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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 >> Seeckts v Derwent & Anor [2004] EWCA Civ 393 (30 March 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2004/393.html Cite as: [2004] EWCA Civ 393 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL
DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM TUNBRIDGE WELLS COUNTY COURT
H.H. JUDGE
MITCHELL
Case No TN 001460
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL | ||
B e f o r e :
AND
LORD JUSTICE
CARNWATH
____________________
ROBERT CECIL SEECKTS |
Claimant/ Respondent | |
and – |
||
PAUL DERWENT JANET DERWENT |
Defendants
/Appellants |
____________________
Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr P Crampin QC and Mr U
Staunton (instructed by Robert C Seeckts, Solicitors) for the
Claimant/Respondent
Hearing dates : 5th March 2004
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Carnwath :
Introduction
The disputed boundary
i) The building of Linden House lies to the north of Clock House, some 50 feet away at the nearest point. The part of the boundary with which we are concerned lies between the two properties and runs generally from north-west to south-east.
ii) The relevant section of boundary starts from point V (point A in the claim plan) at the north-west corner of the Clock House grounds. From that point it was shown in the conveyance plan running south-east towards Clock House in a straight line for 157 feet, following the edge of a path (shown on the Clock House side); after which it made a right-angle turn (at point Y or C) to the north-east.
iii) As shown in the conveyance plan, it then continued to the north-east to a point R1 (16ft 6 inches south of the wall of Linden House), and, after a further right-angle turn, to the south-east to point R2 (F on the claim plan); from there it followed the line of two connected features marked "existing hedges", the first running south from point R2 to S, and the second running north-east from point S to T.
iv) There was an agreed departure from the boundary shown by the line R1 to R2 in the conveyance plan. By agreement, a new boundary wall was built in that section, which veered southwards at its westerly end (between points D and E on the claim plan), D being a point on the line C-R1, a few feet south-west of point R1. It is common ground that the new wall (D-E-F) formed the boundary of the property in that section (rather than the line as shown on the conveyance plan.)
v) There are two further points of relevance on the boundary section A-C. Point O (about 8 feet west of point C) was noted on the conveyance plan as representing the beginning of a drain-line running at right-angles to the boundary in the direction of Linden House. Point B (referred to only in the claim plan) appears to be some 20 feet to the west of point O. It appears to correspond to the beginning of a boundary feature of some form on the Linden House property, which is indicated by a broken line on the conveyance plan, but not otherwise described. The Judge did not differentiate between point O and point B (see judgment p 13 ll 5-8).
vi) The remainder of the boundary (on the south and west sides of the grounds of Clock House) is not directly material to the dispute.
The proceedings
"The Court declares that the claimant is the owner of the boundary features including hedges, trees, fences and walls surrounding the claimant's land known as Clock House, Groombridge, East Sussex and is in particular the owner of the land upon which the line of yew trees and hollies and the laurel hedge [grew] between the points marked 'A – B - C – D' on the plan attached to the particulars of claim."
[I have added the word "grew" (taken from the wording of the order as claimed) in order to make grammatical sense.]
The 1968 conveyance.
"All that piece or parcel of land situated near Park Corner near Groombridge in the County of Sussex together with the messuage or buildings standing on part thereof known as The Clock House which said land is for the purpose of identification only delineated on the plan annexed hereto and thereon edged in red."
i) The whole of the boundary of the Clock House grounds was marked by a red line;
ii) There were "T-marks" along all the boundaries, pointing to the Clock House side;
iii) Dimensions were marked in feet and inches, indicating distances at various points of the boundary from Clock House. For present purposes the most significant ones are those between the two houses, on which Mr Harper relies to establish the precise boundary in that area;
iv) On the sections of boundary between points R2, S and T (referred to in the covenants – see above) there appears the note "existing hedges". There is no other specific notation on the plan of the existence of hedges or other boundary features.
"Question: 'Other than between points R1 and R2 the property appears to be adequately fenced or hedged. If there is any part of the boundary where the vendor feels a fence is required would he please say so.'
Answer: 'You will recall we discussed this point.'"
"The Clock House boundaries are marked with T symbols positioned inwards which in accordance with normally recognised convention, and without specific evidence to the contrary, would show any feature on the boundary to be in the ownership of Clock House."
Mr Tonkin, for the Derwents, said:
"In accordance with the convention, an inward-facing T marking would indicate ownership of a boundary, but not what the boundary is nor where it is located."
The boundary vegetation
"At the date of the contract which preceded the Conveyance the physical features which divided the two properties between A and F on the [claim plan] consisted of mature yews and holly trees and a large Scots pine (towards A); a laurel hedge and/or mature laurels (between B and C); another laurel hedge (between C and D and continuing a little way beyond D towards Linden House); and open ground (between D, E and F)…."
This summary, as I understand it, was based on the evidence of Mr Seeckts himself, and of Mr Joyes, an estate agent, who acted for Amersham Investment Trust on the sale in 1968. In particular, the evidence of Mr Joyes was that the hedges were "clearly defined" close to the house. Mr Seeckts gave evidence that the laurels in the disputed boundary area were about 14 to 16 feet high:
"They were very distinctive. There was no vegetation beyond them in the direction of Linden House. They were a very distinct boundary feature."
"There was no evidence that the mature yews, hollies and/or the pine formed physical dividing features in the same way as a hedge. They in fact constituted a belt of woodland to the North of the path along line A-B on the [claim plan]"
In submissions he referred us to a 1972 aerial photograph, and described the vegetation in the disputed section as a "clump" rather than a hedge.
Legal principles
"Two factors weigh with me. First, I feel no doubt that the modern climate of judicial and professional opinion favours the relaxation of exclusionary rules of evidence in civil cases whenever it seems safe to do so. In civil cases, there is rarely a jury, and so rarely a body of persons whose minds have to be shielded from evidence which is of lesser cogency or liable to be unfairly prejudicial in character. The tendency, I think, is towards admitting the evidence and assessing its weight rather than excluding it; and this is a process to which the Bench is well accustomed.
Secondly, in the construction of the parcels clause of a conveyance and the ascertainment of a boundary the court is under strong pressure to produce a decisive result. The prime function of a conveyance is to convey. As to any particular parcel of land, either the conveyance conveys it, or it does not; the boundary between what is conveyed and what is not conveyed must therefore be proclaimed. The court cannot simply say that the boundaries are uncertain, and leave the plot conveyed fuzzy at the edges, as it were. Yet modern conveyances are all too often indefinite or contradictory in their parcels…."
"…Insofar as the plan does not conflict with the parcels, I can see no reason why, because it is described as being 'for identification only', it should not be looked at to assist in understanding the description of the parcels. The process of identification is in fact the process of discovering what land was intended to pass under the conveyance, and that is the precise purpose which the plan is said to serve. Accordingly, so long as the plan does not come into conflict with anything which is explicit in the description of the parcels, the fact that it is said to be 'for the purposes of identification only' does not appear to me to exclude it from consideration in solving problems which are left undecided by what is explicit in the description of any parcel." (p 1473H – 1474B).
"…One looks at the language used in the contract, the content of the plan and in the context the facts relating to the locus in quo, if it is in issue as indeed it is in this appeal, including relevant photographs and the preliminary enquiries. The question therefore is: what would the reasonable layman think he was in fact buying?"
"Boundaries may and generally should be fixed by the deed or deeds conveying one or both of the properties concerned. Nevertheless, conveyances of land commonly leave the exact line of existing boundaries undetermined. It is only in comparatively rare cases that the exact line assumes any real significance, and the steps necessary to achieve the position can be time-consuming and expensive, for boundaries cannot be fixed unilaterally unless the adjoining land is also in the ownership of the vendor."
Normally the imprecision of such boundaries is of no practical concern. If it does become subject to dispute, then (as Megarry J said) the Court has no alternative but to seek some objective means with the benefit of appropriate expert evidence to produce a "decisive result".
"Although there is power to fix boundaries, it has hitherto hardly ever been used for two main reasons. The first is the expense of so doing… The second is that the process of fixing a boundary is all too likely to create a boundary dispute where none had existed…" (para 9.10)
The issues
"fraught with problems because … the edges of parts of roads can creep and thus can alter over a period of time."
(He also mentioned a point relating the position of an arrow on the plan, which he thought had had been misinterpreted by Mr Tonkin; but this did not form part of Mr Crampin's submissions.)
Fixing the boundary
"It should be measured at the centre of the laurel stumps and a figure of perhaps 2 feet, or something that is deemed appropriate, be agreed between the surveyors representing the thickness of the boundary. Unusual as it may be, I am quite satisfied that it was intended that the laurel hedge should lie on Mr Seeckts' land whether it be from R1 to Y or from Y to O. From there on it seems to me that they will have to measure between Y and O and come to some specific conclusion. For my part it seems to me that perhaps an appropriate course of action is to measure the line between the laurels, as they are on the line Y to O in the middle, and then again add a figure, so that the precise boundary can be plotted, drawn, and the map can be lodged and attached to the original conveyance so that this unfortunate position does not re-appear."
Conclusion
Lord Justice Waller
Note 1 A reduced version of the plan is
attached to this judgment for illustrative purposes. However, for reporting
purposes, it need not be treated as an essential part of the judgment.
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