Barriers to Development - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 58
About This Presentation
Title:

Barriers to Development

Description:

Developer requires vehicular access over Redacre. Understands that vendor (and its predecessors in title) have used strip of land ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:53
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 59
Provided by: leemcm
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Barriers to Development


1
Barriers to Development
  • Andrew Olins
  • Jon Mowbray
  • Real Estate Dispute Resolution

2
Easements
  • Jon Mowbray
  • Real Estate Dispute Resolution

3
Case study

4
Case study

Greenacre
Redacre
F O O T P A T H
R O A D
Proposed development
Office
5
Acquisition of right of way
  • Developer requires vehicular access over
    Redacre
  • Understands that vendor (and its predecessors
    in title) have used strip of land marked orange
    for this purpose for a number of years
  • Has a right of way been acquired?

6
Essential characteristics of an easement
  • Dominant and servient land
  • Right must accommodate the dominant land
  • Dominant and servient owners must be different
    persons
  • Must be capable of forming the subject matter
    of a grant

7
Acquiring easements
  • Statute
  • Express grant or reservation
  • Implied grant or reservation
  • Prescription

8
Prescription
  • Common law
  • - Since time immemorial (1189)
  • - 20 years use raises rebuttable presumption
  • - User must be as of right - nec vi, nec clam,
    nec precario
  • Doctrine of Lost Modern Grant
  • - Any 20 year period
  • Prescription Act 1832
  • - 20 years user - 40 years user

9
For what purpose can the right of way be used?
  • Express grant
  • - Construction of words
  • - Context in which they are drafted
  • - Courts usually construe widely (White v Grand
    Hotel Eastbourne (1913))

10
For what purpose can the right of way be used?
  • Implied grant
  • - for all purposes according to ordinary and
    reasonable use to which the dominant land might
    be applied at the time of the implied grant
    (Williams v James (1867))
  • - Two stage test in McAdams Homes v Robinson
    (2004)
  • (1) Radical change in character of dominant
    land and
  • (2) Substantial increase in burden on servient
    land

11
Case study

Greenacre
Redacre
F O O T P A T H
R O A D
Proposed development
Office
12
Can you use right to access adjoining plot?
  • Rule in Harris v Flower (1905)
  • Generally not permissible to increase area of
    dominant land
  • Ancillary use (National Trust v White (1987)

13
Case study

Greenacre
Redacre
F O O T P A T H
R O A D
Proposed development
Office
14
Right of way
  • Redacre was expressly granted in 1960 a right
    of way on foot over the yellow land for purposes
    of accessing footpath through gate
  • Gate has been locked for last 10 years
  • Developer wants to build over this area

15
Has right of way been abandoned?
  • Mere non-user, however long, not sufficient
  • - Cook v Mayor Corporation of Bath (1868)
  • Indication of intention to abandon
  • - Williams v Usherwood (1983)

16
Can right of way be realigned?
  • Not unless such a right is an express or
    implied term of the grant of the easement
  • What if realigned route equally convenient?
  • - Greenwich NHS Trust v London Quadrant
    Housing (1998)

17
Disturbance of easements
  • Need to establish substantial interference
  • Can right of way be exercised as conveniently
    as before?
  • - BQ Plc v Liverpool Lancashire Properties
    Limited (2001)

18
Remedies for disturbance
  • Abatement
  • Action for nuisance
  • - Injunction
  • - Damages

19
Rights of light

20
Rights of light
  • Proposed development of Greenacre will affect
    the amount of light enjoyed by the office block
    on Redacre
  • Can Redacre stop the development of Greenacre?

21
What is a right of light?
  • Easement
  • The right to receive sufficient natural light
    through defined apertures to allow the use of the
    building for the ordinary purpose for which it
    could reasonably be put

22
Acquisition of right to light
  • Express grant/reservation
  • Implied
  • Prescription
  • - Common law
  • - Doctrine of lost modern grant
  • - S3 Prescription Act 1832 20 years counting
    back from when the action challenging the right
    is commenced

23
Infringement of right of light

24
When is the right of light infringed?
  • If it falls below a level that is sufficient
    for the comfortable use and enjoyment of the
    building
  • Severity of infringement
  • - Consider the amount of light left
  • - The 50/50 rule
  • - Grumble point
  • - Waldram diagrams

25
Availability of an injunction
  • Shelfer principles
  • (1) If the injury to the neighbours rights is
    small
  • (2) If it is capable of being estimated in
    money
  • (3) If it can be adequately compensated by a
    (small) money payment and
  • (4) If it would be oppressive to the developer
    to grant an injunction
  • Then damages may be awarded instead of an
    injunction

26
Availability of an injunction
  • Equitable remedy at discretion of court
  • Consider all factors
  • - Personal effect on existing occupiers
  • - Social utility of the offending development
  • - Conduct of the parties
  • Midtown Ltd v City of London Real Property
    Company Ltd Joseph ors v City of London Real
    Property Company Ltd (2005)
  • Regan v Paul Properties (2006)

27
Damages
  • Damages awarded in lieu of an injunction
  • Court calculates the level of compensation by
    reference to a number of factors
  • - Reasonable price for allowing the developer to
    buy off the right
  • - Impact of the loss of light and general
    amenity
  • - Loss of sky visibility and sunlight
  • - General deterioration in the quality of the
    environment

28
Damages
  • Tamares Limited v Fairpoint Properties Limited
    (2006)
  • - Fair result of hypothetical negotiation
  • - Seriousness of breach
  • - Dominant owners significant bargaining
    position
  • - Share of profit
  • - Size of award should not prevent development
  • - Did the deal feel right

29
Developers strategy
  • Appoint experienced rights of light surveyor
  • Ensure legal adviser has all necessary facts
    and works with rights of light surveyor
  • Commission a relevant topographical survey of
    the site and neighbours buildings
  • Undertake an early assessment of risks
  • Communicate

30
Restrictive Covenants
  • Andrew Olins
  • Real Estate Dispute Resolution

31
How to get rid of restrictive covenants
  • Buy certainty of outcome
  • - Defective title insurance
  • - Deed of release

32
How to get rid of restrictive covenants
  • Is it enforceable?
  • If so, can we get rid of it?

33
Is it enforceable?
  • Marten -v- Flight Refuelling Ltd 1962 Ch. 115
  • The covenant must be made for the benefit of the
    adjoining owners land
  • Annexed by express words or implied by
    surrounding circumstances

34
Is it enforceable?
  • Crest Nicholson -v- McAllister 2004 1 W.L.R
    2409
  • The land with the benefit of the covenant needs
    to be readily identifiable from the deed

35
Is it enforceable?
  • Declaration of unenforceability - Law of Property
    Act 1925 section 84(2)
  • The Court shall have power on the application of
    any person interested -
  • (a) to declare whether or not in any particular
    case any freehold land is, or would in any given
    event be, affected by a restriction imposed in
    any instrument or 
  • (b) to declare what, upon the true construction
    of any instrument purporting to impose a
    restriction, is the nature and extent of the
    restriction thereby imposed and whether the same
    is, or would in any given event be, enforceable
    and if so by whom.

36
Where to apply?
  • Lands tribunal
  • Wide jurisdiction to discharge or modify
    restrictive covenants
  • Section 84(1)
  • Panel of experienced judges
  • Useful website www.landstribunal.gov.uk

37
Who can apply?
  • Freehold land
  • Anyone interested in the freehold land affected
    by the covenant
  • Wide category owners, mortgagees, purchasers
    under an uncompleted contract, option holders

38
Who can apply?
  • Leasehold land Section 84(12)
  • Anyone interested in the leasehold land
  • Providing the lease is for more than 40 years AND
    (at least) 25 years of the term has expired

39
Who can object?
  • Persons entitled to the benefit of the covenant
  • - Usually, adjoining landowners
  • - Certain statutory bodies e.g. local planning
    authorities where covenant is contained in an
    agreement made under TCPA 1990 section 106

40
Who can object?
  • General rule
  • - Distinction with the planning process
  • - Not enough to complain that you will be
    adversely affected by a modification and/or
    discharge of the covenant

41
What can the Lands Tribunal do?
  • Discharge
  • - Nuclear option
  • - Entire covenant is removed

42
What can the Lands Tribunal do?
  • Modification
  • - Less drastic option
  • - Permits the Lands Tribunal (effectively) to
    rewrite the covenant
  • - Lands Tribunal can add new restrictions if it
    is minded to relax the covenant - section 84(1C)
  • - Pay careful attention to the wording of
    proposed modification

43
When to apply?
  • Leasehold land
  • section 84(12)
  • Freehold
  • Any time the age of covenant is irrelevant
  • Newer covenants are more unlikely to be
    discharged or modified than older ones

44
When to apply?
  • Response to enforcement proceedings
  • The Court can stay enforcement proceedings
    pending determination of an application to the
    Lands Tribunal - section 84(9)

45
Grounds for discharge or modification
  • 4 main grounds for applying for a discharge or
    modification of a covenant under section 84(1)
  • Ground 1 - Obsolete covenant
  • Ground 2 - Reasonable user impeded
  • Ground 3 - Express or implied in agreement
  • Ground 4 - No injury

46
Ground 1 - Obsolete covenant
  • that by reason of changes in the character of
    the property or the neighbourhood or other
    circumstances of the case which the Lands
    Tribunal may deem material, the restriction ought
    to be deemed obsolete."
  • Section 84(1)(a)

47
Ground 1 - Obsolete covenant
  • Truman, Handbury, Buxton and Co Ltd's Application
    1956 1QB 261
  • Difficult ground to make out
  • Test for obsolescence is strict
  • It is necessary to identify the purpose behind
  • the covenant AND established that the purpose
  • is no longer capable of fulfilment

48
Ground 1 - Obsolete covenant
  • 2 different types of change that may lead to a
    covenant to becoming obsolete
  • Environmental (or physical) changes i.e.
    commercial area has become residential area
  • Social changes i.e. society's view about alcohol

49
Ground 2 - Reasonable user impeded
  • "that the continued existence of the covenant
    would impede some reasonable user of the land for
    public or private purposes and the Lands
    Tribunal is satisfied that the covenant, in
    impeding that user, either
  • (a) does not secure to persons entitled to the
    benefit of it any practical benefits of
    substantial value or advantage to them or
  • (b) is contrary to the public interest
  • and that money will be an adequate compensation
    for the loss or disadvantage (if any) .

50
Ground 2 - Reasonable user impeded
  • the Lands Tribunal shall take into account the
    development plan and any declared or
    ascertainable pattern for the grant or refusal of
    planning permissions in the relevant area"
  • Section 84(1)(aa)

51
Hurdles to overcome
  • Reasonable user of the land will be impeded
  • Best evidence is a planning permission
  • The objectors do not accrue a practical benefit
    of substantial value or advantage
  • "Practical benefit" is construed very widely
  • Does not include ability to extract ransom
    payment Stockport MBC -v- Alwiyah 1983 52 PCR
    278
  • Covenant is contrary to the "public interest
  • Rarely, if ever used
  • Money will be adequate compensation

52
Ground 3 - Express or implied in agreement
  • "that the persons of full age and capacity for
    the time being or from time to time entitled to
    the benefit of the restriction, whether in
    respect of estates in fee simple or any lesser
    estates or interests in the property to which the
    benefit of the restriction is annexed, have
    agreed, either expressly or by implication, by
    their acts or omissions, to the same being
    discharged or modified"
  • Section 84(1)(b)

53
Ground 3 - Express or implied in agreement
  • Express Deed permitting the changing user
  • Waiver - through a failure to enforce the
    covenant

54
Ground 4 - No Injury
  • "the proposed discharge or modification will not
    injure the persons entitled to the benefit of the
    restriction.
  • Section 84(1)(c)
  • "Sweep up" ground
  • Prevents vexatious and frivolous objections -
    Ridley -v- Taylor 1965 1 LR 611

55
Compensation
  • "an order discharging or modifying a restriction
    may direct the applicant to pay to any person
    entitled to the benefit of the restriction such
    sum by way of consideration as the Tribunal may
    think it just to award under one, but not both,
    of the following heads
  • a sum to make up for any loss or disadvantage
    suffered by that person in consequence of the
    discharge or modification or
  • a sum to make up for any effect which the
    restriction had, at the time, when it was
    imposed, in reducing the consideration then
    received for the land affected by it."
  • Section 84(1)

56
Compensation
  • An award of compensation is discretionary
  • First head involves assessing the actual loss
    or disadvantage the person entitled to the
    benefit of the covenant at the time the Order is
    made
  • (Usually) equates to the fall in value of the
    Objectors property

57
Compensation
  • Second head
  • Involves calculating the (additional) price that
    applicant would have paid for the property but
    for the covenant
  • Available to the original covenantee (only?)

58
Questions?
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com