Week 9
Week 9
- Re Ellenborough Park:
o The purchasers of the land adjacent to the park and other blocks within 100 metres of the
park were given rights to use the park as a ‘pleasure ground’.
o Was the right to use the pleasure park connected to the use and enjoyment of the houses that
the right had been granted to?
o yes because the park was intended to be a garden for these properties
o (Someone else owned the park- they just have right to use it)
- Gallagher v Rainbow: Private Road jointly owned by lots 14, 15, 16, 17.
o One of the lots subdivided
To the extent that any part of the dominant land may benefit from that easement, the
easement will be enforceable for the benefit of that part
o In this case, the easement would attach to each of the new subdivisions because the easement
provided access to all of the land of the dominant tenement.
- Regency Villas Title v Diamond Resorts: Broome Park Estate – subdivided to create
Country Club
whether the particular recreational or sporting rights granted accommodate the dominant
tenement?
o there was a valid easement, there was accommodation
- Jackson v Mulvaney: “the court will lean in favour of the creation of an [express] easement
if the intention of the parties was clearly to that end”.
- Copeland v Greenhalf: right to Park trucks –he locked the owner - is not an easement, claim
to possession of the servient tenement.
he can leave as many or a few lorries there as he likes for as long as he likes;
he may enter on it by himself, and agents to do repair work thereon.
o Harada v Registrar of Titles: (nothing left for the servient - Easement rejected)
- Easement for overhead power lines
o the servient owner was left "with very few rights over her property and she could do little
more with it than move over it and park cars on it".
- London and Blenheim Estates Ltd v Ladbroke Retail Parks: (Business parking – nothing
left for the servient tenement – easement rejected)
o Claim for an easement giving a right of way and a right for customers of the dominant
owner's business to park on a part of the servient tenement
o A small coal shed in a large property is one thing, the exclusive use of a large part of the
alleged servient tenement is another.
- Evanel v Nelson: (the validity of an easement for a "right of footway” for a garden)
o Easement excluded the servient owner from the relevant area of land at all times except on
one day of the year except one day each year
o the servient owner was not excluded from the land
- Sections 23E and 54A CA: Part performance might also find a right to an 'equitable
easement' if sufficient evidence can be produced
- s 51 RPA: A transfer of an interest under Torrens vests all relevant interests including
easements in the transferee without the necessity of using specific words.
s 88(1) Conveyancing Act: (it deals with restriction and covenant – give right to council)
- a restriction arising under covenant or otherwise as to the user of any land shall not be
enforceable unless the instrument clearly indicates:
o (a) the land to which the benefit of the easement or restriction is appurtenant,
o (b) the land which is subject to the burden of the easement or restriction:
o (c) the persons (if any) having the right to release, vary, or modify the restriction,
o (d) the persons (if any) whose consent to a release, variation, or modification
- Papdopolas v Goodwin: is authority for the proposition that ‘clearly indicate’ means ‘point
to’ rather than ‘state’. as long as the land benefitted and burdened can be clearly identified
from the instrument, this will be sufficient.
Express reservation
- s 44A CA: validates reservations contained in the transfer of the fee simple (dividing your
land and sell to someone but you keep the right of way for yourself) you should do it in deed/
register it as well.
Implied easements
Common law doctrine: There are a group of circumstances that is create imply easement:
- Richards v Rose: the adjoining house which had a common support wall created an implied
easement right of support
- Lyttelton Times v Warners: (person buys or heir the land has that easement?)
o The maxim that a grantor cannot derogate from his grant expresses the duty ordinarily laid on
a man who sells or leases land.
3) Non-Derogation from Grant
- Nelson v Walker: in circumstances where a grantor grants land to a grantee for a specific
purpose and that specific purpose requires some sort of easement over neighbouring land held
by the grantor.
- In these cases the easement is granted to stop the grantor from doing something on retained
land that makes the land disposed of unfit or materially less fit for the intended use.
- Keberwar v Harkin:
o Browne v Flower and Nelson v Walker: If the sale of land is made for a particular purpose,
the vendor is under an obligation not to render the land sold unfit or materially less fit for that
purpose.
o Siddons v Short, Harley: If a vendor sells part of his land, knowing that the purchaser
intends to erect a building upon that land, the vendor impliedly undertakes not to use his
adjoining land so as to injure or interfere with the building.
o Nelson v Walker: a right in the purchaser is only implied if, having regard to the
circumstances, the parties must be taken to have contemplated that the land retained by the
vendor would not be used by him in a manner inconsistent with that right:
4) Continuous and Apparent Easements
- Wheeldon v Burrows: (blocked the light)
- the Court considered an application for an implied reservation of a right to light arising from
the sale of land.
- the principle for continuous and apparent easements as:
o on the grant by the owner of a tenement of part of that tenement, as it is then used and
enjoyed, there will pass to the grantee all those continuous and apparent easements, all those
easements which are necessary to the reasonable enjoyment of the property granted, and
which have been and are at the time of the grant used by the owners of the entirety for the
benefit of the part granted down.
- Four elements are necessary to show a W v B easement:
o There must be a grant of a part of the land (a severance);
o At the time of the grant, the exercise of the easement must be continuous and apparent;
o The easement must be necessary for the reasonable enjoyment of the land granted;
o Just before the time of severance, the grantor must have been using the easement for the
benefit of the land granted.
- McGrath v Campbell: the common transferor intended one party to take the burden and
another party to take the benefit of any continuous and apparent easement and that those
parties who knew about the other transaction also intended that to happen
- North Sydney Printing Ltd v Sabemo Investments (the corner of the land left without
access to the road – council will buy it – 50 cent - rejected)
o The court rejected it, you can’t argue the necessity, you created this situation
o You never intended that an easement should be created
- McGrath v Campbell
o Two adjoining lots were owned by a single registered proprietor. The northern lot (Lot 6)
faced a main road, while the southern lot (Lot 12) was bounded by a street known as Brighton
Avenue. A registered easement had been created over both lots in favour of a third adjoining
property.
o W v B does not apply to the Torrens system.
o Both were RP’s. Could the owner of the dominant tenement enforce the easement against the
owner of the servient tenement and then force them to register that easement?
o such an implied easement arises out of the common intention of the relevant parties, which is
presumed by operation of law. Prescriptive easements arise in a similar way.
o If prescriptive easements are trumped by the indefeasibility provisions of the RP Act, logic
requires that those provisions should apply to implied easements in the same way
Williams v State Transit Authority (Torrens system/ never create an easement/ similar to
Dobbie but different period of use)
o The dominant land was the Randwick Race Course and they claimed an easement for their
sewerage pipes by long use of land owned by the State Transport Authority which was next
to the Race Course. The STA agreed to sell the land to a third party but after they exchanged
contracts, Randwick lodged a caveat and the matter ended up in court.
o whether the prescriptive easement gave Randwick an equitable right to force the STA to
register the easement
Answer: No – both Lands are in Torrens system and s.47 RPA says the easement should be
recorded.
o Australian Hi Fi Publications v Gehl (registered proprietor taking without fraud)
o Rights, such as those which arose upon the sale of the land by the Savage family to the
defendant, would normally be within the class of rights existing personally against the Savage
family as proprietors and so enforceable against them notwithstanding s. 42.
o Those rights would not be enforceable against a subsequent registered proprietor taking
without fraud;
o The right created by that deed would not be enforceable against a subsequent registered
proprietor.
- Jea Holdings (Aust) v Registrar-General of NSW: (Car parking right- recorded as sth else
(covenant), not as an easement - misdescribed)
- Servient tenement holder could build below and above the car park
- Was registered as a covenant but only on the benefitted (dominant) land not the burdened
land (servient)
- Could s 42(1)(a1) apply?
- It was recorded s. 46 RPA but misdescribed its valid easement.
o it is a right of way claimed under a grant, in the nature of the width of the road or something
of that kind, full effect must be given to the grant, and we cannot consider the subsequent
user as in any way sufficient to cut down the generality of the grant.
- Westfield Management v Perpetual Trustee Company (didn’t change the nature – only
Sky Garden can use, if you are at pitt st you cant use easement - interpretation)
o Westfield is the owner of the Sky Garden complex in Pitt St Mall. Perpetual is the owner of
the Glass House complex.
o Former owners of Glass House granted an easement to former owners of Sky Garden
o The terms of the grant of easement read:
o Full and free right of carriageway for the grantee its successors in title and registered
proprietors for the time being of an estate or interest in possession of the land herein indicated
to go, pass and repass at all times and for all purposes with vehicles to and from the said lots
benefited or any such part thereof across the lots burdened.
o They sought a declaration that they could use the right of way for this purpose and
Glasshouse defended arguing that they could only use the right of way to access Sky Garden.
o Westfield argued that the words ‘for all purposes
o held the phrase ‘for all purposes’ had to be read in the context of the grant as a whole
o granting the capacity to use the easement for all purposes connected with the grant of the
easement
o The easement in this case was granted for all purposes involving travelling to and from Sky
Garden not across Sky Garden. Westfield had the right to cross Glass House for ANY
purpose provided that that crossing was just to and from Sky Garden not across Sky Garden.
o the contractual rules of interpretation should not be resorted to for registered easements
o The importance this has for the construction of the terms in which easements are granted has
been remarked in Riley v Penttila and in Pearce v City of Hobart.
- Interference
o Interference is a basic nuisance
o Bullard v Harrison: If there is an obstruction you can deviate
o Hemmes Hermitage v Abdurahman: compost bin was in the way so the parties could
deviate
- Stolyar v Towers
- The Stolyars and the Towers were neighbours
- An easement was created by Mrs Stolyar’s predecessor in the title
- it granted a right of vehicle parking and garaging which burdens Mrs Stolyar’s property,
- A single garage had been built on the easement area and Towers parked vehicles for many
years.
- The Stolyars had a double garage which was adjacent to the single garage
- Some time ago, a turntable was installed in the area in front of the double garage but it no
longer worked
- The Stolyars complained about the Towers blocking them from turning around and reversing
into their garage by parking in front of their single garage
- Full and free right for the person or body in whose favour this easement is created.
- The Towers claimed that the Stolyars had wrongfully interfered with the Towers’ rights
under the easement
- The Stolyars denied the allegations of wrongful interference
The purposes for which the dominant owner may use a right of carriageway must also take
into account the inherent nature of such a right.
The ancillary rights of a dominant owner include, where appropriate, the right to obtain the
written consent of the owner of the servient tenement to the lodgement of a development
application by the dominant owner.
Sertari: held that such an order can be made where the development application is for the
construction of improvements on the right of way which are reasonably necessary for the
proper enjoyment of the easement.
- Treweeke v Wolsely Road: (you did sth that no one can use, it did not abandon)
o Over the next few years, she increased the bamboo plantation, installed a retaining wall, built
a fence and constructed a swimming pool, …
o the High Court found that the construction of a fence did not evince a clear intention to
abandon the easement because the fence could be moved or a gate could be inserted.
o the high court found that an easement will not be extinguished by non-use alone.
o In this case, the non-use of the right of way could be explained by the state of the path,
including the dangerous rock face, rather than an intention to abandon.
o There was no intention to abandonment.
- Because the previous owner has gone through the process and abandoned that was evidence
of abandonment. You can raise s.42 here.
Profits
Definition
- A profit is a right to take away the natural products of the land
- Crops, minerals, soil and timber: Connelley v Noone
- Right to hunt and fish: Alfred F Beckett v Lyons
A profit is not...
- A business: Frank Warr v London County Council
- A right to take cultivated crops or domesticated animals: Permanent Trustee
Australia v Shand (plantation of macadamia nuts);
- Clos Farming Estates v Easton (vineyard)
- Timber may be an exception to this if it is slow-growing: Corporate Affairs
Commission v ASC Timbers
- Forestry rights are defined to be profits by virtue of s 88AB
- A personal interest or license: King v David Allen & Sons
- Exclusive possession
Differences with easements
- Can exist in gross: Ellison v Vukecevic
How Profits are created
- Old system: deed s 23B, 88AA, 88AB
- Torrens system: registration ss 46, 46A, 47
- Prescription: 20 years, Barton v The Church Commissioners for England
- Equity: Walsh, part performance
- Omitted or misdescribed: s 42(1)(b)
How are profits extinguished?
- Similar to easements
- Agreement
- Common ownership
- Abandonment
- Obsolete