OUTER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION
[2006] CSOH 1NUMBER30
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A40/06
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OPINION OF LORD
HODGE
in the cause
MELFORT PIER
HOLIDAYS LIMITED
Pursuers;
against
THE MELFORT CLUB
AND OTHERS
Defender:
ญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญ________________
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Pursuers: O'Brien; Digby Brown SSC
Defenders: Barne; Morisons
25 August 2006
Background
[1] These
are two motions relating to an interim
interdict and interim order under
section 47(2) of the Court of Session Act 1988 which Lord Menzies
pronounced on 25 January 2006. The pursuers seek to extend the scope of that
interim interdict while the defenders
seek the recall of both orders.
[2] The
pursuers wish to develop a restaurant at the holiday resort, known as Melfort
Pier and Harbour and comprising fifteen self-catering houses, which they own
and operate at Loch Melfort near Kilmelford, by Oban, Argyll. The first to eighth defenders are an unincorporated
association, its office bearers and three individuals who, it is averred, act
on behalf of the association. The
association is responsible for the management of a timeshare resort known as Melfort
Village, comprising thirty-two
cottages and a restaurant. The two
holiday resorts adjoin each other. When,
in August 2005, the pursuers sought planning permission for the development of
the restaurant at their holiday resort, several of the defenders objected to
their application. The local planning authority
granted planning permission for the development notwithstanding the objections
which included objections in relation to the inadequacy of access by road. Thereafter a disagreement has arisen between
the pursuers and the defenders about the manner in which large vehicles obtain
access to the pursuers' resort.
[3] The
disagreement has arisen in the following way.
Vehicles travel to and from the pursuers' resort on an unclassified
single track public road ("the public road") which starts on the A816 public
road about three hundred metres south of Kilmelford. The public road runs for about one and a half
miles until it crosses a bridge over the river Oude. When one approaches from the south there is,
shortly before one reaches the bridge, a farmyard on the right hand side of the
public road at Melfort Mains Farm.
Immediately after the bridge there is a sharp left hand bend in the road
which then proceeds in a westerly direction.
To the right of the road at this point is the entrance to the driveway
to the first defenders' resort ("the driveway"). The driveway is owned by the ninth defenders
in trust for the first defenders. The
road layout therefore resembles a T-junction, with the lower arm and the left
arm being the public road and the right arm being the driveway. The left hand bend is so sharp that large
vehicles are unable to negotiate the bend without encroaching upon the driveway
and manoeuvring within it. The public
road then runs in a westerly direction past the pursuers' resort towards Degnish
Point and ends at a turning point without connecting to any other public
road. There are to the
west of the bridge the pursuers' resort, two houses owned by or on
behalf of the first defenders, approximately fourteen other houses and a farm.
[4] The
method by which large vehicles negotiated the bend when approaching from the
south was that they turned into the farmyard before reaching the bridge and
then reversed over the bridge before reversing into the driveway. Thereafter they manoeuvred on the driveway in
order to proceed forwards in a westerly direction on the public road. The distance for which the vehicles reversed
on the public road was approximately 80 metres.
When large vehicles came in the opposite direction they drove into the
driveway before reversing out of the driveway, over the bridge, down the public
road and into the entrance of the farmyard from where they proceeded forwards
in a southerly direction.
[5] When
the pursuers obtained the interim
interdict in January 2006 they averred that long vehicles encroached upon the
driveway for a distance of around two metres.
They sought and obtained an interdict against the first to eighth
defenders from obstructing, preventing or impeding the use of the driveway by,
among other things, placing any physical obstruction across the driveway within
four metres of the public road. The interim order which Lord Menzies granted
ordered that members of the public might encroach onto the driveway so far as
was reasonably necessary for the purpose of traversing the public road. The basis on which the pursuers sought and
obtained the interim interdict and
the interim order was their
contention that a public right of way had been constituted over the driveway by
the operation of positive prescription.
The motions
[6] After
they obtained the interim interdict,
the pursuers discovered that the large vehicles needed to encroach on the
driveway for a distance of eleven metres and that the interdict which they had
obtained did not preserve the status quo
which they had sought to maintain. By
this time the defenders had constructed bollards on the driveway at about four
metres from its junction with the public road.
The bollards prevent larger vehicles from encroaching further onto the
driveway while allowing smaller vehicles to use the driveway. The pursuers adjusted their pleadings to aver
that the vehicles had used eleven metres of the driveway to effect
their manoeuvres and now seek to amend their conclusion for interdict
accordingly. The defenders oppose the
amendment and the related motion for an amended interim interdict and seek recall of the interim interdict and interim
order which Lord Menzies granted.
[7] In
support of his motions Mr O'Brien for the pursuers submitted that the law
allowed the public to extend the use made of a public right of way so long as
the route was reasonably navigable. He
referred to Ferguson "The Law of Roads, Streets and Rights of Way in Scotland",
Galbreath v Armour (1845) 4 Bell's App 374, 389, Mann v Brodie (1885) 12
R (HL) 52, Forbes v Forbes (1829) 7 Shaw 441 and (1829) 4
Fac Dec 563, Mackenzie v Bankes (1868) 6 M 936 and
Rhins District Committee v
Cunninghame 1917 2 SLT 169. In any event, he submitted that the pursuers
had averred a relevant prima facie case
of the constitution of a public right of way over the driveway by positive
prescription. He referred to
section 3(3) of the Prescription and Limitation (Scotland)
Act 1973. While the defenders averred
that the use of the driveway had been by tolerance, he submitted that Lord
Sands in Rhins District Committee (above)
was correct in holding (at p.171) that a judge is required to assume that a
proprietor would be vigilant in protecting his rights and that he should not
readily imply tolerance of significant encroachment by such a proprietor.
[8] Counsel
submitted that the balance of convenience favoured the amended interim interdict which would maintain
the status quo as the defenders had
not objected to other road users using the driveway. He questioned the defenders' concern about
safety to the public or damage to the driveway.
If larger vehicles were not able to reach the pursuers' resort by the
public road, the pursuers would face higher fees from Shanks & McEwan
Limited for waste disposal and materials for the construction of the restaurant
would require to be brought by boat to Melfort pier and then
transported in smaller vehicles.
The pursuers no longer claimed that the closure of the driveway to large
vehicles would frustrate their construction of the restaurant but it would make
it more expensive.
[9] Mr Barne
for the defenders referred me to correspondence which appeared to show that
some lorries had travelled over one hundred metres up
the driveway before turning round and returning to the public road. He submitted that the pursuers' "reasonable
navigability" test was not an appropriate test as otherwise people would be
entitled to drive large vehicles for long distances up a private driveway which
would thereby become a public road. In
support of his motion to recall the interim
orders, he advanced three propositions.
First, he submitted that the public had a right of highway over the
public road and not a public right of way, arguing that the latter was a more
extensive right than the former. The
western end of the public road was only a turning point and did not
terminate in a public place; it could not be a public right of way because
there were not two public termini. He accepted however that the public road was
a "public road" in terms of section 151 of the Roads (Scotland)
Act 1984. Secondly, if there were
sufficient material to support a prima
facie case of a public right of way along the public road, that right of
way was confined geographically to the physical limits of the public road. Where a public road was physically restricted
by walls on either side or by the shape and size of a bridge, the law did not
allow the public to encroach on private land to make the road passable to
larger vehicles. Thirdly, it was not
possible to constitute a public right of way over the driveway because a public
right of way required two public termini. There were not two public termini in this case as the vehicles
entered and exited the driveway at the same place.
[10] In support of his first submission Mr Barne referred me to
PIK Facilities Limited v Watson's Ayr Park Limited [2005] CSOH 132, Rankine "Landownership", (4th
ed), Chapter 19, McRobert v Reid 1914 SC 633, MacKinnon v Argyll and Bute
Council 2002 SLT 1275, and Cusine and Paisley, "Servitudes and Rights of Way", paragraphs 18.03 and
18.05. In support of his second
submission he referred me to Forbes v Forbes (above), MacKenzie v Bankes (above),
Kenneth Reid's "Law of Property",
paragraph 505, Cusine and Paisley (above), paragraph 20.31 and Lord
Donington v Mair (1894) 21 R
829. He supported his third submission
by referring to PIK Facilities Limited (above),
Cusine and Paisley (above), paragraph 20.01, and Magistrates of Edinburgh v
North British Railway Company (1904) 6 F 620.
[11] He submitted that the balance of convenience favoured recall of
the interim orders. The status
quo had been that the defenders were trying to prevent lorries
from encroaching on their property.
Large vehicles which carried out the manoeuvres in the driveway without
supervision posed a risk to the safety of members of the first defenders, their
children and domestic pets. Damage had
been caused to the defenders' property and no compensation had been paid. The
defenders needed to control access to their driveway to ensure the safety of
persons and property.
Decision
[12] The public road is a road which the roads authority maintains
at public expense; that was a matter on which the parties were agreed. I was not informed of its origins beyond the
pursuer's averment that the public road was constructed before 1873. As it predated the Roads and Bridges (Scotland)
Act 1878, it may have been a statute
labour road or one of the highland roads which was constructed at public
expense before that Act reorganised the management of public roads by
establishing county road trustees; but this matter was not explored before me.
[13] I am not persuaded that the pursuers are correct in their
submission that, absent the operation of prescription, a public road can be
extended into a private driveway as a matter of right when larger vehicles
start to use the road, simply because it is possible for such vehicles to use
the public road, which otherwise would not be passable, by encroaching on to
and manoeuvring on the driveway. That is
the substance of the pursuers' "reasonable navigability" test. I am satisfied that the law does not
countenance that. It is clear from Forbes v Forbes, MacKenzie v Bankes and McRobert v Reid (above),
that the public are not entitled to alter a public road or a public right of
way to make it passable when otherwise it is not. Where in the past a public road or public
right of way was of a nature that it was used by all means of transportation
known to a district, the judges' opinions in Forbes v Forbes and MacKenzie v Bankes support the view that the public were entitled to bring new
methods of transportation on to the public road or public right of way when
such methods were introduced into the district.
Thus in certain highland areas when, in the nineteenth century, carts
were introduced as a method of transporting goods where before horses with
panniers were the only method of such transportation, it was held that the use
of the public roads could be extended to include the new means of transportation. But as Lord Glenlee stated in Forbes v Forbes (1829 4 Fac Dec 563 at p.566), "if the road had been lined
and marked off by walls and fences, and were so narrow that no cart could use
it, the public might have no right to make it broader, and thus be confined to
the use of it as a horse or foot road".
And in Mackenzie v Bankes other obstructions and
difficulties, which prevented carts and carriages from traversing the road from
end to end and which could be removed only by engineering operations, were sufficient
for the court to hold that the road was incapable of being a public road for
use by such means of transport.
[14] In this case the larger vehicles cannot negotiate the bend at the bridge by remaining
within the confines of the public road.
The fact that the road is a public road does not of itself entitle the
drivers of those vehicles to encroach on to the driveway which is the property
of the ninth defenders. I therefore do
not accept the pursuers' contention that there is a test of reasonable passableness
(which, absent inundation of the road, may be the correct way to describe the
ability to use a road in preference to navigability) which entitles users of a
public road to encroach upon private property which is not fenced off or walled
or otherwise inaccessible. In this
respect I agree with Mr Barne's second submission set out in
paragraph 9 above. On the
information before me it appears that the only relevant case that the pursuers
have for asserting a right to drive and manoeuvre on the driveway is that the
entrance to the driveway has become part of a public right of way by means of
public use during the period of positive prescription. That is the pursuers' pleaded case on Record.
[15] Against that case Mr Barne advanced the other two of the
three propositions which I set out in paragraph 9 above. In relation to the submission that the public
road was a highway and did not have the rights which a public right of way
entailed, I am not satisfied that the authorities which he cited vouch that
distinction. The case law and textbooks
use expressions such as "highway" and "public road" in contexts which reveal
that the terms have no fixed meaning as to the rights associated with each. In many statutory provisions, cases and texts
a distinction is drawn between a highway or public highway that is maintained
at public expense and a public right of way which is not: see the statutory
provisions referred to in Magistrates of
Perth v Earl of Kinnoull 1909 SC
114, Corporation of Glasgow v Caledonian Railway Co 1908 SC 244 and
1909 SC (HL) 5, and Evans v Magistrates of Edinburgh 1916 SC (HL)
149. Rankine (above), p.329, Ferguson
(above), pp.12 and 105 and Bell's Law Dictionary s.v. "Road, Public" also note
this distinction. But it appears to me
that there is also considerable authority which supports the view that
historically a highway conferred the most extensive public rights of way. Cusine and Paisley at
paragraph 18.04 discuss the way in which the Institutional writers used the
term "highway" or "the king's highway" as routes which were open to all and as
routes between two burghs or between a burgh and a public port. See Stair II, vii, 10, Erskine II, vi, 17, Bankton II, vii, 21. The importance of the rights conferred on
the public by a highway was recognised in Sutherland
v Thomson (1876) 3 R 485,
Lord Neaves at p.489. Interference
with or obstruction of the highway was a crime: Bankton II, vii, 27. While in a public right of way, an owner may
erect gates provided that they do not prevent the public exercising their
rights of way, in highways the right to prevent any erection is absolute: Lord Donington v Mair (above), Lord Justice-Clerk MacDonald at p.832, Reilly v Greenfield Coal and Brick Co Ltd 1909
SC 1328, Lord President Dunedin at p.1338.
Statutory provisions now protect public roads against obstruction,
interference and damage: see Parts V and VIII of the Roads (Scotland)
Act 1984. Unlike a public right of way,
it has been suggested that a right of highway cannot be lost by non-use: see Will's Trustees v Cairngorm School Ltd 1976 SC (HL) 30, Lord Fraser at
p.169. In Galbreath v Armour (above),
Lord Brougham (at p.390) equated the concept of a highway with the most
extensive right of way which was recognised by civil law, namely via.
His approach is consistent with the view that historically a highway has
been seen as the most extensive public right over a road. So while there are examples of the term "highway"
being used as a term to cover different classes of roads (see Lord Skerrington
in McRobert v Reid (above) at p.648) and the statutes and texts mentioned above
equate "highway" with a public road which is publicly funded in contrast with a
public right of way, I am not persuaded that a publicly funded highway has
historically been seen as conferring less rights on its would-be users than a
public right of way.
[16] In support of his submission, Mr Barne submitted that the
public road could not be a public right of way because it did not have two
public termini. I discuss the need for two public termini in relation to a public right of
way below. But where a public road has
been recognised as a highway, I doubt if it is necessary for there to be two
public termini. No doubt in most cases the older highways
which were publicly funded did connect two public places such as two burghs or
a burgh and a port. I note that Cusine
and Paisley (at paragraph 18.05) suggest that both
highways and public rights of way lead from one public place to another. Nonetheless, I am not persuaded, in the
absence of the citation of more authority, that this is necessarily the
case. There are examples today of
publicly maintained unclassified roads in rural areas which link farms or small
groups of houses to classified public roads.
There is also older case law which treated similar roads constructed by
statute labour as public roads: Wilson
v Jamieson (1827) 4 Murr. 364. Nor
am I satisfied that the public road gives the public less rights than it would
if it were a public right of way, which, it was submitted, it could not be as
the public road terminated at a turning point and not at a public place. While it is clear that, where the public
authority maintains a road but has not acquired the land on which the road is
laid, the ground underneath a public road remains the property of the
landowner, there are dicta that every
point on a public road is a public place.
See, for example, Jenkins v Murray (1866) 4 M 1046, Lord President McNeill at p.1047, McRobert v Reid (above), Lord President Strathclyde at p.639, Lord
Skerrington at p.648, and Rhins District
Committee (above) Lord Sands at p.170.
Not having had further authorities cited to me, I proceed on the basis
that every part of the public road is a public place. It appears therefore that a public road may
confer extensive rights of passage on the public without having two public termini.
[17] I recognise that a local authority may, under the Roads
(Scotland) Act 1984, adopt a road over which there is no public right of way
but the use of which by the public has merely been on tolerance by the
landowner (see MacKinnon v Argyll and Bute Council (above)). That may be the basis of Mr Barne's
submission that the public road is a highway that gives the public less rights than a public right of way. But I have no information before me which
suggests that the public have enforceable rights of passage over the public
road only by virtue of the adoption of the road by the roads authority under
the Roads (Scotland)
Act 1984. In any event, I am not
persuaded that the rights of passage of the public over a "public road" in
terms of section 151 of the Roads (Scotland)
act 1984 are less than those available to them in a public right of way,
whatever was the status of the road before it was adopted by the roads
authority. Accordingly, I do not accept
the defenders' first submission.
[18] Mr Barne's third submission was that the averred use of
the driveway during the prescriptive period could not establish public rights
of way over the driveway because there were not two public termini. There is no doubt
as to the rule that in order to set up a route as a public right of way the
route must have two public termini. See, for example, Young v Cuthbertson (1854)
1 Macq 455, Burt v Barclay (1861) 24 D 218, Jenkins v Murray (above), Duncan v
Lees (1870) 9 M 274 and Winans v Lord Tweedmouth (1888) 15 R
540. Nor is there any doubt that one can
have a public right of way from one part of a public road to another part of
the same road (Jenkins v Murray (above)). It appears to me that the reason for the rule
is that the right of the public to go on to private land does not extend to
allowing the public to stroll across that land for recreation. See Mackintosh
v Moir (1871) 9M 574, Lord
President Inglis at p.575 and Lord Ardmillan at pp.578-9, and Duncan v Lees (above) Lord Ardmillan at p.278 and Lord Kinloch at
p.279. As Lord Kinloch said in the
latter case, "the legal object [of a public right of way] is transit, not
amusement". Where, however there is a
public road and the users of that road encroach upon a small area of private
land when traversing the road for the prescriptive period, I consider that it
is arguable that their so doing could create a public right of way over the
area of private land. The right of way
would be an adjunct to the public road.
In the present case it is not likely that the wheels of large vehicles
which enter the driveway to effect the manoeuvre will
leave the driveway at exactly the same spot as they entered it. Thus, while it is a technical point, a
vehicle will usually move from one public place on the public road to
another. I am not persuaded therefore
that it is a legal impossibility for there to be a public right of way over the
driveway as an adjunct to the public's right of passage over the public
road. I therefore do not accept the
defenders' third submission.
[19] The remaining question is whether I should extend the interim interdict as the pursuers request. I
am satisfied on the information before me that it is appropriate to do so. While there is a dispute between the parties
as to whether the prior use of the driveway was an assertion of right or by
tolerance, it appears that for many years the people living to the west of the
bridge and public utilities have used the driveway to effect
the manoeuvres to negotiate the bend. I
was informed by Mr O'Brien that the parties were agreed that large
vehicles had encroached on the driveway for eleven metres when effecting the manoeuvres to negotiate the bend. Also while the defenders aver that Council's
normal refuse collection vehicles are able to negotiate the bend, the pursuers
(in as yet unanswered adjustments) aver the contrary and that, after the
defenders erected the bollards on their driveway, the Council at a meeting on 16 February 2006 requested the
defenders to remove them. The defenders
have not challenged the encroachment on the driveway by their neighbours and by
public utility vehicles seeking to negotiate the bend. It may be that in a proof the defenders will
be able to demonstrate that the local population and the Council had obtained
their permission to use the entrance of the driveway for the manoeuvres and, as
in Magistrates of Edinburgh v North British Railway Company (above),
encroachment which had been tolerated had never become an assertion of
right. Nevertheless it is not disputed
that some vehicles have carried out the manoeuvres for many years. It would not be appropriate for me to assume
at the interim stage that these
manoeuvres have been carried out only with the permission of the
defenders: Rhins District Committee (above).
I consider that the balance of convenience favours the preservation of
the status quo before the defenders
sought to forbid large vehicles serving the pursuers' premises from encroaching
on the driveway. While this will
require the defenders to lower or remove the bollards which they have erected
four metres into the driveway, they will be entitled to erect bollards at or
beyond eleven metres into the driveway and to take reasonable steps to ensure
the safety of users of their facilities.
It will be incumbent on the drivers of vehicles using the driveway for
the manoeuvres to take care for the safety of others in the vicinity of the
driveway.
[20] I therefore refuse the defenders' motion and allow the pursuers
to amend their first conclusion and I vary the interim interdict granted on 25 January 2006 by substituting "eleven metres" for
"four metres" on the three occasions where those words appear.