Easements Flashcards

(49 cards)

1
Q

St Edmundsbury v Clark

A

Courts will construe reservations strictly against landowner - had the right to reserve what they wanted and are assumed to have done so

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2
Q

Attwood v Bovis Homes

A

If burden has substantially changed, the increased use of easement cannot be claimed
Right to drainage and utilities through defined channels

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3
Q

Re Ellensborough Park

A

Test for capability of being an easement:

1) Must be dominant and servient tenement (identifiable piece of land)
2) Must accommodate the dominant tenement
3) No common ownership
4) Must lie in grant

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4
Q

London & Blenheim Estates v Ladbroke

A

There must be land for the benefit of which the easement exists and one which is burdened by its exercise
Right to park

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5
Q

Hawkins v Rutter

A

Easement cannot exist in gross - not exercisable independent of interest in the land

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6
Q

P&A Swift Insurance v Combined English Stores

A

Does the easement affect the value, convenience or amenity of land?
Must be more than merely personal benefit

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7
Q

Hill v Tupper

A

Right which facilitates business but is not sufficiently connected with use of land is not capable of being an easement

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8
Q

Moody v Steggles

A

Right which is sufficiently connected to use of dominant land can be an easement if inextricably connected with use of land

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9
Q

Pugh v Savage

A

Need not be adjoining land

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10
Q

Bailey v Stephens

A

Must be proximity to establish that the dominant land actually derives benefit

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11
Q

Roe v Siddons

A

Dominant and servient lands must be owned and occupied by two separate parties

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12
Q

William Aldred’s Case

A

Nature and extent must be capable of reasonably exact description

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13
Q

Bland v Mosely

A

Cannot claim right to a view - too ambiguous

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14
Q

Browne v Flower

A

Cannot claim right to privacy - too vague

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15
Q

Harris v De Pinna

A

No easement to flow of light through undefined channels

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16
Q

Borman v Griffiths

A

Right of way

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17
Q

Colls v Home & Colonial Stores

A

Right of light (specific window receives certain amount)

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18
Q

Race v Ward

A

Right to water through defined channel

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19
Q

Wong v Beaumont Property Trust

A

Right to air in defined channel

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20
Q

Dalton v Angus

A

Right to support

21
Q

Regency Villas v Diamond Resorts

A

Right to use facilities

22
Q

Dyce v Lady James Hay

A

Courts are willing to accept new positive easements to accommodate new social and technological changes

23
Q

Wright v Macadam

A

Right of storage

Effect of s62 LPA 1925 - renewal of lease/sale, informal permission becomes full easement implied into new lease

24
Q

Phipps v Pears

A

Right to protection from weather claimed by analogy to easement of support - courts are unwilling to recognise new negative easement

25
Hunter v Canary Wharf
Cannot claim right to TV signal - should have done so via restrictive covenant
26
Regis Property v Redman
Claim to supply of hot water was not an easement as it incurred additional expense on servient landowner
27
Jones v Pritchard
Servient landowner is not obliged to do or spend anything Not under any obligation to repair, but must allow dominant landowner to enter servient tenement to effect repairs at his own expense
28
Rance v Elvin
Easement to allow passage of water was allowed, subject to quasi-contractual obligation for dominant landowner to pay for his share
29
Green v Ashco Horticulturalists
Must be exercisable as of right and not dependent on permission every time s62 operates where there is casual permission to exercise right permanently
30
Grigsby v Melville
Right to use whole cellar was not an easement - amounted to exclusive use
31
Batchelor v Marlow
'Ouster principle' - is the servient owner left with any reasonable use of his land? - easement to park 9-5 on business days amounted to significant possession
32
Moncrieff v Jameson
Scottish case (persuasive only) - 'does the servient owner retain possession and control of the land' - could do anything but interfere with claimant's parking rights
33
Kettel & Ors v Bloomfold
Confirmed Batchelor v Marlow (not overruled) - claimant's right to use designated parking spaces was as he retained reasonable use of the spaces
34
Pryce v McGuinness
Utilities will not be implemented by necessity
35
Manjang v Drammeh
If there is another access route, no matter how inconvenient, the easement will not be implied via necessity
36
Pwllback Colliery v Woodman
To be implied by common intention the property must be used in a definite and particular manner and the easement is necessary for that
37
Wong v Beaumont Property
Right to ventilation implied by common intention - property let as a restaurant
38
Re Webb's Lease
High onus of proof on someone claiming an implied common intention Not satisfactory that the right had been openly exercised prior to the transaction
39
Peckham v Ellison
Reserved through common intention - facts must be consistent with any other explanation than common intention
40
Wheeldon v Burrows
On sale or lease of part of land, grantee will receive all quasi-easements which are 1) Continuous and apparent 2) Used regularly to be a clear and objective feature of the land 3) Apparent upon reasonable inspection 4) Necessary for reasonable enjoyment of that land and used at time of transfer
41
Pyer v Carter
Can include underground easement if it would be apparent to someone familiar with the subject (e.g. surveyor)
42
Constagliola v English
Where the common owner hadn't actively used their right for a few months, but has generally used it in the past, it was still held to be in use by the owner
43
Wheeler v Saunders
If there is alternative and equally adequate access to land then right of way is not necessary to reasonable enjoyment of that lanf
44
Millman v Ellis
If right of way is significantly more convenient, then it will be held to be necessary to the reasonable enjoyment of that land
45
Kent v Kavanagh
Only operates upon sale/lease where immediately before there was a common owner and occupier of the whole
46
P&S Platt Limited v Crouch
No need for diversity of occupation to imply easements under s62
47
Williams v Sandy Lane
30 years' non-use and overgrowth of right of way did not make the way impassable - not sufficient to demonstrate intention to abandon
48
Swan v Sinclair
Right of way had not been used for 50 years and was blocked by fences - abandoned
49
Regan v Paul Properties
Injunction unlikely to be justified where infringement is only trivial or temporary/overly oppressive/can be compensated by damages