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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> The Police Commissioners of the Burgh of Partick v. Great Western Steam Laundry (Ltd) [1886] ScotLR 23_318 (27 January 1886) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1886/23SLR0318.html Cite as: [1886] SLR 23_318, [1886] ScotLR 23_318 |
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A local Act provided that “all houses and every other building whatever” should be at least 30 feet from the centre line of a certain road. A proprietor who was erecting a house more than 30 feet from this line proposed to erect on his ground in front of it, but within 30 feet of the centre line, an ornamental fence consisting of a stone parapet a foot high surmounted by a railing. Held ( diss. Lord Young) that such a fence was not objectionable as a building in the sense of the provision.
This was a Special Case to have the opinion of the Court upon certain questions arising between the Police Commissioners of the burgh of Partick, who were, as local authority, vested under the Roads and Bridges (Scotland) Act 1878 (41 and 42 Vict. cap. 51) with the management and maintenance of the highways within the burgh, and certain proprietors and superiors of ground, under the following circumstances:—The burgh of Partick is intersected by various roads and streets, and amongst others by a road of communication leading from the main road from Glasgow to the drawbridge over the Forth and Clyde Canal, thence to the Yoker Road near Blawarthill. This road was known as the “Crow Road.” Prior to the coming into force of the Roads and Bridges (Scotland) Act 1878 the Crow Road was under the charge of the Yoker Road trustees under various local statutes, including the Act 8 and 9 Vict. cap. 195.
The Great Western Steam Laundry Company (Limited), incorporated under the Companies Acts 1862–1880, were proprietors of certain property lying along the Crow Road, the superior of which was James Gordon Oswald, Esq. of Scotstoun and Balshagray. The company were in the course of erecting and completing on their own ground certain buildings to be used as a steam laundry, the front wall of which buildings was at least 60 .feet from the centre of the Crow Road. They intended, however, to erect along the Crow Road, so far as their ground extended, a parapet wall of 1 foot in height, surmounted by an ornamental iron railing This wall—which in the Special Case was designed a “fence”—was to be placed 25 feet from the centre of the Crow Road. The result of their whole operations would have been to increase the breadth of the road by a width of from 6 to 9 feet. The Police Commissioners of the burgh of Partick, acting under this Act, insisted that this parapet wall and railing erected by the Steam Laundry Company, should be placed at a distance of 30 feet from the centre of the Crow Road. The ground on which they maintained this contention was that section 18 of the Act 8 and 9 Vict. cap. 195 (the preamble of which set forth that “it is expedient that further and more effectual powers should be granted for widening, repairing, and improving” certain roads therein mentioned, including the Crow Road), enacts “that all houses, and every other building whatever,” to be built on the sides of the said roads should be erected at the distance of at least 30 feet from the centre of said roads under a penalty; and that 1 and 2 Will. IV. cap. 43, incorporated with the Roads and Bridges (Scotland) Act 1878, enacts by section 91 (referred to in section 102 of the Act of 1878, quoted infra) “that no houses, walls, or other buildings above 7 feet high shall be erected without the consent of the trustees previously obtained in writing, and no new enclosures or plantations shall be made within the distance of 25 feet from the centre of any turnpike road.”
The Roads and Bridges (Scotland) Act 1878, sec. 102, provides—“Notwithstanding the hereinbefore contained enactments that the local Acts now in force relating to turnpike roads and statute-labour roads shall cease to be in force at the respective times hereinbefore provided, all the provisions of such Acts which provide that houses, walls, or other buildings shall not be erected, or that new enclosures or plantations shall not be made within certain distances therein specified from the centre of such respective roads which are greater than the distance prescribed by section ninety-one of the Act first and second King William the Fourth, chapter forty-three, applied by this Act to those roads, are hereby continued in force; and the trustees, boards, district committees, and burgh local authorities, having the management
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of such respective roads, and their officers, may enforce such provisions in the same manner as the trustees having the management of such respective roads under such local Acts, and their officers, might now enforce the same.” In order to settle the question thus raised this Case was stated, the parties of the first part being the Police Commissioners, the Steam Laundry Company being the parties of the second part, and Mr Oswald the party of the third part; he was superior of the ground on which the parapet wall and railing were being put, and also was proprietor of other feuing ground. Part of his ground was within and part without the burgh. It was admitted that since 8 and 9 Vict. cap. 195, and within the last ten years, dwelling-houses had been built within the burgh and on the Crow Road, the walls and railings surrounding which were 20 feet from the centre of the road, but that this was before the second parties had jurisdiction. The parties were agreed not only on the facts already stated, but also that the statutes upon which the question submitted depended were 8 and 9 Vict. cap. 195, sec. 18; and the Roads and Bridges (Scotland) Act 1878; and those portions of the Act 1 and 2 Will. IV. cap. 43, incorporated therewith, particularly section 91 thereof.
The questions of law submitted for the opinion of the Court were—“(1) Is a wall and railing of the description above mentioned a ‘building’ within the meaning of section 18 of the Act 8 and 9 Vict. cap. 195? (2) Are the first parties entitled to insist that the said wall and railing along the second parties' ground shall be placed at a distance of at least 30 feet from the centre of the said Crow Road.”
Argued for the first parties—The Act 8 and 9 Vict. cap. 195, sec. 18, enacted “that all houses and every other building whatever” erected on the sides of the road to which the Act applied, one of which was the Crow Road, should be erected at the distance of at least 30 feet from the centre of the road. The Act 1 and 2 Will. IV. cap. 43, sec. 91, re-enacted in the Roads and Bridges (Scotland) Act 1878, provides—“That no houses, walls, or other buildings above 7 feet high shall be erected without the consent of the trustees, and no new enclosure or plantations shall be made within the distance of 25 feet from the centre of any turnpike road.” Walls as well as houses were included in the term building. This erection was a building within the meaning of the statute. The height of the wall did not matter; if it was built at all it was a building, and so could not be placed at a less distance than 30 feet from the centre of the road.
Argued for the parties of the second and third part—This erection was not a building at all in the sense of the statute; it was merely a fence; and because some masonry was used to keep the railing firm that did not turn the fence into a building. A hedge might have been grown there without objection. This wall and railing was to follow the line of an old fence. The provision in the 91st section of the Act 1 and 2 Will. IV., which must be read along with 8 and 9 Vict., did not apply to fences, as to them there was a special provision in the 61st section.
Authority— Haig v. Henderson, June 12, 1830, 8 S. 912.
At advising—
Now, the description of the particular fence and its construction is stated thus in the Case. It is said that the parties intend to erect along the Crow Road, so far as extending along their ground, a parapet wall of 1 foot in height, surmounted by an ornamental iron railing of 5 feet 3 inches in length, the wall and railing being thus together not higher than 6 feet 3 inches, as a fence for the protection of their ground and buildings. The question therefore is, whether a fence so constructed, with 1 foot of a parapet wall apparently as a socket for the iron railing, and with about 5
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Now, the question arises whether this substantially ornamental fence is or is not within the proper construction of these clauses. My opinion is that it is not within these clauses. I think the fence is a fence and nothing else. It was intended by the parties for a fence. It was calculated to be a fence and was erected for that purpose. It was adopted for nothing else. Accordingly, I cannot see any ground for holding that it should be called a building when in point of fact it is a fence, and has no other use or purpose or adaptability. I have looked very carefully at the statutes, and I can find in them no provision whatever which entitles the road trustees to interfere with the position of such a fence. I do find certain provisions about new enclosures, but this is not a new enclosure, because from the statements made in the Case it appears that the line of this fence is exactly in the same position as the fence which it is intended to succeed. There was, I repeat, a previous fence, and the present erection about which the complaint is made is exactly in the same line.
Accordingly, the view which I generally take of this matter is simply this, that there is no provision in the statutes at all to regulate the position in which a fence is to be placed, and for the best of all reasons, that it is the right of the proprietor of the fence to have it placed in the position where he desires it. That is not a right with which the road trustees have any title to interfere. On the contrary, it would rather seem that there was an obligation on the proprietors to have proper fences betwixt the road and their property where the ground was truly of the nature of unenclosed ground. Be that as it may, however, the general view I adopt is that this is not a building. I do not care to define what a “building” is. I think the statutes might have been worded with a little more precision upon that matter, but upon that subject I shall not enter. No doubt it has been suggested that the word building here indicated implies habitation. That may be so; I will not say that it is necessarily so. I can conceive that many things might come to be enclosed as buildings which were not intended or adapted for habitation. But I can find nothing at all in the present case indicative of buildings, excepting the fact that a certain amount of masonry is used in erecting this fence. Surely that is not a sufficient thing to make a fence a building in the sense of this statute. The same thing might be said of any foot-pavement in Edinburgh for instance. A foot-pavement is made of stone and mortar in the same way as this parapet wall. Again, the same thing might be said of the edging of a footpath along the highway. No one could say that it was a building, although stone and lime are used in the construction of it precisely in the same way as they are used in the construction of this parapet wall, which is merely a socket for the iron stanchions which constitute the fence.
I may mention that a case of this kind did occur a great many years ago under the former Acts. I think it occurred in 1830 [
Haig v. Henderson,
sup. cit.] The question arose whether a stone wall which was a fence 3
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Then the description in the case goes on after the words I have read, “of one foot in height surmounted by an ornamental iron railing of 5 feet 3 inches in height, the wall and railing being thus together not higher than 6 feet 3 inches, as a fence for the protection of their ground and buildings.” That is the kind of fence which they propose to erect, but if it had been a garden wall 10 or 20 feet high, it would just have been a fence all the same, and so far as I can see, although our judgment will be formally limited to the particular thing here in question, I do not see in the ground upon which the answer, conform to the judgment which your Lordship has expressed, will proceed, anything which will not be applicable to a wall of the description I have mentioned 10 or 20 feet high—that is, just a wall like the present wall; it is not a house—not the least like a house—any more than the wall in question. If such a wall as that—I mean of the height I have mentioned—were erected in perfectly good faith as a garden wall, and trees trained upon the other side of it, which is a legitimate use of a garden fence, and it subsequently honestly occurred to the proprietor that he would convert that into the wall of a house by extending a roof from that wall to another wall erected on the inside of it, the question arises, would that be a lawful proceeding? Now, it seems to me, according to the judgment your Lordships are to pronounce, that it would be quite a lawful proceeding. For the wall was erected as a fence, although the proprietor might wish to convert it into a house. Now, would that be a contravention of the statute? The thing is there; you are putting a thing within 30 feet of the centre of the road which is not there already.
On the whole matter, I am of a different opinion from your Lordship, and think that in conformity with the language of the statute—and I think with the meaning of the Legislature—any wall to be erected must be kept back the very short distance which is prescribed. It is no great hardship to keep it back that distance. The Legislature in the public interest having prescribed that any such wall should be kept back that distance, I think I would be disposed to give effect to that statutory regulation, and say that it would be violated by any wall whatsoever within that distance from the centre of the road. But I end as I began by saying that with respect to the particular thing the case is of little importance indeed.
Now, it appears to me that we ought not to deal with anything except that which is presented to us upon the present occasion. The question presented to us concerns the particular erection of which the Police Commissioners of Partick complain. The question we have to decide is, is that a wall, or is it not a building within the sense of the statute? Our interpretation of the statute is with reference to the thing of which complaint is made, and with reference to that only. I can quite imagine that there might be difficulties in regard to decisions to be given upon other fences. For there are fences and fences; and you might have a wall so constructed of such dimensions, that upon a reasonable interpretation of the statute, and with reference to the way in which it behoved that such buildings should be erected, it would be proper to extend the operation of this clause to it. But what throws light upon the present fence is that this wall is intended to serve the purpose of a fence pure and simple. I think this notion is sanctioned by language, and by the statutory provisions found in the Turnpike Act of 1832, in a clause which has been re-enacted in the Roads Act of 1878. One of the things specified in that Act, which may not be constructed within a certain distance of the centre of the road is a wall, I think, 7
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I entirely agree, not only with the conclusion at which your Lordship has arrived, but also with the reasons by which your Lordship's opinion has been supported.
The Court answered both questions in the negative.
Counsel for First Parties— Lang. Agents— Macbrair & Keith, S.S.C.
Counsel for Second Party— Low. Agent— Donald Mackenzie, W. S.