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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Rees v Skerrett & Anor [2001] EWCA Civ 760 (23 May 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2001/760.html Cite as: (2001) 3 TCLR 27, [2001] 1 WLR 1541, [2001] 40 EG 163, [2001] EWCA Civ 760, [2001] 3 EGLR 1, [2001] 24 EGCS 162, [2001] WLR 1541 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE PLYMOUTH COUNTY COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL Wednesday 23rd May 2001 |
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B e f o r e :
and
MR JUSTICE LLOYD
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(1) RAYMOND JOHN REES (2) JANET MARY REES (since deceased) |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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(1) PHILIP SKERRETT (2) WARNER ANDREW SOLOMON |
Respondents |
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Smith Bernal Reporting Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
The First Respondent did not appear and was not represented
The appeal was not pursued against the Second Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE LLOYD:
The facts
"Crack damage was observed by Mr Cooper. His view was that this damage was probably more likely to have been caused by the effect of wind, in particular suction to part of the gable wall, rather than by failure to provide lateral support. He agreed that the lateral support provided was minimal."
"7.2 In addition to damp penetration problems it is also clear that the flank/gable wall has undergone some structural movement since the demolition of the adjoining property. The writer's investigation has revealed that the wall is effectively free-standing with no adequate restraint from any of the intermediate floors or the roof structure over the entire terraced section of the property.
7.3 Bearing in mind the substantial window and door openings in the front elevation immediately adjacent to the flank wall and the even larger opening in the rear elevation wall of the terraced section of the property which permits the passage of the staircase, the wall is effectively a 12m high by 11m long free-standing panel of masonry of approximately 550mm thickness. BS5628: Part 1: 1978, being the relevant British Standard Design Code of Practice for the masonry walls, in clause 36.3 limits the height of a free-standing wall to 12 times the thickness. The height of this wall is almost 22 times the thickness and without any lateral restraint it can only be described as unstable."
"7.5 Any competent engineer asked to advise on the demolition works is likely to have recommended that buttressing be provided to the wall prior to the demolition works being carried out and that this buttressing should have extended over the entire height of the building and been maintained in position until such time as alternative measures such as the redevelopment of the site were complete. Likewise the design for any redevelopment should have taken full account of the need to provide restraint to the existing wall and the new structure should have been designed to carry the loads required to ensure its stability."
"4.2.3 Furthermore, the wall is effectively partially buttressed against positive wind pressures on the party wall in that the floors will restrain movement in the inward direction. The critical case for wind loading is therefore the suction case where the wind attempts to pull the wall on to the site of 14A Hastings Street. Mr Bird has given no consideration whatsoever to this load case nor to the additional effect of internal positive pressures which may occur within the building of number 14 and worsen the situation. Consequently the bending movement calculated as existing within the wall has been greatly underestimated."
"4.2.11 Mr Bird then proceeds into pure fantasy choosing to ignore totally the advice and recommendations of British Standard CP3: Chapter 5: Part 2: 1972 being the code of basic data for the design of buildings, Chapter 5 relating to loading and Part 2 specifically to wind loads. He suggests that eddies will form resulting in zones of suction and pressure if the wind were to blow away from the gable wall. He further suggests that it is not possible to ascertain the loading on to the wall in this circumstance other than by the production of a detailed model analysis using coloured smoke traces in a wind tunnel.
4.2.12 This is absurd as such model analyses have been undertaken and a great wealth of information is available to the designer to accurately predict the forces which might be applied to the gable. This wealth of information indicates that there is undoubtedly an overall suction on the gable wall in the event of the wind blowing away from the wall. Moreover a far more severe loading case would occur when the wind blows parallel to the gable-wall, in either direction. The same wealth of information indicates that in this case the suction will be 2 to 2.5 times as much.
4.2.13 Incidentally in comparison with the positive pressure due to wind blowing on the face, the value of the suction in the circumstances of wind blowing parallel to the face is likely to be in the regions of 0.7 to 1.0 times the positive pressure. This is both significant and critical."
"5.1 The primary reason for concern over the stability of the party wall to number 14 Hastings Street after the demolition of the property known as 14A Hastings Street is that this wall has now become subjected to wind load from which it would have been sheltered previously. Additionally the structure of 14A would also have provided lateral restraint to the wall with the floors arresting any outward movement of the wall which might occur."
The claim in nuisance, based on the easement of support
"What is support? The force of gravity causes the superincumbent land, or building, to press downward upon what is below it, whether artificial or natural; and it also has a tendency to thrust outwards, laterally, any loose or yielding substance such as earth or clay, until it meets with adequate resistance. Using the language of the law of easements, I say that, in the case alike of vertical and of lateral support, both to land and to buildings, the dominant tenement imposes on the servient a positive and a constant burden, the sustenance of which, by the servient tenement, is necessary for the safety and stability of the dominant."
"The nature of the right of support is not open to dispute. The owner of the servient tenement is under no obligation to repair that part of his building which provides support for his neighbour. He can let it fall into decay. If it does so and support is removed, the owner of the dominant tenement has no cause for complaint. On the other hand, the owner of the dominant tenement is not bound to sit by and watch the gradual deterioration of the support constituted by his neighbour's building. He is entitled to enter and take the necessary steps to ensure that the support continues by effecting repairs, and so forth, to the part of the building which gives the support. But what the owner of the servient tenement is not entitled to do is, by an act of his own, to remove the support without providing an equivalent."
"The case, so put, raises the question whether there is a right known to the law to be protected - by your neighbour's house - from the weather. Is there an easement of protection?
There are two kinds of easements known to the law: positive easements, such as a right of way, which give to the owner of land a right himself to do something on or to his neighbour's land: and negative easements, which give him a right to stop his neighbour doing something on his (the neighbour's) own land. The right of support does not fall neatly into either category. It seems in some way to partake of the nature of a positive easement rather than a negative easement. The one building, by its weight, exerts a thrust, not only downwards but also sideways on to the adjoining building or the adjoining land, and is thus doing something to the neighbour's land, exerting a thrust on it: see Dalton v. Angus. But a right to protection for the weather (if it exists) is entirely negative. It is a right to stop your neighbour pulling down his own house. Seeing that it is a negative easement, it must be looked at with caution. Because the law has always been very chary of creating any new negative easements."
"The reason underlying these instances is that if such an easement were to be permitted it would unduly restrict your neighbour in his enjoyment of his own land. It would hamper legitimate development: see Dalton v. Angus. Likewise here, if we were to stop a man pulling down his house, we would put a brake upon desirable improvement. Every man is entitled to pull down his house if he likes. If he exposes your house to the weather, that is your misfortune. It is no wrong on his part. Likewise every man is entitled to cut down his trees if he likes, even if it leaves you without shelter from the wind or shade from the sun: see Cochrane v. Verner. There is no such easement known to the law as an easement to be protected from the weather. The only way for an owner to protect himself is by getting a covenant from his neighbour that he will not pull down his house or cut down his trees. Such a covenant would be binding on him in contract, and it would be binding on any successors who took with notice of it."
Duty of care in relation to the demolition of one of two adjoining properties
Conclusion
LORD JUSTICE WALLER: