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A quay, whose owner was not a statutory body, has qualified for registration as a green

In 2008, following the threat of enforcement action by the Health and Safety Executive, the owner and operator of the port of Mistley erected a fence along the quayside to prevent people falling into the water. “Free the Quay” campaigners protested vigorously, claiming that they had used the waterfront for recreation for decades.

The quay was situated in front of industrial buildings and formed part of a concrete apron, which was used by lorries and other vehicles when ships docked. The owner and operator of the port argued that the activities that it carried on there were incompatible with registration as a green. But, following a non-statutory public inquiry, the council registered the waterfront as a green.

The port operator asked the High Court to remove the land from the register. In TW Logistics Ltd v Essex County Council [2017] EWHC 185 (Ch) it claimed that the recreational use had been contentious and not “as of right”, thanks in particular to its signage in the port area. But the judge refused to reverse the decision. No one had ever been warned off the land. And, having considered the wording and location of the signs (which had not been posted at the entrances to the land in question, or painted on the ground), the judge decided that a reasonable person would have understood them to refer to another area of the port, once situated behind a raisable barrier.

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