BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions >> Horsford v Croft (Antigua and Barbuda) [2024] UKPC 4 (05 March 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKPC/2024/4.html Cite as: [2024] UKPC 4 |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
[2024] UKPC 4
Privy Council Appeal No 0060 of 2021
JUDGMENT
Joseph W Horsford (as Administrator of the Estate of William Horsford, deceased) (Respondent)
v
Geoffrey Croft (Appellant) (Antigua and Barbuda)
From the Court of Appeal of the Eastern Caribbean Supreme Court (Antigua and Barbuda)
before
Lord Lloyd-Jones
Lord Kitchin
Lord Sales
Lord Burrows
Lord Richards
JUDGMENT GIVEN ON
5 March 2024
Heard on 2 May 2023
Sylvester Carrott
(Instructed by Harold Lovell & Co (Antigua)
Respondent
Justin L Simon KC
(Instructed by Charles Russell Speechlys LLP (London))
Introduction
The facts
"The Vendor shall, prior to the completion date, clear and make useable by vehicles the lower road that provides access to the Property and further clearly mark out and identify for the benefit of the Purchaser all of the boundary stakes relevant to the Property."
" The Monks Hill Road is a Private Road owned solely and exclusively by myself, and any interference by you or any other person is a trespass. Your rights as it relates to the Monks Hill Road is limited only to your access to your property that forms part of the Monks Hill Estate and is subject to the road conditions based upon normal wear and tear."
The present proceedings
The judgment of Cottle J
"This court visited the locus in quo. It was at once patent that the access via the western road was only apparent but far from real. The topography rendered it extremely difficult to build a driveway from this road onto the First Defendant's property. But more crucially, the claimant, at the locus in quo, explained that the western road is also his private property and the First Defendant would require his permission to use it. At the entrance to this road the claimant has constructed a gate which he can lock at any time effectively preventing access along this road to the First Defendant's property. The effect of all this is that the First Defendant is landlocked. He cannot access his home unless he passes along one of the roads which [run] from his western and eastern boundaries. Both of those roads are owned by the claimant. This is the epitome of an easement by necessity."
The judgment of the Court of Appeal
"The evidence is that in 1993 when Parcel 171 was transferred and registered to Joseph W. Horsford, he used as access to the public road a path west of the glebe land (the western road). So that Parcel 171 enjoyed a right of way over the lower or western road. An express easement was granted over this road to Ms Tobitt on the transfer of Parcel 171 to her. There is no evidence in the record of Parcel 171 ever enjoying an easement or right of way over the upper or eastern road."
"Further, there was no finding by the learned trial judge that the lower road did not in fact lead to the public road or that the lower road would take the user over lands of a stranger to the grant as submitted by Mr Croft. A right of way across the appellant's land could not be granted on the basis that it was a more convenient way and there was no other basis from which a way of necessity in favour of the upper or eastern road could be implied. Mr Croft therefore has failed to meet the essentials for implication of such an easement."
An express right of way over the western route?
Easement of necessity: the law
"It seems hardly necessary to state the essentials for the implication of such an easement. There has to be found, first, a common owner of a legal estate in two plots of land. It has, secondly, to be established that access between one of those plots and the public highway can be obtained only over the other plot. Thirdly, there has to be found a disposition of one of the plots without any specific grant or reservation of a right of access. Given these conditions, it may be possible as a matter of construction of the relevant grant (see Nickerson v Barraclough) to imply the reservation of an easement of necessity."
"...in my judgment the law relating to ways of necessity rests not upon a basis of public policy but upon the implication to be drawn from the fact that unless some way is implied, a parcel of land will be inaccessible. From that fact the implication arises that the parties must have intended that some way giving access to the land should have been granted."
The application of the law to the facts of this case
Encroachment
Conclusion