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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Barkas v North Yorkshire County Council [2012] EWCA Civ 1373 (23 October 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2012/1373.html Cite as: [2012] 44 EG 95, [2012] WLR(D) 306, [2013] 1 EGLR 1, [2013] BLGR 32, [2013] 1 WLR 1521, [2012] EWCA Civ 1373, [2013] 1 P &CR 8, [2013] 2 EG 68 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Buy ICLR report: [2013] 1 WLR 1521] [View ICLR summary: [2012] WLR(D) 306] [Help]
ON APPEAL FROM THE ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
MR JUSTICE LANGSTAFF
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE SULLIVAN
and
LORD JUSTICE MCFARLANE
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BARKAS |
Appellant |
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-and- |
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NORTH YORKSHIRE COUNTY COUNCIL |
Respondent |
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-and- |
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SCARBOROUGH BOROUGH COUNCIL |
Interested Party |
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Ruth Stockley (instructed by North Yorkshire County Council) for the Respondent
William Hanbury (instructed by Scarborough Borough Council) for the Interested Party
Hearing date: 13th September 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Sullivan :
The Issue
"15 Registration of greens
(1) Any person may apply to the commons registration authority to register land to which this Part applies as a town or village green in a case where subsection (2)….. applies.
(2) This subsection applies where –
(a) a significant number of the inhabitants of any locality, or of any neighbourhood within a locality, have indulged as of right in lawful sports and pastimes on the land for a period of at least 20 years; and
(b) they continue to do so at the time of the application."
The proceedings
Factual background
"80 (1) The powers of a local authority under this Part of this Act to provide housing accommodation, shall include a power to provide and maintain with the consent of the Minister and, if desired, jointly with any other person, in connection with any such housing accommodation, any building adapted for use as a shop, any recreation grounds, or other buildings or land which in the opinion of the Minister will serve a beneficial purpose in connection with the requirements of the persons for whom the housing accommodation is provided."
"12. Provision of shops, recreation grounds, etc.
(1) A local housing authority may, with the consent of the Secretary of State, provide and maintain in connection with housing accommodation provided by them under this Part –
(a) Buildings adapted for use as shops,
(b) Recreation grounds, and
(c) Other buildings or land which, in the opinion of the Secretary of State, will serve a beneficial purpose in connection with the requirements of the persons for whom the housing accommodation is provided."
The Inspector's approach
"124 The question that arises is whether local people had a legal right to use a recreation ground which was set out under s. 80 of the 1936 Act and (during the relevant 20 year period) maintained under s. 12 of the 1985 Act as a recreation ground open to the public. The Open Spaces 1906 Act created by s. 10 an express statutory trust for public recreation. However, there is authority that where a statute empowers a local authority to acquire and lay out land for public recreation, the public have a legal right to use it. This point has been explored in relation to Public Health Act 1875 s. 164 (which contains no express trust for public recreation) in a series of cases:
A-G v Loughborough Local Board The Times 31st May 1881
Hall v Beckenham Corporation [1949] 1 KB 716
Sheffield corporation v Tranter [1957] 1 WLR 843
Blake v Hendon Corporation [1962] 1 QB 283
The same principle must apply to a recreation ground laid out under statute as an area for public recreation on a council estate. Council tenants, who are the primary objects for the provision of recreation, must have had a legal right to use the land for harmless recreation. It would be absurd to think of them as trespassers unless they first obtained the permission of the council to use the land for harmless recreation. Where the recreation ground, as in the present case, is laid out and maintained as a recreation ground open to the public pursuant to statutory powers, it seems to me that the public must similarly have a legal right to use the land for harmless recreation. Again, it would be absurd to regard them as trespassers. This view is supported by the obiter comments of Lord Walker in para. 87 of Beresford. I therefore consider that at least until 2003, when [the Borough Council] ceased to be owner of the remaining council houses, recreational use of the Field by local people was by right and not as of right. I did not hear any argument on the effect of the 2003 transfer of the remaining housing stock to Yorkshire Coast Homes, but it is not necessary for present purposes to consider the post 2003 legal situation.
125 I therefore consider that, at least until 2003, recreational user of the Field by local people was not "as of right". The application fails on this ground".
"121 In my view, the critical issue in this case is whether recreational user of the Field by local people was "by right" or "as of right". Although the discussion of the point was obiter, there is strong guidance from the House of Lords in Beresford that user which is under a legal right is not user "as of right"
Lord Bingham paras 3 & 9
Lord Hutton para 11
Lord Scott paras 29-30
Lord Rodger para 62
Lord Walker paras 72, 87 & 88
The comments of Lord Walker at para. 87 are particularly pertinent. He considered that it would be difficult to regard recreational users as trespassers acting as of right not only where there was a statutory trust under s. 10 of the Open Spaces Act 1906 but also where land had been appropriated for the purposes of public recreation. Under s. 122 of the Local Government Act 1972 (as amended) a local authority can appropriate land from one statutory purpose to another. I understand Lord Walker to be remarking that if a local authority holds land for a statutory purpose which involves public recreational use of the land (albeit without an express statutory trust in favour of the public) use of that land for public recreation would not be "as of right"."
Provision of Open Space by local authorities
"164. Any local authority may purchase or take on lease lay out plant improve and maintain lands for the purpose of being used as public walks or pleasure grounds, and may support or contribute to the support of public walks or pleasure grounds provided by any person whomsoever.
Any local authority may make byelaws for the regulation of any such public walk or pleasure ground, and may by such byelaws provide for the removal from such public walk or pleasure ground of any person infringing any such byelaw by any officer of the local authority or constable."
"The expression "open space" means any land, whether inclosed or not, on which there are no buildings or of which not more than one-twentieth part is covered with buildings, and the whole or the remainder of which is laid out as a garden or is used for purposes of recreation, or lies waste and unoccupied…"
Section 10 of the 1906 Act provides for the maintenance of any open space so acquired:
"A local authority who have acquired any estate or interest in or control over any open space or burial ground under this Act shall, subject to any conditions under which the estate, interest, or control was so acquired –
(a) hold and administer the open space or burial ground in trust to allow, and with a view to, the enjoyment thereof by the public as an open space within the meaning of this Act and under proper control and regulation and for no other purpose: and
(b) maintain and keep the open space or burial ground in a good and decent state.
And may inclose it or keep it inclosed with proper railings and gates, and may drain, level, lay out, turf, plant, ornament, light, provide with seats, and otherwise improve it, and do all such works and things and employ such officers and servants as may be requisite for the purposes aforesaid or any of them."
"(1) A local authority may provide, inside or outside its area, such recreational facilities as it thinks fit and, without prejudice to the generality of the powers conferred by the preceding provisions of this subsection, those powers include in particular powers to provide –
(a) indoor facilities consisting of sports centres, swimming pools, skating rinks, tennis, squash and badminton courts, bowling centres, dance studios and riding schools;
(b) outdoor facilities consisting of pitches for team games, athletics grounds, swimming pools, tennis courts, cycle tracks, golf courses, bowling greens, riding schools, camp sites and facilities for gliding;
(c) facilities for boating and water ski-ing on inland and coastal waters and for fishing in such waters;
(d) premises for the use of clubs or societies having athletic, social or recreational objects;
(e) staff, including instructors, in connection with any such facilities or premises as are mentioned in the preceding paragraphs and in connection with any other recreational facilities provided by the authority;
(f) such facilities in connection with any other recreational facilities as the authority considers it appropriate to provide including, without prejudice to the generality of the preceding provisions of this paragraph, facilities by way of parking spaces and places at which food, drink and tobacco may be bought from the authority or another person;
and it is hereby declared that the powers conferred by this subsection to provide facilities include powers to provide buildings, equipment, supplies and assistance of any kind.
(2) A local authority may make any facilities provided by it in pursuance of the preceding subsection available for use by such persons as the authority thinks fit either without charge or on payment of such charges as the authority thinks fit. "
"122. (1) Subject to the following provisions of this section, a principal council may appropriate for any purposes for which the council are authorised by this or any other enactment to acquire land by agreement any land which belongs to the council and is no longer required for the purpose for which it is held immediately before the appropriation; but the appropriation of land by a council by virtue of this subsection shall be subject to the rights of other persons in, over or in respect of the land concerned."
"(2A) A principal council may not appropriate under subsection (1) above any land consisting or forming part of an open space unless before appropriating the land they cause notice of their intention to do so, specifying the land in question, to be advertised in two consecutive weeks in a newspaper circulating in the area in which the land is situated, and consider any objections to the proposed appropriation which may be made to them.
(2B) Where land appropriated by virtue of subsection (2A) above is held –
(a) for the purposes of section 164 of the Public Health Act 1875 (pleasure grounds); or
(b) in accordance with section 10 of the Open Spaces Act 1906 (duty of local authority to maintain open spaces and burial grounds),
the land shall by virtue of the appropriation be freed from any trust arising solely by virtue of its being land held in trust for enjoyment by the public in accordance with the said section 164 or, as the case may be, the said section 10. "
"(a) to acquire, hold, manage and dispose of land and other property:
(b) to carry out building and other operations;
(c) to provide water, electricity, gas, sewerage and other services:
(d) to carry on any business or undertaking in or for the purposes of the new town,
and generally to do anything necessary or expedient for the purposes of the new town or for purposes incidental thereto."
"6.–(1) The development corporation established for the purposes of a new town shall from time to time submit to the Minister, in accordance with any directions given by him in that behalf, their proposals for the development of land within the area of the new town, and the Minister, after consultation with the local planning authority within those area the land is situated, and with any other local authority who appear to him to be concerned, may approve any such proposals either with or without modification."
"3. In this context it is plain that "as of right" does not require that the inhabitants should have a legal right since in this, as in other cases of prescription, the question is whether a party who lacks a legal right has acquired one by user for a stipulated period. It is also plain that "as of right" does not require that the inhabitants should believe themselves to have a legal right: the House so held in R v Oxfordshire County Council, Ex p Sunningwell Parish Council [2000] 1 AC 335, 354 356. It is clear law, as summarised in the last-mentioned decision, that for prescription purposes under the Prescription Act 1832 (2 & 3 Will 4, c 71), the Rights of way Act 1932 and the 1965 Act "as of right" means nec vi, nec clam, nec precario, that is, "not by force, nor stealth, nor the licence of the owner": see pp 350, 351, 353-354. In this case there was no question of force or stealth. So the only question is whether the inhabitants' user was by the licence of the owner.
4. It was not suggested that the council had expressly licensed the inhabitants' use of the land, either in writing or orally. The argument was accordingly directed to whether it was ever possible to imply a licence by a landowner to use land in the manner prescribed by the statute and, if so, whether the facts here could properly be held to give rise to such an implication."
"7. As already pointed out, the [Commons Act 1965] drew heavily on principles established under the Acts of 1832 and 1932, relating to private and public rights of way respectively, and in neither of these instances could acts of encouragement by the servient owner be relied on to contend that the user by the dominant owner had not been as of right. Such conduct would indeed strengthen the hand of the dominant owner. Here the conduct is in any event equivocal: if the land were registered as a town or village green, so enabling the public to resort to it in exercise of a legal right and without the need for any licence, one would expect the council to mow the grass and provide some facilities for those so resorting, thus encouraging public use of this valuable local amenity. It is hard to see how the self-same conduct can be treated as indicating that the public had no legal right to use the land and did so only by virtue of the council's licence."
"9. The foregoing paragraphs of this opinion are directed to the issue which was contested before the lower courts and debated between the parties on the hearing of this appeal. After the House had reserved judgment at the conclusion of oral argument, however, the House became concerned to explore the possibility that, on the special facts of this case, the inhabitants of the locality might have indulged in lawful sports and pastimes for the qualifying period of 20 years or more not "as of right" but pursuant to a statutory right to do so. Such use would be inconsistent with use as of right. Counsel were invited to make written submissions on the point, which had not been raised or investigated below, and the House heard further oral argument on it. The House is grateful to counsel for responding so fully to its invitation, and consideration has been given to every statutory provision which appeared to be potentially relevant. In the event, I do not find it necessary to review these provisions in detail since it is to my mind clear that none of them, on the facts found or agreed, can be relied on to confer on the local inhabitants a legal right to use the land for indulgence in lawful sports and pastimes. Indeed Mr. Petchey for the council, who had not himself sought to raise this contention earlier, found it hard to argue otherwise."
Lord Bingham agreed with Lord Scott, Lord Rodger and Lord Walker (paragraph 10). Lord Hutton agreed with Lord Walker, Lord Rodger and Lord Bingham (paragraph 11).
"30. It is, I think, accepted that if the respondent council acquired the sports arena "under the 1906 Act", the local inhabitants' use of the land for recreation would have been a use under the trust imposed by section 10 of the Act. The use would have been subject to regulation by the council and would not have been a use "as of right" for the purposes of class c of section 22 (1) of the Commons Registration Act 1965. But Mr. Petchey accepted that Mr. Laurence was correct in contending that the sports arena had not been acquired "under the [1906] Act" and that section 10 did not, therefore, apply…."
Lord Scott was not persuaded that the concession was correct, but he allowed the appeal on the basis on which the case had been argued (paragraph 52). He was uneasy about that conclusion because he considered that the statutory scheme under the 1972 Act which permitted the appropriation of land held as open space would "trump" any TVG status of the land. But as the point had not been argued he left it to be decided on another occasion (ibid).
"62. After the first hearing of the appeal, however, your Lordships invited further written and oral submissions from counsel on whether any of the statutes that may apply to local authority land had conferred on the local residents and others a right to use the sports arena – with the result that their use would be "of right", as opposed to being "as of right" in terms of section 22 (1) of the 1965 Act. Having considered those submissions, for the reasons given by my noble and learned friend, Lord Walker of Gestingthorpe, I am satisfied that, on the agreed facts, neither the designation of the land as "open space" in the New Town Plan nor any of the statutes conferred any such right in this case."
"86. I would however add that I feel some sympathy for the view taken by the courts below. The city council as a local authority is in relation to this land in a different position from a private landowner, however benevolent, who happens to own the site of a traditional village green. The land is held by the city council, and was held by its predecessors, for public law purposes. A local resident who takes a walk in a park owned by a local authority might indignantly reject any suggestion that he was a trespasser unless he obtained the local authority's consent to enter. He might say that it was the community's park and that the local authority as its legal owner was (in a loose sense) in the position of a trustee with a duty to let him in. (Indeed that is how Finnemore J put the position in Hall v Beckenham Corpn [1949] 1 KB 716, 728 which was concerned with a claim in nuisance against a local authority, the owner of a public park, in which members of the public flew noisy model aircraft). So the notion of an implied statutory licence has its attractions.
87. After that approach had been suggested there was a further hearing of this appeal in order to consider the effect of various statutory provisions which were not referred to at the first hearing, including in particular section 10 of the Open Spaces Act 1906, sections 122 and 123 of the local Government Act 1972 and section 19 of the Local Government (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1976.
88. Those situations would raise difficult issues but in my opinion they do not have to be decided by your Lordships on this appeal, and would be better left for another occasion. The undisputed evidence does not establish, or give grounds for inferring, any statutory trust of the land or any appropriation of the land as recreational open space. Counsel for Sunderland rightly did not argue for some general implied exclusion of local authorities from the scope of section 22 of the Commons Registration Act 1965."
Discussion
(a) That there is a distinction between a use of land "by right" and a use of land "as of right".
(b) That if a statute properly construed confers a right on the public to use land for recreational purposes their use of that land will be by right and not as of right.
(c) That section 10 of the 1906 Act is an example (Mr. Edwards submits the only example) of land which is provided by a local authority as open space which the public use for recreational purposes by right.
"So far as a local authority are concerned, if land is bought under s. 164 of the Act of 1875 for that purpose [the purpose of public walks or pleasure grounds] it is dedicated to the use of the public for the purpose of a park." (p. 726).
He therefore concluded that the local authority were not liable as the occupiers of the park for an alleged nuisance that was being committed in the park. Finnemore J also rejected the plaintiff's submission that even if it was not the occupier, the authority was liable because it had the management and control of the park:
"So long as a member of the public behaves himself in the ordinary way, committing no criminal offence and observing the by-laws, the corporation cannot stop his doing what he likes in this recreation ground……
I think that the corporation are the trustees and guardians of the park, and that they are bound to admit to it any citizen who wishes to enter it within the times when it is open. I do not think that they can interfere with any person in the park unless he breaks the general law or one of their by-laws. They cannot put themselves in the position of judges of whether a person may be causing a nuisance to someone outside the park. Their proper attitude to such a complaint is to say that the complainer must take action against the person who is said to be committing the nuisance." (p. 728).
"The authority may not use a public pleasure ground provided by it, or permit it to be used, for any purpose inconsistent with public recreation, subject to certain exceptions. The authority is not the occupier of the land, but merely its custodian or trustee on behalf of the public…."
Hall v Beckenham is cited as authority for the latter proposition. When Parliament inserted subsection (2B) into section 122 of the 1972 Act it did so in the belief that land would be held by a local authority on trust for enjoyment by the public whether it was held under section 164 of the 1875 Act or section 10 of the 1906 act: see paragraph 15 (above).
"Where land is vested in a local authority on a statutory trust under section 10 of the Open Spaces Act 1906, inhabitants of the locality are beneficiaries of a statutory trust of a public nature, and it would be very difficult to regard those who use the park or other open space as trespassers (even if that expression is toned down to tolerated trespassers). The position would be the same if there were no statutory trust in the strict sense, but land had been appropriated for the purpose of public recreation."
The final sentence of paragraph 87 of Lord Walker's judgment is obiter, but Lord Walker clearly regarded "appropriation" for the purpose of public recreation as being of critical importance. He emphasised that the undisputed evidence in Beresford did not establish, or give grounds for inferring "any statutory trust of the land or any appropriation of the land as open space" (emphasis added): see paragraphs 88, 89(a) and 90 of his opinion (paragraphs 24 and 25 above).
Conclusion
Lord Justice McFarlane:
Lord Justice Richards: