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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Kennerley v Beech & Anor [2012] EWCA Civ 158 (21 February 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2012/158.html Cite as: [2012] EWCA Civ 158 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE GUILDFORD COUNTY COURT
His Honour Judge Reid QC
9GU00564, 9GU00613
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE PATTEN
and
MR JUSTICE BRIGGS
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JOHN WILLIAM FRANK KENNERLEY |
Defendant/Appellant |
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- and - |
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ERIC EDWARD BEECH JILL PAULA BEECH |
Claimants/ Respondents |
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WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
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Tim Morshead QC and Timothy Polli (instructed by Hart Brown LLP) for the Respondents
Hearing date : 13th January 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Patten:
"The Purchaser shall within three months from the date hereof erect and for ever after maintain at his own expense a good and sufficient hedge or fence not less than three feet or more than six feet in height on the sides of the said property within the boundary lines marked 'T' on the said plan numbered one to the satisfaction in all respects of the Surveyor for the time being of the Vendor."
The boundary dispute
"54. There was considerable debate as to what was signified by the uncoloured areas between the two sets of parallel lines. It was submitted on behalf of the Beeches that that the words "Centre of Hedge" meant what they said, and there had at the time been a hedge in existence, which it was intended should be the boundary. There was evidence of a hedge at the top of the bank along the disputed boundary, though not elsewhere at the bottom of the bank.
55. Mr. Gordon suggested that the fact that the "Centre of Hedge" area was uncoloured meant that it showed a pathway, which was retained in the ownership of Mr. Russell. He did not explain why the words "Centre of Hedge" should have been written on the plan if there what was delineated as in fact a path. The suggestion that the uncoloured areas between the parallel lines might represent paths retained by Mr Russell might have had some appeal: they would for example have been a means of access to the Square Land. It was not one that was adopted or pursued by counsel on behalf of Mr Kennerley. It is easy to see why. It would have involved arguing that there was a narrow strip across the middle of Ruckstones' garden still belonging to Mr Russell. There was no grant of any right of way across this strip and no easement of necessity could have arisen since it would have been possible to access the southern half of the garden by going out on to the drive way and round the end of the offending path.
56. On the balance of probabilities I am satisfied that the source of the plan on the transfer of Ruckstones was the block plan submitted to the Guildford Borough Council with the planning application for Ruckstones. On that plan as originally produced for its original purpose I have no doubt the lines were intended to indicate paths. It is expressly designated as "Path" and shown running out through a gap in the hedge alongside the drive into the driveway. At the point where the gap is indicated there is still a point in their hedge and there is a large flat stone which forms what Mr. Gordon described as a nosing stone to the driveway. The site plan forming part of that application shows a 4 inch drain running down the middle between the two lines, but that is not the end of it. The layout plan that also formed part of the application shows a hedge alongside the path as indicated by the part of the solid line to the west of the Wiggly Path on the Land Registry plans.
57. That does not answer the question whether the northern of those two lines was hijacked when the plan was adopted as a transfer plan to delineate a hedge. If the hedge alongside the path continued eastwards beyond the Wiggly Path there is no reason why when adapting the plan for the purpose of being a transfer plan the parties should not have decided to adopt the delineation of the path as the delineation of the adjoining hedge. On the balance of probabilities it is my view that they did so, making clear what they had done by writing in the words "Centre of Hedge" on the plan.
58. Mr. Gordon appears entirely to discount the words "Existing Hedge" on the May 1954 transfer plan. I am unable to see why he should do so. He could not explain why the words "Centre of Hedge" should have been written on the plan if the draftsman did not intend to indicate the presence of a hedge and that it was to be a boundary feature.
59. It is true that this does not fit in with his theory that the boundary ran along the rope-edged path, but that is no valid reason for rejecting clear words on a plan accepted at the time by parties who knew the property well. It would be remarkable if they had identified the boundary as being "Centre of Hedge" if there was no hedge and the intention was in fact that the boundary should be a path.
60. Matters were not simplified by Mr. Roberts' apparent refusal to recognise that the rope-edged path had ever existed. From my view of the property I am satisfied that in this regard Mr. Gordon is correct and there was a path (the course of which is still apparent on the ground) edged by rope-edged tiling (remnants of which can be seen) and that the path ran from the edge of the drive across from west to east along the south of the embankment.
61. In my judgment the words "Centre of Hedge" meant what they said and the boundary was intended to be the centre of a hedge. The November 1954 transfer was intended to fit in with the May 1954 transfer and provide for a boundary down the centre of a hedge. It would be remarkable if both the 27 May 1954 transfer and the 5 November 1954 transfer referred to a hedge as a boundary feature if there were no hedge or it was not intended that whatever hedge there was should be a boundary feature. It is unfortunate that what appears to have been an effort to avoid the fairly minor expenditure of having a proper plan for the two transfers has resulted in so much confusion over half a century later."
"101. The important one of the features on the 27 May 1954 transfer plan is the "Existing Hedge". There is no evidence of a hedge at the bottom of the bank. Nor (contrary to one caustic observation by Mr Gordon) did Mr Roberts suggest that there was one hedge at the top of the bank and one at the bottom. There was evidence of both a fence and hedge at the bottom of the tennis lawn.
102. A feature of the transfer 27 May 1954 is that by paragraph 9 of the Third Schedule Mr Courtney covenanted within three months from the date of the transfer to "erect and for ever after maintain at his own expense a good and sufficient hedge or fence not less than three nor more than six feet in height on the sides of the said property within the boundary lines marked 'T' on [Plan No.1]. The 'T' marks are on the southern boundary.
103. So far as material to this dispute, that means that one starts from the north east corner of the property where the public footpath meets Warwick's Bench. The 27 May 1954 transfer plan shows a measurement of 171 feet which must be taken south from that point along the boundary of the footpath. Mr. Gordon stated that the exact northern point of this line might be uncertain because approximately 0.5m of the northern corner of the brick wall on that boundary had been recently rebuilt (apparently following an incident with a motor vehicle) and that it was quite possible that the end of the wall was not rebuilt in exactly the same position. His view was that the measurement of 171 feet "nearly coincides with the eastward extension of the line of the lower embankment/east-west pathway", and that "it does so within 0.6m (2 ft)". This, he felt supported his view that the southern edge of the pathway represented the boundary.
104. Mr Gordon supported his view that the southern boundary of Westwick lay on the south edge of the rope-edged path by reference to measurements he had scaled from the title plan SY149666 from the northern edge of the path to the front door of Old Westwick was "approx 27.15m" while the distance to the solid line on that plan immediately to the north of the path was 26m. He refined the figures by measuring the embankment on site as having "an actual width of approx 1.25m" at this point and the distance from the wall at the side of the garden doorway at Old Westwick to the foot of the embankment retaining wall (ie the northern edge of the path) as 26.9m. This indicated to him that the solid line on the plan to SY149666 was intended to represent the top of the embankment and not Old Westwick's southern boundary.
105. Mr. Roberts disagreed. He took the view that the measurement of 171 feet, which he erroneously described as being 51.1m rather than 52.12m, (although in evidence he corrected this as a typographical error) ran down to the hedge which is identified on the May 1954 transfer plan. He pointed out that the distance from the north-east corner of Westwick to the centre of the parallel lines scaled on the file plan to the centre of the east-west parallel lines is 51.5m or 168 feet 111/2 inches (give or take 0.2m or 7.87 inches). He noted that if one extended the fence line B2-B3 on Mr Gordon's Plan A (representing the line of the fence at the bottom of Westwick's tennis lawn and the top of the bank) to the eastern boundary wall, then the scaled distance from the north east corner was 51.8m or 169 feet 11.37 inches. These figures, in his view, were too close for coincidence and indicated that the hedge at the bottom of the tennis lawn and the top of the bank was the boundary.
106. In my judgment the boundary of the land transferred to Mr Courtney was the hedge which stood at the top of the embankment. The property transferred to Mr Tucker included the embankment and the paper title of the Beeches extends to the top of the embankment.
107. My primary reasons for this conclusion are as follows:
a. Both the May 1954 transfer plan and the November 1954 transfer plans show that the relevant boundary between Westwick and Ruckstones was to be a hedge.
b. The measurement of 171feet on the May 1954 transfer plan could be consistent with either the top of the bank or the edge of the path being the relevant boundary. Even putting aside any doubts as to whether that measurement was inch perfect, it does no more than provide material on which each side could found a respectable argument.
c. There was however a covenant by Mr Courtney to "erect and for ever after maintain … a good and sufficient hedge or fence…" along that boundary.
d. There was a hedge at the top of the bank and also a fence. There is nothing to suggest that there was ever either a fence or a hedge at the bottom of the bank.
e. While, as Mr. Gordon observed, there is a natural logic in retaining embankments for the purpose of maintenance to ensure that the upper land would not collapse, there is equally an interest in the owner of the land below in owning the embankment so as to be able to preserve his property from the collapse of the embankment. Mr Russell was in a position to determine what he would sell and what he would retain for his own benefit. The point does not assist Mr Kennerley: at best it is neutral."
" Mr. Gordon was on stronger ground when he fixed point X3 on his plan. He derived this from measuring 47 feet 6 inches (14.48m) from his point E4, which was the northern edge of the stone slab at the edge of the driveway at the point where the east-west path met the driveway. I have already held that measurement of 47 feet 6 inches was intended to show the dimension between the edge of the driveway and the south west corner of the land which had been sold to Mr. Courtney by the transfer dated 27 May 1954. Although that transfer was ineffective in that it did not transfer to Mr. Tucker the sliver of land to the east of the Wiggly Path which had already been transferred to Mr. Courtney, once the subsequent transfer of the sliver of land in March 1955 had taken place it was possible to look back to the measurement of 47 feet 6 inches on the November 1954 transfer to assist in fixing the boundary line. "
"76. In one of the rare matters on which they did agree, Mr. Gordon and Mr. Roberts agreed that the north-south line showed marked X1 to X3 on Mr. Gordon's plan was correctly positioned if I accepted the annotated dimension of 47 feet 6 inches shown on the transfer plan as defining the boundary. As I have done so, it follows that the paper boundary between Ruckstones and Old Westwick is a straight line passing from point X3 on Mr Gordon's plan through X2 and onwards northwards until it meets the driveway."
The right of way dispute
"2 …My late husband used this right of way for approximately 12 months merely to gain access to the property to the purpose of cultivating the said kitchen garden.
3. A few months after the date of the said transfer my said husband commenced cultivation of a kitchen garden on my said property known as Old Westwick and from such time ceased to use the kitchen garden at Ruckstones and the right of way giving access thereto.
4. I can state from my own knowledge that since 1955 neither my late husband nor myself have ever used the said right of way across Ruckstones at any time."
"136. So far as the contention on behalf of Mr. Kennerley that is the right of way could exist, in effect as a form of jus spatiandi, even without a terminus ad quem, it seems to me that point is without substance. The right was reserved as a right of way, not as in the Ellenborough Park case for the enjoyment of a pleasure ground. It was not expressed to be reserved for the purpose of enjoying Ruckstones' garden. At the time of the grant Ruckstones had not yet been built and in any event, the idea that a right might be granted to enable someone to wander into their neighbour's domestic garden for the purpose of enjoying it is so bizarre that it would require very plain words before the court would be persuaded of that construction.
137. So far as the suggestion is made that there would be an advantage to Mr. Kennerley in having the use of the path to inspect his property, at the time of the grant, the land running alongside the Wiggly Path was no longer owned by Mr. Russell, having already been sold to Mr. Courtney. It cannot have been the intention of the parties to reserve to Mr. Russell a right over the Wiggly Path for the purpose of inspecting property he had already sold.
138. In my judgment the right of way over the Wiggly Path was reserved by Mr. Russell for the benefit of Mr. Hopegood so that he could obtain access to his vegetable garden, and that when the vegetable garden was given up the right of way ceased to exist. In practical terms the line of the path continued to exist from the driveway down as far as Ruckstones for some time: Mrs Berry said she used a path which I think must be identified as the top end of the Wiggly Path when she went to see Mrs Phillips.
139. In these circumstances, I do not need to express a concluded view on the further point taken on behalf of the Beeches that the right of way had ceased to exist, by reason of non-user and the change in the land, however since the point was argued I will express my tentative conclusion.
140. The courts are extremely reluctant to hold that a party has lost a property right by abandonment. I was referred to Benn v Hardinge (1992) 66 P&CR 246 in which non-user for 175 years was not sufficient. In Gotobed v Pridmore (1971) EG 759, as quoted in Benn v Hardinge Buckley LJ said:
"To establish abandonment of an easement the conduct of the dominant owner must, in our judgement have been such as to make it clear that he had at the relevant time a firm intention that neither he nor any successor in title of his should thereafter make use of the easement… abandonment is not, we think, to be likely in the third owners of property do not normally wish to divest themselves of it unless it is to their advantage to do so, notwithstanding they may have no present a use for it."
141. In the present case not only did Mrs Hopegood, and before her husband, have no present use for the right of way, but there was no prospect of their ever having a need for the right of way. Furthermore Mr. Kennerley's predecessors in title had stood by, whilst the garden of Ruckstones was altered in such a way that is the northern part of the path had become obliterated and ceased to exist. This occurred between 1982 and 1984. The Phillips got professionals in to do the bulk of the work, creating a levelled paved area with a small retaining wall together with some landscaping. Mrs Phillips and her son James then did what she described as "tidying up" afterwards. The path and all trace of it was obliterated by these works. In those circumstances, had it been necessary. I would have held that this was one of those rare cases where the easement had been lost by abandonment."
"a right enjoyed by one over the land of another does not possess the status of an easement unless it accommodates and serves the dominant tenement, and is reasonably necessary for the better enjoyment of that tenement, for if it has no necessary connexion therewith, although it confers an advantage upon the owner and renders his ownership of the land more valuable, it is not an easement at all, but a mere contractual right personal to and only enforceable between the two contracting parties."
Conclusion
Mr Justice Briggs :
Lady Justice Arden :