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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Joyce v Rigolli [2004] EWCA Civ 79 (02 February 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2004/79.html Cite as: [2004] EWCA Civ 79 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE EPSOM COUNTY COURT
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE HULL QC)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE ARDEN
and
SIR MARTIN NOURSE
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Catherine Mary Esther Joyce |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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John Rocco Rigolli |
Respondent |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Howard Smith (instructed by Vivash Hunt Solicitors) for the Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
Lady Justice Arden :
i) Did the judge find that the boundary between 6 and 7 Chanton Drive, Cheam, Surrey was not ascertainable from the title plans registered at HM Land Registry and, if so, was he wrong so to conclude?
ii) Was the boundary agreement, which the judge found was made between the appellant, acting by her husband, Mr Joyce, and the respondent, Mr Rigolli, the owners of respectively 6 and 7 Chanton Drive, invalid because it was not in writing as required by section 2 of the Law of Property (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1989?
iii) Was the boundary as found by the judge inconsistent with the evidence which he accepted about the boundary agreement?
Background and the judgment below
"The distance between the points marked C and D on the plan annexed hereto being a line from the northern corner of the building at 6 Chanton Drive at right-angles to the boundary between the points marked A and B shall be 8.382 metres (27 feet 6 inches)."
"I shall not attempt to describe further Mr Francis' very careful and impressive work. There are certain obvious weaknesses which follow from its application. First and foremost, under Rule 278 of the Land Registration Rules, the filed plan is deemed to indicate general boundaries only and the exact line is left undetermined. Rules 278 and 279 would appear to have been entirely overlooked by the parties and their advisers at the time of the material transfers. But if they are observed, then Mr Francis' entire operation is logically and legally illegitimate or probably so. Secondly, to project lines less than half an inch long representing a width on the ground of two feet or more so as to arrive at angles accurate to half a degree appears to me to be contrary to all common sense. Thirdly, as can be seen from the plan at p.110, the angle is made with an assumed boundary line. Mr Francis admitted that the lines of the fences on the eastern boundaries of 6 and 7 Chanton Drive were not straight. They apparently run along the top of a slope perhaps 8 feet high, leading down to playing fields beyond, and tend to follow the top of the slope. Mr Francis also admitted that a difference of as little as 7 degrees would mean that the fence was in the correct position and did not constitute a trespass."
"If I had to choose between the views of these two experts, I should, I think, be obliged to prefer the opinion of Mr Maskell, notwithstanding the very high quality of Mr Francis' work. Even if Mr Maskell is correct, however, it follows that a very small part of the land in Mrs Joyce's paper title has been taken by Mr Rigolli – see the arc of the circle on the drawing at 848-3 – unless it had been agreed that the radius 27 feet 6 inches was not to be perpendicular to the boundary."
"At the meeting in November 2000 referred to in the previous paragraph (1) the Claimant and Mr Joyce agreed the position of the boundary between No 6 and No 7 on the ground. A measurement of 26 feet 6 inches was taken from the northern corner of the Claimant's house. That measurement reached a cherry tree shown marked Y on the plan attached hereto ('the Defendant's plan'). Mr Joyce said that the Claimant wished to retain the cherry tree and it was therefore agreed that the boundary fence should be erected so that the cherry tree would remain on the Claimant's side of the fence, but that to the west of the cherry tree the fence would revert to the original line (i.e. the line of the boundary on the basis that the cherry tree was on the boundary). The line of the boundary running through the cherry tree is shown marked green on the Defendant's plan. The line of the boundary fence as agreed at the meeting (and as constructed) is marked red on the Defendant's plan. (2) Stakes were inserted in the ground and a string was run from the front (western side) of the plots to the rear (eastern side) of the plots to identify the boundary. The western end of the boundary was in line with a drain/manhole on Chanton Drive shown in the position marked X on the Defendant's plan."
"I am satisfied by that evidence. I found Mr French an extremely frank and trustworthy witness. I am content to act on the evidence of this witness, corroborated to an extent, of course, by Mr Rigolli, though contradicted, of course, by Mr Joyce. As I say, I find quite clearly that Mr Joyce was the agent of Mrs Joyce and it was quite clear that he had authority to fix the boundary and that he did so. I find that the boundary was agreed."
"I find that the boundary was agreed, and that that agreement having been acted on is binding on both claimant and defendant. It was admitted and it is self-evident that if the line of the boundary runs beside and parallel to the garage and is in line with the inspection cover and the two drains in the road, then the defendant's development is within his boundary. In my judgment, that is precisely what happened. Moreover, Mr Joyce, who, as I have said, was plainly acting for his wife, did nothing to prevent the erection of the southern gate post, the drive, the fence, the garage or other work between November 2000 and May 2001, or at any time before October 2001. When Mrs Joyce raised her doubts about the gate post, then Mr Joyce told her there was nothing that could be done because they had sold the land. In these circumstances, having considered the judgment in Neilson v Poole (1969) 20 P&CR 909 it appears to me that the parties have reached a binding agreement , which the court must recognise, with regard to the line of the boundary between their properties, and the action therefore must be dismissed."
Submissions
Issue 1
Issue 2
Issue 3
Conclusions
Issue 1
"It will be observed that the parcels as there set out are really almost devoid of any particularity; all that is said about the property conveyed is that it is part of the Chicklade Estate and part of the dwelling house thereon. Unhappily, the plan which was annexed to that conveyance is wholly inadequate to perform the function which the draftsman of the conveyance seems to have contemplated that it would. It is a very dangerous practice for a conveyancer to frame a conveyance with parcels which are not adequately described. Perhaps the most important feature of all the features of a conveyance is to be able to identify the property to which it relates; and, if the draftsman of the conveyance chooses to identify the property solely by reference to a plan, it is of the utmost importance that he should make use of the plan which is a on a scale sufficiently large to make it possible to represent the property and its boundaries in precise detail, giving dimensions and any other features which may be necessary to put beyond doubt the subject matter of the conveyance."
"The facts of the present case are really very simple, but I hope that this judgment will be understood by every conveyancing solicitor in the land as giving them warning, loud and clear, that a conveyancing technique which may been effective in the old days to convey large property from one vendor to one purchaser will lead to nothing but trouble, disputes and expensive litigation if applied to the sale to separate purchasers of a single house and its curtilage divided into separate parts. For such purposes it is absolutely essential that each parcel conveyed shall be described in the conveyance or transfer deed with such particularity and precision that there is no room for doubt about the boundaries of each, and for such purposes if a plan is intended to control the description, an Ordnance map on a scale of 1:2500 is worse than useless. The plan or other drawing bound up with the deed must be on such a large scale that it clearly shown with precision where each boundary runs. In my view the parties to this appeal are the victims of sloppy conveyancing for which the professional advisers of vendor and purchasers appear to bear the responsibility. We are not concerned in this appeal with determining or apportioning that responsibility. This court has to try to reduce to order the confusion created by the conveyancers."
"278 General boundaries
(1) Except in cases in which it is noted in the Property Register that the boundaries have been fixed, the filed plan or General Map shall be deemed to indicate the general boundaries only.
(2) In such cases the exact line of the boundary will be left undetermined – as, for instance, whether it includes a hedge or wall and ditch, or runs along the centre of a wall or fence, or its inner or outer face, or how far it runs within or beyond it; or whether or not the land registered includes the whole or any portion of an adjoining road or stream.
(3) When a general boundary only is desired to be entered in the register, notice to the owners of the adjoining lands need not be given.
(4) This rule shall apply notwithstanding that a part of the whole of a ditch, wall, fence, road, stream, or other boundary is expressly included in or excluded from the title or that it forms the whole of the land comprised in the title.
279 Where physical boundaries do not exist
Where, and so far as, physical boundaries or boundary marks do not exist, the fullest available particulars of the boundaries shall be added to the filed plan or General Map."
Issue 2
"I turn next to the defendant's plea that the boundary agreement is void against him for want of registration as a land charge. It was admittedly not registered, and the only question is whether it was registrable. The point is devoid of any direct authority. A boundary agreement may, I think, be registrable, or it may not, depending on the nature of the agreement. The only suggested head of registration is as an estate contract, Class C(iv). By section 10 (1) of the Land Charges Act 1925, this is defined as :
any contract by an estate owner or by a person entitled at the date of the contract to have a legal estate conveyed to him to convey or create a legal estate;
and then the definition continues with options, pre-emptions and other like rights.
Now a boundary agreement may constitute a contract to convey land. The parties may agree that in return for a concession by A in one place, straightening the line of division, B will make a concession in another place; and the agreement may thus be one for the conveyance of land. But there is another type of boundary agreement. This does no more than identify on the ground what the documents describe in words or delineate on plans. Nothing is transferred, at any rate consciously; the agreement is to identify and not to convey. In such a case, I do not see how the agreement can be said to constitute a contract to convey land.
In general, I think that a boundary agreement will be presumed to fall into this latter category.
…
There may, of course, be cases in which it is uncertain or doubtful whether a boundary agreement will convey any land. Thus, the configuration of the boundary may suggest that land will be conveyed, without demonstrating this beyond doubt. In such a case I would hold the agreement not registrable. Clause C(iv) applies to a 'contract … to convey,' and not to a contract which leaves it uncertain whether or not any land is to be conveyed. In short, in my judgment, a boundary agreement is presumed not to convey land; the presumption may be rebutted, but unless it is, the agreement is not registrable; and to point to circumstances of doubt or uncertainty is not to rebut the presumption.
In this case, the boundary on the conveyance, as I have construed it, coincides with the boundary on the agreement, and so the agreement is not registrable. If the two boundaries had not coincided, because, for example, the true construction of the conveyance yields a different boundary, then the agreement would have been an agreement whereby in fact it was agreed that land belonging to one should thenceforward belong to the other. Nevertheless, even in those circumstances, I should not hold that the agreement was registrable: for, in my judgment, it is not a 'contract … to convey' within clause C(iv). A contract merely to demarcate and confirm is not a contract to convey. No doubt the parties cannot go back on this agreement, and each in time will acquire a title by limitation to the land of the other which falls on his side of the agreed boundary. Even if each were to be entitled to demand a conveyance of that land from the other, I doubt whether the agreement would be registrable: for although the obligation to convey would no doubt arise out of their agreement to demarcate, the contract was merely a contract to demarcate and not a contract to convey."
"I must, too, bear in mind that a boundary agreement is, in its nature, an act of peace, quieting strife and averting litigation, and so is to be favoured in the law. I also bear in mind that many boundary agreements are of the most informal nature, and that the penalty of failure to register an estate contract is that the agreement will be void against a purchaser. These more general conditions, I think, support me in the view that I have expressed. In my judgment, no boundary agreement should be held to be registrable unless it can be seen with reasonable clarity to be an agreement to convey. Accordingly, whether or not I am right about the boundary shown by the conveyances, I hold that the boundary agreement is not void against the defendant for want of registration.
I may add that there was a further contention in relation to the boundary agreement by the defendant; and this, too, I reject. This contention was that once the boundary agreement was made, it superseded the conveyance in so far as the conveyance defined the boundary. Yet what the agreement did was merely to establish on the ground, by agreement, what it was that the conveyance showed. A boundary agreement that merely demarcates is, I think, an agreement that is ancillary to the conveyance; it does not supersede it."
"2 Contracts for sale etc of land to be made by signed writing
(1) A contract for the sale or other disposition of an interest in land can only be made in writing and only by incorporating all the terms which the parties have expressly agreed in one document or, where contracts are exchanged, in each. …
(5) … nothing in this section affects the creation or operation of resulting, implied or constructive trusts."
Issue 3
Disposition
Sir Martin Nourse :
"A contract for the sale or other disposition of an interest in land can only be made in writing….."
"Nothing is transferred, at any rate consciously; the agreement is to identify and not to convey. In such a case, I do not see how the agreement can be said to constitute a contract to convey land."
At p. 919 he added:
"If the two boundaries had not coincided, because, for example, the true construction of the conveyance yields a different boundary, then the agreement would have been an agreement whereby in fact it was agreed that land belonging to one should thenceforward belong to the other. Nevertheless, even in those circumstances, I should not hold that the agreement was registrable….. A contract merely to demarcate and confirm is not a contract to convey."
Lord Justice Thorpe :