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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Wesleyvale Ltd v Harding Homes (East Anglia) Ltd [2003] EWHC 2291 (Ch) (09 September 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2003/2291.html Cite as: [2003] EWHC 2291 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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WESLEYVALE LTD |
CLAIMANT |
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- v – |
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HARDING HOMES (EAST ANGLIA) LTD |
DEFENDANT |
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190 Fleet Street London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
(Official Shorthand Writer's to the Court)
MR FANCOURT QC (instructed by Bircham Dyson Bell) appeared on behalf of the DEFENDANT
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE LEWISON:
"Except in reserve to the vendor and its successors in title in respect of the Blue Land or any part thereof, the following rights over the Green Land for the benefit f the Blue Land and each and every part thereof, for whatever use the same may from time to time be put (a) a right of way with or without vehicles over the Green Land at all times and for all purposes and the right of entry from time to time with workmen and equipment for the purpose of constructing, maintaining, improving and repairing a metalled road thereon with associated footpaths, drainage, lighting and other services as the vendor, or its successors in title in respect of the Blue Land or any part thereof shall think fit, notwithstanding that during the period of any such works rights of passage over the Green Land my be obstructed or prevented, and provided that access to the hotel and the nightclub shall not be prevented or impeded without the consent of the purchaser, such consent not to be unreasonably withheld".
"The Green Land means that strip of land, 35 feet in width, being part of the property, and in approximately the position shown coloured green under plan numbered 1 attached hereto as the same is more particularly delineated on the plan numbered 2 (annexed hereto) and thereon edged with green".
"The deed purports to convey parcels describing four different ways: one by the name which the premises bear, two by their acreage, three by the names of those who respectively occupy part thereof and the remainder thereof, and four by delineation and tint on a plan to scale endorsed on the deed. I say describe in four way advisedly. I recognise the difference made by saying 'all which said premises are more particularly described in the plan' instead of 'and all more particularly described in the plan'. The latter simply continues the series of descriptions by another mode of description. The former is a relative sentence to which the said premises are the antecedent. It qualifies, but does not enlarge them. It furnishes details within the extent of the antecedent; it does not make additions to it. Still the word 'describe' is there. When, as I think is the case, the description of the antecedent previously given is inconclusive and contradictory. The relative clause elucidates and completes the description of the antecedent just because it supplies particulars of the content to a fullness and indeterminate outline".
"My Lords, I find that the description by plan couched in the words 'all which premises are more particularly described' the words 'more particularly' exclude, I can see, that they have already been exhaustively described. These words seem to me that the previous description may be insufficient for exact limitation and that the plan is to cover all deficiencies, if any".
"My Lords, to my mind, the description of the parcels in this conveyance is equivalent to a description of parcels expressed as being Farm A containing blank acres in the occupation of B, more particularly described in a plan. In that description, I find no accurate and exhaustive description before reaching the plan. B may have adjoining lands in his occupation which are not part of Farm A. The acreage may be more or less than that stated. The name may convey such and such plots or may not. The earlier part is but a description by reference to certain characteristics of premises whose position and abutments are to be found on the plan".
"It [that is the contract] then proceeds with the words 'as the same is more precisely delineated on the plan annexed hereto and thereon coloured pink' there, for the first time in the schedule, one gets what appears to be a clear and definite description of a land which is being sold. I think this is a case in which the only definite description of what is being sold is contained in the plan".
"Where there are inconsistencies between a verbal description and a plan, the competing interpretations must be applied to the physical features on the ground to see which of them produces the most sensible result".
"It seems to me that the decision is one which must depend on the application of the plan to the physical features on the ground, to see which, out of two possible conclusions, seems to give the more sensible result".
This is the approach I will adopt in the present case.
"One factor to be taken into account in the interpretation of a conveyance was a pre-existing planning permission and the conveyance should be construed on the footing that neither party could have intended that it would involve the vendor in any infringement of 'the obligations' which the planning permission had imposed upon him".
"(1) The test of an action of interference is not whether what the grantee is left with is reasonable, but whether his insistence on being able to continue the use of the whole of what he contracted for is reasonable (2) It is not open to the grantor to deprive the grantee of his preferred modus operandi and then argue that someone else would prefer to do things differently, unless the grantee's preference is unreasonable or perverse (3) If the grantee has contracted for the relevant luxury of an ample right, he is not to be deprived of that right in the absence of an express reservation of a right to build upon it, merely because it is a relative luxury and the reduced non-ample right would be all that was reasonably required (4) The test is one of convenience and not of necessity or of reasonable necessity, provided that that which the grantee is insisting upon is not unreasonable. The question is, can the right of way be substantially and practically exercised as conveniently as before (5) The fact that an interference of an easement is infrequent and when it occurs, is relatively fleeting, does not mean that the interference cannot be actionable".