Crow v Wood
Crow v Wood | |
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Boundary fence | |
Court | Court of Appeal |
Full case name | Edna Crow v Robin Wood |
Citation(s) | [1971] 1 QB 77, [1970] 3 WLR 516 |
Keywords | |
Easements, cattle trespass |
Crow v Wood [1971] 1 QB 77 is an English land law case, concerning easements.
Facts
Mrs Edna Crow, Stone House Farm of North Riding, sued Mr Robin Wood, or Wether Cote Farm, Hawnby, for his sheep straying into her land, alleging cattle trespass. She lived on a Yorkshire moor, long in common ownership where sheep had the right to stray, but then parcels were sold off, each maintaining a right to stray, which Ms Crow did not exercise but Mr Wood did. From 1966 on Ms Crow ceased to keep up a fence. Mr Wood claimed that under an implied grant at common law and Law of Property Act 1925, section 62, she was under a duty to keep up her fences for the benefit of those with grazing rights on the moor.
Judge awarded £205 damages and an injunction, and Mr Wood appealed.
Judgment
Lord Denning MR held that the right to have a fence repaired lay in grant, and so could pass under Law of Property Act 1925, section 62. But also the right to have a fence or wall kept in repair is in the nature of an easement. Since the plaintiff was in breach of her duty to fence she could not complain of cattle trespass.[1]
“ | Thus a right to use a coal-shed is such a right. It is in the nature of an easement and passes under section 62. But a right, given by contract to have a road kept in repair, is not such a right. It is a positive covenant which does not run with the land and is not binding on successors: see Austerberry v Oldham Corporation (1885) 29 Ch D 750.
The question is, therefore, whether a right to have a fence or wall kept in repair is a right which is capable of being granted by law. I think it is because it is in the nature of an easement. It is not an easement strictly so called because it involves the servient owner in the expenditure of money. It was described by Gale [ Easements, 11th ed. (1932), p. 432] as a "spurious kind of easement." But it has been treated in practice by the courts as being an easement. Professor Glanville Williams on Liability for Animals (1939), says, at p. 209: "If we put aside these questions of theory and turn to the practice of the courts, there seems to be little doubt that fencing is an easement." In Jones v Price [1965] 2 QB 618, 633, Willmer LJ said: "It is clear that a right to require the owner of adjoining land to keep the boundary fence in repair is a right which the law will recognise as a quasi-easement." Diplock L.J., at p. 639, points out that it is a right of such a nature that it can be acquired by prescription which imports that it lies in grant, for prescription rests on a presumed grant. It seems to me that it is now sufficiently established - or at any rate, if not established hitherto, we should now declare - that a right to have your neighbour keep up the fences is a right in the nature of an easement which is capable of being granted by law so as to run with the land and to be binding on successors. It is a right which lies in grant and is of such a nature that it can pass under section 62 of the Law of Property Act 1925. |
” |
Edmund Davies LJ stated that the duty to fence arises from proof that the land is accustomed to be fenced.
See also
Notes
- ↑ [1971] 1 QB 77, 84-85