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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Gilks & Anor v Hodgson & Anor [2015] EWCA Civ 5 (15 January 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2015/5.html Cite as: [2015] EWCA Civ 5 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE MANCHESTER COUNTY COURT
HIS HONOUR JUDGE KEITH ARMITAGE QC
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE BEAN
and
SIR STANLEY BURNTON
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RICHARD THOMAS GILKS & ANOTHER |
Claimants/ Respondents |
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- and - |
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ADRIAN VERNON HODGSON & ANOTHER |
Defendants/ Appellants |
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Ian Foster (instructed by Ralli Solicitors LLP) for the Respondents/Claimants
Hearing dates : 12th, 13th, & 14th November 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Sir Stanley Burnton:
Introduction
The properties and the issues
(1) What is the eastern border of Fiveacres, owned by the Claimants?
(2) Does Fiveacres have the benefit of a vehicular right of way for agricultural purposes from the gate in its eastern boundary (a) to the east over Clay Lane and/or (b) to the south down Clay Lane towards Edge View Farm?
The eastern border of Fiveacres
".. first all that pasture field known as Green Lane Field situate on the westerly side of and fronting to Paddock Hill Lane Mobberley in the County of Chester numbered 352 on the Ordinance Survey Map of Cheshire (1909 Edition) and containing in the whole 2.605 acres or thereabouts… and secondly all that piece or parcel of land (formerly 3 several plots of land) situated near Lindow Farm Mobberley aforesaid called "the Long Croft" "the Middle Croft" and "the Bottom Croft" containing in the whole two acres of land statute measure or thereabouts and being Numbered 351 on the said Ordnance Survey Map and thereon shown as containing 2.252 acres or thereabouts … which said properties first and secondly hereinbefore described are for the purposes of identification only and not of limitation or enlargement delineated on a plan annexed hereto and thereon edged red …"
The right of way
Prescription
"… in the period about 1960 to 1965 there was a usable timber gate in the hedge or fence giving access from 352 onto Clay Lane over a culverted ditch and that it was used frequently for at least the passage of horses."
"Karl Eckert accepted that they could go where ever they liked when Mr Fisher was alive because of the close friendship between Mr Fisher and his father. I pause here to observe that that concession is not one of fact. It is, on analysis, an opinion probably based at best on an inference open to anyone aware of the friendship. It proves simply that, whatever their legal rights, these men did not insist upon them."
"… His factual evidence was honestly given and substantially accurate. His dates were the least reliable aspect of his evidence, but my judgement is that that does not undermine the essential thrust of his evidence that: in his lifetime, particularly his (Karl's) working lifetime, his father used an access point adjacent to the stile by Ivy Cottage, from Clay Lane to Fiveacres for work, sometimes for his father's direct and Mr Braka's indirect benefit and vice versa, and sometimes for access across Fiveacres to more remote worksites…"
"4. For as long as I can remember there has always been an access leading from Clay Lane directly onto Fiveacres at the south eastern boundary of the property. As a child I would regularly use this access to play in the field forming part of Fiveacres.
5. I would often help my father tend to land at Fiveacres with his tractors and he would always access to land directly from Clay Lane. In fact I can recall from as young as 16 years old I was taking the tractors onto Fiveacres to tend to this land myself and always gained access directly from Clay Lane.
6. I still tend to land at Fiveacres and often make hay for the Claimants using the field on their property. I therefore continue to take my tractors onto the land at Fiveacres for this purpose and I always gained access directly from Clay Lane."
"There was an issue over where I could go and where I could not go. You rightly said that Jack Fisher said I could go where ever I wanted to go and all of a sudden I couldn't go wherever I want to go because people dug up accesses, put gates in the way, blocked my way, and I carried on going up to Edge View and into Fiveacres and I got a letter of my sister's solicitor telling me I was trespassing."
"I found Michael Eckert's evidence convincing on the proposition that there had been a usable gate and crossing at the latest by 1974 and probably for years before that, based on his father's replacement of a derelict gate."
"295. I am satisfied, to the extent that it is more likely than not, that:
(i) There was agricultural vehicular access between 352 (and 351) and Clay Lane… From before 1948. It seems likely that the amount of actual usage was dictated by the type of agricultural use of 351 and 352, year by year and season by season.
(ii) That such use was not permissive. There was no reason to infer that Mr Fisher other than tolerated use by or on behalf of Mr Harris or by on behalf of Mr Braka. In the latter case there is direct acceptable evidence that Mr Fisher had stood by while the access was used by women with horses, who had no knowledge of the need for or fact of any permission or the existence of neighbourly relations. In the case of Joe Eckert the evidence is that he did as he pleased. What he did at Fiveacres was of direct benefit to the owners of that land. Although he was friendly with Mr Fisher there is nothing to suggest that he used the access with Mr Fisher's permission.
…
297. I find, therefore, that a prescriptive right-of-way exists, established by use as and when required for agricultural purposes, on foot and by vehicle, with a horse and cart or cultivating implement or later their motorised equivalents, without permission and uninterrupted by challenge, the period March 1950 to 2009, and that the way was in the same place and of the same dimensions as that in use immediately before the defendants dug out the culvert and barred the gate."
Implied easement under the rule in Wheeldon v Burrows and the right of way claimed to the south
Conclusion
Lord Justice Bean
Lord Justice Christopher Clarke