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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 >> Fortune & Ors v Wiltshire Council & Anor [2012] EWCA Civ 334 (20 March 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2012/334.html Cite as: [2012] JPL 1092, [2013] 1 WLR 808, [2012] 3 All ER 797, [2012] EWCA Civ 334, [2012] 2 P &CR 11, [2012] WLR(D) 90 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE CHANCERY DIVISION
His Honour Judge McCahill QC
6BS30497
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LONGMORE
and
LORD JUSTICE LEWISON
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FORTUNE & ORS |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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WILTSHIRE COUNCIL & ANR |
Respondents |
____________________
MR TIM MOULD QC & MR JEREMY BURNS (Solicitor to Wiltshire Council) for the Respondents
Hearing dates : 5 – 8 March 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Lewison:
Introduction
Topography
Legal principles
"The law of highways forms one of the most ancient parts of the common law. At common law highways are of three kinds according to the degree of restriction of the public rights of passage over them. A full highway or 'cartway' is one over which the public have rights of way (1) on foot, (2) riding on or accompanied by a beast of burden and (3) with vehicles and cattle. A 'bridleway' is a highway over which the rights of passage are cut down by the exclusion of the right of passage with vehicles and sometimes, though not invariably, the exclusion of the right of driftway, i.e., driving cattle, while a footpath is one over which the only public right of passage is on foot.
At common law too a public right of way of any of the three kinds has the characteristic that once it has come into existence it can be neither extinguished nor diminished by disuse, however long the period that has elapsed since it was last used by any member of the public - a rule of law that is the origin of the brocard 'once a highway, always a highway.'"
"… where there has been evidence of a user by the public so long and in such a manner that the owner of the fee, whoever he was, must have been aware that the public were acting under the belief that the way had been dedicated, and has taken no steps to disabuse them of that belief, it is not conclusive evidence, but evidence on which those who have to find the fact may find that there was a dedication by the owner whoever he was."
"I think you can have a highway leading to a place of popular resort even though when you have got to the place of popular resort which you wish to see you have to return on your tracks by the same highway, and you can get no further either by reason of physical obstacles or otherwise."
"User is evidence, and can be no more, of dedication. The expression that user raises a presumption of dedication has its origin in this, that in cases where express dedication is out of the question, no one can see into a man's mind, and therefore dedication, which can never come into being without intention, can, if it is to be proved at all, only be inferred or presumed from extraneous facts. But that still leaves as matter for inquiry what was the user, and to what did it point. And this must be considered, not after the method of the Horatii and Curiatii, by taking a set of isolated findings, saying that they presumably lead to a certain result, and then proceeding to see if that presumption can be rebutted, but by considering the whole facts, the surroundings which lead to the user, and from all those facts, including the user, coming to the conclusion whether or not the user did infer dedication."
"If you know nothing about a road except that you find it is used, then the origin of the road is, so to speak, to be found in the user, and in such cases it is safe to say, whether strictly accurate or not, that the user raises a legal presumption of dedication. That really means no more than this, that the evidence points all one way. Hundreds of highways are in this position. But suppose, on the other hand, you do know the origin of a road. Suppose it is the avenue to a private house, say, from the south. But from that house there leads another avenue to the north which connects with a public road different from that from which the south avenue started. This is not a fancy case. The situation is a common one in many parts of the country. Would the mere fact that people could be found who had gone up the one avenue and down the other—perhaps without actually calling at the house—raise a presumption that the landholder had dedicated his private avenues as highways? The user would be naturally ascribed to good nature and toleration."
"(1) Where a way over any land, other than a way of such a character that use of it by the public could not give rise at common law to any presumption of dedication, has been actually enjoyed by the public as of right and without interruption for a full period of 20 years, the way is to be deemed to have been dedicated as a highway unless there is sufficient evidence that there was no intention during that period to dedicate it.
(2) The period of 20 years referred to in subsection (1) above is to be calculated retrospectively from the date when the right of the public to use the way is brought into question, whether by a notice such as is mentioned in subsection (3) below or otherwise."
"It has been said that circumstantial evidence is to be considered as a chain, and each piece of evidence as a link in the chain, but that is not so, for then, if any one link broke, the chain would fall. It is more like the case of a rope composed of several cords. One strand of the cord might be insufficient to sustain the weight, but three stranded together may be quite of sufficient strength."
"A court or other tribunal, before determining whether a way has or has not been dedicated as a highway, or the date on which such dedication, if any, took place, shall take into consideration any map, plan or history of the locality or other relevant document which is tendered in evidence, and shall give such weight thereto as the court or tribunal considers justified by the circumstances, including the antiquity of the tendered document, the status of the person by whom and the purpose for which it was made or compiled, and the custody in which it has been kept and from which it is produced."
Approach to appeals on fact
"Once the appellant has shown a real prospect (justifying permission to appeal) that a finding or inference is wrong, the role of an appellate court is to determine whether or not this is so, giving full weight of course to the advantages enjoyed by any judge of first instance who has heard oral evidence. In the present case, therefore, I consider that (a) it is for us if necessary to make up our own mind about the correctness or otherwise of any findings of primary fact or inferences from primary fact that the judge made or drew and the claimants challenge, while (b) reminding ourselves that, so far as the appeal raises issues of judgment on unchallenged primary findings and inferences, this court ought not to interfere unless it is satisfied that the judge's conclusion lay outside the bounds within which reasonable disagreement is possible. In relation to (a) we must, as stated, bear in mind the important and well-recognised reluctance of this court to interfere with a trial judge on any finding of primary fact based on the credibility or reliability of oral evidence."
The case for the Council at trial
"In my opinion Rowden Lane is an ancient vehicular public highway, in existence before its first known map recording in 1669. The vehicles involved in such use could have included carts, wagons, sledges and more latterly carriages. The main purpose of the historical public use would appear to have included access to the open common lands surrounding Rowden Lane prior to the inclosure of these lands. In addition it is also quite probable that Rowden Lane was used as access to the place known as Rowden; and also as an alternative use to the Great (London) Road so as to avoid its poor condition and possibly later to avoid the paying of tolls on the section of the main road it bypasses."
Two questions
The early maps and other material
"If you know nothing about a road except that you find it is used, then the origin of the road is, so to speak, to be found in the user, and in such cases it is safe to say, whether strictly accurate or not, that the user raises a legal presumption of dedication. That really means no more than this, that the evidence points all one way."
"In modern usage, the term "cross road" and "crossroads" are generally taken to mean the point where two roads cross. However, old maps and documents may attach a different meaning to the term "cross road". These include a highway running between, and joining, other regional centres. Inspectors will, therefore, need to take account that the meaning of the term may vary depending on a road pattern/markings in each map."
"In considering evidence it should be borne in mind that the recording of a way as a cross road on a map or other document may not be proof that the way was a public highway, or enjoyed a particular status at the time. It may only be an indication of what the author believed (or, where the contents had been copied from elsewhere – as sometimes happened – that he accepted what the previous author believed). In considering such a document due regard will not only need to be given to what is recorded, but also the reliability of the document, taking full account of the totality of the evidence in reaching a decision."
"The shading on the 1900 OS map is also a reliable indicator that Sections A and B were well maintained roads suitable for taking fast wheeled traffic in all seasons. This must be contrasted with the different and inferior way in which Section C was depicted. In my judgment, the way in which Sections A and B had been maintained make it unlikely that they simply formed a private road to Rowden Farm, for, if that were so, one might have expected a similar level of maintenance along Section C, and that is not the case. I find that the level of maintenance of Sections A and B is higher than one would have expected of mere farm tracks in private ownership, and this is most confidently displayed in the 1900 OS map."
"The 1910 Act required all land to be valued, but routes shown on the base plans which correspond to known public highways, usually vehicular, are not normally shown as included in the hereditaments, i.e. they will be shown uncoloured and unnumbered….So if a route in dispute is external to any numbered hereditament, there is a strong possibility that it was considered a public highway, normally but not necessarily vehicular, since footpaths and bridleways were usually dealt with by deductions recorded in the forms and Field Books; however there may be other reasons to explain its exclusion."
"In areas where the valuation work was completed, all the omitted roads were either stretches of road which ran between inclosures "fenced roads", or roads in built-up areas. The valuations and deductions required by the Act were duly made where an unfenced stretch of highway crossed a larger area which had to be valued anyway. In such cases the larger area, such as a field or private park, was valued and a deduction was made in respect of the public right of way: that was so even if other stretches of the same highway were fenced roads which were omitted from the valuation."
"The fact that the road is uncoloured may point strongly to the conclusion that the road was recognised as a highway at the time but, viewed in isolation, the fact that the road is uncoloured leaves open the question whether it was recognised as a public carriage road or as a lesser highway."
"I am satisfied that it is more likely than not that, if Sections A and B with their wide verges, were merely a bridleway, this would have resulted in a liability to taxation, but a deduction in respect of the minor highway. In my judgment, the probable explanation for sections A and B being untaxed is because they were regarded as a full vehicular highway."
"I have elsewhere in this judgment developed the point that the majority of maps show Rowden Lane ungated at its junction with the Bath Road, and that there was no physical obstruction to passage between Sections A and B. There were many and varied types of members of the public who used Rowden Lane over the centuries. The Lane must have led to a place of public interest or purpose, because it is conceded by the Claimants to be a public highway albeit only on foot and on horseback. Moreover, there is a clear picture of Gypsy Lane and Rowden Lane forming a thoroughfare leading from and to the Bath Road. Rowden Lane has been shown on many maps to be of comparable status to the Bath Road, and the quality of its maintained surface, revealed by the OS maps, is consistent with being used as a vehicular highway. Its width is greater than one would have expected for a footpath or bridlepath. These factors, which have been shown on the plan and maps starting in 1669, are entirely consistent with the picture presented by the 1910 map namely that Sections A and B of Rowden Lane constitute a public vehicular highway."
"I repeat that the making of the declaration did not alter legal rights. It did not create Rowden Lane a public vehicular highway, if it had not been one before the resolution. However, I am satisfied, on the balance of probabilities, that it is right to infer that the Council resolved as it did, because it was apparent to it that Rowden Lane between the Bath Road and the cattle grid was already a public vehicular highway. Had they been of the view that it was merely a private road, but subject to public bridleway or footpath rights only, it seems improbable that they would have imposed on those undertaking the residential development of Rowden Lane the requirement of laying out a carriage road to provide the principal access to those dwellings over no more than a bridleway."
"The object of the statute is this: it is to have all our ancient highways mapped out, put on record and made conclusive, so that people can know what their rights are. Our old highways came into existence before 1835. They were created in the days when people went on foot or on horseback or in carts. They went to the fields to work, or to the village, or to the church. They grew up time out of mind. The law of England was: Once a highway, always a highway. But nowadays, with the bicycle, the motor car and the bus, many of them have fallen into disuse. They have become overgrown and no longer passable. But yet it is important that they should be preserved and known, so that those who love the countryside can enjoy it, and take their walks and rides there. That was the object of the National Parks and Access to the Countryside Act 1949 and the Countryside Act 1968. In 1949 the local authorities were required to make inquiries and map out our countryside. First, a draft map; next a provisional map; and finally a definitive map. There were opportunities both for landowners and the public to make their representations as and when each map passed through each stage. In 1968 there was to be a review and re-classification."
"a highway over which the public have a right of way on foot only…"
"a highway over which the public have the following, but no other, rights of way, that is to say, a right of way on foot and a right of way on horseback or leading a horse, with or without a right to drive animals of any description along the highway."
"a highway being either a footpath or a bridleway."
"a highway, other than a public path, used by the public mainly for the purposes for which footpaths or bridleways are so used."
"Highways which the public are entitled to use with vehicles but which are in practice mainly used by them as foot ways or bridle ways should be marked on the map as "C.R.F." or "C.R.B"."
"It is unlikely that the Council would have claimed CRB5 as a cul-de-sac way, and it is likely that it regarded the enclosed Sections A and B of Rowden Lane as having full public vehicular rights to the point where it connected with CRB5."
"C.R.B. from the eastern end of Rowden Lane leading south east along the entrance road to Rowden Farm, to the Lacock Parish boundary, 100 yards west of Rowden Farm buildings."
"I regard this as cogent and compelling evidence that, in or about 1950, Sections A and B of Rowden Lane were regarded as full vehicular highways. It was compiled by someone who could be taken to have knowledge of the highway network at the time."
"I accept the [Council's] submission that the material point here is that there is before me now a record made in 1955 of an Inspector, who had received and evaluated evidence (which has since been lost) through a statutory forensic process. He found as a fact that considerable public user of Section C of Rowden Lane supported its inclusion on the definitive map, not merely as a public footpath or a bridleway, but as a public cartway albeit mainly used in 1950 as a bridleway. The only way in which the public could gain access with vehicles to RUPP/Chippenham 5 in the 1950s was by driving along Sections A and B of Rowden Lane. This was because in the Draft and subsequent Maps, the enclosed section of Gypsy Lane was shown as bridleway 2A. Vehicular access was therefore not possible from Gypsy Lane in 1950. In fact, it is probable that Gypsy Lane had been closed to vehicles since about 1910, before the date of the Finance Act map."
"What is looked for is a general picture of whether the route seemed important enough to get into these documents fairly regularly. A one-off appearance could be an error … consistent depiction over a number of years is a positive indication."
"I am not persuaded that the junction of the two tracks, Section C and the southernmost continuation of Gypsy Lane, form the impractical 'v' junction described by Professor Williamson, nor that they are simply different private access tracks to Rowden Farm. Rowden Farm Lane is narrower than either Rowden Lane or Gypsy Lane, and there is no visible obstruction on the plan to stop the corner being cut at the 'V' junction."
Maintenance
"726. For me, the interesting thing about this Minute is that the letter had been written by the Highway Surveyor. He was asking for contributions for the repair of the bridge. Why was the Highway Surveyor involved, if Rowden Lane was entirely private? Moreover, he was merely asking for a contribution towards repair, he was not suggesting that the adjoining owners were obliged to do so.
727. In my judgment, the fact that the person taking responsibility of the project was the Highway Surveyor provides support for the view that Rowden Lane was regarded at the time as a public vehicular road. A bridge, especially of that width, would not have been necessary if Rowden Lane were a mere bridleway." (Original emphasis)
"I have already dealt with the 1881 Minute concerning the repair of the bridge in Section A of Rowden Lane, when dealing with Professor Williamson's observations on it above. In addition, it must be remembered that, given the Claimants' concession that Sections A and B are public highways, much of the force of his argument has evaporated. In my judgment, the 1881 Minute indicated not only that Section A was a publicly maintainable highway but also the fact that a bridge needed to be repaired indicated that it was a public vehicular highway, since the presence of a bridge bearing a track way over it was much more consistent with a public vehicular way than a public footpath or bridleway."
Conveyancing evidence
"… if land adjoining a highway or a river is granted, the half of the road, or the half of the river is presumed to pass, unless there is something either in the language of the deed or in the nature of the subject-matter of the grant, or in the surrounding circumstances, sufficient to rebut that presumption, and this though the measurement of the property which is granted can be satisfied without including half of the road or half of the bed of the river, and although the land is described as bounded by a river or a road, and notwithstanding that the map which is referred to in the grant does not include the half of the river or the road."
"It is presumed that those who were seised of the neighbouring land devoted the surface of their soil to the public, in order to confer a common benefit on all those desirous of using the highway, without, however, parting with the ownership of the soil itself."
"Given the absence of private easements in favour of the properties fronting Rowden Lane, they and Rowden Farm would be landlocked if Rowden Lane were not a public vehicular highway. The fact that the parties did not include any part of the road in the conveyance, and also failed to stipulate for private access rights, renders it probable that everybody realised that the road had become a public vehicular highway. Even if the current owners of property fronting Rowden Lane owned one half of the subsoil of Rowden Lane which adjoined property, this did not give a right of way over the entire length of Rowden Lane to gain access to the A4."
"Q. And if they wanted to go along with horses, can you think of any reason why they might want to go along with horses but not want to go along pulling a cart behind the horses?
A. It might reside in the extent to which the use was tolerated, when dedication occurred, i.e. you might be prepared to tolerate user on foot or by horseback in the same way you might not be prepared to tolerate full use by vehicles largely because of damage done to road surfaces and to crops and standing fields etc. There might be reasons why you would allow one and not the other."
"(i) Rowden existed as a location since at least 1190;
(ii) The borough lands were seized by the Crown in 1540, and allotted to the 'Inhabitant Householders' of Chippenham. This was a group large enough to constitute "the public". They probably used horse drawn carts and wagons to carry away wood from the coppice which became their land by 1544. These inhabitants of Chippenham have used Rowden Lane to access the Coppice either via the two spur roads, if they existed before 1669, or over the unhedged southern boundary of Rowden Lane before the spur roads were created;
(iii) The unruly and disorderly members of the public from Chippenham or elsewhere, who trespassed in and stole wood from the coppice, also constituted a sufficiently large constituency of people to constitute the public. No complaint was made that they were trespassing on private roads when they were undoubtedly using Rowden Lane to gain access to the Coppice. The Borough of Chippenham did not own Rowden Lane and therefore could not give consent to anyone to use Rowden Lane;
(iv) Soldiers with horse-drawn wagon and carts must have used Rowden Lane to access Rowden Manor during the Civil War. Such soldiers must have constituted members of the public, and their use of Rowden Lane must have been trespassory;
(v) By 1669, Rowden was a well established place to which both Gypsy Lane (as it was to become) and "Rowden Way" gave access;
(vi) In 1669, Sections A and B of Rowden Lane had a distinct name, ie "Rowden Way";
(vii) Rowden Lane and Gypsy Lane, as they were to become known, contained the word 'Lane' in their name implying a highway running between two major roads or different sections of the same major road. The presence of a useable through route from the Bath Road, along Rowden Lane, over the unenclosed track, up Gypsy Lane and back on to the Bath Road is clearly demonstrated on historical maps. There are sound reasons why such a through route existed. They include the potential avoidance of paying tolls, the avoidance of badly maintained or unpassable sections of the Bath Road and, at least for a time, to provide some form of access from Gypsy Lane to the Market Place in Chippenham. This through route is shown in the maps of 1773, 1792, 1828, 1829, 1848, 1862, 1867, 1890 and 1910. Professor Williamson accepted that the maps of 1773 1828 1829 and 1890 demonstrated a through route;
(viii) Apart from gates shown at the junction of the Bath Road and Section A of Rowden Lane in the 1784 and 1796 maps, no such gates are shown in the maps of 1669, 1848, 1867, 1900, 1910, 1953 and 1974, nor in the aerial photographs of 1946, 1950, 1964 and 1973. Moreover, even by 1784, it is likely that Sections A and B of Rowden Lane were a public highway on foot at the very least, and so it is likely that the public was not excluded from using Rowden Lane in carts or wagons, especially since it was eminently suitable for that use;
(ix) Spurs 1 and 2 leading to Hulberts Hold and the coppice, south of Rowden Lane, have been depicted in a way similar to Rowden Lane. This is consistent with the use of Rowden Lane and the spurs, by the public in wagons and carts, to gain access to the Borough lands, including the coppice;
(x) There is an abundance of evidence to justify the inference, which I draw, that Rowden Lane was dedicated to and used by the public as of right with wagons and carts. The public used this to gain access to the Borough lands, the infectious hospital (as shown in the 1896 Minute in relation to Hulbert Hold, a piece of land owned by the Council until 1947), those persons ruly and unruly who used the coppice to cut and gather wood, soldiers and those using the football ground shown on the 1910 map. Moreover, as the Claimants' admission, namely that sections A and B of Rowden Lane was a public highway subject to public rights on foot and horseback, showed, the public had a real reason for using Rowden Lane. Either it was a place of public interest or the public had a particular purpose for using it. Given this admission, and the width and level of maintenance of Rowden Lane over the centuries, it seems likely that the public would also have used it with wagons and carts. It must be remembered that the coppice was not common land after 1540 and, after 1669, previously common land had been enclosed. After 1669 the use of Rowden Lane would not have been by commoners as an incident of common.
(xi) Sections A and B of Rowden Lane have been shown to be of a higher standard of status than Section C. If, which I reject, Section C of Rowden Lane was only a bridleway before the 1970s, Sections A and B are, therefore, of a higher status, namely a public vehicular highway.
(xii) There are, and have been no obstructions or gates limiting or restricting access between Sections A and B of Rowden Lane.
(xiii) There were never any "Private" signs before 2002.
(xiv) The manner in and the standard to which Sections A and B were maintained (see the Minute of 1881 and the shading on the 1900 map and the quoted correspondence dealing with maintenance), indicate that the Highway Authority had been maintaining, however intermittently, Sections A and B of Rowden Lane.
(xv) The 1896 Minute in relation to the infectious hospital clearly justifies the inference that the Council considered Rowden Lane was then a public highway, because otherwise the infectious hospital would be landlocked, given the absence of any private easement over Rowden Lane.
(xvi) The maintenance of the bridge in Section A, as shown in the 1881 minutes, would be unnecessary if Rowden Lane were then merely a public highway on foot or on horseback. A wide bridge maintained by the Highway Authority was plainly excessive if the only public rights were on foot or on horseback.
(xvii) Rowden Lane was shown on some of the less ancient maps as comprising a track with verges. This is more indicative of a public vehicular use rather than use confined to foot or horseback.
(xviii) I draw the inference that Gypsy Lane too was a public vehicular highway, on the totality of the evidence, including the shading shown on the Ordnance Survey map for 1900, the 1910 map and the fact that it bore the name 'Gypsy' Lane. This clearly implied the use of that lane with carts and wagons by travelling gypsies. That use could not have been with the permission of Rowden Farm, since Gypsy Lane was not owned by Rowden Farm. The fact that Gypsy Lane was also a public vehicular highway supports the useable through route contention. Moreover, the Perkins drawing of 1905, derived from maps and other documents which he had seen, referred to a 'cart track' going across the unenclosed sections of Cunniger and Home Down fields.
(xix) Utilities are found in sections A and B of Rowden Lane. There is no wayleave agreement permitting this, and the inference is that they were installed in the highway under statutory powers. Whilst these are not probative on their own of in public vehicular highway, they are entirely consistent with it.
(xx) A public house has existed at the corner of the Bath Road and Section A of Rowden Lane for many centuries. In the 1960s, when a new public house was built, the then narrow section A of Rowden Lane was widened by the dedication of land by the brewery. This could only reasonably have been accepted by the Highway Authority on the basis that the then existing narrow section A was also public vehicular highway.
(xxi) Professor Williamson's report virtually admits that Section A is a public vehicular highway, and this fact had been conceded by the Claimants up to November 2008.
(xxii) The 1910 Finance Act is strongly supportive of Sections A and B as a wholly untaxed public vehicular highway, as opposed to a private road subject to deduction for minor highway rights.
(xxiii) The 1937 Chippenham declaration of Rowden Lane as a new street, to be built to certain standards, would seem to be an over-exacting requirement, if the only public rights over Rowden Lane were on foot or on horseback.
(xxiv) The Definitive Map process, from 1949 to the Inquiry in 1955 (in relation to Section C as RUPP 5 connecting with Sections A and B of Rowden Lane) is highly indicative of Sections A and B status as a public vehicular highway, especially when it was shown as such on the relevant maps. Nor is the strength of this conclusion in any way undermined, in my judgment, by the fact that Section C was subsequently downgraded to a bridleway.
(xxv) The private conveyancing documents, relating to transfers of property adjoining Rowden Lane, and in particular the absence of express grants of rights of way, are probably explicable on the basis that everybody had regarded the public as having full rights of way over Rowden Lane, as it was a public vehicular highway."
NERCA
"67 Ending of certain existing unrecorded public rights of way
(1) An existing public right of way for mechanically propelled vehicles is extinguished if it is over a way which, immediately before commencement—
(a) was not shown in a definitive map and statement, or
(b) was shown in a definitive map and statement only as a footpath, bridleway or restricted byway.
But this is subject to subsections (2) to (8)."
"(2) Subsection (1) does not apply to an existing public right of way if— …
(b) immediately before commencement it was not shown in a definitive map and statement but was shown in a list required to be kept under section 36(6) of the Highways Act 1980 (c 66) (list of highways maintainable at public expense)…"
"(6) The council of every county, metropolitan district and London borough and the Common Council shall cause to be made, and shall keep corrected up to date, a list of the streets within their area which are highways maintainable at the public expense."
"(7) Every list made under subsection (6) above shall be kept deposited at the offices of the council by whom it was made and may be inspected by any person free of charge at all reasonable hours and in the case of a list made by the council of a county in England, the county council shall supply to the council of each district in the county an up to date list of the streets within the area of the district that are highways maintainable at the public expense, and the list so supplied shall be kept deposited at the office of the district council and may be inspected by any person free of charge at all reasonable hours."
Was the EDB a list of streets for the purposes of section 36(6) of the 1980 Act and of section 67(2)(b) of NERCA?
"As Rural Affairs Minister, I have been approached by many individuals and organisations who are deeply concerned about problems caused by the use of mechanically propelled vehicles on rights of way and in the wider countryside. I share these concerns, having seen for myself examples of damage to fragile tracks and other aspects of our natural and cultural heritage in various areas of the country. There is considerable concern about behaviour that causes distress to others seeking quiet enjoyment of the countryside …
I do not think that it makes sense that historic evidence of use by horse drawn vehicles or dedications for vehicular use at a time before the internal combustion engine existed can give rise to rights to use modern mechanically propelled vehicles. Those who suffer from vehicle misuse find this incomprehensible and in this paper we offer new proposals that are intended to address what many have come to view as the inappropriate and unsustainable way in which vehicular rights are acquired and claimed on rights of way."
Was the Council entitled to keep the list of streets in computerised form?
"All notices, consents, approvals, orders, demands, licences, certificates and other documents authorised or required by or under this Act to be given, made or issued by, or on behalf of, a highway authority or a council, and all notices, consents, requests and applications authorised or required by or under this Act to be given or made to a highway authority or a council, shall be in writing."
""Writing" includes typing, printing, lithography, photography and other modes of representing or reproducing words in a visible form, and expressions referring to writing are construed accordingly."
Conclusions
Result