Easements In English Law
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Easements in English law are certain rights in English land law that a person has over another's land. Rights recognised as easements range from very widespread forms of rights of way, most rights to use service conduits such as telecommunications cables, power supply lines, supply pipes and drains, rights to use communal gardens and rights of light to more strained and novel forms. All types are subject to general rules and constraints. As one of the
formalities in English law Formalities in English law are required in some kinds of transaction by English contract law and trusts law. In a limited number of cases, agreements and trusts will be unenforceable unless they meet a certain form prescribed by statute. The ma ...
express, express legal easements must be created by deed. Some classes, types, of easement are heavily constrained — the courts of England and Wales will only uphold these as easements subject to wide-reaching public policy, chiefly property rights interference, tests they have laid down in
precedent A precedent is a principle or rule established in a previous legal case that is either binding on or persuasive for a court or other tribunal when deciding subsequent cases with similar issues or facts. Common-law legal systems place great valu ...
. Similar tests apply to the implication of easements. If they fail on any of these tests the right claimed may be interpreted as a "mere" licence, typically a right of use revocable at will. Details of the use, wording and history of certain rights is pivotal. Prime examples of express purported easements which will only be upheld on particular facts are the use of a communal garden with a public dimension, a neighbour's lavatory, or use of parts of another person's land for parking. In all cases the neighbouring, impacted, "servient" land does not have to be adjoining. The necessity of easements is shown by the
Law Commission A law commission, law reform commission, or law revision commission is an independent body set up by a government to conduct law reform; that is, to consider the state of laws in a jurisdiction and make recommendations or proposals for legal chang ...
's 2008 statistical finding that express easements exist over or under at least 65% of registered freehold titles. In many cases it is impossible for a land owner or tenant to access a public highway without an easement of a right of way over intervening land. The creation of easements is usually done expressly by deed, but easements may be implied where they are necessary, or would be reasonably expected to be held by a land owner, an approach which reduces legal fees but is not altogether uncontroversial, and has been the subject of recent reform proposals.


Characteristics of easements

Whilst an easement is essentially a right over another's land, any right claimed as an easement must satisfy the
common law In law, common law (also known as judicial precedent, judge-made law, or case law) is the body of law created by judges and similar quasi-judicial tribunals by virtue of being stated in written opinions."The common law is not a brooding omnipres ...
definition, outlined in the case of ''
Re Ellenborough Park was an English land law case which reformulated the tests for an easement (the scope of the law of easements). It found an easement to use a communal garden to be a valid easement in law. There is no requirement for all of the houses to be imme ...
''.''Re Ellenborough Park 956Ch 131 Here, Danckwerts J laid out essential characteristics of an easement: # There must be a dominant and a servient tenement; # The easement must accommodate the dominant tenement, that is, be connected with its enjoyment and for its benefit; # The dominant and servient owners must be different persons; # The right claimed must be capable of forming the subject-matter of a grant. The first requirement – that there must be two distinct plots of land affected – is central to the definition of an easement. A right of way granted to an individual is granted in their capacity as a land owner; if a right of way is granted to an individual who is not a land owner, it is merely a license. Next, it must be shown that the right is connected with the enjoyment of the dominant tenement in some way. It is important to this end that the right must benefit an individual in their capacity as a land owner, and not merely form a personal right. For example, it has been judicially stated that a right of way over a plot of land in Northumberland to an estate in Kent would not form the requisite benefit, the proximity of the two pieces of land being too remote. It was recognised in ''Re Ellenborough Park'' however that an easement need not be over an adjacent property, though there must clearly be some reasonable connection in which the dominant tenement can be benefitted. An easement can not be recognised where it the dominant and servient tenement are under common ownership. However, rights may be recognised as 'quasi-easements', which can then be implied as full easements upon the conveyance of the land in question. The most problematic characteristic of an easement is that it must be capable of forming a grant by deed. The right must therefore be certain and definite in its purpose, and more importantly, that the courts are willing to recognise it as a right capable of being an easement. Many claimed rights fail this last criterion, for example, rights which require positive action by the owner of a servient tenement are unlikely to be granted, as are negative rights, which restrict the use of land. Rights which are excessive in nature are equally unlikely to be upheld. In '' Copeland v Greenhalf'' a claim to store unlimited vehicles on a neighbour's land failed, with the interference and right claimed being too great to be allowed as an easement.


Comparison with other rights

Easements are distinct from
restrictive covenants A covenant, in its most general sense and historical sense, is a solemn promise to engage in or refrain from a specified action. Under historical English common law, a covenant was distinguished from an ordinary contract by the presence of a se ...
and the court will not allow the creation of an easement where the right is in substance a restrictive covenant. Showing a restrictive covenant exists requires demonstrating different criteria are met and a restrictive covenant operates only in equity and not at the common law, whereas an easement can operate at either. An instrument that imposes a negative obligation on another tenement will normally be a restrictive covenant, although there are exceptions – the right to light, capable of being an easement, acts to prevent the owner of the servient tenement from acting inconsistently with it. Easements are also separate from natural rights, which operate universally and do not have to be created. Some natural rights appear similar to easements. For example, there is a natural right to support of one's land. This does not, however, extend to buildings upon the land or the consequences on the land of building upon it. The operate of prescription to bring about a right of support of buildings as well as land in the form of an easement limits the operation of this natural right, however. Natural rights are only actionable after the fact – where damage has already occurred; the neighbouring landowner cannot be compelled to take preventative steps or give support in any particular fashion. The right to water from a stream or river is another natural right which may be extended through the operation of an easement. Easements in this area must also be considered in light of statutory regimes, particularly in the commercial context. There is also a public right to fish and navigate on the
foreshore The intertidal zone, also known as the foreshore, is the area above water level at low tide and underwater at high tide (in other words, the area within the tidal range). This area can include several types of habitats with various species ...
, although this is limited in several respects.Smith (2011). pp. 492–493. Covenants are also separate to public rights. These include rights acquired as of custom – one being, for example, the right to hold a market in a particular location – thus acting in a similar way to an easement. However, in order to show a right as of custom it must be shown that the use dates back to at least 1189 and so these are rare. More common are rights of common. These are now regulated by the
Commons Act 2006 The Commons Act 2006 (c 26) is an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom. It implements recommendations contained in the Common Land Policy Statement 2002. The Act sets out the provision for designation of town or village greens. Part 1 S ...
which laid down a system of exclusive registration – all rights must now be registered if they are to operate. Thus new rights of common can only take effect by express grant. Rights of way often form the subject of easements, but public rights of way take effect without the need for a covenant. As well as the
public highway A highway is any public or private road or other public way on land. It is used for major roads, but also includes other public roads and public tracks. In some areas of the United States, it is used as an equivalent term to controlled-access ...
, rights over common land and open country are also granted to the public, now regulated by the
Countryside and Rights of Way Act 2000 The Countryside and Rights of Way Act 2000 (c. 37), known informally as the CRoW Act or "Right to Roam" Act is a United Kingdom Act of Parliament affecting England and Wales which came into force on 30 November 2000. Right to roam The Act imp ...
.


Creation of easements


Express grant

Section 1(2) of the Law of Property Act 1925 states that easements are an interest capable of being legal, with 52 of that Act stating that all conveyances (transfers of interests in land) will be void unless created ''by deed''. Therefore, for an express legal easement (which will automatically bind all successors) to be formed rather than simply equitable it must have been created by deed. A legal easement must be registered against the dominant and servient land ("tenements"), if their titles are registered, to take effect. The benefit of legal easements pass automatically on the transfer of the dominant tenement or part of the dominant tenement.Smith (2011). p. 506.


Implied easement

Easements may also arise by implication where a vendor sells one plot of land but retains another neighbouring plot. Easements may arise in favour of the retained plot (reservation) or the sold plot (grant). Because a presumption operates that a vendor will have had ample opportunity to insert into the documents of sale a clause in his favour, the scope of implied reservation is much smaller than that of implied grant. Where the vendor sells two neighbouring plots (as determined by time of contract, not of conveyance) both plots will fall under the rules of implied grant with regard to the other. Two plots sold at the same auction will fall under provision, for example, but a period of a month between contracts is too long. Implied easements act at law, not in equity, because the effect is the same as if the provision had been express. Any requirement of registration would clearly be incompatible with the concept of an implied easement, so none is applied.


Implied grant

There are several circumstances where the grant of an easement may be implied, usually occurring on the conveyance of land. Where land is transferred, subject to contrary intention, existing easements are automatically conveyed under Section 62 of the Law of Property Act 1925. Additionally – and controversially in some cases – 'precarious' rights, such as licenses or personal rights may be transformed into legal easements, as demonstrated in '' International Tea Stores Co v Hobbs'' and ''
Hair v Gillman ''Hair v Gillman'' (2000) 80 P&CR 108 is an English land law case, concerning creation of easements. Facts Ms Gillman had taken a seven-year lease of a school built in the back yard of a three-storey building that had a forecourt by the street. ...
''. In these cases a right of way (and right to park respectively) granted as licences were held to have been legally transformed into an easement, following the conveyance of the impacted (servient) land. A limitation of the section is that it does not act to reserve easements impliedly; for example, a land owner in common ownership of two plots of land could not claim that, after selling one plot, his remaining plot should have an easement for right of light implied. Other circumstances where easements may be implied are where they are necessary for the enjoyment of land.


Implied reservation

For reserved easements to be implied, they must be necessary either for the use of the land in general or for the use which the parties together intend the land to be put. The first of these categories covers those cases where the land would be landlocked but for the proposed easement, but seems to extend no further than that.Smith (2011). pp. 507–8. It has long been the case that any access, even if by water or inconvenient, will be enough to defeat a claim of necessity, although there are signs that courts might be more willing in the future to consider a wider approach, perhaps only vehicular access. A claim of necessity will not be defeated by an access provided by revokable licence, or where a building would need to be demolished to use it. In '' Nickerson v Barraclough'', the Court of Appeal decided that the necessity requirement was based on the presumed intention of the parties at the time of the grant. It should therefore follow that subsequent events cannot destroy an easement arising by implied reservation, although one pre-Victorian case suggested that it might. The second category includes cases like '' Wong v Beaumont Property Trust Ltd'' (although in that case, it operated to bring about an implied grant). The defendant leased a series of cellars to the claimant, requiring that they be used only as a restaurant. In order to comply with trading laws, however, the claimant was required by law, if he wished to use the cellars as a restaurant, to install ventilation ducts on the part of the building retained by the defendant. The court decided to imply a grant in that case because it was necessary for the carrying on the business required in the lease. As stated by Lord Atkinson in that case, it must be necessary, not merely reasonable or common in properties of that type or in that location.Smith (2011). pp. 508–9. Where the right is reciprocal, for example support, then the rules of necessity are more relaxed.


Prescription

Where a right has long been physically enjoyed by a land owner, it may be upheld ("prescribed") as an easement with or without a dispute with the owner of the impacted land ("servient tenement"). To have done so it must meet the criteria of an easement, and the claimant must be able to show the use was not by force, stealth, or by permission, and continued for a period of twenty years. A land owner may be, but need not be, aware of such a use over his land. The claimant of the uses will see their claim rejected if that claimant has reason to believe that the land owner knows of and has objected to the claimed uses. It has been stated that:
"A landowner who wishes to stop the acquisition of prescriptive rights must not acquiesce and suffer in silence"
Such rights can be registered. The claimant must produce evidence, in a statement of truth or statutory declaration or a chain of such documents covering previous owners, of continuous use as of right, by or on behalf of and against the freehold owners, for a period of at least 20 years. The statement of truth or statutory declaration must set out in detail the use and enjoyment relied upon to substantiate the claim. The right claimed must be one that could have been lawfully granted. The Land Registry has form ST4, for a typical statement of truth related to prescriptive easements.UK Government: Land Registry: Practice guide 52: easements claimed by prescription.
"Even if the claimant produces this evidence, it does not mean an easement has necessarily been acquired. Where the claim is based on common law prescription ather than statutory prescription the owner of the burdened land may be able to establish that the right could not possibly have been exercised from 1189 onwards. Where the claim is based on lost modern grant, the owner may be able to establish that nobody could have lawfully granted the easement. In these cases, there is no easement.


Transfer of legal easements

The benefit of a legal easement will pass to the next owner of that tenement without express words. This was the position of the common law and is now reflected in both sections 62 and 187 of the Law of Property Act 1925. If the dominant tenement is leased, even if only at equity, the benefit of the legal easement will still pass to the lesee and it will remain an easement at law albeit one enforceable by the lessee in equity only.


Equitable easements

Equitable easements have the same basic requirements as easements at law concerning their subject matter. Easements are recognised as arising in equity in at least three circumstances.Barnsley (1999). p. 98. The first is where section 1(2)(b) of the Law of Property Act 1925, requiring an easement to be "absolute in possession or a term of years absolute", renders an easement incapable of existing as an interest at law. This includes easements for periods of uncertain duration, such as those ending when a particular event happens (the passing of planning permission over one of the tenements, for example). More controversially this category also includes easements for life, similarly incapable of existing at law. Although the topic has not arisen in the courts since at least 1925, it is difficult to show that as easement for life accommodated the dominant tenement, since it is inherently personal in nature. Rights purporting to be easements for life would, if they were rejected as easements, be licences instead and take effect through contract. The second category involves those cases where a specifically enforceable contract to create an easement has taken effect but the easement has not been granted. Here, the regular principles of equity will operate to bring about an easement, since "equity regards as done those things which ought to be done". The third category is where the grantor holds only an equitable interest himself. The most common occasion where this will happen is where an easement is created by operation of a
testamentary disposition A testamentary disposition is any gift of any property by a testator under the terms of a will. Types Types of testamentary dispositions include: * Gift (law), assets that have been legally transferred from one person to another * Legacy, te ...
. Where there is a will, legal title vests in the executors of the estate until transferred to the deceased's personal representatives, but any devised interests operate at equity from the time of disposition. A fourth category, equitable easements arising by virtue of
proprietary estoppel Proprietary estoppel is a legal claim, especially connected to English land law, which may arise in relation to rights to use the property of the owner, and may even be effective in connection with disputed transfers of ownership. Proprietary est ...
, is contested. Cases such as '' ER Ives Investments Ltd v High'' and ''
Crabb v Arun District Council ''Crabb v Arun District Council'' 975EWCA Civ 7is a leading English land law and English contract law">contract case concerning "proprietary estoppel". Lord Denning MR affirmed that where agreements concern the acquisition of rights over land, ...
'' have been offered in support of their existence; however, some commentators prefer to analyse these cases as giving rise to a right distinct from an easement or a legal easement respectively. This makes an important difference when it comes to binding third-party purchasers. Where land is registered, as is now common, there are further circumstances where an equitable easement will arise. Where both the dominant and servient tenements are registered, easements must be registered against both titles under the terms of the
Land Registration Act 1925 The Land Registration Act 1925 (LRA) was an act of Parliament in the United Kingdom that codified, prioritised and extended the system of land registration in England and Wales. It has largely been repealed, and updated in the Land Registration Ac ...
. Failure to do so will render them easements in equity only, although they will still bind purchasers under rule 258 of the Land Registration Rules 1925. Where the servient land is unregistered, it is likely that the easement will not have to be registered against the dominant title, even if that is itself registered land. This has been disputed, however, and is significant because if legal would bind successors after first registration whereas an equitable easement would require registration as a land charge. Rule 250(1) allows for easements to arise in equity through prescription where the title is registered, but a right arising through prescription would be created as a legal easement and there seems to be no part of this process where the owner of the dominant tenement has a right in equity only. The benefit of an equitable easement passes with the transfer of the dominant tenement. Whether section 62 of the Law of Property Act 1925 can operate to turn an equitable easement into a legal easement upon conveyance of the dominant tenement is unclear. On the one hand, it would seem odd that a mere licence could become a legal easement through the section, when the much closer equitable easement could not; on the other hand, construing the section in this way is unnecessary from the perspective of the purchaser, since a right enforceable in equity will be almost as useful as one enforceable at common law. An equitable easement when the servient tenement is unregistered is enforceable against a purchaser for value only when properly registered under the terms of the
Land Charges Act 1972 The Land Charges Act 1972 is a UK Act of Parliament that updates the system for registering charges on unregistered land in England and Wales. It repealed and updated parts of the Land Charges Act 1925 and other legislation affecting real property ...
. Equitable easements arising by virtue of a contract to grant an easement are registerable as either
estate contract Estate or The Estate may refer to: Law * Estate (law), a term in common law for a person's property, entitlements and obligations * Estates of the realm, a broad social category in the histories of certain countries. ** The Estates, representati ...
s or equitable easements. Where the servient tenement is registered, the registration of an equitable easement at the Land Registry can take place through mere notice or caution and will then bind purchasers. Alternatively, it will still bind purchasers if it constitutes an " overriding interest". As confirmed in the case of '' Thatcher v Douglas'', section 70(1)(c) of the Land Registration Act and rule 258 of the Land Registration Rules 1925 will operate to ensure that almost all equitable easements constitute overriding interests.


Termination of easements


Deed of release or surrender

This is a document usually headed ‘deed of release’ (or similar), and optionally with ‘of easement’ or ‘of easements’ appended to the title. All interested parties in the benefit of the easement must be parties to the deed or consent to the release, including: *the registered proprietor/owner of the dominant land (land enjoying the easement) *any chargee (usually termed the mortgagee) of the dominant land (land enjoying the easement) *any other party whose interest was noted in the register for the dominant land and who would be adversely affected by the release. For example, if there was a contract for sale noted in the register for the dominant land, the person having the benefit of the contract would have to be a party or consent. *the servient land owner, perhaps, if as is rarer than most instances the easement grants them benefit In New Zealand, the law reflects the older alternate legal vocabulary in that "surrender" is often used. In England and Wales it had an easements application synonymous with release. Surrender is generally, for clarity, confined to a class of ending of leases, occupational rights, goods and similar rights in English law as has tended towards a more monetary character.


Determination of lease to which the easement is appurtenant

This is the formal, Latin-based legal language for the ending of a lease which, as in most leases, had the boon of an easement or set of easements. Easements granted in leases normally come to an end with the lease.UK Government: Land Registry Practice Guide 62 at 12.2.2: Determination of lease to which the easement is appurtenant Where a registered lease has terminated and an application is made in the standard Land Registry Application Form to close the title, completion of the application will mean removal of any entry in respect of the benefit of an appurtenant easement.


Merger, unity of possession and ownership

There must be unification of both ownership and possession of the dominant land and of the servient land. The rights may by continued use fall, that is evolve, to being quasi-easements and then be revived depending on the terms of a re-splitting of the title i.e. the later transfer of a relevant portion of the unified land, or effectively be revived by necessity. Assuming not, or in all cases at any time during unified ownership, entries seemingly confirming an easement at the Land Registry can at any time after unification be removed.


Abandonment allowed by law

The person entitled to the easement must not only have stopped exercising it, but also to have “demonstrated a fixed intention never at any time thereafter to assert the right himself or to attempt to transmit it to anyone else” The circumstances that are claimed to amount to abandonment must be set out in a statutory declaration or Statement of Truth.


By statute

An easement can be expressly, or impliedly,Subsection (2) of Section 4 of the Requisitioned Land and War Works Act extinguished or modified by statute.


Case law

*'' Moncrieff v Jamieson'' 007UKHL 42. *'' Hill v Tupper'' (1863) 2 H & C 121 *''
Re Ellenborough Park was an English land law case which reformulated the tests for an easement (the scope of the law of easements). It found an easement to use a communal garden to be a valid easement in law. There is no requirement for all of the houses to be imme ...
'' 956Ch 131 *'' Pugh v Savage''
970 Year 970 ( CMLXX) was a common year starting on Saturday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar, the 970th year of the Common Era (CE) and ''Anno Domini'' designations, the 970th year of the 1st millennium, the 70th yea ...
2 QB 373 *'' Aldred's Case'' (1610) 9 Co Rep 57 *''
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'' (1862) 13 CB (NS) 841 *''
Bass v Gregory ''Bass v Gregory'' (1890) is an English tort law and English land law case, concerning a ventilation shaft on under or through adjoining land (a "passage of air"). It was deemed an easement by prescription, having been used without long interrup ...
'' (1890) 25 QBD 481 *'' Cable v Bryant''
908 __NOTOC__ Year 908 ( CMVIII) was a leap year starting on Friday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar. Events By place Byzantine Empire * May 15 – The three-year-old Constantine VII, the son of Emperor L ...
1 Ch 259 *
Prescription Act 1832 The Prescription Act 1832c 71 is an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom concerning English land law, and particularly the method for acquiring an easement. It was passed on 1 August 1832. History Common law prescription assumed continuous ...
s 3 *'' Hunter v Canary Wharf Ltd''
997 Year 997 (Roman numerals, CMXCVII) was a common year starting on Friday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar. Events By place Japan * 1 February: Empress Teishi gives birth to Princess Shushi - she is the first ...
2 All ER 426 *'' Keppel v Bailey'' (1843) 2 My & K 517 *'' Dyce v Lady James Hay'' (1852) 1 Macq 305 *'' Phipps v Pears'' 9651 QB 76 *'' Crow v Wood''
971 Year 971 ( CMLXXI) was a common year starting on Sunday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar. Events By place Byzantine Empire * Battle of Dorostolon: A Byzantine expeditionary army (possibly 30–40,000 men) ...
1 QB 77 *'' Dalton v Angus'' (1881) 6 App Cas 740 * Law of Property Act 1925, section 1(2) *'' Titchmarsh v Royston Water Co'' (1900) 81 LT 673 *'' Nickerson v Barraclough''
981 Year 981 ( CMLXXXI) was a common year starting on Saturday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar. Events Births * Abu'l-Qasim al-Husayn ibn Ali al-Maghribi, Arab statesman (d. 1027) * Giovanni Orseolo, Venetian ...
2 WLR 773 * Access to Neighbouring Land Act 1992 * Law of Property Act 1925, section 62 *
LRA 2002 The Land Registration Act 2002c 9 is an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom which repealed and replaced previous legislation governing land registration, in particular the Land Registration Act 1925, which governed an earlier, though sim ...
Sch 3, para 3 *''
Crabb v Arun DC ''Crabb v Arun District Council'' 975EWCA Civ 7is a leading English land law and English contract law">contract case concerning "proprietary estoppel". Lord Denning MR affirmed that where agreements concern the acquisition of rights over land, ...
'' *'' Payne v Inwood'' (1997) 74 P &CR 42 *'' International Tea Stores v Hobbs''
903 __NOTOC__ Year 903 ( CMIII) was a common year starting on Saturday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar. Events By place Europe * King Berengar I of Italy proceeds to issue concessions and privileges to the Lo ...
2 Ch 165 *
Conveyancing Act 1881 In law, conveyancing is the transfer of legal title of real property from one person to another, or the granting of an encumbrance such as a mortgage or a lien. A typical conveyancing transaction has two major phases: the exchange of contracts ...
s 6 *''
Wong v Beaumont Property Trust ''Wong v Beaumont Property Trust Ltd'' 9651 QB 173 is an English land law case, concerning easements. Facts Mr Wong leased a basement for his Chinese restaurant, Chopstick, 83 and 84 Queen Street, Exeter. The lease said he should control all ...
'' 9651 BE 173 *''
Wheeldon v Burrows ''Wheeldon v Burrows'' (1879) LR 12 Ch D 31 is an English land law case confirming and governing a means of the implied grant or grants of easements — the implied grant of all continuous and apparent inchoate easements (quasi easements, t ...
'' (1879) 12 Ch D 31 *'' Wheeler v Saunders''
995 Year 995 ( CMXCV) was a common year starting on Tuesday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar. Events By place Japan * 17 May - Fujiwara no Michitaka (imperial regent) dies. * 3 June: Fujiwara no Michikane gain ...
2 All ER 697 *'' Kent v Kavanagh'' 007Ch 1 *'' Benn v Hardinge'' (1992) 66 P & CR 246 *'' Bosomworth v Faber'' (1995) 69 P & CR 288 *'' Huckvale v Aegean Hotels'' (1989) 58 P & CR 163


See also

* English land law *
English property law English property law refers to the law of acquisition, sharing and protection of valuable assets in England and Wales. While part of the United Kingdom, many elements of Scots property law are different. In England, property law encompasses fou ...


Notes

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References

;Books *M Thompson, ''Modern Land Law'' (OUP 2009) *R Smith, ''Property Law'' (2011) ;Articles *DG Barnsley, 'Equitable easements - sixty years on' (1999) 115 Law Quarterly Review 89-118 *P Luther, ‘Easements and Exclusive Possession’ (1996) 16 Legal Studies 51 *B Ziff and M. Litman, ‘Easements and Possession’ 989Conveyancer 296 *E Paton and G. Seabourne, ‘Can’t Get There from Here?’
003 003, O03, 0O3, OO3 may refer to: *003, fictional British 00 Agent *003, former emergency telephone number for the Norwegian ambulance service (until 1986) *1990 OO3, the asteroid 6131 Towen * OO3 gauge model railway *''O03 (O2)'' and other related ...
Conveyancer 127 ;Reports *
Law Commission A law commission, law reform commission, or law revision commission is an independent body set up by a government to conduct law reform; that is, to consider the state of laws in a jurisdiction and make recommendations or proposals for legal chang ...
, ''Making Land Work: Easements, Covenants and Profits a Prendre'' (2011
Law Com No 327


External links

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