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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 >> Dance v Savery & Ors [2011] EWHC 16 (Ch) (17 January 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2011/16.html Cite as: [2011] EWHC 16 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
BRISTOL DISTRICT REGISTRY
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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SEMAJ JOHN DANCE |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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ROBERT SAVERY |
First Defendant |
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PHILIP GEOFFREY FRENCH THOMAS KNYVETON DARNLEY ANDERSON ROBERT SAVERY MICHAEL THOMAS WHEELER HART MARY CHARMIAN BATEMAN (In their capacity as Trustees of the South Brent Commoners Association for the purposes of the Brent Moor ESA Agreement) |
Second Defendants |
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MARK TRENEER REBECCA DANCE SEMAJ DANCE (JUNIOR) (In their capacity as Officers of the South Brent Commoners Association and Trustees for the purposes of the ESA Agreement so far as it relates to Brent Moor Area A) |
Third Defendants |
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Hearing dates: 29, 30 November 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
MR. JUSTICE KITCHIN :
Introduction
"To graze 56 bullocks or ponies and 224 sheep on the part of the land comprised in this register unit hatched red (horizontally and diagonally) and lettered A on the register map"
Background
"To graze [the defined livestock] over the whole of the land comprised in this register unit, CL 162, … together with straying rights onto … CL 161 …"
"To graze [the defined livestock] over the whole of the land comprised in this register unit, CL 164 …. together with straying rights on to ….CL161 …."
"In my CL 164 decision dated 39 June 1983 after a hearing in 1982, I concluded that a number of registrations in such proceedings disputed had been properly made, the rights having been recognised by the Duchy, as being attached to lands in Venville, and not disputed by anyone. Mr Sturmer [for the Duchy] said that the corresponding Unit Land [CL 161] registrations were similarly recognised as being in Venville. This is not enough to enable me to equate for all purposes under the 1965 Act, the Forest Part with the adjoining CL 164 land, because of the very many CL 164 Rights Section registrations which in my 1983 CL 164 decision I decided were properly made, only very few have corresponding registrations in the Unit Lands Rights Section. I have no power (it was not at this Unit Land hearing suggested I have) to direct that the Forest Part of the Unit Land be removed from the Land Section of this CL 161 Register and by way of transfer included in the CL 164 Land Section, or to direct that any of the CL 164 Rights Section registrations shall be inserted in the Unit Land Rights Section for the first time. So by the Commons Registration Act 1965 the historic connection between the Forest Part of the Unit Land and the rest of the Forest of Dartmoor comprised in CL 164 has forever in part been broken. The Act nowhere makes this result altogether unavoidable; but even with the hindsight I have as a result of this Unit Land hearing, I am unable to think of any way by which it could have been prevented by the Duchy or anyone else except at trouble and expense disproportionate to the value of any benefit which could have resulted."
"Next I consider the registrations of "rights to stray" specified in Part I of the First Schedule hereto so far as possibly applicable to the Forest Part. Mr Sturmer [for the Duchy] insisted they were not properly made at least as regards those to which the Duchy had made an objection, that is as regards all except Nos 65, 68, 92 and 108; accordingly in the absence of any evidence or argument in support of them, my decision is that all these registrations except as aforesaid were as regards the Forest Part not properly made. As regards the excepted registrations I have no note or recollection of Mr Sturmer saying anything about them; however, because the CL 164 registrations at Entry Nos 575, 580, 592 and 821 corresponding to them were by my CL 164 decision confirmed with the modifications therein set out, my decision is that these four Unit Land registrations modified by substituting "graze" for "stray" were properly made as regards the Forest Part."
The legal framework
The 1965 Act
3. The registers
(1) For the purposes of registering such land as is mentioned in section 1(1) of this Act and rights of common over and ownership of such land every registration authority shall maintain:
(a) a register of common land; and
(b) a register of town or village greens;
and regulations under this Act may require or authorise a registration authority to note on those registers such other information as may be prescribed.
….
(7) the rights section of each register unit shall be in Form 3, and shall contain the registrations of the rights of common registered as exercisable over the land comprised in the land section of the register unit, or any part thereof, particulars of the persons on whose applications the rights were registered and the capacities in which they applied, descriptions of the land (if any) to which the rights are attached, and any such other information as may by any regulation made under the Act be required or authorized to be entered therein.
6 Disposal of disputed claims
(1) The Commons Commissioner to whom any matter has been referred under section 5 of this Act shall inquire into it and shall either confirm the registration, with or without modifications, or refuse to confirm it; and the registration shall, if it is confirmed, become final, and, if the confirmation is refused, become void—
(a) if no appeal is brought against the confirmation or refusal, at the end of the period during which such an appeal could have been brought;
(b) if such an appeal is brought, when it is finally disposed of.
….
10 Effect of registration
The registration under this Act of any land as common land or as a town or village green, or of any rights of common over any such land, shall be conclusive evidence of the matters registered, as at the date of registration, except where the registration is provisional only.
15 Quantification of certain grazing rights
(1) Where a right of common consists of or includes a right, not limited by number, to graze animals or animals of any class, it shall for the purposes of registration under this Act be treated as exercisable in relation to no more animals, or animals of that class, than a definite number.
(2) Any application for the registration of such a right shall state the number of animals to be entered in the register or, as the case may be, the numbers of animals of different classes to be so entered.
(3) When the registration of such a right has become final the right shall accordingly be exercisable in relation to animals not exceeding the number or numbers registered or such other number or numbers as Parliament may hereafter determine.
The 2006 Act
3 Content of registers
(1) The land registered as common land in a register of common land is, subject to this Part, to be—
(a) the land so registered in it at the commencement of this section; and
(b) such other land as may be so registered in it under this Part
…
(3) The rights of common registered in a register of common land or town or village greens are, subject to this Part, to be—
(a) the rights registered in it at the commencement of this section; and
(b) such other rights as may be so registered in it under this Part.
(4) The following information is to be registered in a register of common land or town or village greens in respect of a right of common registered in it—
(a) the nature of the right;
(b) if the right is attached to any land, the land to which it is attached;
(c) if the right is not so attached, the owner of the right.
(5) Regulations may—
(a) require or permit other information to be included in a register of common land or town or village greens;
(b) make provision as to the form in which any information is to be presented in such a register.
…..
(4) the rights section of each register unit must be in Form 3, and is to specify-
(a) the rights of common registered as exercisable over the land comprised in the land section of the register unit, or any part of that land;
18 Conclusiveness
(1) This section applies to land registered as common land, or as a town or village green, which is registered as being subject to a right of common.
(2) If the land would not otherwise have been subject to that right, it shall be deemed to have become subject to that right, as specified in the register, upon its registration.
(3) If the right is registered as attached to any land, the right shall, if it would not otherwise have attached to that land, be deemed to have become so attached upon registration of its attachment.
(4) If the right is not registered as attached to any land, the person registered as the owner of the right shall, if he would not otherwise have been its owner, be deemed to have become its owner upon his registration.
(5) Nothing in subsection (2) affects any constraint on the exercise of a right of common where the constraint does not appear in the register.
(6) It is immaterial whether the registration referred to in subsection (2), (3) or (4) occurred before or after the commencement of this section.
The substantive issues
"I can appreciate that it may serve a useful purpose in indicating that a right exercisable over the land comprised in Register Unit No. CL X is also registered in respect of the land comprised in Register Unit No. CL Y and Register Unit No. CL Z, but any right there may be in respect of the land comprised in Register Units Nos. CL Y and CL Z must be sought in those Register Units and is not conferred, reinforced or in any way affected by the entry in Register Unit CL X ."
"Having regard to the sections of the Act relating to Objections and to inquiries by a Commons Commissioner and having regard to the Regulations made under the Act, it would be extraordinary if a person connected with one and only one Register Unit was by some proceedings and of which he had no notice and had no right to be heard, adversely bound …..
In this decision relating to the Unit Land (CL 164) I disregard references to other register units altogether unless for some reason, eg some knowledge of the state of the register relating to these other register units I consider it convenient to make a correction which sooner or later must be made by somebody. And I record that if for convenience of grammar I have directed some modification which apparently validates some registration in another Unit, no such validation is by me intended."
"Section 15 uses the words "treated as exercisable in relation to no more animals…. than a definite number"; this does not I think mean that when a number is inserted on the register pursuant to the section, the owner of the right thereafter has under section 10 the right in all circumstances to graze that number of animals. In my view section 15 does no more than provide an upper limit. If anybody wishes to claim that the number of animals grazed by anyone at any time is, notwithstanding that it is less than the upper limit, excessive, his right to take legal proceedings is unaffected by the 1965 Act, except to the extent that section 10 is applicable. It may be therefore that in this case and in many other cases the number put on the register pursuant to section 15 may be of little practical consequence.
….
I construe section 15 showing an intention by Parliament to abolish levancy and couchancy; but I do not think it was the intention that any Court who should be concerned with a registered right of common should be bound under section 10 of the Act to assume that the right owner could graze at all times and in all circumstances the number of animals mentioned on the register without regard to the circumstances in which the right came into existence; the object of the Act is I think, to provide a register of rights, not to provide a register of regulations which would determine every conceivable dispute which might arise as to the exercise of rights.
….
When as here in Dartmoor many registrations in one Register Unit contain cross references to other Units, indicating that the registrations were made pursuant to an application made in one document, it may be possible to infer that the applicant thought he was registering one right which subsisted over two Units and not two rights, one over one Unit and another over another Unit. Whether the rights so registered are one or two rights must I think be determined by the Court or other tribunal who has to consider whether the person entitled is or is not at any particular time or in any particular circumstances grazing excessively and in a manner to which either the owner of the land or the owners of other rights can properly object; As I see it the court or tribunal although it will not be bound by, may if it thinks fit pay attention to, words in the register which for reasons under a separate heading I regard as surplusage.
It may be that as a result of decisions by Commons Commissioners, there will be registrations say, of a right to graze x cattle over one Register Unit and to graze y cattle over an adjoining Unit (rights attached to the same land); in my view it will not follow that such person can lear x + y cattle across the boundary relying on some supposed right of vicinage; there is no reason why rights over two commons should not be so connected as to require the animals on one for numerical purposes to be treated as being grazed on both. In other cases elsewhere in England I have been told that this is the local understanding and have at the request of those concerned modified registrations so that the understanding is therein expressed; but by occasionally doing this I am not saying that such an understanding (a sort of bringing of animal numbers hotch-pot) may not in a proper case be implied without being in the Register expressed."
"The conclusion is, in my opinion, inescapable that subsection (3) [of section 15] transformed the right, on registration, from being a right limited by levancy and couchancy to being a right for a fixed number of animals. That had been the intention of the Royal Commission whose recommendation to that effect was implemented by section 15. I am unable to accept Mr Chapman's argument that section 15(3) simply imposed a cap on the number of animals levant and couchant that could be grazed. If that were right, the levancy and couchancy limitation would, subject to the cap, have remained. Whatever else section 15 may or may not have done, it plainly, in my opinion, got rid of levancy and couchancy as a measure of the number of animals that, post registration, could be grazed."
Conclusion