BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Secretary of State for the Environment, Transport & the Regions & Anor v Skerritts of Nottingham Ltd [2000] EWCA Civ 60 (25 February 2000) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2000/60.html Cite as: [2000] EWCA Civ 60, [2001] QB 59 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Buy ICLR report: [2001] QB 59] [Help]
& QBCOF 99/0690/C |
COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM HIS HONOUR
JUDGE BARTLETT QC (SITTING AS A DEPUTY
JUDGE OF THE QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE ROBERT WALKER
and
MR JUSTICE ALLIOTT
____________________
SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE ENVIRONMENT, TRANSPORT & THE REGIONS & ANR |
Appellants |
|
- and - |
||
SKERRITTS OF NOTTINGHAM LTD |
Respondent |
____________________
Smith Bernal Reporting Limited, 180 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2HD
Tel No: 0171 421 4040, Fax No: 0171 831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr Christopher Katkowski QC (instructed by Actons, Nottingham for the Respondent)
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE ROBERT WALKER:
Introductory
"The stable block lying within the curtilage of the Grade II* listed Grimsdyke Hotel, Old Redding, Harrow Weald, shown edged with a bold black line on the attached plan."
"a building which is for the time being included in a list compiled or approved by the Secretary of State under this section; and for the purposes of this Act -(a) any object or structure fixed to the building;(b) any object or structure within the curtilage of the building which, although not fixed to the building, forms part of the land and has done so since before 1st July 1948,shall be treated as part of the building."
"4. ...The hotel stands in a clearing in dense woodland and is set in extensive grounds. To the north of the grounds, there is open farmland and, to the east and south, Harrow Weald Common, a woodland and public open space. There is a water treatment compound set in woodland to the west. The site lies within the Metropolitan Green Belt.5. The hotel is approached from Old Redding, via a gated entrance, past the South Lodge, a Grade II listed building, and along a metalled road through the wooded grounds. The road forks and the left-hand route continues to a parking area and the entrance to the hotel and the right-hand track swings east to a group of buildings including North Lodge, New Lodge and the Stable Block. Grim's Ditch is an ancient linear defensive earthwork which runs east/west to the north of the main hotel building. It is a Scheduled Ancient Monument. Grim's Dyke Lodge, to the north of Grim's Ditch, is a modern annex to the hotel containing 34 bedrooms.
6. Grimsdyke is a two and three storey, former English country house, designed by the architect Norman Shaw for the painter Frederick Goodall (1822-1904) and was later the home of W S Gilbert, the librettist (1837-1911). It is in a romantic, 'Old English', picturesque style and has an irregular plan and was completed in 1872. The landscaped grounds, which were laid out prior to the erection of Grimsdyke, have recently been included in the Register of Parks and Gardens of Special Historic Interest.
7. The Stable Block is some 200m to the east of Grimsdyke. It is L-shaped in plan, with a two storey wing and a single storey wing, and two brick walls complete a square compound in front of it. The approach is along the diagonal to the square from an entrance gate, which is missing, to the main entrance to the building at its inside corner. [Some detailed references to elevations are omitted here.] The accommodation is on two floors and provides bedrooms and communal kitchens and bathrooms for hotel staff. There are also some offices. The building has three tall brick chimneys, a tiled hipped and gabled roof with hipped and gabled dormers, and brick walls with vertical tiling to the upper parts."
"I have reached the conclusion that, based on the physical, historical, ownership, and functional facts before me, the structure known as the Stable Block lies within the curtilage of Grimsdyke and has formed part of the land since before 1948 and so shall be treated as part of Grimsdyke. The appeal under ground (a) should not succeed."
"so clear that it will amount to an error of law to determine whether a structure separated by some distance from the listed building is within the curtilage of the building without having regard to the concept of curtilage as a small area about a building. Considerations of function, history, ownership and physical layout are all material and may in most cases be determinative of the question, but, unless the decision-maker also bears in mind the essential concept of size, in cases of substantial physical separation he may come to a wrong conclusion. Of course what is small will inevitably vary greatly according to the circumstances and to say that a curtilage is a small area is obviously not to provide any precise test of identification. But to bear in mind the concept of size will prevent the decision-maker, relying on the other considerations correctly spelt out in PPG15, from extending too far the area he defines as the curtilage."
"In my judgment, for one corporeal hereditament to fall within the curtilage of another, the former must be so intimately associated with the latter as to lead to the conclusion that the former in truth forms part and parcel of the latter. There can be very few houses indeed that do not have associated with them at least some few square yards of land, constituting a yard or a basement area or passageway or something of the kind, owned and enjoyed with the house, which on a reasonable view could only be regarded as part of the messuage and such small pieces of land would be held to fall within the curtilage of the messuage. This may extend to ancillary buildings, structures or areas such as outhouses, a garage, a driveway, a garden and so forth. How far it is appropriate to regard this identity as parts of one messuage or parcel of land as extending must depend on the character and the circumstances of the items under consideration. To the extent that it is reasonable to regard them as constituting one messuage or parcel of land, they will be properly regarded as all falling within one curtilage; they constitute an integral whole."
"(l) the physical 'layout' of the listed building and the structure, (2) their ownership, past and present, (3) their use or function past and present. Where they are in common ownership and one is used in connection with the other, there is little difficulty in putting a structure near a building or even some distance from it into its curtilage."
Stephenson LJ quoted from Buckley LJ's judgment in Methuen-Campbell but focused on Buckley LJ's reference to an "integral whole" rather than his reference to "small pieces of land".
"All these considerations, and the general tenor of the second sentence of section 54(9) satisfy me that the word "structure" is intended to convey a limitation to such structures as are ancillary to the listed building itself, for example the stable block of a mansion house, or the steading of a farmhouse, either fixed to the main building or within its curtilage. In my opinion the concept envisaged is that of principal and accessory. It does not follow that I would overrule the decision in the Calderdale case, though I would not accept the width of the reasoning of Stephenson LJ. There was, in my opinion, room for the view that the terrace of cottages was ancillary to the mill."
He did not criticise Stephenson LJ's view that an ancillary building might be within a main building's curtilage even though some way from it.
"Mr Dyer therefore has a right to buy his house unless that house is within the curtilage of a building which is held by the council mainly for purposes other than housing purposes and consisting of accommodation other than housing accommodation."
"There are a number of buildings clustered around and to the east of Kingston Maurward House, the great house of the old estate and the headquarters of the college. To the west lies the principal's house and six staff houses, all within 200 to 400 yards of Kingston Maurward House. A little further to the west there is Stinsford Dairy, which was one of Mr Dyer's principal responsibilities. The four lecturers' houses are about 450 yards to the north-west of Kingston Maurward House, forming an isolated close. The remainder of the estate is not built on and consists of a driveway from the public road fronting the lecturers' houses to Kingston Maurward House and fenced fields."
"While making every allowance for the fact that the size of a curtilage may vary somewhat with the size of the house or building, I am in no doubt that the 100 acre park on the edge of which Mr Dyer's house now stands cannot possibly be said to form part and parcel of Kingston Maurward House, far less of any of the other college buildings. Indeed, a park of this size is altogether in excess of anything which could properly be described as the curtilage of a mansion house, an area which no conveyancer would extend beyond that occupied by the house, the stables and other buildings, the gardens and the rough grass up to the ha-ha, if there was one."
MR JUSTICE ALLIOTT:
LORD JUSTICE HENRY: