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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 >> ADM Milling Ltd v Tewkesbury Town Council & Ors [2011] EWHC 595 (Ch) (16 March 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2011/595.html Cite as: [2011] NPC 30, [2012] Ch 99, [2011] 3 WLR 674, [2011] EWHC 595 (Ch), [2011] 2 P &CR 4 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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ADM MILLING LTD |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Tewkesbury TOWN COUNCIL & OTHERS |
Defendants |
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Miss Tamsin Cox (instructed by Hedleys) for the First Defendant
Hearing dates: 8th & 9th March 2011
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Lewison:
Introduction
"It is occasionally used as a race ground; is commonable to the freemen and occupiers of front houses, from Allhallow tide to Candlemas, and is the property of Thomas Dowdeswell, Esq of Pull-Court and others."
Local legislation
"… is very ancient and decayed, and from the Violence of the Floods is so much injured as to be dangerous to Travellers, Carriages and Cattle passing over the same"
"Where then, ah! where, shall poverty reside,
To 'scape the pressure of contiguous pride?
If to some common's fenceless limits stray'd
He drives his flock to pick the scanty blade,
Those fenceless fields the sons of wealth divide,
And ev'n the bare-worn common is denied."
"An Act for inclosing Lands in the Borough and Parish of Tewkesbury, in the County of Gloucester, and for vesting the after or latter Math of a Meadow called Severn Ham, within the said Borough and Parish, in Trustees for certain Purposes."
"… the After or Latter Math of the said Meadow called Severn Ham, shall be, and the same are hereby declared to be, vested in the said Trustees and their Successors, to be appointed by virtue of this Act, for ever freed and discharged of and from all Right, Title, Interest, Claim and Demand whatsoever, which any Person or Persons could or might have in or to the same, or any Part or Parts thereof, upon such Trusts nevertheless, and to and for such Uses, Intents and Purposes, as are mentioned, expressed or declared of and concerning the same in and by this Act."
"… it shall not be lawful for the said Trustees, their Tenant or Tenants, Lessee or Lessees, to stock or depasture at any Time or Times whatsoever, on the said Meadows called Severn Ham, any Horses of His Majesty's Regiments of Dragoons, or any Bulls or Pigs; and that from the Tenth Day of October to the Twentieth Day of November in every Year it shall not be lawful for the said Trustees … to stock or depasture any Horses or Neat Cattle on the said meadow called Severn Ham, unless there shall at the same Time be stocked or depastured thereon Three Sheep at the least for every acre of which the said Meadow Called Severn Ham consists; and that from the Twentieth Day of November to the Thirteenth Day of February in every Year, it shall not be lawful for the said Trustees … to stock or depasture any Horses or Neat Cattle whatsoever on such Meadow, but that the same shall annually, during the said last mentioned Period, be stocked or depastured with Sheep exclusively."
The Quay and the mills
"All that piece or parcel of land or ground situate lying and being at or near to a place called The Quay in the Town of Tewkesbury aforesaid extending from the eastern corner of a Rick Yard in the occupation of William Browett next to the front part of a messuage or public house called the Severn Trow to or adjoining a place commonly called the Lower Landing… and bounded on the north by the river called the Old Avon on the south in part by the said Rick Yard and on the remaining part by other land of [Messrs Dowdeswell] on the east by the road adjoining the said river and on the west by the said Lower Landing…"
The Commons Registration
"The Severn Ham, Tewkesbury. That land enclosed by the River Severn, the river Avon to its junction at the Tewkesbury Lock with the Mill Avon, and the Mill Avon to its junction with the River Severn at the Lower Lode. The rights are governed by an Act of Parliament 1808, 48 Geo III and the act and a large plan is deposited with the county Archivist."
"The tract of about 178 acres known as the Severn Ham in the borough of Tewkesbury, Gloucestershire, as marked with a green verge line inside the boundary on sheet S083SE of the register map and distinguished by the number of this register unit."
"Exclusive right to the Aftermath that is the right to grazing from the 12th August until the 13th February in every year. From the 12th August to 20th November 200 cattle or 200 horses or 1000 sheep may be grazed. (However, from 10th October to 20th November horses or neat cattle shall not be grazed unless there shall at the same time be stocked or depastured thereon three sheep at the least for every acre). From the 20th November until 13th February only 1000 sheep may be grazed over the whole of the land comprised in this register unit."
"The registration of the land as common land in the Land Section and the Registration of the Trustees' grazing rights … are final."
"The conclusion reached is that the relatively small area of common land proposed to be taken for these works would not adversely affect the exercising of grazing rights or the enjoyment of the Ham by the public as a place for air and exercise, that the relocation of the access, by way of a footbridge south of the Mill, would provide a safer and more attractive approach to the Ham, and that it is expedient that consent should be given."
ADM's title
"…land known as Knaves Acre (so far as vested in the Vendor) situate in the said Severn Ham on the Quay adjoining the Borough Flour Mills."
"The Lammas rights of the Trustees of the Tewkesbury Commoners to the Second Math grown thereon between the 12th August and 12th February created by statute which so far as such rights affect Knaves Acre have been (it is believed) commuted into a payment of one moiety of the rents of the lands and buildings thereon."
"The Council are seised of the land hereinafter described and intended to be conveyed as to the first math vesture or cutting for one equal moiety of the net rents and income thereof in fee simple in possession and the Trustees are seised of the said land as to the After or Latter Math or one equal moiety of the net rents or income thereof."
"ALL THAT piece or parcel of land or yard situate at the Quay in the Borough of Tewkesbury … reputed to form part of a larger piece or parcel of land called or known as Knaves Acre."
"ALL That piece or parcel of land containing .489 acres or thereabouts forming part of land known as Severn Ham … and being part of number 261 on the Ordnance Map … which said piece of land is for identification purposes only more particularly delineated and coloured pink on the plan annexed hereto TOGETHER with the rights of the Second Math grown thereon and known as the Lammas Rights as are vested in the Council as Trustees of the Tewkesbury Commoners."
The nature of the rights created by the 1808 Act
"Perhaps a commoner's interest may be most conveniently described as a right to take or his own use part of the produce of another man's land, the landowner being entitled to all that the commoner does not take."
"It seems to me manifest that what the corporation have exercised from time immemorial is a right which, though frequently spoken of as a right of common, was, in fact, an exclusive right of pasturage."
"If it was a right of common, then, according to the old rule which was the law as early as the time of Littleton, the release of a part of the land over which the right was exerciseable would extinguish the right, and Mr. Williams's contention would prevail. If it was not a right of common, but an exclusive right of pasturage, then it is admitted that his contention must fail. I am clearly of opinion, looking to the facts of this case, that this was an exclusive right of pasturage to which the corporation of Colchester was entitled over certain lands during a certain season of the year, though it has been miscalled a right of common. It might, perhaps, be called a right of common, as being exercised by the burgesses in common; but it seems to me that the right pointed to by all the facts as to the use and enjoyment is certainly not a right of common in the legal sense of the word, but a right of exclusive pasturage."
Sections 193 and 194 of the Law of Property Act 1925
"(1) Members of the public shall, subject as hereinafter provided, have rights of access for air and exercise to any land which is a metropolitan common within the meaning of the Metropolitan Commons Acts, 1866 to 1898, or manorial waste, or a common, which is wholly or partly situated within an area which immediately before 1st April 1974 was a borough or urban district, and to any land which at the commencement of this Act is subject to rights of common and to which this section may from time to time be applied in manner hereinafter provided:
Provided that—
(a) such rights of access shall be subject to any Act, scheme, or provisional order for the regulation of the land, and to any byelaw, regulation or order made thereunder or under any other statutory authority; and
(b) the Minister shall, on the application of any person entitled as lord of the manor or otherwise to the soil of the land, or entitled to any commonable rights affecting the land, impose such limitations on and conditions as to the exercise of the rights of access or as to the extent of the land to be affected as, in the opinion of the Minister, are necessary or desirable for preventing any estate, right or interest of a profitable or beneficial nature in, over, or affecting the land from being injuriously affected, for conserving flora, fauna or geological or physiographical features of the land, or for protecting any object of historical interest and, where any such limitations or conditions are so imposed, the rights of access shall be subject thereto; and
(c) such rights of access shall not include any right to draw or drive upon the land a carriage, cart, caravan, truck, or other vehicle, or to camp or light any fire thereon; and
(d) the rights of access shall cease to apply—
(i) to any land over which the commonable rights are extinguished under any statutory provision;
(ii) to any land over which the commonable rights are otherwise extinguished if the council of the county, county borough or metropolitan district . . . in which the land is situated by resolution assent to its exclusion from the operation of this section, and the resolution is approved by the Minister."
"(1) The erection of any building or fence, or the construction of any other work, whereby access to land to which this section applies is prevented or impeded, shall not be lawful unless the consent of the Minister thereto is obtained, and in giving or withholding his consent the Minister shall have regard to the same considerations and shall, if necessary, hold the same inquiries as are directed by the Commons Act 1876 to be taken into consideration and held by the Minister before forming an opinion whether an application under the Inclosure Acts 1845 to 1882 shall be acceded to or not.
(2) Where any building or fence is erected, or any other work constructed without such consent as is required by this section, the county court within whose jurisdiction the land is situated, shall, on an application being made by the council of any county or county borough . . . or district concerned, or by the lord of the manor or any other person interested in the common, have power to make an order for the removal of the work, and the restoration of the land to the condition in which it was before the work was erected or constructed, but any such order shall be subject to the like appeal as an order made under section thirty of the Commons Act 1876.
(3) This section applies to any land which at the commencement of this Act is subject to rights of common:
Provided that this section shall cease to apply—
(a) to any land over which the rights of common are extinguished under any statutory provision;
(b) to any land over which the rights of common are otherwise extinguished, if the council of the county, county borough or metropolitan district . . . in which the land is situated by resolution assent to its exclusion from the operation of this section and the resolution is approved by the Minister.
(4) This section does not apply to any building or fence erected or work constructed if specially authorised by Act of Parliament, or in pursuance of an Act of Parliament or Order having the force of an Act, or if lawfully erected or constructed in connexion with the taking or working of minerals in or under any land to which the section is otherwise applicable, or to any electronic communications apparatus installed for the purposes of an electronic communications code network."
"It is worthy of notice that Littledale J, in his judgment, speaks of the right as a right of common, and so also Willes J, in the Court below, spoke of this right as a right of common. With all respect to two judges so eminently learned in matters of ancient law, I should say the language they used was not strictly accurate in this respect."
"… there are other rights of pasture on commonable lands which resemble common of pasture, but are in reality of a different nature, being exercised by persons in whom the whole ownership of the herbage is vested, they being rather tenants in common than commoners."
"… other lands were included in the same list which are not subject to common of pasture, though popularly described as "commonable"."
"But there may be rights over a common which, without giving an interest in the soil, exclude the owner of the soil from all enjoyment of some particular product of the common, and are, therefore, not in strictness rights of common, though for practical purposes they are of that nature."
i) any land which is a metropolitan common within the meaning of the Metropolitan Commons Acts, 1866 to 1898;
ii) manorial waste which is wholly or partly situated within a borough or urban district;
iii) a common which is wholly or partly situated within a borough or urban district;
iv) any land which at the commencement of the Act was subject to rights of common, and to which the section is made to apply.
"The term "common" means land subject at the passing of this Act to any right of common, and any land subject to be included under the provisions of the Inclosure Act 1845"
"All such lands as are herein-after mentioned, (that is to say,) all lands subject to any rights of common whatsoever, and whether such rights may be exercised or enjoyed at all times, or may be exercised or enjoyed only during limited times, seasons, or periods, …all land held, occupied, or used in common, either at all times or during any time or season, or periodically, and either for all purposes or for any limited purpose…; all land in which the property or right of or to the vesture or herbage, or any part thereof, during the whole or any part of the year, or the property or right of or to the wood or under-wood growing and to grow thereon, is separated from the property of the soil;… shall be land subject to be inclosed under this Act."
"WHEREAS by the Inclosure Acts, 1845 to 1868, upon the application and with the consent of such of the persons interested in any common as in the said Acts in that behalf specified, the Inclosure Commissioners are empowered by provisional order under their seal to authorise the inclosure of such common, provided such inclosure is made on such terms and conditions as may appear to the Commissioners to be proper for the protection of any public interests, and provided also that the Commissioners are of opinion that such inclosure would be expedient, having regard as well to the health, comfort, and convenience of the inhabitants of any cities, towns, villages, or populous places in or near any parish in which the land proposed to be inclosed, or any part thereof, may be situate (hereinafter included under the expression the benefit of the neighbourhood), as to the advantage of the persons interested in the common to which such application relates (hereinafter included under the expression private interests); but such provisional order is of no validity until and unless the Commissioners have in a report to be laid before Parliament certified that in their opinion the inclosure of such common, if made on the terms and conditions in their provisional order expressed, would be expedient, having regard to the benefit of the neighbourhood as well as to such private interests as aforesaid, nor until and unless an Act of Parliament has been passed confirming such order and affirming such certificate as aforesaid, and directing that the proposed inclosure of the common should be proceeded with accordingly."
i) Was land which now forms part of ADM's registered title ever subject to the right of sole vesture created by the 1808 Act; and, if so,
ii) Was that right validly extinguished at some time before 1 January 1926?
Did the right of sole vesture apply to ADM's land?
How rights of common may be extinguished
"Abandonment of an easement or of a profit à prendre can only, we think, be treated as having taken place where the person entitled to it has demonstrated a fixed intention never at any time thereafter to assert the right himself or to attempt to transmit it to anyone else."
"There is, in my judgment, a further reason why the court should not lightly infer an intention to abandon rights for all time from acquiescence by the owner of the dominant tenement in acts of the servient owner, which make it difficult or impossible to exercise those rights at a time when the owner of the dominant tenement does not have any need to do so. It is this. As a matter of good neighbourliness, an owner of land may well permit his neighbour to make use of the servient tenement for the time being. The dominant owner does not have any present need to exercise his rights and it is a convenience to the servient owner to store materials or vehicles, to erect machinery or structures for his business. It would, I think, be undesirable, if this generous and good neighbourly conduct could not be indulged in for fear of losing for all-time rights, which at that moment the dominant owner has no need or wish to exercise. No doubt, it must be a question of degree. The erection of a house or other substantial and permanent building, which completely defeats the right if acquiesced in by the dominant owner, would be taken as a clear indication that the right was being abandoned. But if the obstruction can be removed, albeit at some inconvenience and expense to the servient owner, the court should, in my judgment, be slow to infer that acquiescence in its existence is sufficient to amount to evidence of intention to abandon for all time the right."
"The lord has a right to approve, not as lord, but as owner of the soil. Glover v. Lane (3 T. R. 445) shews that the owner of the soil, whether lord or not, may make such an approvement. It seems to me that the lord's right is this: he may approve provided he leave sufficiency of common of pasturage for all the cattle which are entitled to feed upon it. The common may originally have been destined for a definite number of cattle, or for all cattle levant and couchant upon certain lands. Many of those rights may be extinguished, or the common itself may produce so much more herbage, that a smaller portion of that common may be sufficient for depasturing the cattle of the persons entitled, than when it was originally destined to that purpose. Now, whenever that is the case, I think that the lord has a right to inclose; but in order to justify making the inclosure, it is incumbent upon him or his grantee, when the right to inclose is questioned, to shew that there is sufficiency of common left."
Were rights extinguished over ADM's land?
Result