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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 >> Gosling & Anor v Bradbury & Anor [2023] EWHC 199 (Ch) (06 February 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2023/199.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 199 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS IN BIRMINGHAM
CHANCERY APPEALS (ChD)
33 Bull Street Birmingham B4 6DS |
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B e f o r e :
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(1) PETER GOSLING (2) STEVEN TRANTER (IN THEIR CAPACITY AS TRUSTEES OF THE TRUST OF DENNIS ANSTEY DECEASED |
Claimants/ Respondents |
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- and - |
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(1) DANIEL BRADBURY (2) VICKIE BRADBURY |
Defendants/ Appellants |
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Tony Watkin (instructed by Higgs LLP) for the Respondents
Hearing date: 31 January 2023
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Zacaroli :
"the right to take water from the spring in Ordinance Survey Enclosure 7960 by means of the pump in that Enclosure and the pipes leading therefrom (insofar as such pipes are within the boundary of the property hereby conveyed) and the right to enter upon the property hereby conveyed for the purpose of inspecting cleansing and maintaining the said spring and of inspecting cleansing and maintaining and repairing any pipes and apparatus used in connection with the water supply to [Rashwood Lodge] the Vendors or other the persons exercising such rights making good all damage occasioned in the course of or by reason of such entry."
"1. The Claimants' Land benefits from an easement ('the Easement') over the Defendants' Land in […the terms granted by the 1982 Conveyance, as quoted above]
2. The Easement is a priority interest within the meaning of the Land Registration Act 2002, s.29 and Schedule 3, and upon the Defendants purchasing the Defendants' Land they did so subject to the burden of the Easement.
3. The Easement includes ancillary rights to enjoy the passage of electricity across the Defendants' Land to supply the (or any replacement/s) water pump which supplies water pursuant to the terms of the Easement, to the Claimants' Land ('the Ancillary Rights').
4. The Ancillary Rights include:
(1) The right for the Claimants' and their successors in title to arrange for a supply of electricity from the utility supplier onto the Defendants' Land;
(2) The right for the Claimants and their successors in title to make use of any in situ infrastructure and apparatus located on the Defendants' Land (including cables and meters) which supplied electricity to the water pump prior to it being turned off by the Defendants; and/or
(3) The right for the Claimants and their successors in title to install such infrastructure and apparatus (including cables and meters) on and across the Defendants' Land to enable the Claimants' Land to obtain a supply of electricity from the utility provider to the Water Pump (or any replacement/s);
(4) Rights of access for the Claimants and their successors in title, any beneficiaries, servants and agents onto and across the Defendants' Land for the purposes of installing, replacing, maintaining and checking (including checking meters) the infrastructure and apparatus.
For the avoidance of doubt all rights granted under the Easement and Ancillary Rights include the right for lawful occupiers of the Claimants' Land to enjoy those rights.
5. The Claimants are entitled to register the Easement as an Easement which burdens the Defendants' Land together with the Ancillary Rights as declared by the Court.
6. The actions of the Defendants in turning off the electricity supply to the water pump on or before the 18 April 2019 was an unlawful interference with the Easement and Ancillary Rights."
The grounds of appeal
(1) The judge failed to conclude that the supply of electricity to the pump is necessary to the exercise or enjoyment of the water easement and it is not in any event necessary;
(2) The judge was wrong to conclude that the water easement granted an ancillary right to the passage of electricity via Ford Farm to the pump because such a right is positive in nature;
(3) The judge was wrong to hold that the water easement was a legal easement because it imparted no benefit to Rashwood Lodge;
(4) The judge was wrong to conclude that the appellants had interfered with the respondents' rights under the water easement;
(5) The judge was wrong to conclude that the water easement was a legal easement that bound the appellants as successors in title to Ford Farm, because it was made clear in correspondence between the vendor and purchaser at the time of the 1982 Conveyance that positive obligations were imposed by the water easement on the owner of Ford Farm.
Easements and ancillary rights
Ground 1
Ground 2
Ground 3
"In its report Making Land Work: Easements, Covenants and Profits à Prendre (2011) (Law Com No 327), para 2.25 the Law Commission advised: "the easement must accommodate, or accommodate and serve, the dominant land. The requirement is that the right must be of some practical importance to the benefited land, rather than just to the right-holder as an individual: it must be reasonably necessary for the better enjoyment of that land."
And at §38
"In the present case, the Court of Appeal [2017] Ch 516, para 56 described this requirement as follows: "In our view, the requirement that an easement must be a right of utility and benefit is the crucial requirement. The essence of an easement is to give the dominant tenement a benefit or utility as such. Thus, an easement properly so called will improve the general utility of the dominant tenement. It may benefit the trade carried on upon the dominant tenement or the utility of living there."
Ground 4
Ground 5
Conclusion