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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 >> Slough Borough Council v Secretary of State for Environment Food And Rural Affairs [2018] EWHC 1963 (Admin) (03 August 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2018/1963.html Cite as: [2018] EWHC 1963 (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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SLOUGH BOROUGH COUNCIL |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR ENVIRONMENT FOOD AND RURAL AFFAIRS |
Defendant |
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MR NED WESTAWAY (instructed by THE GOVERNMENT LEGAL DEPARTMENT) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 17 JULY 2018
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE OUSELEY :
The Decision Letters in relation to Ground 1
"2. It is not disputed that a public right of way subsists. The Council believes that a bridleway has been dedicated under statute or common law over the varying width specified in the Order. In contrast, two of the objectors (Mrs Young and Mr Phillips) rely on dedication at common law. In this respect, reliance is placed on the available historical documentary evidence and the user evidence provided. They submit that a vehicular highway with a width of 30 feet should be recorded in the definitive map and statement.
29. I have concluded that the evidence is not supportive of the existence of the highway over the historical route shown on the pre-inclosure maps. The inclosure award itself only made provision for a private road over part of this route. Having regard to my conclusions regarding the other pieces of documentary evidence, I do not find on balance that an implication of the dedication of a public right of way can be inferred from this evidence. Further, I am not satisfied that the submissions made by Mr Phillips in relation to the Highways Act 1835 have any bearing on my decision in light of the documentary provided. The Order therefore needs to be determined in relation to the user evidence provided.
30. Whilst the Council relies upon dedication under Section 31 of the 1980 Act, it accepts that there is sufficient evidence to infer the dedication of a public bridleway prior to 1959 under common law. This view takes into account the evidence of use by pedestrians, cyclists and horse riders. If it can be established that a public right of way of a particular status was dedicated at common law those rights will exist irrespective of the subsequent use by the public during the potential periods for the purpose of statutory dedication.
37. The parties agree that the dedication of a public right of way occurred prior to 1959. Although the personal evidence is limited after such a lengthy period of time, the evidence points to widespread use by the public. In reaching this conclusion, I give particular weight to the detailed evidence of Mrs Watson. The Council accepts that this use included use by cyclists. It is also apparent that motor vehicles used BRN on occasions prior to the action taken in the early 1960s. The evidence of Mrs Watson indicates that the use by motor vehicles was not confined to residents of BRN.
38 An issue arises out of the acknowledged use by cyclists. Whilst I note that Mrs Young challenges particular aspects of the judgment in the case of Whitworth and ORS and Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs 2010 ("Whitworth"), I am bound by this judgment. However, a right to cycle on a bridleway did not exist prior to the passing of the 1968 Countryside Act. Mr Phillips draws attention to Section 85 of the Local Government Act 1988, which extended the definition of a carriage to include bicycles.
39. The council accepts that the dedication of a bridleway can be inferred at common law following public use that included cyclists. Nonetheless, this cycling would have been viewed at the time as being of a vehicular nature. This is distinct from the issue decided in Whitworth. In these circumstances, it is not in my view appropriate to adopt the principal highlighted by the Council from Whitworth, namely that I should infer the form of dedication least burdensome to the landowner. There is also some evidence of use of a through route by motor vehicles. The erection of the structures in the early 1960s to deter use by four wheeled vehicles occurred too late in respect of the accepted earlier dedication of a highway. Having regard to the above, I conclude on the balance of probabilities that a vehicular highway subsists."
"8. The Council accepts that the evidence of use by pedestrians, horse riders and cyclists is sufficient to infer the common law dedication of a bridleway prior to 1959 [30]. It is apparent to me that the significant public use followed on from the housing development that occurred in the area after 1952. Therefore, the dedication could have been contemporaneous to this use rather than in relation to the earlier evidence of use, which is limited to Mr Harvey and Mr Jago. Nonetheless, if the dedication is taken to be coeval to the earliest evidence of use, Mrs Jago states that her late husband cycled along BRN in the 1930s. Mr Harvey's use of the route on foot commenced in 1940.
9. The legal position at the time was that a cycle constituted a vehicle and there was no right for cyclists to ride on a bridleway [38]. Therefore, the cycling use would count towards the dedication of a vehicular highway. This means that the landowner should not have interpreted the use by cyclists to be supportive of the acceptance of the dedication of lesser public rights. Further, the evidence of Mrs Watson was clear that when she moved house in 1956/57 she observed the use of BRN by motor vehicles until a chain link fence was erected in the early 1960s [32 & 34]. It cannot be determined when the use by motor vehicles commenced but clearly there is the potential for such use to have coincided with the completion of the properties in the area.
10. It remains my view on balance that the evidence is supportive of the dedication of a vehicular highway rather than a public bridleway. As it is accepted that this highway was dedicated prior 1959, it is not necessary for me to comment on the more recent evidence of use. I address later the issue of whether the route should be recorded as a restricted byway or BOAT."
The statutory provisions relevant to Ground 1
"(1) Where a way over any land, other than a way of such 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) As regards every definitive map and statement, the surveying authority shall
(b) as from that date, keep the map and statement under continuous review and as soon as reasonably practicable after the occurrence, on or after that date, of any of those events, by order make such modifications to the map and statement as appear to them to be requisite in consequence of the occurrence of that event.
(3) The events referred to in subsection (2) are as follows
(c) the discovery by the authority of evidence which (when considered with all other relevant evidence available to them) shows (i) that a right of way is not shown in the map and statement subsists or is reasonably alleged to subsist over land in the area to which the map relates, being [a right of way such that the land over which the right subsists is a public path [a restricted byway]or, subject to section 54A, a byway open to all traffic."
Common law dedication
"5 In the case of a public right of way, a lawful origin had to be found in dedication by the landowner at some unknown date in the past. Such dedication was analogous to the lost modern grant of a private easement. Juries were told that they could find such a dedication on evidence of user openly and as of right by members of the public and were often encouraged to do so. The reason for juries and judges being willing to make and accept findings that there had been a dedicated or lost modern grant was of course the unfairness of disturbing rights which had been exercised without objections for a long time. In Scottish law, this policy was given effect by the more logical method of allowing such user to create the right. But in England the policy of the law was not openly acknowledged. Instead juries were told that in order to uphold the public right, they had to find as a fact that there had been an act of dedication accompanied by the necessary animus dedicandi on the part of the landowner: see Poole v Huskinson (1843) 11 M & W 827.
6 As a matter of experience and common sense, however, dedication is not usually the most likely explanation for long user by the public, any more than a lost modern grant is the most likely explanation for long user of a private right of way. People do dedicate land as pubic highways, particularly in laying out building schemes. It is however hard to believe that many cartways, bridle paths and footpaths in rural areas owe their origin to a conscious act of dedication. Tolerance, good nature, ignorance or inertia on the part of landowners over many years are more likely explanations. In Jones v Bates [1938] 2 All ER 237, 244 Scott LJ said that actual dedication was "often a pure legal fiction [which] put on the affirmant of the public right an artificial onus which was often fatal to his success". In Jaques v Secretary of State for the Environment [1995] JPL 1031, 1037 Laws J called it an "Alice in Wonderland requirement".
7 Nevertheless, juries and other tribunals of fact did frequently find that such acts of dedication had taken place, no doubt for the reasons I have suggested. So much so that in Folkestone Corpn v Brockman [1914] AC 338 it was argued that, in the absence of evidence of facts inconsistent with such a dedication, they were obliged to make such a finding. But this submission was rejected by the House of Lords and it became settled that user was no more than evidence from which dedication could be inferred. It was open to the jury to ascribe the user to toleration or some other cause. Since as I have said, some other cause was in real life more likely, it became difficult to predict when or for what reason a jury would have sufficient sympathy with the users of the highway to find that there had been a dedication."
"13 In Trustees of the British Museum v Finnis (1833) 5 C & P, Patterson J told a jury:
"If a man opens his land so that the public pass over it continually, the public, after a user of very few years, would be entitled to pass over it, and use it as a way; and if the party does not mean to dedicate it as a way, but only to give licence, he should do some act to show that he gives a licence only. The common course is, to shut it up one in every year, which I believe is the case at Lincoln's Inn."
"52 Deemed dedication may be relied upon at common law where there has been evidence of a user by the public for so long and in such a manner that the owner of the fee, whoever he is, must have been aware that the public were acting under the belief that the way had been dedicated, and the owner has taken no steps to disabuse them of that belief. The 1932 Act, which the Highways Act 1980 replaced, was enacted to clarify the law. No definite time was required at common law for a dedication to be inferred. In Mann v Brodie, at p 386, Lord Blackburn observed that a very short period of public user would often satisfy a jury. For the statutory presumption to apply, however, a full period of 20 years is required: section 31(1). Unlike the period which is needed for prescription, which can be measured between any dates however long ago for which evidence is available, this period must be calculated retrospectively from the date when the right of the public is brought into question: section 31(2)."
"In Poole v Huskisson Baron Parke says:
"In order to constitute a valid dedication to the public of a highway by the owner of the soil, it is clearly settled that there must be an intention to dedicate there must be an animus dedicandi, of which the user by the public is evidence, and no more; and a single act of interruption by the owner is of much more weight upon a question of intention, than many acts of enjoyment."
But is has also been held that 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. It is therefore, I may say, in England never practically necessary to rely on prescription to establish a public way."
"The proper way of regarding these cases is to look at the whole of the evidence together, to see whether there has been such a continuous and connected user as is sufficient to raise the presumption of dedication; and the presumption, if it can be made, then is of a complete dedication, coeval with the early user. You refer the whole of the user to a lawful origin rather than to a series of trespasses. It may be that in this case the evidence of user prior to 1861 was alone sufficient to establish the presumption of dedication; but the strength of that presumption is increased by the subsequent user, and would certainly have been much diminished if the user had been discontinued after 1861."
"In my view, the same conclusion would follow even if the claim had rested solely on the use after 1973. One would then be considering the inference to be drawn from the actual use between 1973 and 1993. It is true that regular use by both horse-riders and cyclists of that period would be consistent with an assumed dedication as a restricted byway at the beginning of the period (had that concept then existed). But it is no less consistent with an assumed dedication as a bridleway, of which cyclists have been able to take advantage under the 1968 Act. Since section 30 involves a statutory interference with private property rights, it is appropriate in my view, other things being equal, to infer the form of dedication by the owner which is least burdensome to him."
The submissions on Ground 1
Ground 2
"(2) Without prejudice to any other enactment (whether contained in this Act or not) whereby a highway may become for the purposes of this Act a highway maintainable at the public expense, and subject to this section and section 232(7) below, and to any order of a magistrates' court under section 47 below, the following highways (not falling within subsection (1) above) shall for the purposes of this Act be highways maintainable at the public expense
(d) a highway, being a footpath [bridleway or restricted byway]
(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."
"(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 by way.
(2) Subsection (1) does not apply to an existing public right of way if
(a) it is over a way whose main lawful use by the public during the period of 5 years ending with commencement was use mechanically propelled vehicles,
(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)."
"44. The second claimed exemption found in Section 67(2)(b), namely if "immediately before the 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". The Council has provided an extract from its current list of streets and has no reason to believe that the relevant entry differs from the position immediately prior to the commencement of the 2006 Act. BRN is included in the list and recorded as a "private street".
45. The above entry in the list of streets does cause a little concern bearing in mind the purpose of this document. However, the intention of the exemption is to preserve unrecorded public rights of way which are shown in the list of streets. It may be the case that the BRN should not have been included in this document. However, a literal interpretation indicates that the public rights for mechanically propelled vehicles are not extinguished where the route in question was recorded in the list of streets immediately prior to the commencement of the 2006 Act. It follows in my view that the route should be recorded in the definitive map and statement as a byway open to all traffic."
"17. The wording of Section 67(2)(b) is clear and unambiguous and protects the public rights of way for mechanically propelled vehicles which are not shown in the definitive map and statement but are included in the list of streets. It is apparent that BRN was included in the list of streets prior to the date of commencement and the route continued to be recorded in this document. The issue in this case arises out of BRN being described in the list of streets as a "private street".
18. The list of streets only serves as a record of the highways maintained by the Council at public expense. It does not provide conclusive evidence of the public rights that exist over a particular way. Clearly the Council took the decision to include BRN in its list of maintained highways. If it is maintained for other purposes, such as in relation to a private right of way, it should not have been included in the list of streets. Nonetheless, it cannot be determined whether the recent resurfacing works highlighted by Mrs Young were undertaken by the Council in its capacity as highway authority.
19. I have concluded from the evidence that BRN is an unrecorded public right of way for mechanically propelled vehicles. This public right of way was included in the list of streets at the commencement of the 2006 Act albeit described as a private street. It is not argued that the route was included in the list in error. Having regard to the purpose of the list of streets outlined above, I conclude that the exemption in Section 67(2)(b) of the Act is applicable in this case. Therefore, it remains my view that BRN should be recorded in the definitive map and statement as a BOAT."
Overall Conclusions