St Edmundsbury v Clark
Courts will construe reservations strictly against landowner - had the right to reserve what they wanted and are assumed to have done so
Attwood v Bovis Homes
If burden has substantially changed, the increased use of easement cannot be claimed
Right to drainage and utilities through defined channels
Re Ellensborough Park
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
London & Blenheim Estates v Ladbroke
There must be land for the benefit of which the easement exists and one which is burdened by its exercise
Right to park
Hawkins v Rutter
Easement cannot exist in gross - not exercisable independent of interest in the land
P&A Swift Insurance v Combined English Stores
Does the easement affect the value, convenience or amenity of land?
Must be more than merely personal benefit
Hill v Tupper
Right which facilitates business but is not sufficiently connected with use of land is not capable of being an easement
Moody v Steggles
Right which is sufficiently connected to use of dominant land can be an easement if inextricably connected with use of land
Pugh v Savage
Need not be adjoining land
Bailey v Stephens
Must be proximity to establish that the dominant land actually derives benefit
Roe v Siddons
Dominant and servient lands must be owned and occupied by two separate parties
William Aldred’s Case
Nature and extent must be capable of reasonably exact description
Bland v Mosely
Cannot claim right to a view - too ambiguous
Browne v Flower
Cannot claim right to privacy - too vague
Harris v De Pinna
No easement to flow of light through undefined channels
Borman v Griffiths
Right of way
Colls v Home & Colonial Stores
Right of light (specific window receives certain amount)
Race v Ward
Right to water through defined channel
Wong v Beaumont Property Trust
Right to air in defined channel
Dalton v Angus
Right to support
Regency Villas v Diamond Resorts
Right to use facilities
Dyce v Lady James Hay
Courts are willing to accept new positive easements to accommodate new social and technological changes
Wright v Macadam
Right of storage
Effect of s62 LPA 1925 - renewal of lease/sale, informal permission becomes full easement implied into new lease
Phipps v Pears
Right to protection from weather claimed by analogy to easement of support - courts are unwilling to recognise new negative easement