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] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Barlow v Wigan Council [2019] EWHC 1546 (QB) (19 June 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2019/1546.html Cite as: [2020] 1 WLR 29, [2019] PIQR P18, [2020] WLR 29, [2020] RTR 1, [2019] EWHC 1546 (QB) |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Buy ICLR report: [2020] 1 WLR 29] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
MANCHESTER DISTRICT REGISTRY
On Appeal from HHJ Platts sitting at Manchester County Court
B e f o r e :
____________________
DEBORAH BARLOW |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
WIGAN COUNCIL |
Defendant |
____________________
Simon Vaughan (instructed by Forbes, Solicitors) for the Defendant/Respondent
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
INTRODUCTION
BACKGROUND FACTS
(1) The land used to develop the park had been purchased on 10 November to 1920 by Abram Urban District Council ("Abram"); this body remained in existence until 1977 although it ceased to act as a local authority on 1 April 1974;(2) the land had been purchased by Abram with the intention of constructing a public park; Abram was the predecessor in title to the Council;
(3) the land was not developed for some years but when it was, it was called The Lane Park. The park was constructed some time in the early 1930s and the paths (including the Path) were present before 1959;
(4) the Path had been made in order to provide access to and across the amenities built within the park and while the public at large might have enjoyed unfettered access, the Judge stated that he could not conclude or infer there was an intention to dedicate the Path as or part of a highway, as at the time of its construction;
(5) The Judge held that the Path became a highway by reason of at least 20 years usage pursuant to s31 of the Act (see further below). Indeed, the Council had always contended that this was the case (see its letter dated 2 October 2015, subsequent letters and paragraph 4 b of the Defence).
THE RELEVANT LEGAL FRAMEWORK
"(1) All such highways as immediately before the commencement of this Act were highways maintainable at the public expense for the purposes of the Highways Act 1959 continue to be so maintainable… for the purposes of this Act.
(2) … The following highways (not falling within subsection (1) above) shall for the purposes of this Act be highways maintainable at the public expense:-
(a) a highway constructed by a highway authority, otherwise than on behalf of some other person who is not a highway authority;
(b) a highway constructed by a council within their own area under Part II of the Housing Act 1985…
(f) a highway, being a footpath, a bridleway, a restricted by way or a way over which the public have a right of way for vehicular and all other kinds of traffic, created in consequence of a special diversion order or an SSSI diversion order.…"
"17 [quoting from Halsbury] .. A way over which there exists a public right of passage that is to say a right for all Her Majesty's subjects at all seasons of the year freely and at their will to pass and re-pass without let or hindrance.
18. … A highway may be created… either by statute… or by the common law doctrine of dedication and acceptance. There is a statutory presumption of dedication after 20 years uninterrupted use by the public (see s31 (1) Highways Act 1980) but as that period has not elapsed, there can be no statutory presumption of dedication. But dedication at common law does not require 20 years (or indeed any period) of interrupted user. If there is dedication and acceptance, a highway is created."
"Where a way over any land, other than a way of such a character that used by of it by the public could not give rise at common law to any presumption of dedication, has been actually enjoyed by the public as of right and without interruption for a full period of 20 years, the way is deemed to have been dedicated as a highway unless there is sufficient evidence that there was no intention during that period to dedicate it."
THE ISSUES ON THE APPEAL AND CROSS-APPEAL
(1) In order for s36 (2) (a) to apply, it was not enough that the highway, or what had become a highway, was constructed by the relevant Highway Authority; it had to be constructed as a highway at the time of its construction;(2) that required an intention so to created on the part of the highway authority;
(3) however, there was no evidence as to what Abram's intention may have been when it created the Path; as the Judge put it in paragraph 9 of his judgment:
"… The issue is whether, when the path was constructed there was an intention to dedicate it as a highway - that is, an intention that the public should not only have unrestricted access to it, but that they should have a right to unrestricted access. There is no direct evidence as to the intention of the defendant's predecessor at the time of construction and in my judgment there is insufficient evidence to allow me to infer that the defendants predecessor intended that the public should enjoy a right of unrestricted access to the park. The park was an open space and persons could and no doubt did use it frequently and were permitted to do so, but the reality was that it was not public land. It was land owned by the local authority - the defendants predecessors - I cannot infer or conclude that at the time that paths were created, there was an intention to dedicate them as part of the highway - ie with a right of passage and re-passage."(4) Accordingly, since the highway only became such as a result of your long usage, not original dedication as it were, the sub-section was not satisfied. As he put it:
"10. I therefore conclude, on the balance of probabilities, that this path on which the claimant unfortunately fell, became a highway as a result of usage.11. Is that sufficient for the purpose of 36 (2) (a)? In considering that issue I apply the ordinary and natural meaning of the words used in section 36 (2) (a)… In my judgment the intention of the Act was that, for the path to be classified as a highway, it had to be constructed as such rather than it becoming a highway due to subsequent usage. The phrase "a highway constructed by a highway authority" in my judgment refers to a highway which at the time of construction was intended to be such, and it does not, in my judgment refer to a path constructed by a highway authority that subsequently became a highway, by way of usage. In those circumstances it seems to me that this pathway cannot be said to have been a highway constructed by the highway authority for the purposes of section 36 (2) (a)."(5) That finding alone spelled failure for the claim. However, given the other arguments addressed to him the Judge made the following further findings:
(a) s36 (2) (a), if applicable, would apply both to pre-existing as well as future highways i.e. it was not limited to those created after commencement of the Act; see paragraphs 12 and 13 of the judgment;(b) It was not possible to find, as also required by s36 (2) (a), that the Path had been so constructed by a highway authority because as matters stood before him, there was "absolutely no evidence" one way or the other as to whether Abram was a highway authority or not; see paragraph 15, in which he said:".. It was an urban district council. Its purpose, so far as this park was concerned, was to create an urban park in a residential area, for the use of local inhabitants, and there's nothing before me to suggest that, when constructing this path, it was or was acting as a highway authority so as to bring it within section 36 (2) (a)."(6) However, as noted above, it is now accepted that Abram was in fact a highway authority.
(1) s36 (2) (a) does not require any proof of intent to create (or dedicate) a highway at the time of the construction of the Path; it is enough that (a) the Path was constructed, (b) that at the relevant time (ie at the time of the accident), it had become a highway and (c) that it had been constructed by a highway authority, not now in dispute;
(2) as an alternative and new ground of appeal and one not argued before the Judge, the Path fell within s36 (1) of the Act, , taken in conjunction with the operation of ss47 and 49 of the National Parks and Access to the Countryside Act 1949, along withs38 (2) (a) of the 1959 Act (" the Alternative Ground").
ANALYSIS
Does s36 (2) (a) apply?
Is s36 (2) (a) confined to where the highway was constructed as such at the outset?
"… Had the first defendants [ie the Authority] themselves constructed the highway, by the operation of s36 of the Highways Act 1988 [it should be 1980] it would have been maintainable at the public expense but that point was of no avail as it was the second defendants, a wholly separate legal entity who constructed it."
If the (or what became the) highway was constructed by a highway authority, did it have to act in that capacity when constructing it, for s36 (2) (a) to apply?
"I would nevertheless venture the following observations on the provisions which were canvassed in the courts below. By section 2 (1) and (3) of the Local Government Act 1972 a county council, like every other local authority, is a single body corporate. A local authority may well have to take care from time to time (for example when considering whether to grant itself planning permission) to keep its various capacities distinct, but it is one body in law. Agreements between its departments may be necessary for budgetary purposes, but they are not contracts because a legal person cannot contract with itself. For this reason I would not in any event have found it easy to adopt the view of Neuberger J that section s36 (2) (a) of the 1980 Act contemplated a highway authority acting as such."
"would very largely render the provisions in s38 (2) (b) [this must in fact be a reference to s36 (2) (b)] otiose and render the safeguards in that subsection ineffective. It was not necessary for the decision in Gulliksen and it is suggested that the existence of the express provisions in s38 (2) (b) [see above note] dealing with ways constructed under housing powers indicates that this was not the legislator's intention."
The Council made a similar point in argument.
Was there a deemed intent by Abram to dedicate at the outset?
"Would not the inchoate right run on to maturity rather than be blocked by the intermediate passing of this Act ?" This language does not accurately express the presumption which arises from long-continued user. It is not correct to say that the early user establishes an inchoate right capable of being subsequently matured. If the right had been inchoate only in 1861, the argument of the Appellant that it could not have been matured or acquired after 1861, except in the mode prescribed by the Act, would have had great force. The proper way of regarding these cases is to look at the whole of the evidence together, to see whether there has been such a continuous and connected user as is sufficient to raise the presumption of dedication; and the presumption, if it can be made, then is of a complete dedication, coeval with the early user. You refer the whole of the user to a lawful origin rather than to a series of trespasses. It may be that in this case the evidence of user prior to 1861 was alone sufficient to establish the presumption of dedication; but the strength of that presumption is increased by the subsequent user, and would certainly have been much diminished if the user had been discontinued after 1861. In this case their Lordships have no doubt that, the user being continuous, the direction is right, and if the direction is right, it is not contended that the verdict is wrong."
s36 (2) (a) and Retrospectivity
"Generally, there is a strong presumption that a legislature does not intend to impose a new liability in respect of something that has already happened, because generally it would not be reasonable for a legislature to do that...But this presumption may be overcome not only by express words in the Act but also by circumstances sufficiently strong to displace it."
"Since provisions which affect existing rights prospectively are not retroactive, the presumption against retroactivity does not apply. Nor is there any general presumption that legislation does not alter the existing legal situation or existing rights: the very purpose of Acts of Parliament is to alter the existing legal situation and this will often involve altering existing rights for the future. So, as Dickson J went on to point out in Gustavson Drilling [1977] 1 SCR 271, 282-283, with special reference to tax legislation:
"No one has a vested right to continuance of the law as it stood in the past; in tax law it is imperative that legislation conform to changing social needs and governmental policy. A taxpayer may plan his financial affairs in reliance on the tax laws remaining the same; he takes the risk that the legislation may be changed."
As the sparks fly upward, individuals and businesses run the risk that Parliament may change the law governing their affairs."
Conclusion on the applicability of s36 (2) (a)
The Alternative Ground
CONCLUSION