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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Milton Keynes Council v Wilsher & Anorn [2022] EWHC 578 (QB) (23 March 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2022/578.html Cite as: [2022] EWHC 578 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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MILTON KEYNES COUNCIL |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) MR NATHAN WILSHER (2) PERSONS UNKNOWN |
Defendants |
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Timothy Jones (instructed by DFA Law LLP) for the First Defendant
The Second Defendant did not appear and was not represented
Hearing dates: 8th, 9th and 10th February 2022
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE EYRE :
Introduction.
The Applicable Law.
"(1) there is a presumption that the owner of land with a paper title is in possession of the land;
(2) if a person who does not have the benefit of this presumption wishes to show that he is in possession of the land, the burden is on him to show that he is in factual possession of the land and that he has the requisite intention to possess the land;
(3) for a person to show that he is in factual possession of the land, he must show that he has an appropriate degree of physical control of the land, that his possession is exclusive and that he has dealt with the land in question as an occupying owner might have been expected to deal with it and no-one else has done so;
(4) whether a person has taken a sufficient degree of control of the land is a matter of fact, depending on all the circumstances, in particular the nature of the land and the manner in which such land is commonly enjoyed;
(5) the person claiming to be in possession may be in possession through his tenant or licensee, if that tenant or licensee has, on the facts, sufficient control of the land to amount to factual possession;
(6) the person seeking to show that he has had possession of land must show that he had an intention for the time being to possess the land to the exclusion of all other persons, including the owner with the paper title;
(7) the relevant intention is an intention to possess and need not be an intention to own;
(8) the intention to possess must be manifested clearly so that it is apparent that the person now claiming to have been in possession was not merely a persistent trespasser;
(9) if the acts relied on are equivocal then they will not demonstrate the necessary intention;
(10) it is possible in some cases for a person in possession to add to his own period of possession, the period of time during which his predecessor was in possession; this applies in particular where the predecessor relinquishes possession to a person who then takes possession."
The Background to the Dispute.
The Issues.
The Actions of the First Defendant and his Father on the Land.
"For the past 3 years the eastern block of land over the road [in fact a reference to the western part of the holding] has been occupied by gypsies. Mr Harrison does not pay rent for this land and does not want any further grief from the gypsies and wants to leave situation as it is.
Remainder of land used for silage, grazing of cattle and growing of maize. New fence erected across land"
" Block of land opposite side of road, not taken silage for 3 years on this site as had too much grief from the gypsies. Had a run in with them in the past and they smashed up brand-new tractor, when was dairy farm needed the land and would continually have to re-fence the area due to fencing being cut. No longer so desperate for the land and does not pay rent on this land, therefore prefer to let the gypsies keep their horses on the land and not have any conflict."
"In addition, for the past 4 years the western block of land has been occupied by travellers. Mr Harrison does not pay rent for this land and does not want any further trouble from the travellers, has had previous difficulties with them – would like situation left as is."
"Gypsy site has been a big issue: the site on corner paddock has been excluded from the tenancy (2008). The Harrisons have stopped farming dark blue land over road and is in occupation by gypsies (2012/13). The farm is not claiming BPS on it because of damage caused."
"For your information and by way of background I have spoken to Peter Harrison and he advises me that the travellers first started to stray into this land (edged pink on third attachment) around 2011. They were very confrontational at that time and actually wrecked one of his tractors. In the light of this Peter 'backed off' and has not used the land since that time, albeit technically it was in his tenancy. Similarly rather than be confrontational we have shied away from taking any action and this is now coming back to bite us. I'm not sure how they can claim the land, as I say it's registered to the Council, they have not been there long enough to claim adverse possession and as far as I know there are numerous horses on the land, which probably means there is more than one owner (of the horses) so query who actually is making a claim to own the land."
"Peter Harrison re the travellers that are on the land that he has vacated and he stated that he did not have an agreement with them but allowed them onto the land as in short, it was too much trouble to keep them off. They have never paid any rent and Peter stated that he only let them on the land because they kept forcing their way onto it. Peter reports that it was circa 2011 that he last mowed the grass in those fields therefore the travellers could have been in occupation since then."
The Consequences of the Evidence.
The Assertion of a Proprietary Estoppel.
Conclusion.