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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Newhaven Port and Properties Ltd v East Sussex County Council & Ors [2012] EWHC 647 (Admin) (21 March 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2012/647.html Cite as: [2012] WLR(D) 94, [2012] ACD 85, [2012] 3 All ER 1361, [2012] 14 EG 63, [2012] 3 WLR 709, [2012] EWHC 647 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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NEWHAVEN PORT AND PROPERTIES LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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EAST SUSSEX COUNTY COUNCIL |
Defendant |
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- and- |
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NEWHAVEN TOWN COUNCIL |
1st Interested Party |
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-and- |
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THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR ENVIRONMENT, FOOD & RURAL AFFAIRS |
2nd Interested Party |
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WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7404 1424
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr Stephen Sauvain, QC and Mr John Hunter (instructed by Legal & Democratic Services Solicitors) for the Defendant
Mr Edwin Simpson (instructed by Hedleys Solicitors LLP) for the 1st Interested Party
Mr David Forsdick (instructed by Treasury Solicitors) for the 2nd Interested Party
Hearing dates: 8th, 9th, 10th and 11th November 2011
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE OUSELEY:
Introduction
The Commons Act 2006
"(1) Any person may apply to the commons registration authority to register land to which this Part applies as a town or village green in a case where subsection (2), (3) or (4) applies.
(2) This subsection applies where—
(a) a significant number of the inhabitants of any locality, or of any neighbourhood within a locality, have indulged as of right in lawful sports and pastimes on the land for a period of at least 20 years; and
(b) they continue to do so at the time of the application.
(3) This subsection applies where—
(a) a significant number of the inhabitants of any locality, or of any neighbourhood within a locality, indulged as of right in lawful sports and pastimes on the land for a period of at least 20 years;
(b) they ceased to do so before the time of the application but after the commencement of this section; and
(c) the application is made within the period of two years beginning with the cessation referred to in paragraph (b).
(4) This subsection applies (subject to subsection (5)) where—
(a) a significant number of the inhabitants of any locality, or of any neighbourhood within a locality, indulged as of right in lawful sports and pastimes on the land for a period of at least 20 years;
(b) they ceased to do so before the commencement of this section; and
(c) the application is made within the period of five years beginning with the cessation referred to in paragraph (b).
(5) Subsection (4) does not apply in relation to any land where—
(a) planning permission was granted before 23 June 2006 in respect of the land;
(b) construction works were commenced before that date in accordance with that planning permission on the land or any other land in respect of which the permission was granted; and
(c) the land—
(i) has by reason of any works carried out in accordance with that planning permission become permanently unusable by members of the public for the purposes of lawful sports and pastimes; or
(ii) will by reason of any works proposed to be carried out in accordance with that planning permission become permanently unusable by members of the public for those purposes.
(6) In determining the period of 20 years referred to in subsections (2)(a), (3)(a) and (4)(a), there is to be disregarded any period during which access to the land was prohibited to members of the public by reason of any enactment.
(7) For the purposes of subsection (2)(b) in a case where the condition in subsection (2)(a) is satisfied—
(a) where persons indulge as of right in lawful sports and pastimes immediately before access to the land is prohibited as specified in subsection (6), those persons are to be regarded as continuing so to indulge; and
(b) where permission is granted in respect of use of the land for the purposes of lawful sports and pastimes, the permission is to be disregarded in determining whether persons continue to indulge in lawful sports and pastimes on the land "as of right"".
The section came into force on 6 April 2007.
Can a tidal beach be a town or village green?
"38. My Lords, it is true that in construing a definition, one does not ignore the ordinary meaning of the word which Parliament has chosen to define. It is all part of the material available for use in the interpretative process. But there are several reasons why I think that it would be unwise for your Lordships, at any rate without full argument, to embark upon the process of introducing some elements of the traditional village green into the statutory definition.
"39. First, your Lordships will observe that the question of whether the Trap Grounds failed, by reason of their current character, to qualify as land capable of becoming a town or village green was not among the 10 questions on which the parties sought rulings from the House. It was not discussed in any of the printed cases. Secondly, this is not surprising because there is no authority, either at common law or on earlier statutes which used the term "village green", in which such a restricted meaning was applied. Thirdly, any restriction derived from the ordinary meaning of "village green" must apply to all three limbs of the definition, but the Royal Commission plainly thought that all land with customary rights of recreation (such as Stockbridge Common Down) would fall within class b. Fourthly, Parliament must have been alerted to the width of the definition by the Royal Commission's proposed restriction for class c greens but chose to define them without restriction. Fifthly, even if Parliament had not noticed in 1965, the subsequent practice of the very learned Commons Commissioners and the courts would have shown how the definition operated. On 19 May 1977 Mr CA Settle QC, as Commons Commissioner, registered as falling within the statutory definition some rocks at Llanbadrig, Ynys Mon, which had been used by the inhabitants of the locality to moor boats while engaged in the pastime of boating. On 24 May 1976 the Chief Commissioner Mr Squibb ordered registration of land which the local authority wanted to use for housing purposes but upon which there was a custom of having an annual Guy Fawkes bonfire. No doubt there are other examples in the archive of decisions of the Commons Commissioners. In New Windsor Corporation v Mellor [1975] Ch 380 the Court of Appeal confirmed the registration of a car park in Windsor as a customary (class b) green. Sixthly, Parliament in 2000 showed no unease at the way registration was operating. Seventhly, if Parliament thinks that the definition needs to be narrowed, it will have an immediate opportunity to do so. Eighthly, the terms of the proposed Auburn test would be inherently uncertain. To say that the registration authority will recognise a village green when it sees one seems inadequate."
"71. …The issue is as to what would have been understood by Parliament and by the public generally prior to the enactment of the 1965 Act by the expression "town or village green" and, consequently, how the definition of "town or village green" in section 22(1) of the 1965 Act should be applied. The issue has not been addressed by counsel who have appeared on this appeal, but, nonetheless, I do not think your Lordships can avoid forming a view on it, as indeed my noble and learned friend has done, for the meaning to be attributed to the expression has a heavy bearing on the answers to be given to some of the questions that have arisen in this case."
"77. In my opinion, the "something more" would have been a quality in the land in question that would have accorded with the normal understanding of the nature of a town or village green, namely, an area of land, consisting mainly of grass, either in or in reasonable proximity to a town or village and suitable for use by the local inhabitants for normal recreational activities."
"The important question for present purposes is whether this definition justifies classifying as a town or village green any land on which any form of lawful recreation is either the subject of a customary right or has been indulged in by the local inhabitants for at least 20 years. My instinctive reaction is to say that the definition was not intended to turn into a village green land subject to the exercise of customary rights that would not, pre the Act, have been regarded as a village green. The 160 acre Stockbridge Common Down was not, in my opinion, a town or village green before the enactment of the 1965 Act and did not become one afterwards. The landowner who owned arable land that, before the 1965 Act, had been subject to a customary right to course hares in the autumn would not after the enactment have found that he was the owner of a town or village green. And the addition of class (c) could not, in my opinion, have been intended to alter the status of land that had not previously been a town or village green or to turn into a town or village green land that had never previously been so regarded. The addition of class (c) was intended, in my opinion, in complete agreement on this point with Lord Hoffmann, to enable general recreational rights over town and village greens, as popularly understood, to be established without the necessity of proving user since time immemorial. Proof of 20 years user as of right, a formula borrowed from the Prescription Acts, would do."
"81. It is, in my opinion, an error in construction of section 22(1) to suppose that any land, whatever the degree of divergence between the character of the land and a town or village green as normally understood, can be registered as a town or village green either in reliance on class (b) or in reliance on class (c) of the statutory definition. I do not think the problem would ever arise in relation to class (a) for I imagine that any land allocated by an inclosure award for general exercise and recreational purposes, would have been already or would soon have become a predominantly grassy area."
1. The issue was not argued to any real extent; there was only brief oral argument on it in reply by Mr George for the City Council in opposition to the application.
2. The absence of authority supporting Lord Scott's position was not surprising since the issue in the older cases was whether land was subject to customary rights of recreation, and not whether it was a village green; some areas like Stockbridge Down Common could not possibly have been intended to be village greens.
3. There was no difficulty in applying the traditional "green "or "grassy" meaning of town or village green to all three categories of land registrable as town or village greens under s22; recreational allotments would have been green and within a town or village; the twenty year user was a development of the customary right of user, and though the Royal Commission would not have thought that Stockbridge Down Common was a village green at common law, it plainly possessed the requirement of being grassy.
4. In reality, Parliament should not be seen as rejecting the Royal Commission's proposed restrictive definition of town or village green when enacting the 1965 Act without such restriction; it would have taken both the second and third categories, like recreational allotments, as being the traditional green areas within towns or villages, just as the Commission supposed inhabitants took them to be.
5. The examples of registrations after 1965 did not show in essence how the definition operated so as to warrant the inference that the absence of later amendment in this respect reflected Parliamentary contentment that the Act was operating as intended. Parliament does not interfere merely because of a few occasions when an Act may not operate as intended either, especially when an aggrieved person if any has not used legal opportunities to challenge decisions: the Ynys Mon mooring rocks registration was uncontested, but obviously wrong; whether or not the Guy Fawkes' bonfire green was properly registered as a village green, it obviously passed the "green" test and so was not an example adverse to the argument. The Windsor car park village green showed only that what was a customary green did not cease to be a customary green when it became used as a car park, a use inconsistent with its status; it did not decide that a car park can be a village or town green.
6. No inference as to Parliamentary contentment should be drawn from the absence of change in 2000, since the Countryside and Rights of Way Act was dealing with other matters, and the Commons Bill amendments were tacked on at the instigation of a private member in the House of Lords.
7. No inference could be drawn from the failure of Parliament to alter the definition of town or village green in the 2006 Act during its passage as a Bill, since there were no more than conflicting obiter from the House of Lords on an issue not raised in the pleadings or in the printed cases; Lord Rodger was right to treat the most that could be drawn from this as being that it did not assist in the resolution of the issue rather than positively showing that Parliamentary inaction proved that the courts were correctly interpreting its intentions. If the greenness test, which Lord Scott favoured, was correct before 2006, it was also correct afterwards.
8. There was no uncertainty about the greenness test; Lord Scott's proposed definition embodied what was required; a village or town green was "an area of land, consisting mainly of grass, either in or in reasonable proximity to a town or village and suitable for use by the local inhabitants for normal recreational activities".
The absence of a fixed boundary to the land used by local people
"6.15 It seems to me that the mean low water mark is a sufficient boundary for the purposes of registered land. Although it is not precisely fixed in the sense that it is dependent upon the tide, the changes in the line from time to time will be relatively minor. In essence, it is the best representation of the average position of the low tide and hence, the average extent of the uncovered beach at low tides. I also note that both Newhaven Town Council's administrative area and the Objector's registered land ownership are fixed in that particular area by reference to the mean low water mark. The mean low water mark is thus regarded as an acceptable boundary for administrative and ownership purposes. Similarly, it is my view that it would be an acceptable boundary in principle for a registered town or village green and I so find."
If a tidal beach can be registered as a town or village green, is West Beach lawfully to be registered as one?
6.19…Typical activities were sunbathing, beach games, picnicking, paddling, swimming, fishing, bait digging, walking with and without dogs and kite flying"
"6.33 Fifthly, and particularly significantly, as the Land comprises a tidal beach, it is not available for lawful land-based activities for significant periods dependent upon the state of the tide. The unchallenged expert evidence of Mr Marks was that, on average, the Land is completely covered by water for 42% of the time and is uncovered to some extent for 58% of the time. It is only completely uncovered for a few minutes. Putting that into actual times, he indicated that the average period of time between low tide to when the Land is covered by water is 3.6 hours. It is then a similar 3.6 hour period between the Land first being uncovered to low tide. The tidal cycle from high tide to high tide or from low tide to low tide is approximately 12 hours and 35 minutes. Therefore, in round terms, in every 12½ hour tidal cycle, the land is uncovered to some extent for 7¼ hours and is completely covered for 5¼ hours. Given the water-based activities are not lawful sports and pastimes, the Land is not usable for lawful sports and pastimes for around 5¼ hours in every tidal cycle and then is usable to variable extents for around 7¼ hours.
6.34 Sixthly, and linked to the above, an effect of the tidal cycle is that parts of the Land, namely those parts nearest to the mean low water mark, would not be usable for the majority of the time for lawful sports and pastimes as they would only be available for a limited part of each 7¼ hours of each tidal cycle to a decreasing extent the nearer the area was to the mean low water mark."
"6.39 Turning to the tidal effects, the expert evidence of Mr Marks which I accept is that the Beach is entirely covered by the sea for 42% of the time. Given my finding that all water-based activities were unlawful, lawful sports and pastimes could only take place on the Land for a maximum of up to 58% of the time. Further, different parts of the Land would be available for such lawful sports and pastimes for only a limited part of that 58% of the time, such periods decreasing the nearer the area of the Land is to the mean low water mark. In considering that evidence, the fundamental issue remains whether, in the light of such circumstances, the use of the Land was of such a nature that it would show to a landowner that rights were being asserted. Although the Land was only available for use for a maximum of 58% of the time, gradually reducing towards the mean low water mark, as there are just short of two tidal cycles in every 24 hours, the Land was nonetheless available for use for land-based recreational activities for a material period of time each day. Further, I note that evidence that local people tended to be aware of the times of the tides and so knew when the Land would be available for such uses. My impression of the evidence was that although the Land was not available for such uses for material periods, its use at other times was of such a nature and with such regularity that it was sufficient to indicate to a landowner that rights were being asserted. The mere fact that, due to natural causes, the Land was not available for lawful sports and pastimes for material periods of time would not seem to me to be a reason in itself for the Land being incapable of registration.
6.40 Further, I recognise that some parts of the land were unavailable for use for lawful sports and pastimes for substantial periods in that they are covered by water for the majority of the time. Nonetheless, it seems to me that it is necessary to apply the same consideration, namely whether the use of the land as a whole was of such a nature and extent that it would show to a landowner that rights were being asserted over the Land as a whole. In that regard, I accept the unchallenged evidence of users that the Land was used generally. It was evident that if users went to the Land to sit and/or sunbathe, they would generally seek to find a spot close to the harbour wall if possible as that would be available for the longest period before the tide covered that area. However, if those areas were not available, other areas would be used. … Mrs Carver would look for a space near to the wall but could not always find one whilst Mrs Giles always sought the area near to the steps which was the first area uncovered and the last area covered by the tide. Moreover, for the more active pursuits, the area seems to have been used generally, such as for dog walking, beach games and kite flying. It therefore appears to me that the Land in its entirety has been used for lawful sports and pastimes, albeit some areas have been used more frequently than others, namely those areas closest to the harbour wall. Nonetheless, the impression I gained from the user evidence was that when it was available, the area of the Beach that was uncovered by water was used for lawful sports and pastimes. Further, it seems to me that the use was such that it would have been apparent to a landowner that the Beach as a whole was used for lawful sports and pastimes as and when it was uncovered."
Use as of right: the effect of the byelaws
"For a use to be regulated, it seems to me that it must be actively controlled in some way, such as by the erection of appropriate signs or notices or by active enforcement. In contrast, the mere making of byelaws nearly 80 years ago without any notice being erected informing the public of their existence or any active enforcement of those byelaws or any other indication being given to the public that those byelaws existed does not appear to me to amount to a regulation of the use of land to which they related. On the contrary, it seems to me that the use of the Land was not in fact being regulated. Although it was capable of regulation given the making of the Byelaws, no such regulation of the use in fact took place during the relevant 20 year period."
" 30 It is, I think, accepted that if the respondent council acquired the sports arena "under the 1906 Act", the local inhabitants' use of the land for recreation would have been a use under the trust imposed by section 10 of the Act. The use would have been subject to regulation by the council and would not have been a use "as of right" for the purposes of class c of section 22(I) of the Commons Registration Act 1965. "
Crown and foreshore
"Blewett v Tregonning (1835) 3 Ad. & EI. 554 applied. Per curiam obiter. The claim at common law that the public at large had a right to take this sea-coal could not succeed, for the only rights of the public in the foreshore are the rights of fishing and navigating and rights ancillary thereto. It is well known that in relation to the English foreshore that many activities, including walking thereon, bathing therefrom, and beachcombing, have been generally tolerated by the Crown as owner of the foreshore, without at any time giving rise to any legal right in the public to continue them."
Conflicting statutory regimes
Use of land to which there was no right of access could not be as of right
"No justifiable explanation has been able to be identified as to the reason for the 1953 version of the Definitive Map showing Footpath 16 across most of the width of the Promenade and the current version not doing so. Nonetheless, my interpretation of the current Definitive Map is that it shows Footpath 16 as passing along the back of the Promenade only and leading to the shingle beach to the west of the Breakwater. It follows that it does not appear to identify a definitive right of way to the steps leading down to the Land. "
The retrospectivity of s15(4) of the 2006 Act and its incompatibility with Article 1 Protocol I ECHR
"(1A) Land falls within this subsection if it is land on which for not less than twenty years a significant number of the inhabitants of any locality, or of any neighbourhood within a locality, have indulged in lawful sports and pastimes of right, and either-
(a) continue to do so, or
(b) have ceased to do so for not more than such period as may be prescribed, or determined in accordance with prescribed provisions. "