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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Lands Tribunal >> Felton Homes Ltd, Re Law Of Property Act 1925 [2004] EWLands LP_3_2003 (2 December 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWLands/2004/LP_3_2003.html Cite as: [2004] EWLands LP_3_2003 |
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[2004] EWLands LP_3_2003 (2 December 2004)
LP/3/2003
LANDS TRIBUNAL ACT 1949
RESTRICTIVE COVENANT – modification – discharge – restriction limiting development on plot to one dwellinghouse – application to amend to permit dormer bungalow in rear garden – no interference with objectors' amenities – change in character of estate as some areas developed to greater density – many covenants on estate no longer enforceable – whether restriction obsolete – whether grant of application would result in break-down in system of covenants – Law of Property Act 1925, s.84(1)(a)(aa)(c).
IN THE MATTER OF AN APPLICATION UNDER SECTION 84 OF THE
LAW OF PROPERTY ACT 1925
BY
FELTON HOMES LIMITED
Re:
"Farnley",
3 Croft Drive West,
Caldy,
Wirral,
Merseyside, CH48 2JQ
Before: N J Rose FRICS
Sitting at Merseyside Valuation Tribunal, 2nd Floor, Cunard Building, Pier Head,
Liverpool L3 1DS on 19 and 20 October 2004
Richard Lander, instructed by Mr C M Brand, solicitor, of Heswall for the Applicant
Nicholas Riddle, instructed by Hill Dickinson, solicitors, of Liverpool for the Objectors Mr B K and Mrs L Holland
Mr C Langford, Objector, in person
Mrs J M Ratcliffe, Objector, in person
The following cases are referred to in this decision:
Truman, Hanbury, Buxton and Co Limited's Application [1956] 1 QB 261
Crest Nicholson Residential (South) Limited v McAllister [2004] 1 WLR 2409
Zetland (Marquess of) v Driver [1939] Ch 1
The following cases were also cited:
Re Purkiss' Application [1962] 1 WLR 901
Brennan v Bolt Burden and Others [2004] EWCA Civ 1017
Re Wards Construction (Medway) Ltd's Application (1973) 25 P & CR 223
Re Bass Ltd's Application (1973) 26 P & CR 156
Cryer v Scott Brothers (Sunbury) Ltd (1986) 55 P & CR 183
Re Chandler's Application (1958) 9 P & CR 612
Stannard v Issa [1987] AC 175
Re Snaith & Dolding (1995) 71 P & CR 104
Re Page (1996) 71 P & CR 440
Re Hunt (1996) 73 P & CR 126
Re Diggens and Others' application (No.2) [2001] 2 EGLR 163
Chatsworth Estates Company v Fewell [1931] 1 Ch 224
Re Hornsby's Application (1968) 20 P & CR 495
Re University of Westminster [1998] 3 All ER 1014
Re Shaw's Application (1996) 18 P & CR 144
Re Fettishaw (No.2) (1973) 27 P & CR 292
Re Davis' Application (1950) 7 P & CR 1
Re Associated Property Owners' Application (1964) 16 P & CR 89
Re Azfar's Application [2002] 1 P & CR 215
Re Quaffers Ltd's Application (1988) 56 P & CR 142
Re Beecham Group Ltd's Application (1980) 41 P & CR 369
Re Forgac's Application (1976) 32 P & CR 464
Re Gaffney (1974) 35 P & CR 440
Re Hextall's Application (2000) 79 P & CR 382
Re Wreford's Application (1956) 7 P & CR 257
DECISION
Introduction
"(a) No shops or any erections other than one private dwellinghouse with its necessary outbuildings shall be built upon the said land or any part thereof
(b) such dwellinghouse shall be detached with a floor area of at least one thousand five hundred feet super exclusive of garage and erected within eighteen months from the date hereof and shall have the land hereby conveyed attached appurtenant and exclusively belonging to it …
(d) the said dwellinghouse (with its offices appurtenances and land) shall be used as one private residence only and shall not be used for the letting of apartments and no part thereof shall be let or sub-let or used separately from the whole …
(g) no building shall be commenced on the said land without plans showing the site of the proposed building with sections and elevations thereof having been first submitted to and approved in writing by the Vendors or their architect or surveyor for the time being and all such buildings such be in conformity with such plans and a fee of three pounds three shillings shall be payable to the Vendors for such approval of plans and elevations".
"No shops or any erections other than two private dwellinghouses with their necessary outbuildings shall be built upon the said land or any part thereof".
It also seeks the consequential discharge of covenants (b), (d) and (g). In the course of the hearing it was agreed that covenant (g) was unenforceable, CMEL having been dissolved on 11 November 1985.
Facts
"No shops or any erections other than one private dwellinghouse with its necessary outbuildings shall be built upon the land or any part thereof" (in some instances more than one dwellinghouse was permitted or a separate lodge was permitted)…
"the said dwellinghouse (with the offices appurtenances and land) shall be used as one private residence only and shall not be used for the letting of apartments and no part thereof shall be let or sublet or used separately from the whole. Such house shall be detached and set back at least 15 yards from any road abutting thereon and the said house shall be of the yearly rental value of £ - / shall be not less than 1,500 feet super"… (this is an example, a variety of wording was used to describe the scale, nature and value of the houses to be built).
Typically, the plans for any buildings were subject to approval by CMEL.
Ground (a)
"by reason of changes in the character of the property or the neighbourhood or other circumstances of the case which the Lands Tribunal may deem material the restriction ought to be deemed obsolete."
Ground (aa)
"that (in a case falling within subsection (1A) below) the continued existence thereof would impede some reasonable user of the land for public or private purposes or, as the case may be, would unless modified so impede such user…
(1A) subsection (1)(aa) above authorises the discharge or modification of a restriction by reference to its impeding some reasonable user of land in any case in which the Lands Tribunal is satisfied that the restriction, in impeding that user, either –
(a) does not secure to persons entitled to the benefit of it any practical benefits of substantial value or advantage to them; or
(b) is contrary to the public interest;
and that money will be an adequate compensation for the loss or disadvantage (if any) which any such person will suffer from the discharge or modification.
(1B) In determining whether a case is one falling within subsection (1A) above, and in determining whether (in any such case or otherwise) a restriction ought to be discharged or modified, the Lands Tribunal shall take into account the development plan and any declared or ascertainable pattern for the grant or refusal of planning permissions in the relevant areas, as well as the period at which and context in which the restriction was created or imposed and any other material circumstances."
"(i) retain the character of a low density, maturely landscaped suburb with substantial houses in large grounds;
(ii) retain the unifying features of design, layout and building materials within the old village core;
(iii) preserve the unity of strongly enclosed boundary treatment incorporating high walls, dense landscaping or dark-stained, close-boarded, timber fences in the area outside the old village core; and
(iv) preserve, wherever practicable, views of the Dee estuary and of the North Wales coast beyond.
Only primarily residential uses will be permitted within this Area."
"The development of the wider area was first regulated by the owning control of the Caldy Manor Estate Company, but has latterly been regulated through design and density controls applied by the Local Planning Authority. Policy CH11, therefore, provides for these controls to be maintained in order to respect the established architectural and landscape standards elsewhere within the estate."
"In its later decision in the Federated Homes case [1980] 1 WLR 594 this court held that the provisions of section 78 of the 1925 Act had made it unnecessary to state, in the conveyance, that the covenant was to be enforceable by persons deriving title under the covenantee or under his successors in title and the owner or occupier of the land intended to be benefited, or that the covenant was to run with the land intended to be benefited; but there is nothing in that case which suggests that it is no longer necessary that the land which is intended to be benefited should be so defined that it is easily ascertainable. In my view, that requirement, identified in Marquess of Zetland v Driver [1939] Ch 1 remains a necessary condition for annexation."
Ground (c)
"that the proposed discharge on modification will not injure the persons entitled to the benefit of the restriction."
Dated 2 December 2004
N J Rose FRICS
Addendum
20 January 2005
N J Rose FRICS