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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Woods & Anor v Riley & Anor [2005] EWCA Civ 1129 (04 July 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2005/1129.html Cite as: [2005] EWCA Civ 1129 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM LEICESTER COUNTY COURT
(HHJ BRUNNING)
Strand London, WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE RIX
LORD JUSTICE CARNWATH
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(1) CAROLE WOODS | ||
(2) RICHARD HUGHES | Appellants | |
-v- | ||
(1) NIGEL RILEY | ||
(2) ANN MARY RILEY | Respondents |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR CONRAD RUMNEY (instructed by Messrs DFA Law) appeared on behalf of the Respondents
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Crown Copyright ©
"Not to use the property or any part thereof for any purpose which may be or become a nuisance or annoyance to the Transferors or their successors in title to the retained land and the land edged red on the said plan or any part thereof or which tends to diminish or lessen the value of the retained land or any building or erected thereon or any part thereof."
"Since in or about September 2001 the Defendants have carried on use of the Property in breach of their obligations under the Covenant:
(a) . . . in or about September 2001, the Defendants commenced work at the Property to convert the store immediately adjacent to the Claimants' premises into an area accessed internally from, and incorporated within, the Defendants' retail shop premises;
(b) In or about February 2002 the Defendants inserted two clear glazed and opening roof windows in the Property in a position overlooking the private amenity area of the Claimants' property. Both of these windows infringed upon the privacy of the private amenity area of the Property. The windows remain an infringement.
(c) On or about 7 November 2002 the Defendants commenced further building work at the Property to relocate the sorting office (5 High Street) to the New Structure immediately adjacent to the gable end wall of the Claimants' property and have affixed racking to the said wall.
(d) Further still, in or about February 2003, the defendants erected fences and gates at the rear of the Property with a view to leaving the Post Office as a separate business unit independent of their residential premises at (5 High Street) (formerly the Post Office was ancillary to the residential use). The effect of the fences and gates is that the employees of the Post Office now use a footpath immediately adjacent to Claimants' property causing increased noise and lack of privacy and conflicts with the claimants' own and only access gate and is in breach of the Claimants' right of access to the Claimants' property.
(e) Furthermore, the Defendants having been actively attempting to sell the Post Office as an independent commercial business unit in breach of Condition 6 of the 1991 planning permission (rather than, as already stated, using it as ancillary to the Post Office business) the obvious and inevitable effect will be a change of ownership of the Property into the hands of persons without any, or a significant lack of, interest in complying with the obligations of the Covenant as neighbours."
(a) The New Structure area is in use as a sorting office six days each week, from 6.45am each day. The Claimants are awoken by the noise of newspapers being delivered, Post Office employees reporting for work, the arrival and departure of delivery vans, the slamming of doors to vehicles and the fire door to the Post Office premises recently located immediately adjacent to the end gable wall of the Claimants' property, and the sorting of mail into pigeon holes affixed to that wall. The Claimants have suffered stress, inconvenience and loss of enjoyment. The Second Claimant has to date been off work for six months as a result of the Defendants' actions. The claimants have lost rental income.
(b) Generally there is increased noise from very early in the morning as vans arrive, motors idle for a moment, doors are opened, persons are heard using the pathway and accessing the sorting office from a single door (where the double door used to be when it was a storage area). All of this occurs as a matter of a metre or two from the Claimants' master bedroom. More recently, after an approach to the Royal Mail, the deliveries have been postponed until 6.45am.
(c) The noise of use of the sorting office is transmitted easily through the Claimants' gable end wall because of the keying in of the various structures against and into that wall.
(d) All of the incidents are sufficient to awake a normal person from sleep six days a week.
(e) Furthermore, there is no reason why the delivery of papers and mail could not be undertaken on the parking area beside the Post Office a sufficient distance away from the Claimants' property. Such used to be the case when the sorting office was part of No 5 High Street, prior to the works complained of which have encompassed the relocation of the sorting office."
"As a result . . . of the planning permission and [the Rileys'] wish to convert the store into an integral part of the Post Office, trouble broke out. When drilling started to reinforce the floor of the store relations between the Rileys and Mr Hughes and Miss Woods went downhill. The store was altered despite protests by the claimants. A new Post Office counter was created linked by a secure door to the store. The Post Office itself entered into a shop smaller than the area previously used and the property of number 5, the living accommodation, was physically separated from the Post Office cum shop."
Since that work was carried out, the position had been and now is that the shop leads into the Post Office with the Post Office counter; and the sorting office -- being the old lean-to shed -- is to the rear or east of that counter. The sorting office abuts onto the wall of the barn conversion.
"There are other movements. At about 6.45 Mr Rhone who occupies the property at 1A High Street [which is another of the development properties] leaves for work. His wife presumably does so as well to get to her own work. Mr Hughes himself leaves around seven."
The problem, as the judge indicated in paragraph 62, was that the noise created by those movements had affected Miss Woods. She was woken by it and she found it a nuisance.
"It is in my judgment a use of premises which is reasonable. It is part and parcel of that to be expected from such a shop within a village in the early morning.
It is said that deliveries could be made in the street. I accept the evidence of the Rileys that for security reasons the deliveries need to be made at the back. I am satisfied that the decision Mr Riley made to transfer sorting the post from his own house to the store was made and was necessarily made at the instigation of the Environmental Health Officer. Had Mr Riley not effected the transfer it would have led to Health and Safety problems. It was not in any sense therefore done with deliberation to affect the Hughes'.
The use of the store is a use of the premises which, in my judgment, is a reasonable one. It is adjacent to the Post Office. It is not a use that I judge to be in breach of covenant or to be a tortious use. The coming[s] and goings that occur are ones that, it seems to me, those living in this area can reasonably be expected to accept as Mr and Mrs Riley are reasonably entitled to carry them out."
So the judge dismissed the claim for breach of covenant and the breach of common law nuisance.
"[The use] is part and parcel of that to be expected of a shop of this kind within a village in the early morning."
"The extent to which these measurements are of any assistance to me is limited. It helps to see the level at which noise is measured. It is also interesting that throughout the period there is what is called background noise which is within 15 per cent, at most 20 per cent, of the level caused by the van arriving."
Order: appeal dismissed. Appellants to pay costs of appeal, summarily assessed at £11,500. Permission to appeal refused.