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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Burrows (on behalf of Wraysbury Action Group), R (on the application of) v The Royal Borough of Windsor and Maidenhead & Anor [2014] EWHC 389 (Admin) (21 February 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2014/389.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 389 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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The Queen on the application of SU BURROWS (on behalf of WRAYSBURY ACTION GROUP) |
Claimant |
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and – |
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THE ROYAL BOROUGH OF WINDSOR AND MAIDENHEAD - and - WORBY ESTATES SALES LIMITED & OTHERS |
Defendant |
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Jane Evans-Gordon (instructed by Shared Legal Solutions) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 14 February 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE FOSKETT:
"This report concludes that although Thamesfield has been used for lawful sports and pastimes by significant number of the local people for more than twenty years, such use became contentious and ceased to be use "as of right" in July 2007 and that the application fails because it was not made within two years of that cessation."
"These signs were not placed at every entrance to Thamesfield. There was no sign at the entrance from FP8 at the north-eastern corner of Thamesfield, at the various entrances through the boundary with the Kayles or at the southern entrance on Friary Road. However, I am satisfied that, if those signs remained in place for any material length of time, the message conveyed by the signs would have been communicated to the vast majority of local people who regularly used Thamesfield for informal recreation, either by seeing the signs or being told about them by other users. The sign at the Coppice Drive entrance has remained in place ever since, although it has periodically been pulled down and reinstated by Mr Butler. The evidence of postings on the Wraysbury Watchdog Forum dated 20th, 29th and 30th July 2007 shows that the other signs were in place until the end of July 2007. However, they were subsequently torn down and disappeared. I find that the July 2007 signs, other than the Coppice Drive entrance sign, were in place for about a month. It is true that there are many local witnesses who have given evidence that they were unaware of the July 2007 signs. It is not possible to say of any one witness that he or she is not telling the truth about the 2007 signs because, in the case of every witness, there might be some good reason why he or she did not see or hear tell of the signs, e.g. being away on holiday or happening to access Thamesfield for a while by an entrance at which a sign was not erected. However, I find it wholly incredible that the vast majority of regular users of Thamesfield would not have seen or been told of these highly contentious signs, placed at four of the major entrances to Thamesfield, which challenged public use of the field which had been enjoyed unimpeded for so many years." (Emphasis added.)
"The wording of the signs erected … in early July 2007 was as follows:
'PRIVATE PROPERTY
Access to this land is by permission of the owners'
The wording of the signs is not happy, since it is arguably ambiguous as to whether the signs are prohibitory or permissive signs. The wording is potentially capable of two alternative meanings. It could mean that, although Thamesfield is privately owned, the owner gives general permission to all and sundry to access the field. Alternatively, it could mean that no one is entitled to access Thamesfield without the permission of the landowners. The issue is what the signs would be understood to mean by the ordinary reasonable reader of those signs and is not determined by what WESL intended it to mean nor what any particular person reading the sign understood it to mean. I consider that the ordinary reasonable reader of the signs would understand them to be prohibitory signs. The words "PRIVATE PROPERTY" appear at the top of the sign in large capital letters. These words ordinarily carry the message that the public have no right to use the land. I do not think that any ordinary reader (unversed in the technicalities of the law relating to prescription) would understand the reference to permission as being other than a reinforcement of the message given by the "PRIVATE PROPERTY" heading by making it clear that no one was entitled to enter the land except with the owner's permission."
"The true principle is that use is "contentious" if the landowner takes steps which would signify to the reasonable user that he does not acquiesce in the user. It does not matter whether those steps involve verbal dispute, physical obstruction, legal proceedings or just correspondence. Nor does it matter whether there are individual users who claim to have been unaware of those steps. As Sullivan J pointed out in Cheltenham Builders, since Sunningwell the question is how the matter would have appeared to the landowner. Hence the reference in the Warneford Meadow and Betterment cases to the reasonable user."
"[8] The applicant has served very detailed submissions settled by Mr Wilmshurst and dated 5th April 2013. Having read and reflected on those submissions with care and respect, it seems to me that they can fairly be summarised in two propositions:
- The signs erected on the instructions of WESL in July 2007 were not suitably worded to prohibit future public access to Thamesfield, and
- Even if they were suitably worded, they were not enough to render future public use of Thamesfield "contentious" and not "as of right".
[9] I will first consider the argument that the 2007 signs were not adequately prohibitory in their wording. It will be recalled that the signs read:
PRIVATE PROPERTY
Access to this land is by permission of the owners
I considered the meaning of these signs in paragraph [309] of my Report. I have reconsidered that paragraph and remain of the same view. I do not consider that any ordinary reasonable person reading these signs would understand them to mean that the landowner was granting all and sundry permission to use the land. I consider that the ordinary reasonable person reading those signs would understand that the landowner was forbidding access to the land except with his permission. I conclude that although the signs could have been better worded their meaning is clearly prohibitory.
[10] Secondly, I turn to consider the argument that, even if the wording of the signs was prohibitory, the signs were insufficient to render public use of Thamesfield contentious and hence not "as of right". The conclusion I reached on this point is set out in paragraph [331] of my Report. In short, I considered that the erection of these signs at four of the major entrances to Thamesfield and their being in position for about a month, was sufficient to communicate to the generality of recreational users of Thamesfield that the landowner was not acquiescing in that use. I have reconsidered that conclusion and, having done so, remain of the same view."
"If the landowner displays his opposition to the use of his land by erecting a suitably worded sign which is visible to and is actually seen by the local inhabitants then their subsequent use of the land will not be peaceable. It is not necessary for Betterment to show that they used force or committed acts of damage to gain entry to the land. In the face of the signs it will be obvious that their acts of trespass are not acquiesced in …."
"This requires to be unpacked a little. Assuming that the notice is in terms sufficiently clear to convey to the average reader that any use of the relevant land by members of the public will be treated as a trespass then it will be irrelevant that individual users either misunderstood the notice or did not bother to read it. The inhabitants who encounter the sign have to be treated as reasonable people for these purposes to whom an objective standard of conduct and comprehension is applied …."
"The test formulated by Morgan J in paragraph 121 of his judgment specifies two alternative approaches to the question of notice. If the landowner erects suitably worded signs and they are seen by would-be peaceable users of the land then it follows that their user will be contentious and not as of right. That is the easy case. The alternative is an objective test based on knowledge being attributed to a reasonable user of the land from what the landowner did in order to make his opposition known. If the steps taken to manifest that opposition are sufficient to bring it to the attention of any reasonable user of the land then it is irrelevant that particular users may not have been aware of it. The steps to be taken do not have to be fail safe in that regard. But they must be proportionate to the user which the landowner wishes to prevent."
"It has often been pointed out that "as of right" does not mean "of right". It has sometimes been suggested that its meaning is closer to "as if of right"…. This leads at once to the paradox that a trespasser (so long as he acts peaceably and openly) is in a position to acquire rights by prescription, whereas a licensee, who enters the land with the owner's permission, is unlikely to acquire such rights. Conversely a landowner who puts up a notice stating "Private Land—Keep Out" is in a less strong position, if his notice is ignored by the public, than a landowner whose notice is in friendlier terms: "The public have permission to enter this land on foot for recreation, but this permission may be withdrawn at any time.""
POSTSCRIPT