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Cite as: [1999] IEHC 82

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Fortin v. Delahunty [1999] IEHC 82 (15th January, 1999)

THE HIGH COURT
1995 No. 7376P
BETWEEN

JEAN FORTIN ANN FORTIN CHRISTOPHER PHELAN AND DAPHNE (OTHERWISE DYMPHNA FRANCES) PHELAN
PLAINTIFFS
AND
MARY DELAHUNTY
DEFENDANT

Judgment of Mr. Justice Quirke delivered on the 15th day of January 1999

1. The Plaintiffs are the owners and occupiers of two dwelling houses within a small residential development which is known as Ashurst (and will hereinafter be referred to as Ashurst) in College Road, in the City of Kilkenny. Ashurst which was developed and constructed between 1982 and 1985 (on foot of planning permissions having reference numbers P1201 and P1201 (a) dated respectively the 5th day of October 1981 and the 30th day of March 1982) comprises a total of 17 dwelling houses (being 8 town houses and 9 detached homes) together with a building at the entrance to the development which contains 8 residential apartments. Virtually the entire of the development is contained within a high stone and concrete boundary wall so that Ashurst in fact comprises a residential cul-de-sac with access to College Road which is a regional route leading to Kilkenny city centre.

2. Most of the western perimeter of Ashurst comprises an area of land (hereinafter referred to as "the wooded area") adjoining the boundary wall end comprising approximately 0.332 acres which is grassed and upon which a stand of mature trees has been retained through which a pedestrian footpath runs. The total area contained within the boundaries of Ashurst and including all of the land upon which the houses, apartments, open spaces and roads and footpaths stand is estimated to be 3.223 acres.

3. The Defendant is the registered owner of an undivided one third share in certain lands immediately adjoining Ashurst and the Defendant's two sisters are registered owners of the remaining two undivided one third shares in those adjoining lands (hereinafter referred to as Walkinslough) and on the 19th day of September 1995 the Plaintiffs learnt that the Defendant intended to commence the construction of a development of some 65 houses at Walkinslough pursuant to permission granted in that behalf by Kilkenny Corporation on the 7th day of May 1993 and confirmed on Appeal by An Bord Pleanala by Order of that Bord dated the 7th day of September 1993.

4. The planning permission (register reference no. P30/93) for the construction of the 65 houses at Walkinslough expressly provided that vehicular and other means of access to and egress from Walkinslough should be effected, inter alia, by the removal of mature trees within the wooded area and by the construction of a roadway over part of the wooded area and by the removal of part of the boundary wall separating Ashurst from Walkinslough thereby enabling vehicular and other traffic to pass and re-pass between Walkinslough and the various thoroughfares provided by College Road via Ashurst Road (which had hitherto been reserved for the use of persons seeking to effect access to and egress from Ashurst).

5. By Order of the High Court (Kinlen J.) dated the 22nd day of September 1995 and upon the application of the Plaintiffs made ex parte the Defendant was restrained until the 27th day of September 1995 or until further Order from embarking upon or proceeding with any works on Walkinslough or from doing anything which might interfere with the wooded area and the residential amenity provided thereby or from gaining access to or egress from Walkinslough by or through the wooded area.

6. By further Order of the High Court (McCracken J.) dated the 26th day of October 1995 an Application by the Plaintiffs for an interlocutory injunction in the terms of the interim Order dated the 22nd day of September 1995 was adjourned pending the trial of the proceedings herein upon undertakings (a) by the Defendant in the terms of the Interim Order dated the 22nd day of September 1995 and (b) by the Plaintiffs in the customary terms as to damages.


THE PLAINTIFFS' CLAIM

7. In these proceedings the Plaintiffs who enjoy the express support and approval of a large majority of the owners and occupiers of the other dwelling houses within Ashurst, are claiming equitable relief by way of a permanent injunction restraining the Defendant, her servants and agents, and any purchaser or transferee from her or any person claiming any interest in her lands at Walkinslough from seeking to effect access to and egress from her lands at Walkinslough by (a) constructing a road on or over the wooded area or (b) cutting down trees on the wooded area, or (c) removing all or part of the boundary wall separating the wooded area from Walkinslough or (d) in any manner howsoever by entering onto or into or interfering with the wooded area.

8. The Plaintiffs claim that they are entitled to the relief which they seek because:-

(1) The Defendant has no right, title to or, estate, or interest in or licence to enter the wooded area either for the purpose of effecting access to or egress from the Defendant's land at Walkinslough or for any other purpose or at all so that any entry by the Defendant onto the wooded area is and will be unauthorised and unlawful; and

(2) The wooded area remains the property of another person or party who enjoys beneficial ownership of the wooded area subject to (i) particular rights enjoyed, inter alia, by the Plaintiffs which were expressly recognised by Order of the High Court (Denham J.) dated the 2nd day of December 1991 and (ii) to ownership, as to part thereof jointly or in common with a Mr. Patrick Murray who is the owner and occupier of the dwelling house known as No. 1 Ashurst.

THE DEFENDANT'S CASE

9. It is contended on behalf of the Defendant:-


(1) That the wooded area is in every respect which is material to these proceedings an integral part of the public roadway which is now known as Ashurst Road and that the owner or owners thereof intended to and did in fact dedicate the wooded area and the said public roadway to the public on or before February of 1988 and the owner's dedication was accepted by the public in consequence whereof a public right of way was established over the public roadway and the wooded area with effect on or before the 8th day of February 1988; and

(2) That Kilkenny Corporation which is and has at all material times been the relevant Authority for the maintenance of public roadways, took possession and charge of the wooded area as part of the public roadway with effect from the 8th day of February 1988 and has since that date exercised power and control over the wooded area in exercise of its statutory obligations and on behalf of the public; and

(3) That on the 7th day of May 1993 Kilkenny Corporation which is and has at all material times been the relevant Planning Authority in respect of both Walkinslough and Ashurst, granted to the Defendant planning permission to construct the Walkinslough development and to effect access to and egress from Walkinslough by constructing a roadway over part of the wooded area cutting down some trees and removing part of the boundary wall for that purpose; and

(4) That the Plaintiffs did not and could not have acquired any rights in or to or over the wooded area pursuant to the Order of the High Court dated the 22nd day of April 1991 since the parties allegedly acknowledging or conferring those rights had no beneficial interest in the wooded area in April of 1991 (since all estate right and title in and to the wooded area had been dedicated to and surrendered in favour of the public in February of 1988) and since any additional or residual rights in favour of the Plaintiffs over the wooded area (the existence of which is strongly denied by the Defendant) have either been extinguished or are unenforceable having regard to the provisions of the Statute of Frauds.

FACTS

10. The following facts were proved in evidence at the hearing of this action:-


(1) That between 1982 and 1985 it was represented to the Plaintiffs and to the other purchasers of dwelling houses in Ashurst by an agent acting on behalf, inter alia, of the then vendors (Mr. James Delahunty and R.A. Investments Limited) that the then vendors would take appropriate steps to ensure that the Plaintiffs and the other owners of dwelling houses in Ashurst would enjoy the amenity of an enclosed cul-de-sac and in particular would be entitled to enjoy the amenity provided by the wooded area as an open space whose mature trees would be preserved as part of that amenity.

(2) That nonetheless and notwithstanding the foregoing the conveyances to the Plaintiffs and most (perhaps all) of the owners of dwelling houses in Ashurst reserved and retained for the benefit of the then vendors and their successors in title particular easements, rights and privileges, including the following right, that is to say:-

"Notwithstanding that the estate has been designed for development as a building estate for residential purposes, the vendor shall not be under any obligation to complete such development and may alter such development in such a manner as it may wish and there is reserved unto the vendor full right and liberty to execute such works and erections upon the retained property or any part thereof in such a manner as it may think fit and notwithstanding that the access of light and air to the sold land and buildings thereon may thereby be interfered with". (See Third Schedule Clause 3).

(3) That Ashurst was constructed pursuant to permission in that behalf granted by Kilkenny Corporation in the terms of Planning Register Ref. Nos. P1201 and P1201(a) dated respectively the 5th day of October 1981 and the 30th day of March 1982. This permission provided, inter alia, for the construction of an apartment block at the entrance to a cul-de-sac of 17 dwelling houses contained within a total site area of approximately 3.223 acres surrounded by a stone and concrete wall with a substantial stand of mature trees running inside and along the western boundary wall of the site.

11. The permission provided, inter alia, that "...the developer shall ensure that adequate protection is given to all existing trees proposed to be retained, during construction works". (See condition 7 thereof) and placed upon the developer an obligation to "...identify and mark on site, all trees proposed to be removed and to submit to the Corporation a plan indicating these trees". - (See condition No. 8).


12. The reasons given by Kilkenny Corporation for conditions numbers 7 and 8 above was in both instances declared to be "in the interest of amenity".


(4) That on the 19th day of March 1981 an official within the Planning Department of Kilkenny Corporation appears to have visited Ashurst and to have taken measurements which were intended to enable him to calculate the appropriate densities in respect of both the dwelling houses and the apartments having regard to the total area of Ashurst.

13. He recorded his calculations, findings and conclusions on a sheet of notepaper which he headed "Areas" and which was dated the 19/3/81. This document is of importance. Its author concluded that the total site area of Ashurst amounted to 3.223 acres. He then provided calculations in respect of density and continued as follows:-


"OPEN SPACE
1. APARTMENT SITE:
Site area = 0.45
Open space = 0.2455 = 54%
2. HOUSING:

14. Total site area

(excluding apartment site) = 2.773 acre

15. Open space = 0.332 acre = 11.97%


16. I am satisfied on the evidence that on the 19th day of March 1981 Kilkenny Corporation through its Planning Officials and during the consideration of an Application for permission for the Ashurst Development was, quite properly, and in its capacity as Planning Authority, satisfying itself that the residential development which was then being proposed for Ashurst would provide for the owners and occupiers of dwelling houses sufficient amenity by way of public open space to comply with the recommendations of the Kilkenny County Development Plan which had been published in 1980 and which provided (at P.21), inter alia, that "...a minimum of 10% of the area of a residential development will normally be required as public open space, but this figure may be greater than 10% where, in the opinion of the Corporation, amenity features worthy of preservation exist on the site....."


17. Clearly the Planning Authority's Official was satisfied on the 19th day of March 1981 that the residential development proposed for Ashurst provided for public open space of 11.97% in respect of housing and 54% in respect of apartments.


(5) That on the 9th day of June 1987 a Mr. Michael J. Hogan who was then the Solicitor for and Director of a company call R.A. Investments Limited (the then beneficial owner of lands in Ashurst which included the wooded area, the main roadway, and the pavements and verges abutting that roadway) wrote to the Town Clerk of Kilkenny Corporation in the following terms:-

"Re: ASHURST

Dear Sir,

We confirm that we act on behalf of R.A. Investments Limited.

Our clients instruct us that an agreement has been reached between them (through Mr. John Santry) and your Corporation (through Mr. Joseph Gannon) on the taking in charge of the entire development known as Ashurst, College Road, Kilkenny.

We are instructed that in return for our clients paying to your Corporation the sum of £11,600.00 (which includes £600 VAT) in the manner as set out below your Corporation will take the development in charge it being the intent that your Corporation will carry out all necessary outstanding works and that our clients will have no further responsibility for same:-

(a) Payment of £5,000.00 immediately.
(b) Payment of £6,600.00 on our client being furnished by your Corporation with an invoice for the cost of providing the wearing course for the roadway.
In order to implement this agreement we enclose our clients cheque in favour of your Corporation for £5,000.00.

Yours truly,
Michael J. Hogan."

18. On 27th October Mr. Hogan forwarded a cheque in the amount of £1,250.00 to the County Manager of Kilkenny County Council with a covering letter on the same date indicating that this cheque was "...a compromise figure to settle all outstanding maters on the take-over of the above development and in the interests of harmonious relationships between our client and your Corporation".


19. Although this latter letter and the accompanying payment was apparently sent to Kilkenny County Council it appears to have been received by Kilkenny Corporation and no suggestion has been made on behalf of the Plaintiffs that this payment represented anything other than an attempt on the part of R.A. Investments Limited to conclude the transaction whereby Kilkenny Corporation would "take in charge" and become responsible for the maintenance of the public roadway, the adjoining footpaths and verges and all other areas within Ashurst (including the wooded area) other than the lands which had already been conveyed by R.A. Investments Limited to individual owners of dwelling houses and apartments.


(6) That on the 8th day of February 1988 Kilkenny Corporation passed the following resolution:-

"That we, the Council of the Borough of Kilkenny in accordance with the power delegated to us under Section 2(3) Local Government Act 1953, hereby declare the following road to be an Urban Public Road:-

'That Section of the road situated in the townland of Walkinslough, Kilkenny serving Ashurst Housing Development for a distance of 194 metres from its junction with Callan Road.'"

(7) That on the 8th day of October 1990 Messrs. Miley & Miley acting on behalf of the Ashurst Residents Association which included the Plaintiffs wrote to the Manager of Kilkenny Corporation in relation to an outline Planning Permission which had been granted in respect of Walkinslough and enquired in relation to the wooded area in the following terms:-

"We now write however to specifically enquire from you what your attitude is in relation to this open space. We will be obliged to receive your response to this enquiry within the next 10 days. In particular when replying please address yourself to and answer the following questions:-

1. Whether you have taken the open space in charge and, if so, when this was done.
2. If you have not taken the open space in charge whether you have any intention of so doing.
3. Whether the open space has been dedicated or transferred to the Corporation and, if so, the date upon which this took place.
4. If not yet dedicated or transferred to the Corporation whether the Corporation has any plans for this to be done."

20. By letter dated the 25th day of October 1990 Mr. Donal O'Brien, the Town Clerk of Kilkenny Corporation, replied, inter alia, in the following terms:-


"Dear Sirs,

Re: ASHURST - KILKENNY

I refer to your letter of 8.10.90. We reply to the questions raised in your letter of 8.10.90 as follows:-

1. I enclose a copy of a Resolution of Kilkenny Corporation dated 8.2.88.
2. See reply at 1. above.
3. No such Dedication or Transfer has ever taken place.
4. The Corporation does not have any plans for any such Dedication or Transfer.
Yours faithfully,

D. O'Brien
Town Clerk."

21. By letter dated the 6th day of November 1990 Messrs. Miley & Miley on behalf of Ashurst Residents Association wrote to Mr. O'Brien in response to his letter of 25th October, inter alia, in the following terms:-


"We respond to the Replies made in your letter as follows:-

1. The Resolution which you sent to us refers to the roadway and not to the open space. We accordingly repeat the question raised at No. 1 of our letter of 8th October last and would be obliged to hear from you in reply.
2. We again repeat question No. 2 raised in our letter to you of 8th October last. Please let us have a Reply.
3. We note your Reply. Please confirm that this Reply relates to the open space and not to the roadway.
4. We note your Reply. Please confirm that it relates to the open space and not to the roadway...........".

22. By letter dated the 21st November 1990 Mr. O'Brien on behalf of Kilkenny Corporation replied as follows:-

"Re: ASHURST KILKENNY

Dear Sir,

I refer to your letter of 6.11.90 and previous correspondence. As you will note from my letter of 25.10.90 and enclosure the Corporation took over the roadway. The Corporation did not take over the open space and has no plans to do so. I trust the position is now clear.

Yours faithfully,

D. O'Brien
Town Clerk."

8. That whilst in October and November of 1990 Mr. Donal O'Brien the Town Clerk of Kilkenny Corporation was conscientiously of the belief:-
1
(a) That some time in 1987 Kilkenny Corporation agreed with R.A. Investments Limited to take in charge and become responsible for the maintenance of the public roadway in Ashurst and its adjoining footpaths and verges;
(b) that this agreement was implemented by Kilkenny Corporation by Resolution passed on the 8th day of February 1988; and
(c) that whilst it may well have been the intention of R.A. Investments Limited in 1987 that Kilkenny Corporation should take in charge and become responsible for the maintenance of the wooded area;
(d) no such agreement was concluded between R.A. Investments Limited and Kilkenny Corporation which did not agree to take the wooded area in charge or to become responsible for its maintenance either by the passing of a Resolution or in any other manner or at all.

23. In the proceedings herein Mr. O'Brien (having consulted with his legal advisors at some point close to the trial) was of the opinion that what he conscientiously believed to be the case in October and November of 1990 was in fact mistaken. In his evidence at the trial Mr. O'Brien (having now had the benefit of advice from his legal advisors) stated that in his opinion the wooded area was not part of the pubic roadway in Ashurst but was separate "open space" and he believed that Kilkenny Corporation had taken the wooded area "in charge" as a separate "open space" and not as part of the public roadway.


(9) That on the 13th day of July 1990 the Defendant was granted permission by Kilkenny Corporation (Planning Register Reference P 18/90) for a residential development comprising the erection of 65 houses at Walkinslough and this permission was later confirmed on Appeal by An Bord Pleanala on the 27th day of March 1991. Condition number 17 of Planning Permission Reference No. P18/90 provided as follows:-
"17. 10% open space shall be provided and maintained on the site as well as a planted buffer open space a minimum of 13m wide and 38m in length along the boundary wall of the public open space of Ashurst in the North East corner of the Application Site."

24. The "Reasons for Conditions" in respect of Condition No. 17 were stated to be as follows:-


"17. In accordance with the standards of the 1986 City Development Plan and to provide a more balanced distribution of open space in the site and to compensate the Ashurst Development for the reduction of open space in the interests of visual and residential amenity."

(10) That Mr. Joseph Gannon who is the Senior Executive Engineer for Kilkenny Corporation, testifying on behalf of the Defendant stated in evidence that it was his understanding during his discussions in 1987 with Mr. Santry and Mr. Hogan of R.A. Investments, that it was the wish and intention of R.A. Investments Limited that Kilkenny Corporation should take "the estate" in charge and would be responsible to maintain the roadways, the footpaths and the open space which comprised the wooded area. He indicated that it was his understanding that this was what had been agreed between R.A. Investments Limited and Kilkenny Corporation stating "....that's what we do in all estates....".

25. Mr. Gannon, when pressed on the matter, with particular reference to Condition 17 of Planning Permission Reference No. P18/90 agreed that between 1981 and 1990 Kilkenny Corporation had treated the wooded area as public open space. He went on to confirm that on or about the 20th day of March 1987 he himself carried out a survey of Ashurst during consideration of the Application by R.A. Investments Limited to have the public roadway and other parts of the estate taken in charge. He agreed that whilst his notes record his having surveyed and sectioned off the entire of the footpaths abutting the public roadway but do not record any survey of any part of the footpath which runs through the wooded area which he conceded is and has at all material times been in a poor state of repair in direct contrast to the state of repair of the footpaths abutting the public roadway.


(11) That the footpath running through the wooded area is just over 100 yards in length, of concrete construction and approximately 5 ft. 6 ins. in width. Unlike the footpaths which abut the public roadway this footpath does not follow the level or line of the adjoining estate road varying in height some 6 ft. at different points. Some parts of this footpath are very badly cracked and other parts have sunk. The foundations upon which this footpath has been built are defective and in consequence the concrete has cracked whilst roots of trees have caused distortion of some of the concrete in other parts of the footpath which is covered with slime and is dangerous to walk upon in wet weather. In contrast the footpaths adjoining and abutting the public roadway are of sound design and construction and are well maintained.
(12) That at all material times the grass within the wooded area has been cut and the area cleaned by small groups of the owners and occupiers of the dwelling houses in Ashurst who formed small committees for that purpose and carried out the maintenance and other work themselves and (occasionally) by contractors.

26. Whilst Mr. Gannon was under the impression that Kilkenny Corporation might have carried out some maintenance work on or to the wooded area on a rota basis at one stage he agreed that it certainly had not been maintained at all in the last 2 or 3 years and whilst several owners and occupiers of dwelling houses in Ashurst testified in these proceedings only one such person (Mr. Brian Deering, the owner of No. 2 Ashurst) recalled any person other than a resident of Ashurst cutting the grass within the wooded area and Mr. Deering confirmed the evidence of the other owners and occupiers to the intent that maintenance of the wooded area was entirely carried out by owners and occupiers of dwelling houses in Ashurst who from time to time had to employ contractors to cut the grass.


(13) Conflicting evidence was adduced on behalf of both parties as to the existence or otherwise of alternative means of access to and egress from the Defendant's lands at Walkinslough for the purposes of the proposed residential development there. On the evidence adduced it would appear that the achievement of alternative access and egress might well require considerable and perhaps drastic re-design and re-planning. It may require the purchase of additional lands by the Defendant or the sale or surrender by her of some of her existing lands and it may be that notwithstanding her best endeavours she may be unable to obtain permission from Kilkenny Corporation for alternative access to and egress from a revised re-planned proposal for a residential development. However, I take the view that evidence as to the existence or otherwise of access to or egress from any proposed development upon the Defendant's land cannot properly be taken into account by me in these proceedings because such evidence is not relevant to any of the issues which require to be determined in this case and accordingly I do not propose to take that evidence into consideration.

(14) That by Deed of Conveyance dated the 8th day of August, 1983 the land and property known as No. 1 Ashurst was transferred to Mr. Joseph Reidy who subsequently transferred the same lands and premises to a Mr. Patrick Murray who is now the beneficial owner thereof. It is possible that by the Deed of Conveyance dated the 8th day of August, 1993, a portion of the wooded area was transferred to Mr. Reidy (who subsequently transferred it on to Mr. Murray) because the boundaries delineating the wooded area are difficult to identify either having regard to the various site maps adduced in evidence and to the site map attached to the Deed of Conveyance dated the 8th August, 1983 but I am not satisfied that on the evidence the Plaintiff has proved on the balance of probabilities that Mr. Patrick Murray is entitled to the beneficial ownership of any part of the wooded area.

(15) That by Order of the High Court (Denham J.) dated the 2nd day of December, 1991 in proceedings between the Plaintiffs and Mr. Joseph Reidy of the one part and R.A. Investments Limited and Phelan Holdings Limited of the other part the following undertaking on the part, inter alia, of R.A. Investments Limited and in respect of the wooded area was recorded:-

"And Counsel for the Defendant's undertakings to the Court that they, their servants or agents or the owners or occupiers of the hereinafter mentioned lands will not carry out any development or carry out any works or erect any buildings or cut down or interfere with any trees or do or permit any other act on or over the lands situate at Walkinslough in the parish of St. Patrick's and city of Kilkenny more particularly described and delineated on the drawings the subject matter of Planning Permission Register Reference No. P1201 granted by Kilkenny Corporation on the 30th day of March, 1982 and known as Ashurst, College Road, Kilkenny which may injure or interfere with the existing residential amenity of the development as a cul-de-sac with open space enjoyed by the Plaintiffs who are the owners and occupiers of the lands numbered 10, 18 and 1 Ashurst, College Road, Kilkenny......"
THE ISSUES

27. The Defendant contends that at the end of 1987 or at the commencement of 1988 R.A. Investments Limited, the then beneficial owner thereof, divested itself of the entire of its estate, rights, title and interest in and to the wooded area by dedicating the wooded area to the public which accepted the dedication and it is contended that this dedication to and acceptance of the wooded area to and by the public thereby created a public right of way over the wooded area which the Defendant is entitled, with the permission of Kilkenny Corporation, to use for the purpose of effecting access to and egress from her lands at Walkinslough.

28. The Plaintiffs contend that R.A. Investments Limited did not dedicate the wooded area to the public and that if it was the intention of R.A. Investments Limited to dedicate the wooded area to the public then that intention was not realised because there was no acceptance by the public of the dedication which was offered in consequence whereof no public right of way came into existence either prior to the 2nd December, 1991 when rights in favour of the Plaintiffs were recognised at any time or at all.

29. The Defendant argues that the wooded area was dedicated to the public as part of the public roadway when the latter was "taken in charge" by Kilkenny Corporation in February 1988.

30. The Plaintiffs argue that the wooded area was never "taken in charge" by Kilkenny Corporation but was and is and remains an "open space" which has not been dedicated to or accepted by the public but which is and remains an area through which the public have permission to walk by means of a footpath.

In Gwen Smeltzer -v- The County Council of the County of Fingal [1998] 1 I.L.R.M. 24 Costello P. pointed out (at p. 31) that:-

"What is in dispute in this case is the question of fact; was there a dedication to the public of rights of way over the land it had acquired or was a permission merely granted to the public to enter and traverse the Council's lands?

The law relating to highways and the creation of public rights of way is a very ancient one and the relevant principles are well established. A distinction is made between a permission granted by an owner of land to members of the public to walk on pathways on his land and the dedication to the public of those pathways. To establish a public right of way what has to be proved is an intent on the part of the owner to dedicate his land to the public, an actual dedication, and acceptance by the public of the dedication".

31. It follows from the foregoing that what falls to be determined in these proceedings is whether or not there was or has at any time been an intent on the part of R.A. Investments Limited as beneficial owner thereof to dedicate the wooded area to the public whether, in furtherance of that intention, there has been an actual dedication of the wooded area in favour of the public and an acceptance by the public of that dedication.

32. In order to make the foregoing determination the following questions must be answered:-


(1) Did R.A. Investments Limited intend, either expressly or by implication to dedicate the wooded area to the public and, if so,
(2) Were any steps taken by R.A. Investments Limited to give effect to its intention and, if so,
(3) Did the steps taken by R.A. Investments Limited (or any of them) give rise to an effective dedication of the wooded area to the public and an acceptance of that dedication by the public?

(1) INTENT

33. On the evidence it was abundantly clear that by June of 1987 Messrs. R.A. Investments Limited had sold most of its interests and property in Ashurst and was concerned to divest itself of any residual obligations or responsibilities which might have arisen by virtue of its remaining property rights and interests in Ashurst (that is confirmed by the letter dated 9th June, 1987 written on behalf of R.A. Investments Limited to Kilkenny Corporation by Mr. Michael J. Hogan referring to an agreement by the Corporation to ".....take the development in charge it being the intent that your corporation will carry out all necessary outstanding works and that our client will have no further responsibility for same").

34. The intention of R.A. Investments Limited was to divest itself of its remaining property interests in Ashurst so that it would have no further responsibilities or obligations arising out of such proprietary interests. On the evidence the sum agreed in the amount of £11,600 could not be regarded as being in any respect consideration (or part thereof) for dedication by RA Investments Limited of any of its lands in Ashurst to the public. The sum amounted to financial commitments by R.A. Investments Limited to Kilkenny Corporation in respect of insurance bonds and other obligations arising out of the interests R.A. Investments Limited in the residential development at Ashurst.

35. Notwithstanding the foregoing I am satisfied on the evidence that throughout the second half of 1987 and at the commencement of 1988 R.A. Investments Limited had a clear intention to divest itself of its property interests in the wooded area and had the appropriate means at its disposal, by virtue of its legal advice and otherwise to achieve that objective whether by dedicating the lands to the public or otherwise and accordingly I am satisfied that at that time there was sufficient intent on the part of R.A. Investments Limited to satisfy the requirements laid down in that behalf by law to enable the wooded area to be dedicated to the public but subject however to an actual dedication of the lands on the part of R.A. Investments Limited and to acceptance by the public of that dedication.


(2) STEPS TAKEN

36. A public right of way may come into existence either (a) pursuant to the common law doctrine of dedication and acceptance or (b) on foot of a statutory provision. (See Halsbury's Laws of England (4th Ed. - Reissue) Vol. 21 and Keane - The Law of Local Government in the Republic of Ireland (1982) at pp. 66-68.

37. The Defendant contends that R.A. Investments Limited dedicated the wooded area to the public as part of the public roadway in Ashurst and that its acceptance by the public was effected by the resolution which was passed by Kilkenny Corporation on Monday the 8th day of February, 1988.

38. I am satisfied on the evidence that the steps which were taken by R.A. Investments Limited to give effect to its intention to dedicate the wooded area to the public were as follows:-


(i) In the early part of 1987 R.A. Investments Limited through its officers and agents had discussions with Kilkenny Corporation and reached what they believed to be an agreement whereby "the entire development known as Ashurst, College Road, Kilkenny...." would be taken "... in charge" by the Corporation (see Mr. Hogan's letter to Mr. O'Brien dated 9th June, 1987).

(ii) R.A. Investments Limited through its officers and agents wrote to Kilkenny Corporation purporting to conclude that agreement (see the letters dated 9th June, 1987 and the 27th October, 1987 respectively).

(iii) R.A. Investments Limited made payments to Kilkenny Corporation in the amount of £11,600 and (possibly) £1,250.


(3) THE LEGAL EFFECT OF THE STEPS TAKEN

39. As a result of the steps which were taken by R.A. Investments Limited, Kilkenny Corporation on Monday the 8th February, 1988 passed the following resolution:-


"That we, the Council of the Borough of Kilkenny, in accordance with the power delegated to us under Section 2(3) Local Government Act, 1953, hereby declare the following road to be an Urban Public Road:

'That Section of road situated in the townland of Walkinslough, Kilkenny, serving Ashurst Housing Development for a distance of 194 metres from its junction with Callan Road.'"

40. It is contended on behalf of the Defendant that the Resolution of Kilkenny Corporation on the 8th February, 1988 was the final step in the dedication by R.A. Investments Limited to the public of the wooded area being part of what is described as "... that Section of road situated in the townland of Walkinslough, Kilkenny, serving Ashurst Housing Development for a distance of 194 metres from its junction with Callan Road".

41. During the trial of this action it was expressly conceded on behalf of the Defendant that insofar as the wooded area was dedicated to the public by R.A. Investments Limited it was so dedicated because it was and has at all material times been an integral part of the "... Section of road...." referred to in the Resolution of Kilkenny Corporation dated the 8th February, 1988.

42. It has not been suggested either in argument on behalf of the Defendant or in any other manner that the wooded area was or has at any time been dedicated to the public by means other than the means which I have just outlined and accordingly no other potential means of dedication requires to be considered herein.

43. Sub-section (1) of Section 25 of the Local Government Act, 1925 (No. 5 of 1925) provides as follows:-

"If at any time after the appointed day the Council of any county or urban district by resolution passed after such notice as is hereinafter mentioned declares any road which is not a public road, but over which a public right of way for foot passengers, animals and vehicles exists and which connects two public roads and is not less than 11 feet wide in the clear, to be a public road, such road shall for all purposes be a public road."

44. In The Law of Local Government in the Republic of Ireland (1982) at p. 69 Keane J., the learned author of that immensely valuable work, observed that the foregoing section ".... is peculiarly worded. If a public right of way for foot passengers, animals and vehicles exists over a road, it can only have come into existence either by statute or because of the express or presumed dedication by the owner for that purpose. In either event, it already appears to possess all the features of a 'public road'. What then is the necessity for declaring it to be a public road? It seems reasonably clear that the section was passed so as to enable local authorities to spend the ratepayers' money on repairing roads without having to prove to the Local Government Auditor in every case that the portion of the roadway in question had been expressly or by implication dedicated to the public...." Section 2 of the Local Government Act, 1953 provides inter alia that:-


"(1) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary contained in Section 25 of the Local Government Act, 1925 (No. 5 of 1925) or in any other enactment a road authority is hereby empowered to declare any road over which a public right of way for foot passengers, animals and vehicles exists and which is not a public road to be a public road, if such road authority is satisfied that the road is of general public utility, and every road so declared to be a public road shall thereupon for all purposes be a public road.....

(3) The making of a declaration under Sub-section (1) of this section or under Sub-section (1) of Section 25 of the Local Government Act, 1925 (No. 5 of 1925) shall be a reserved function within the meaning of the County Management Acts, 1940 and 1942."

45. The Resolution of Kilkenny Corporation dated the 8th February, 1988 comprised a declaration made by the Corporation pursuant to the provisions of Sub-section (3) of Section 2 of the 1953 Act and it follows (and is I believe conceded on behalf of the Plaintiffs) that on or before the 8th day of February, 1988 a public right of way for foot passengers, animals and vehicles existed over a certain ".... Section of road.... serving Ashurst Housing Development for a distance of 194 metres from its junction with Callan Road".

46. Certainly it is clear that where resolutions are passed and declarations are made either pursuant to Section 25 of the 1925 Act or Section 2 of the 1953 Act ".... in an appropriate case, the High Court will declare invalid a resolution purportedly passed under these sections which declares a road to be a public road over which in fact a private right of way only existed". (See Keane - The Law of Local Government in Ireland (1982) at p. 69). No such declaratory or other relief of that character has been sought by the Plaintiffs herein so that there is a clear recognition on the part of the Plaintiffs of the existence of a public right of way over part of the lands in Ashurst on or before February of 1988. Accordingly, there can be little doubt that R.A. Investments Limited dedicated some or all of the lands which it then owned in Ashurst to the public on or before the 8th February, 1998 and that there was acceptance by the public of that dedication.

47. It has been contended on behalf of the Plaintiffs that RA Investments Limited was not empowered to effect a dedication of the wooded area to the public having regard to particular rights to and in the wooded area which the Plaintiffs claim were then vested in the Plaintiffs and in the other owners and occupiers of dwelling houses in Ashurst which said rights were (say the Plaintiffs) acknowledged by Order of the High Court dated the 2nd day of December, 1991, which said Order was duly registered in the Registry of Deeds on the Index of Names for Acts to effect the lands at Walkinslough, parish of St. Patrick's and city of Kilkenny.

48. It is conceded on behalf of the Plaintiffs that on and before the 8th day of February, 1988 R.A. Investments Limited was seised of the wooded area for an estate in fee simple in possession free from any incumbrances other than such rights (if any) as were then vested in the Plaintiffs and the other owners and occupiers of dwelling houses in Ashurst.

49. As I have already indicated, I am satisfied that between 1982 and 1985 it was represented to the Plaintiffs and to the other purchasers of dwelling houses in Ashurst (principally by Mr. Martin Carroll and corroborated by items of advertising literature) that the then vendors (including Messrs. R.A. Investments Limited) would take appropriate steps to ensure that the Plaintiffs and the other owners of dwelling houses in Ashurst would enjoy the amenity of an enclosed cul-de-sac and would be entitled to enjoy the amenity provided by the wooded area as an open space whose mature trees would be preserved as part of that amenity.

50. These representations were not reduced to writing at any time but were made verbally by Mr. Martin Carroll and I am satisfied on the evidence that if the representations made by Mr. Carroll gave rise to rights when they were made then such rights would have been personal or contractual in nature when they were made and would have been either rights arising out of representations made or rights which were additional and ancillary to contracts made between the Plaintiffs and R.A. Investments Limited for the purchase by the Plaintiffs of their dwelling houses in Ashurst. Such personal or contractual rights (if they exist) would not then have enjoyed the status of easements which, ".... being rights which are superadded to the ordinary common law incidents of the ownership of a dominant tenement, and which connote a corresponding burden on a servient tenement against common right, can only be created by statute or grant". See Halsbury's Laws of England (4th Ed. - Vol.14 at para 45).

51. The Deeds of conveyance whereby R.A. Investments Limited conveyed to the Plaintiffs (and the other purchasers) their lands in Ashurst and which extinguished the provisions contained within the earlier contracts for purchase made no provision for rights of the kind contended for but expressly reserved onto R.A. Investments Limited and the other vendor of the lands in question the right, inter alia, to alter the lands in such a manner as it might wish and to execute such works and erections thereupon as it might deem appropriate (see 3rd Schedule, Clause 3).

52. Accordingly, such rights (if any) as the Plaintiffs (and the other owners and occupiers of dwelling houses in Ashurst) enjoyed in respect of the wooded area on and before February 1988 would have been enjoyed as personal or contractual rights arising out of oral representations made by or on behalf of R.A. Investments Limited and the other owners and developers of Ashurst and would not have existed in the form of proprietary rights of the kind which attached to and ran with the lands to which they related.

53. It follows from the foregoing that on and before the 8th day of February, 1988 R.A. Investments Limited as beneficial owner in fee simple of the wooded area free from incumbrances was empowered to dedicate the wooded area to the public.

54. The question which now falls to be determined is whether or not the lands which were dedicated by RA Investments Limited to the public excluded the wooded area and were confined only to the section of roadway which served Ashurst and to the footpaths and verges adjoining that roadway.

55. Whilst it was the general objective of RA Investments Limited in the months leading up to February of 1988 to divest itself of its residual proprietary interests in Ashurst in order to avoid any long term legal or other responsibilities or obligations arising out of its ownership of the lands in question and whilst it was empowered on or before the 8th day of February, 1988 to dedicate the wooded area to the public (having regard to its estate, right, interest in and title to the lands in question) it should not be forgotten that no public right of way comes into existence unless and until an actual dedication is accomplished and that dedication is accepted by the public [see Gwen Smeltzer -v- Fingal County Council (supra)].

56. In order to achieve that dedication and acceptance RA Investments Limited sought to reach agreement with Kilkenny Corporation in 1987 whereby the latter would take all of its lands "... in charge" and it believed that it had reached such an agreement.

57. Kilkenny Corporation, by way of implementing the agreement which it believed it had reached with RA Investments Limited, by Resolution dated the 8th February, 1988 declared a particular ".... Section of road...." to be ".... an Urban Public Road" for "all purposes" pursuant to the provisions of Section 2(3) of the 1953 Act.

58. There is no doubt as to the existence of a public right of way over the "... Section of road...." referred to in the Resolution of Kilkenny Corporation dated the 8th February, 1988 so that logically it follows that on or before the 8th day of February, 1998 the dedication of the "... Section of road...." had taken place and there had been acceptance by the public of that dedication. The Defendant insists that this ".... Section of road...." included the wooded area and points to the agreement between RA Investments Limited and Kilkenny Corporation whereby the latter agreed to take "in charge" the "... entire development known as Ashurst...". However, it must not be forgotten that there must be a dedication and an acceptance by the public of the dedication. Whilst a road authority is empowered to declare particular roads to be public roads they are only empowered to do so in respect of a road over which "... a public right of way for foot passengers, animals and vehicles..." is already in existence. It is not the function of local authorities to accept on behalf of the public the dedication of particular lands to the public by the owners thereof. Whether dedication has occurred and has been accepted by the public is entirely dependent upon the evidence as to whether or not (a) the lands have been dedicated and (b) the dedication has been accepted by the public. Mere proof that a local authority has agreed to take certain lands "in charge" is insufficient by itself to prove that the lands in question have been lawfully and effectively dedicated to the public and/or that the dedication has been accepted by the public.

59. In this case RA Investments Limited wished to divest itself of its proprietary interests in its lands at Ashurst and for that purpose sought to enter into an agreement with Kilkenny Corporation whereby the latter would take all of its lands in Ashurst (including the wooded area) "... in charge". Kilkenny Corporation may well have agreed to take all of the lands concerned "... in charge" (although this is not certain) but, by its officers and officials it drew a clear distinction between the wooded area and the public roadway in Ashurst since:-

(a) On the 21st November, 1990 its town clerk wrote in respect of the wooded area that "... the Corporation took over the roadway. The Corporation did not take over the open space and has no plans to do so....".
(b) During the trial, having had the benefit of advice from his legal advisors, he expressed the clear view that the wooded area was not part of the public roadway in Ashurst but was a separate "open space" and had been taken "in charge" as a separate "open space" and not as part of the public roadway.
(c) The Corporation's senior executive engineer also agreed in evidence that between 1981 and 1990 the Corporation had treated the wooded area as a public open space and not as part of the public roadway.
(d) On the 13th July, 1990 Kilkenny Corporation in its planning permission in respect of the Walkinslough development expressly referred to the wooded area as "open space" and not as part of the roadway.
(e) The Corporation's senior executive engineer did not include the footpath running through the wooded area in his survey of the area which the Corporation was responsible to maintain and repair.
(f) The Corporation has regularly and carefully maintained and repaired the roadway at Ashurst and the footpath and verges immediately adjoining the roadway but has not maintained or repaired the footpath running through the wooded area or any part of the wooded area in consequence whereof the footpath has fallen into disrepair and the remainder of the wooded area has been maintained by and at the expense of the owners of the dwelling houses in Ashurst.

60. Accordingly, all of the evidence adduced in the trial on behalf of both parties points inescapably to the conclusion that between 1981 and 1990 (and indeed thereafter), Kilkenny Corporation both in its capacity as planning authority and in its capacity as roads authority treated the wooded area other than as part of the roadway which serves Ashurst. Although evidence was adduced on behalf of the Defendant by expert witnesses who expressed the view and were of the opinion that as a matter of practice the wooded area should be categorised as part of the public roadway and indeed that it was as a matter of fact part of the public roadway, no evidence whatsoever was adduced by either party which was consistent with its use as part of the public roadway or its treatment by Kilkenny Corporation or any other person or persons as part of the public roadway.

Conversely
(a) the owners and occupiers of dwelling houses in Ashurst who testified in these proceedings were firm in their insistence that they had throughout the currency of their various ownerships at all times treated the wooded area as an open space and an amenity area which was privately maintained by them,
(b) the wooded area by itself (and excluding the public roadway and its adjoining footpaths and verges) comprises some 11.97% of the whole of the lands at Ashurst, and
(c) RA Investments Limited itself treated the wooded area other than as part of the public roadway as late as the 2nd day of December 1991 when together with another party (Phelan Holdings Limited) it treated the wooded area other than as part of the public highway when by Order of the High Court it gave express and particular undertakings in respect of the precise area concerned.
"Dedication and acceptance are facts to be proved....... These two questions of fact always arise together, and the finding turns on evidence relating to..... (1) period of user.... (2) purpose of user.... (3) origin of user.... and (4) character of the road" (see Street - Local Government (1955) at pp. 187/189 and see also Smeltzer (supra)).

61. No evidence has been adduced herein which could reasonably give rise to a finding that the wooded area was separately dedicated to the public at any time either by R.A. Investments Limited or otherwise and indeed no argument to that intent has been advanced on behalf of the Defendant.

62. Similarly, the fact that the wooded area is accessible to the public is not by itself proof of dedication and acceptance (see Abercromby -v- Fermoy Town Commissioners , [1900] 1 I.R. 302 at p. 314) and no such public rights can be acquired at common law (see Smeltzer supra).

In Marshall -v- Blackpool Corporation , [1935] A.C. 16, Atkin L.J. declared that:-

"... the owner of land adjoining a highway has a right of access to the highway from any part of his premises. This is so whether he or his predecessors originally dedicated the highway or part of it and whether he is entitled to the whole or some interest in the ground subjacent to the highway or not. The rights of the public to pass along the highway are subject to this right of access: just as the right of access is subject to the rights of the public and must be exercised subject to the general obligations as to nuisance and the like imposed upon a person using the highway."

(See also Street - Local Government (1955) at p. 186). It is this right of access which the Defendant seeks to invoke in these proceedings.

63. However, the evidence has established that the wooded area separates the Defendant's land at Walkinslough from the public highway or roadway in Ashurst and is not part of that public highway or roadway. Furthermore, the Defendant has no right or title to or estate or interest in the wooded area which remains the property of another person or party subject to any rights which may have been created or acknowledged by the owner thereof either in favour of the public or in favour of the Plaintiffs and either by user or by Order of the High Court or otherwise.

64. It follows that the Plaintiffs are entitled to the relief which they seek and I will make the appropriate Order after discussion with Counsel on behalf of both parties.


© 1999 Irish High Court


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