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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Hayling v Harper & Anor [2003] EWCA Civ 1147 (2 April 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2003/1147.html Cite as: [2003] EWCA Civ 1147 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE GLOUCESTER COUNTY COURT
(His Honour Judge Hutton)
Strand London WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE WARD and
LORD JUSTICE CARNWATH
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SARAH IRENE HAYLING | Claimant/Respondent | |
-v- | ||
(1) STEPHEN PAUL HARPER | ||
(2) THERESA HARPER | Defendants/Appellants |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
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(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr John Clargo (instructed by Messrs Marshall & Galpin, Oxford) appeared on behalf of the Respondent Claimant.
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(AS APPROVED BY THE COURT)
©CROWN COPYRIGHT
Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE WARD:
"As owners of the Common we would permit vehicular access for [Mrs Hayling] and her visitors to Birchlas Cottage at all times."
Apparently in October 2000 Mrs Hayling's son-in-law visited and, having parked his vehicle in the field, he discovered that it had been damaged by the Harper's horse rubbing against it. This led to some minor altercation.
"Having heard that evidence, I found the relevant facts to be as follows:
1.From 1946 at the latest and, in view of the apparent age of Birchless Cottage, and records of people occupying it, probably for many years before that date, until the present time, the occupiers of that cottage, tradesmen delivering to it and other people visiting the occupants thereof, have used the disputed access in vehicles as well as on foot, namely via the green lane and the route round the edge of the Common.
2.This has been the principal means of access at all times of the year, although, during some periods, particularly in winter, that access would become temporarily impassable due to flooding.
3.The use of this route, by vehicles, as well as by pedestrians, has always been accepted, by the various owners of the Common before that field was acquired by the defendants, as a user by right and not permissive.
4.On occasions when this route has become impassable, due to weather conditions, various other access routes have been used but that was always by permission given by the relevant landowners as a temporary expedient.
5.In addition, for longer periods Mr Hayling, alone, used to drive his cars over a different route, namely over Bonds Field, because it was convenient for particular journeys, in the course of his work but the use of this route was by express permission, given and subsequently withdrawn, by the owner of Bonds field."
"On my findings of fact, as set out above, there would be no doubt in my mind that the occupiers of Birchlas Cottage had acquired the claimed easement, were it not for a statutory provision, relied upon by the defendants, which has caused me such a doubt. This provision appears in a number of statutes, the latest being s.34(1) of the Road Traffic Act 1988, namely: `... if without lawful authority a person drives a motor vehicle ... (b) on any road being a footpath ... he is guilty of an offence.' As there is a public footpath which runs along the green lane and continues along the edge of the Common (and beyond), the defendants' case is therefore that the occupiers of Birchlas Cottage and of [Broken Cottage] have, for the last fifty-five years or so, been committing the crime of driving motors along this way and that it is not possible in law to acquire an easement by such criminal use."
"... the provision was only intended to make it an offence to drive motors on footpaths or bridleways, such as ridgeways or ways across common land, as opposed to private occupation ways to farm fields, as this one is. There must be hundreds, if not thousands, of such occupation ways all over the country, which also have footpaths following the same route. For example, it would be a complete nonsense, if farmers were said to be committing crimes each time they drove their motor tractors along such occupation ways, in order to gain access to their fields or buildings, unless they had got the authority to do so, if some or all of that way ran over land belonging to others, such as neighbouring landowners. Further, the provision that it is an offence, `unless lawful authority' is obtained, is presumably to protect walkers or riders from the presence of motors on footpaths and bridleways, so it might seem that `authority' should be obtained from the local rights of way authority, namely the County Council, rather than from the owner of the land over which the way runs. However the Court of Appeal has ruled that the `lawful authority' is to be obtained from the relevant landowners, so I would be bound by that authority, if it were relevant, in this case, which it is not."
"On the facts of this case, therefore, I distinguish it from others that were quoted by counsel for the defendants, and, in particular, from Hanning v Top Deck Travel Group Ltd (1993) 68 P & CR 14, which was concerned with a track across common land, as I consider that the provisions of s.34(1) of the Road Traffic Act and the provisions of the similar statutory provisions that preceded it, do not apply to this occupation way.
"The reference in subsection (4) to `lawful authority' must mean the authority of the owner of the land, in relation to such land as the present case is concerned with."
His conclusion was, after a review of the authorities, that:
"I take all these cases to recognise what has always been the rule of the law; that an easement cannot be acquired by conduct which, at the time the conduct takes place, is prohibited by a public statute."
"A highway is a way over which there exists a public right of passage, that is to say a right for all Her Majesty's subjects at all seasons of the year freely and at their will to pass and repass without let or hindrance. A highway may be dedicated subject to certain restrictions or obstructions; and it may be limited to a recognised class of traffic, that is it need not be a way for vehicles, as, if they are open to the public generally, footpaths, bridleways and driftways are highways."
"In conducting the review it would not be right to refuse to take into consideration any evidence of post 1930 use, because that would be to assume from the outset that the RUPP was a bridleway or footpath as defined in section 192. In such a case it would be right to look at the evidence of vehicular use, both pre and post 1930, because evidence of user in the latter period may give added credibility to evidence of user in the former. If, having looked at the evidence overall, including both evidence of user and the documentary evidence, the Inspector is satisfied that there was no dedication of the way for vehicular use at common law or by 20 years user prior to 1930, then and only then will it be possible to say that evidence of post 1930 use should be excluded because such use would have been unlawful.
"From 1946 at the latest and, in view of the apparent age of Birchless Cottage [spelt as indicated], and records of people occupying it, probably for many years before that date, until the present time, the occupiers of that cottage, tradesmen delivering to it and other people visiting the occupants thereof, have used the disputed access in vehicles as well as on foot, namely via the green lane and the route round the edge of the Common."
LORD JUSTICE CARNWATH:
"The question is whether that ought to be treated as evidence of a lost grant, which might have had a legal origin. If such a grant could not have had a legal origin, then it is not competent for us to presume its existence. On the other hand, if it could have a legal origin, then we ought to presume the existence of such a grant, when there is evidence of user for such a long period."
"... focuses our attention on the appellants' express power to authorise use of the track. He contends that the `illegality' rule does not preclude the acquisition of an easement by prescription where the illegality lies in an activity to which the servient landowner can lawfully give his consent."
So although the particular passage of the judgment in Neaverson does not seem to have been referred to, the point was clearly before the court and was decided against that proposition.