reason of consent and not negatived by any express provision in that conveyance” (the respondent’s conveyance) “At the very least this claimant will enjoy rights over the blue land equivalent to those expressed in the 1974 conveyance, that is joint use of the entire yard shown coloured blue on the plan. The nature and extent of that joint use depends upon what has been going on in the previous year and has continued during the 30 years since her cottage was sold off. There is no question but that the flower border on the passage adjacent to the cottage was part of the established scheme of things so that the defendants were not entitled to summarily remove it in 1996. The claimant has status to assert and protect the communal rights.”
“There is also the question of the removal of the grass surface of the passage, being that part of the blue land between the “claimants” flower bed and her cottage. The passage is part of the right of way enjoyed by all the cottages as an essential means of gaining direct access to the communal yard and their back doors. This area is more of an access road than the enclosed yard and the surface does not have to be grass. Although I condemn the manner in which the defendants removed this surface I am not, in the exercise of any discretion I may have, prepared to grant any relief to the claimant provided that the defendants now resurface this land in an acceptable manner so it can again be used as a right of way in all weather.”
“The District Judge erred in law in finding that a right to cultivate the common garden, hang washing and generally enjoy land was capable of existing as an easement and/or was capable of being acquired by prescription or implied grant.”
“The judge erred in law in holding that the right claimed by the claimant that is to say the right in common with the owners of the freehold properties surrounding the freehold land shown edged in blue and hatched black on the plan annexed to the defence (“the blue land”) to use the blue land as their communal garden was capable of existing as an easement and/or could be acquired by prescription or implied grant.”
“There can be no prescriptive right in the nature of a servitude or easement so large as to preclude the ordinary uses of property by the owner of the lands affected. Semble, that where a claim in the nature of a servitude or easement is incapable of judicial control and restriction it cannot be sustained by prescription. It does not follow that rights sustainable by grant are necessarily sustainable by prescription.”
“I think that the right claimed goes wholly outside any normal idea of an easement, that is, the right of the owner or occupier of a dominant tenement over a servient tenement. This claim (to which no closely related authority has been referred to me) really amounts to a claim to a joint user of the land by the defendant. Practically the defendant is claiming the whole beneficial use of the strip of land on the south east side of the track there; he can leave as many or as few lorries there as he likes for as long as he likes; he may enter on it by himself, his servants and agents to do repair work thereon. In my judgment, that is not a claim which can be established as an easement. It is virtually a claim for possession of a servient tenement if necessary, to the exclusion of the owner; or at any rate to a joint user, and no authority has been cited to me which would justify the conclusion that a right of this wide and undefined nature can be the proper subject matter of an easement. It seems to me that to succeed, this claim must amount to a successful claim of possession by reason of long adverse possession. I say nothing, of course, as to the creation of such rights by deeds or by covenant; I am dealing solely with the question of a right arising by prescription.”
“the full enjoyment .... at all times hereafter in common with the other persons to whom such easements may be granted of the pleasure ground” (the park) “.... but subject to the payment of a fair and just proportion of the costs, charges and expenses of keeping in good order and condition the said pleasure ground.”
“We see nothing repugnant to a man’s proprietorship or possession of a piece of land that he should decide to make it and maintain it as an ornamental garden and should grant rights to a limited number of other persons to come into it for the enjoyment of its amenities.”
“Next, the right was, as I understand it, a right to use the coal shed in question for the purpose of storing such coal as might be required for the domestic purposes of the flat. In my judgment that is a right or easement which the law would clearly recognise and is a right or easement of a kind which could readily be included in a lease or conveyance by the insertion of appropriate words in the parcels.”
“As stated in In Re Ellenborough Park the categories of easement are not closed and in my experience many older properties enjoy rights over communal gardens and yards. It may be that reallocation of the layout of such areas may be required from time to time but the land owner cannot simply do this for his own convenience without prior consultation with all concerned. That is what happened in this case and it will not be supported by a court of equity.”
“For the purposes of the argument before us Mr Cross and Mr Goff were content to adopt, as correct, the four characteristics formulated in Dr Cheshire’s Modern Real Property 7th Ed pp 456 at seq. They are:
(1) There must be a dominant and servient tenement:
(2) An easement must “accommodate” the dominant tenement.
(3) Dominant and servient owners must be different persons, and
(4) A right over land cannot amount to an easement, unless it is capable of forming the subject matter of a grant.”
“The claimant is entitled to a right to use the blue land as a communal garden for recreational and amenity purposes”
Lord Justice Mance: I agree.
Lord Justice Simon Brown: I also agree.
ORDER: Appeal allowed in part and declaration given. The appellants to pay the respondent 75 per cent of her costs, those costs summarily assessed in total at £20,000.
(Order not part of approved judgment)