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A ‘curtilage’ is like an elephant, hard to describe, but instantly recognisable

The Commons Act 2006 enables landowners to apply to deregister land registered as a common under the Commons Registration Act 1965 if, on registration, it was covered by or was within the curtilage of a building, always has been and still is: paragraph 6, schedule 2.

Blackbushe Airport Ltd v Hampshire County Council [2021] EWCA Civ 398; [2021] PLSCS 56 concerned an application to de-register 115 acres of common land forming part of Blackbushe Airport. The land housed a runway, taxiways, fuel storage depot, and an airport terminal – a two-storey building, once roughly double the size of the application land, but which now had an overall floor area of 760 sq m. The land had been requisitioned for use during World War II, on condition that it was to be restored and the buildings removed on de-requisitioning. But the buildings were not demolished when they should have been.

The planning inspector approved the application. But the High Court overturned his decision and the Court of Appeal has now confirmed that such an extensive area of land could not properly be described as falling within the curtilage of the relatively small terminal building.

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