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50 Cards in this Set

  • Front
  • Back
Re Ellenborough Park
the four requirements of easements
1)Ladbroke Retail parks
there must be a dominant and servient land
2)Hill v Tupper
the right must accomodate the dominant tenement
3)Roe v Siddons
must be diversity of ownership/occupation of S&D land
4)Chaffe
right must lie in grant
Bailey
s and d land must be sufficiently proximate
Dyce
list of easements can be expanded upon
Phipps
courts are reluctant to acknowledge new negative easements
Regis
servient owner should not be obliged to spend money
Jones
servient owner is under no obligation to maintain and repair
Copeland
an easement cannot exist where it gives the dominant owner exclusive use of the servient land
Miller
nature of the right is influential-toilet had to be exclusive possession but only for a short time
Hair
1 parking space out of 4 is an easement
Batchelor
exclusive weekday use of a parking space could not be an easement
Green v Ashco
the need to constantly seek permission to use the right precludes it from being an easement
Express acquisition of an easement
grant
reservation
Implied grant
-out of necessity
-out of common intention
-s62
-Wheeldon v Burrows Rule
Pryce
necessity means it must be essential to the use of the land
Manjang
an alternative less convenient access route may preclude a right of way arising through necessity
Adealon
it may depend upon how realistic the alternative is
Nickerson
implied grant is subject to contrary intention
Wong v Beaumont Property trust
easement can be implied through common intention, where it is essential for a specific use of the land
s62 LPA 1925
passes all existing rights to successor in title
Macadam
s62-a t's revocable licence to store coal in a coal shed converted upon granting of a new lease into a legal easement
s62 LPA criteria
-there must be a conveyance
-right must exist at the date of the conveyance-Penn
-there must be diversity of occupation prior to conveyance-Sovmots
Payne
diversity of occupation is not required for an easement of light
P&S Platt
diversity was necessary where the right in question was continuous and apparent
Wheeldon v Burrows
-elevates quasi easements into full easements
Kent
for WvB there must be common ownership and occupation prior to the conveyance
Hansford
the right must be continuous and apparent, eg worn tarmac road across a field
Wheeler
-must be more than a mere convenience
-right must be necessary for the reasonable enjoyment of the dominant land
Prescription
-common law
-lost modern grant
-prescription act 1932
Prescription 3 conditions
-user must be as of right, nec vi, nec clam, nec precario-Mills
-user must be continuous, 3 times in 20 years was insufficient-Hollins
-user must be by/on behalf of a fee simple owner against another
Common law
user must show there has been 20 years continuous use. can be rebutted by showing it wasnt used at any time since 1189
Lost modern grant
20 years of continuous use, courts presume it was done by deed
Tehidy
cant rebut LMG presumption with evidence that a grant was never made
Oakley
it can only be rebutted by evidence that a grant was legally impossible
Prescription act 1832
-not applicable to rights of light
-must establish either 20 or 40 years uninterrupted use
20 years use
will be defeated by oral or written consent
40 years use
will only be defeated by written consent
Flight v Thomas
an interruption of less than a year will not defeat a claim
right to light
20 yrs use will result in an absolute and indefeasible easement being acquired unless it is by written consent-s3
Legal Easements
-created by competent grantor
-created by deed s52 LPA
-equivalent in duration to a legal estate in land-s1(2)(a) LPA
-expressly acquired by grant or reservation
-reg land-reg in accordance w s27(2)(a) LRA 2002
Equitable easements
-created merely in compliance with s53(1)(a) LPA\
-created by an equitable estate owner
-failue of legal formalities, but still an enforceable contract-Walsh v Lonsdale
Enforcement of easements-Registered land-Legal
-expressly acquired-must be registered to be automatically binding
-impliedly acquired-overriding interest under sch3 para 2, must be actually known to the purchase, obvious on reasonably careful inspection and exercised w/n 1 year prior to disposition
Enforcement of easements-Registered land-equitable
express or implied-if entered as a notice it will be binding s32 LRA 2002
-if not entered as a notice, will not bind a purchaser for value-s29 LRA
-will not be an overriding interest
Enforcement of easements-Unregistered land-legal
binds the world
Enforcement of easements-Unregistered land-equitable
-class d3 land charge-will be binding s198 LPA
-if not registered, will not bind a purchaser of a legal estate, s4(6)LCA
s62 LPA
benefit of an easement will auto pass to the successor in title
Termination of easements
-merger of S&D land
-release-express, implied or statute
-change of character-Attwood-change of use if D land which leads to substantial increase in the burden on the S Land-easement may be terminated