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Development in the face of an easement

In the wake of Regency Villas, Ellodie Gibbons looks at the options for developers faced with an easement.

In the recent case of Regency Villas Title Ltd v Diamond Resorts (Europe) Ltd [2018] UKSC 57; [2018] PLSCS 198 (see also: Recreational easements: a new species), one of the arguments relied on by the appellants in seeking to deny the existence of an easement was that of ouster. The “ouster principle” is that use of an easement must not be so extensive as to leave the servient owner (ie the owner over whose land rights have been granted) without any reasonable use of his or her land. For example, an exclusive right to park in several car parking spaces for 9.5 hours on each weekday has been held to be invalid as an easement: Batchelor v Marlow [2001] EWCA Civ 1051.

However, in Regency Villas the argument failed. Is the decision, therefore, a blow to developers faced with extensive easements? In other words, if such extensive rights as the timeshare owners at Broome Park had are nonetheless easements, is the development of property affected by such rights ever possible? This may be of even greater concern in the future, if the Law Commission’s draft Law of Property Bill produced in 2011 is ever enacted.

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