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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Worth v Turner & Anor [2004] EWHC 1096 (Ch) (04 May 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2004/1096.html Cite as: [2004] EWHC 1096 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
sitting as a Deputy Judge of the Chancery Division
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ROSEMARY WORTH | Claimant | |
- and - | ||
JOHN FREDERICK TURNER | ||
CAROLE SANDRA TURNER | Defendants |
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Roger Smithers (instructed by Lyons Davidson) for the defendants
Hearing dates : Monday 22 March — Thursday 25 March 2004
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Crown Copyright ©
The Deputy Judge:
The present position in outline
The issues
i) Plan F depicts an indentation on the northern boundary of Wendy's, overlapping with part of the V. According to Mrs French's main survey plan (Plan H), Post 2 is placed within that part of the V and thus outside, and to the north of, the defendants' land.
ii) Further, Post 4 lies well outside the defendants' land as depicted by Plan F, as does almost all the kerb between Post 4 and Post 3: what is, according to Plan F as reproduced by Mrs French on her survey plan, the defendant's land follows a line which is as much one metre behind Post 4.
The evidence and witnesses
i) Mr Nutt was asked about the storage and hosing down of the refuse vehicle, but not about the power tools or chain saws. He agreed that he had on occasion had such a vehicle at Hilltop: this, he said, was for the most part when he first moved to Hilltop and was clearing Hilltop. He also accepted that he had on occasion hosed one down there. But he said, and I accept, that he did not keep a vehicle there for several months at a time, that his washing of vehicles was primarily at his yard where he had the proper equipment, and that all this stopped as long ago as 1993 when he retired. He also pointed out that no complaint to him had been made until after the present dispute was under way, although the events had happened long ago.
ii) Mr Nutt agreed that he had trimmed vegetation along Fort Road between Point A and Point B, pointing out that he did this because otherwise it would become overgrown and also that he was continuing to do what Mr Worth had done before him, evidence which was supported by Mr Worth. What I saw of the Fort Road between Point A and Point B was of verges which were by no means bare of vegetation; on the contrary, it had the appearance of a narrow, single-track, country lane with plenty of vegetation and foliage. I can understand that pruning and cutting would be essential in order to keep the way reasonably open and accessible to the traffic which, unquestionably, had the right to pass to Hilltop and to the Fort.
iii) Most importantly, I have no doubt that the hedge to the north side of Fort Road contributes materially to the dispute between the claimant and the defendants. Mr Allingham is zealous in his protection of this hedge. The hedge has in my judgement encroached over what used to be the verge to the north of Fort Road, and has diminished the space which is conveniently used for access to the Fort.
iv) In evidence is a photograph, taken since mid-2001, of a 17 ton refuse lorry some 7 foot 6 inches (2.3 metres) wide manoeuvring into the Fort via the entrance gate at Point C. I am satisfied that for such a vehicle it is an awkward manoeuvre to enter into the Fort at this point. This conclusion I have reached without relying on the photograph. The photograph shows no more than is to be expected. What it does show, in particular, is that the hedge on the north side of Fort Road contributes to the difficulty of the manoeuvre. Mr Allingham, nevertheless, commented that the photograph had been staged by Mr Nutt. I do not accept that suggestion, which was denied by Mr Nutt. Having seen the entrance to the Fort I have no doubt that as matters are at present driving any large trade vehicle into the Fort is challenging.
v) As to Mr Allingham's complaint about the elimination of the verge in front of the hedge the explanation is in my judgment simple. Over time the hedge has grown over the verge. That there was at one time such a verge I accept, there being evidence that in the past Mr Turner had on occasion mowed it. But I cannot accept, as Mr Allingham's complaint would imply, that the width of Fort Road passable by vehicles was at one time no more than about 2.5 metres. This however is what would be necessary if one sought to allow for a 0.5 metre verge before the hedge on the north side of the lane in its present form.
i) For reasons which I explain, I do not accept that Fort Road has been materially widened, whether by Mr Nutt or by anyone else.
ii) The "criminal damage" allegation seems to me to be unfounded. Mr Nutt had cut back one side of the hedge between Hilltop and Wendy's at its northern end by the larch/lap fence; but the cutting was on the Hilltop side of the larch/lap fence, and in any case appeared to me to be outside the Wendy's boundary as represented by Mrs French by reference to Plan F (the end of the fence projecting, according to Mrs French's survey plan, to the north of the defendants' registered title and into Fort Road).
i) He asserted in his written evidence that along the front of Wendy's he had had, at a time before the defendants' recent works were carried out, a series of large stones, painted white, to stop drivers from driving onto the grass verge. Exhibited to his witness statement was a photograph of a large stone with traces of white paint: the sense of the witness statement was that the photographed stone was one of the relevant stones. In fact the photographed stone had nothing to do with the front of Wendy's: it was a stone which always was, and still is, at Point A, beside the entrance to Fort Road.
ii) His written evidence was that three posts had been at the front of his property from before about 1980, one of which is still in position as it has been for over 24 years, the other two having been at about the V in approximately the position of two of Posts 1 to 3. The surviving post the written evidence appeared to identify as Post 4, which had in fact been put in place by Mr Turner in May 2001. Mr Turner's oral evidence was that he had really intended to convey that Post 4 was in the place where there had been a post 24 years ago. In fact, contrary to what he had stated in his written evidence, none of the three supposed original posts "is still in position".
i) First, the post noted by the Ordnance Survey was described as being 30 years old. The post which is present today does not have the appearance of dating from 1945.
ii) Secondly, the sketch marks the width of Fort Road at one end as 4.8 metres and as 4.0 metres at the other. It depicts the lane as straight, with the V being shown as the only irregularity. Had the way narrowed materially at the position of the post it is likely that this would have been noted on the sketch.
iii) Thirdly, Plan F does not include the position of the post within the boundary of the defendants' land, if as I think, Mrs French's main plan (Plan H) is correct in representing what is encompassed within the defendants' land as shown by Plan F; and both Plan F and the Ordnance Survey Plan by reference to which the claimant's title was registered in 1990 depict Fort Road as running straight for its full length, the V being the only irregularity.
The paper position
"at all times ... and for all purposes with or without horses sheep cattle and other animals carts carriages wagons steam motor or other vehicles agricultural and other machinery..."
i) The Fort was in the early years of the twentieth century comprised in land which formed part of the Deepdene Settled Estate. All the surrounding land on three sides, to the west and north and east, formed part of this estate. There is a plan from the 1914 edition of the County Series Sheet, scaled at 1:2500 ("the 1914 Plan"), showing the Fort as being approached by a track following the line of Fort Road.
ii) The claimant was given by her solicitor in about 1972 a document similar to, but probably a little older than, the 1914 Plan. She was told that it was a plan of the property. This plan showed the Fort outlined in red and also depicted a track roughly, but not exactly, along the line of Fort Road, coloured yellow and with Points A, B and C marked along it. My reason for thinking that this plan is an earlier representation of the land at and around the Fort is that it does not show, as the 1914 Plan does, the small addition on the north side of the semidetached caretakers' cottages.
iii) An abstract of title in the possession of the defendants dating from about the 1940s, being an abstract relating to the conveyancing of Wendy's, describes a conveyance made in December 1921 of the land surrounding the Fort on the north, this land being conveyed to a Mr Thompson. It is from Mr Thompson that both the defendants and Mr Nutt derive their title, the length of Fort Road and the land on either side having been conveyed by the December 1921 Conveyance. A plan with the abstract, being a copy of the conveyance plan, marks approximately the line of Fort Road and also points A, B and C.
iv) The abstract describes the December 1921 Conveyance as having been made subject to an existing easement of way in favour of Mr Cheston to the Fort along Fort Road between points A, B, and C, the terms of the easement of way being as set out above.
Conclusions as to extent of way expressly granted
"In the absence of any clear indication of the intention of the parties, the maxim that a grant must be construed most strongly against a grantor must be applied. But a question of construction is a question of law in respect of which no burden of proof lies on either side. In particular in construing a grant the court will consider (1) the locus in quo over which the way is granted; (2) the nature of the terminus ad quem; and (3) the purpose for which the way is to be used."
i) First, I have already made reference to the 1922 Plan. That, it seems to me, is the nearest there is to contemporary documentary evidence of the width of the way in 1921. It labels Fort Road as "roadway". At the scale used one-sixteenth of an inch represents 12 foot 6 inches (3.81 metres); and so far as I can judge it the draftsman of the plan has attempted to represent Fort Road by lines one-sixteenth of an inch apart.
ii) The second reason concerns the width between the gateposts at Point C at the entrance to the Fort. This width is about 12 foot 6 inches. The way between the posts is likely to have been more or less the width of the track leading up to and beyond the posts. The existing posts have been in position since about 1970. According to the claimant these replaced much older wooden ones which had been in exactly the same position.
Prescription
i) For the purpose of the 1832 Act I accept that there has been uninterrupted enjoyment between March 1983 and May 2001, when the defendants' works were carried out.
ii) In any case I accept that sufficient use has been demonstrated for the whole period from the 1930s down to May 2001, so that by an application of the doctrine of lost modern grant the existence of the right would be established, whatever period of 20 years one chose within that longer period.
i) In an ordinary saloon car the purpose of using the V would be to gain a better sight line around what is otherwise a blind and narrow corner.
ii) In the case of a trade vehicle, which could be wide and with a long wheel-base, or in the case of a vehicle towing a caravan or trailer, the purpose would be to assist entry to or exit from the Fort in a comparatively straight east-west direction along the line of Fort Road. This is an advantage (if not a necessity) for a large vehicle manoeuvring through the gate: the extent of the advantage for the vehicle would depend upon many variables such as length, width, position of wheels, number of axles with steering, etc, which would make the vehicle more or less capable of being turned in the limited space.
i) Mr Turner stated that for "the first 10 years of my occupation at Wendy's Cottage ... heavy vehicles could not get up the lane and that dustcarts used to be the small type dust cart with flip-up panels". He said that trucks of the 1 to 3 tonne range (that is, a Fort Transit type van or small delivery van) were the largest which could get up Fort Road. He added that he understood that in the 1980s there was a fire at the Fort and that only a specially small fire tender called "Nellie" could get to the Fort. Now, in contrast says Mr Turner, any dustcart or fire tender can easily reach the Fort. Mr Turner also gave evidence that the entrance to Fort Road was narrow and tunnel-like with trees pressing upon the track.
ii) Mr Allingham also gave evidence of the narrow and tunnel-like appearance of the entrance to Fort Road, and explained how, when he first moved to the Nook (that is, in 1986), Fort Road was just about wide enough for a Sherpa van (a 1 tonne vehicle) and that until 1991 the only dust carts seen down Fort Road were small flip-up panel-sided vans.
iii) Mr Cook gave evidence as to the width and use of Fort Road which was similar to that given by Mr Turner and Mr Allingham, saying that the narrow and tunnel-like appearance of the entrance went back into the 1950s.
i) Over the years mobile homes and caravans have reached the Fort. Mr Worth recalled a 22-foot caravan being brought up on a transporter. Over the years wide vehicles, including a London Tram Trailer measuring 7 foot 6 inches (approximately 2.3 metres) wide and caravans and mobile homes of upwards of 8 foot (approximately 2.5 metres) have come up to the Fort.
ii) Mr and Mrs Worth also gave evidence about the visits of the fire services to the Fort over the years for a variety of reasons including exercises, rescue operations and attending to grass fires. Mrs Worth denied that in the 1980s the fire service had had to send a particularly small fire engine. The fire engines would unquestionably have been greater than 3 tonnes.
iii) Although Mrs Worth agreed that there was a time when the dustcarts were of the van type, her evidence was that long ago, she thought in about 1974, these were changed to large ones. Mr Worth could not recall the time of the change, but his memory was mostly of the large ones coming up. The Transport and Facilities Manager of the Council has written to say that the use of the van type dustcarts had been discontinued from the late 1970s and was stopped in about 1980; and Mr Nutt recalls, and I accept, that in 1991 when he first arrived the dustcarts being used were the 16-tonne, 9-foot wide, variety. It was a dustcart of that type which he himself brought up to Hilltop in 1991.
iv) Other trade vehicles greater than the 1 to 3 tonne range travelled Fort Road. Such vehicles included calor gas lorries, heating oil tankers, coal lorries and the tanker for emptying the septic tanks.
"the user relied upon was not a user asserting a right, but a user relying upon the neighbourly good nature of the owner of the verge to tolerate the sort of use which the evidence discloses."
i) Mr Worth explained that since the completion of the works the deliveries of heating oil to his house have had to be by a special, small tanker, in contrast with the larger tanker which used to be able to deliver the oil. He doubted whether a touring caravan could now be readily towed by a vehicle through the entrance without having to be unhitched and manhandled.
ii) According to Mrs Worth there was also an occasion in 2002 when the driver of a van making a delivery to the Fort failed to get into the Fort.
iii) Mr Nutt explained that heavy vehicles which had once been able to gain access to the Fort with materials or equipment for maintaining or improving the site there could no longer do so.
iv) Earlier in this judgment I have referred to the photograph of the refuse collection lorry manoeuvring through the gate at the Fort: for such a vehicle access is plainly made awkward by the restricted space available at Point C.
v) Mr Dyson described an occasion when he was recently having double-glazing installed in his chalet and the van carrying the glass (a van of the type that is adapted for carrying glass on racks outside the vehicle body) had great difficulty in negotiating the turn into the Fort.
Relief