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Bryant Homes Southern Ltd and others v Stein Management Ltd and others

Sale of land – Conveyancing – Restrictive covenant – Vendor selling land subject to covenant registered at Land Registry to use it for agricultural purposes only – Vendor entering into separate unregistered personal obligation to release covenant in certain circumstances – Defendants claiming to be entitled to enforce covenant as vendor’s successors – Preliminary issue arising whether registered covenant enforceable by successors in title where it “touches and concerns” land notwithstanding unregistered agreement – Preliminary issue determined in favour of defendant

The vendor owned Middlefield Farm, Witney, Oxfordshire. In 1985 he sold 10 acres for a school and, by a deed of easement, granted a right of way over a farm track on his adjoining retained land, with provision to vary the arrangements if any of his adjacent land came to have development potential. In 1993 he conveyed two parcels of agricultural land (the property) of 127 acres to the claimants, a consortium of property developers, subject to but with the benefit of the deed of easement so far as it related to the property. Amongst the land retained by the vendor were the farmhouse and its curtilage, and the farm buildings and yards, including part of the bed of the track. By clause 3 of the conveyance, the claimants covenanted with the vendor and his successors in title, described as the owners and occupiers of the adjoining land edged red and blue on the plan, to use the property for agricultural purposes only. The red and blue colouring included part of the farm track. The conveyance was registered at the Land Registry.

At the same time, the vendor and claimants entered into an agreement by reference to a plan on which further agricultural land owned by the vendor was tinted pink and the property conveyed by the conveyance was tinted green. By that agreement, which was not registered at the Land Registry, the vendor promised to release the covenant imposed by the conveyance in relation to any of the green land if planning permission was obtained. The vendor sold off the pink land and part of the bed of the track, which was all that remained in his possession. When the buyer of those parcels of land defaulted on his registered charge, they came within the ownership of the defendants. On the basis that the benefit of the covenant had not been included in the charge and remained vested in the buyer, the claimants obtained a release of the covenant.

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