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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 >> Housden & Anor v The Conservators of Wimbledon and Putney Commons [2007] EWHC 1171 (Ch) (29 March 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2007/1171.html Cite as: [2007] WLR 2543, [2008] 1 All ER 397, [2007] EWHC 1171 (Ch), [2007] 1 WLR 2543 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
ON APPEAL FROM THE ADJUDICATOR FOR HM LAND REGISTRY
B e f o r e :
(Sitting as a High Court Judge)
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MICHAEL RICHARD HOUSDEN ELIZABETH HOUSDEN |
Appellants |
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and |
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THE CONSERVATORS OF WIMBLEDON AND PUTNEY COMMONS |
Respondent |
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Mr T C Dutton instructed by Russell-Cooke appeared for the Appellants
Mr Guy Fetherstonhaugh QC instructed by Gregsons appeared for the Respondent
Hearing date: 29 March 2007
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Crown Copyright ©
Judge Kaye QC:
Introduction
The Background
The Issues
" no claim which may be lawfully made at the common law, by custom, prescription, or grant, to any way or other easement, or to any watercourse, or the use of any water, to be enjoyed or derived upon, over, or from any land or water of our said Lord the King, his heirs or successors, or being parcel of the Duchy of Lancaster or of the Duchy of Cornwall, or being the property of any ecclesiastical or lay person, or body corporate, when such way or other matter as hereinbefore last mentioned shall have been actually enjoyed by any person claiming right thereto without interruption for the full period of twenty years, shall be defeated or destroyed by shewing only that such way or other matter was first enjoyed at any time prior to such period of twenty years, but nevertheless such claim may be defeated in any other way by which the same is now liable to be defeated; and where such way or other matter as hereinbefore last mentioned shall have been so enjoyed as aforesaid for the full period of forty years, the rights thereto shall be deemed absolute and indefeasible, unless it shall appear that the same was enjoyed by some consent or agreement expressly given or made for that purpose by deed or writing."
The First Question Are the Conservators Capable or Lawful Grantors?
"There shall be a body of Conservators for carrying this Act into execution, the full number of whom shall be eight, and who are hereby incorporated by the name of the Wimbledon and Putney Commons Conservators, and by that name shall be one body corporate, with perpetual succession and a common seal, and with power to take and hold and to dispose of (by grant, demise, or otherwise) land and other property (which body corporate is in this Act referred to as the Conservators)."
"It shall not be lawful for the Conservators, except as in this Act expressed, to sell, lease, grant, or in any manner dispose of any part of the commons."
The Second Question Can the Appellants Nevertheless Acquire a Prescriptive Right Based on 40 Years' User?
"Upon this section [that is s 3] it is material to observe, with reference to the present appeal, that the right to what is called an ancient light now depends upon positive enactment. It is a matter juris positivi, and does not require, and therefore ought not to be rested on any presumption of grant or fiction of a license having been obtained from the adjoining proprietor."
"It is undoubtedly true that under [s 2 of the 1832 Act], there is an important difference between a forty years' and a twenty years' user. Forty years user has the same effect which (under [s 3]) twenty years' user has as to light; it makes the right absolute and indefeasible, unless it is shewn to have been enjoyed by consent or agreement in writing."
"To impose such a servitude upon the water in their canal as that contended for by the Appellants would have been ultra vires of the Respondents, and consequently length of user could never confer an indefeasible claim upon the Appellants under the Prescription Act, as no grant of the use of the water could have been lawfully made by the Respondents."
"But if the Prescription Act had at all been applicable it would be incumbent on the Appellant to prove that the right founded on the claim by user might, at the beginning of, or during that user, have been lawfully granted to them by the Respondents' company. No such proposition can be maintained. Had any grant been made at any time by the Respondents' company of the right, now alleged by the Appellants to have been acquired against them by user, such grant would have been ultra vires and void, as amounting to a contract by the Respondents not to perform their duty by improving their navigation, and conducting their undertaking with economy improvements."
"But to this argument there are many answers. First, as to the support. Such support of land by the land adjoining has existed in nature from all time, and has existed as a legal right at any rate from the time when the land supporting and the land supported became vested in different owners, which we know was the case here before the Companies Act of 1867 was passed. The defendant company did not acquire that part of the site of the new gasholder which adjoins the plaintiff's land until 1877; and nothing turns upon what they have done or permitted since that date. At that time the owner of the plaintiff's land had already a right to have his land supported by the land now belonging to the company, who only acquired the land subject to this burthen of support already existing. Then, as to the houses. It has never been suggested in this case that their existence makes any difference, or that what has occurred would not equally have happened if there had been no houses on the land, though no doubt that circumstance would have affected the amount of damages. But when the defendants' works were commenced the houses had been standing more than thirty years, and prima facie had gained by prescription a right to support, founded upon an implied grant. This grant must be assumed to have been made at any rate as far back as the commencement of the enjoyment - namely, at the time when the houses were erected; and there is no evidence or ground for believing that the owner at that time of the land, the defendants subsequently acquired, was in any way incapacitated from granting a full right to the support which the houses have ever since enjoyed, or was subject to any such disability as that to which the defendant company allege that they have been subject since their purchase."
"The rules of prescription developed by English law for the acquisition of easements by long de facto enjoyment were based on the establishing of a fiction, namely, that the long de facto enjoyment was attributable to the grant of the easement by a past owner of the servient land but that the grant had been lost."
Conclusion