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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Donovan & Anor v Rana & Anor [2014] EWCA Civ 99 (14 February 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2014/99.html Cite as: [2014] EWCA Civ 99 |
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Royal Courts of Justice Strand, London, WC2A 2LL Date: Friday 14th February 2014 |
ON APPEAL FROM THE CANTERBURY COUNTY COURT
His Honour Judge Simpkiss
Case Number 9DA02088
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE RIMER
and
LORD JUSTICE VOS
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KAREN DONOVAN NIGEL DONOVAN |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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ALI ASHGAR RANA MOHAMMED BIBI ALI |
Respondents |
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Mr Peter Fox (appearing under the Bar's Direct Access Scheme) for the Respondents
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Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE VOS:
Introduction
Background facts
i) Under the heading "Rights granted for the benefit of the Property [the Building Plot]":-"the right for the transferee and her successors in Title, the owners and occupiers for the time being of the property and persons authorised by her or them at all times by day or by night to pass and re-pass with or without motor vehicles to or from the property over and along the land hatched blue on the plan [the Blue Land] (being part of the transferor's retained land) for all purposes connected with the use and enjoyment of the property but not for any other purpose ...".ii) Under the heading "Rights reserved for the benefit of other land":-
"Save for any rights of way or access expressly referred to in the Special Conditions of Sale no rights of way or access for the benefit of the property over the transferor's retained land ... shall be deemed to be expressly implied granted or reserved".iii) Under the heading "The Transferor covenants with the Transferee as follows":-
"(a) to erect within one year from the date hereof, upon the property, the dwelling house to the satisfaction of the Local Authority.
…
The transferee and its successors in Title the owners for the time being of the property shall not be entitled to any right of access or light or air or other easements or rights which would restrict or interfere with the future use of the sellers retained land for building or any other purpose".
Do the express provisions of the Transfer exclude the implied easement for which the judge held?
Was the judge wrong to imply an easement permitting the transferee to connect to the utilities (and presumably maintain the connections)?
"My Lords, the right claimed is in the nature of an easement and apart from implied grants of ways of necessity, or of what are called continuous and apparent easements [as to which, see the rule in Wheeldon v. Burrows (1879) 12 Ch D 31], the cases in which an easement can be granted by implication may be classified under two heads. The first is where the implication arises because the right in question is necessary for the enjoyment of some other right expressly granted. The principle is expressed in the legal maxim "Lex est cuicunque aliquis quid concedit concedere videtur et id sine quo res esse non potuit". Thus the right of drawing water from a spring necessarily involves the right of going to the spring for the purpose. The implication suggested in the present case does not fall under this principle; there is no express grant of any right to which the right claimed must be necessarily ancillary, nor is there any evidence that the nuisance is necessarily incidental to the Defendant's mining operations.
The second class of cases in which easements may be impliedly created depends not upon the terms of the grant itself, but upon the circumstances under which the grant was made. The law will readily imply the grant or reservation of such easements as may be necessary to give effect to the common intention of the parties to a grant of real property, with reference to the manner or purposes in and for which the land granted or some land retained by the grantor is to be used. See Jones v Pritchard [1908] 1 Ch 630 and Lyttelton Times Co. v Warners [1907] AC 476. But it is essential for this purpose that the parties should intend that the subject of the grant or the land retained by the grantor should be used in some definite and particular manner. It is not enough that the subject of the grant or the land retained should be intended to be used in a manner which may or may not involve this definite and particular use".
"Intended easements, like all other implied easements, are subject to the general rule that they are implied more readily in favour of a grantee than a grantor. But even there, as Lord Parker points out, the parties must intend that the subject of the grant shall be used in some definite and particular manner. If the grantee can establish the requisite intention, the law will then imply the grant of such easements as may be necessary to give effect to it.
There are therefore two hurdles which the grantee must surmount. He must establish a common intention as to some definite and particular user. Then he must show that the easements he claims are necessary to give effect to it. Notwithstanding the submissions of Miss Baker, for the defendants, to the contrary, I think that the second hurdle is no great obstacle to the plaintiffs in this case …".
Disposal
Lord Justice Rimer:
'Save for any rights of way or access expressly referred to in the Special Conditions of Sale, no rights of way or access for the benefit of the property over the transferor's retained land … shall be deemed to be expressly or impliedly granted …'.
Lord Justice Moore-Bick: