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Donovan and another v Rana and another

Right of way – Implication of rights – Utilities – Respondents having right of way over part of appellants’ adjoining property for all purposes connected with use and enjoyment of their property – Right of way granted in transfer of respondents’ property as building plot with covenant to build single dwelling-house house to satisfaction of local authority – Respondents digging up land to install utilities to serve their house – Appellants failing in claim for damages – Whether easement to install utilities to be implied – Whether right of way sufficient to facilitate that easement – Whether precluded by express terms of transfer – Appeal dismissed

The appellants and the respondents owned adjoining properties in a suburban residential area of Gravesend, Kent. The respondents had built their house on land that their predecessor in title had purchased from the first appellant as a building plot in 2004, with the benefit of outline planning permission to construct a single dwelling-house. By the terms of the transfer, the transferee covenanted to erect that house to the satisfaction of the local planning authority and not to use the property for any other purpose than a single dwelling-house without the written consent of the transferor. The transfer also granted an express right of way, with or without vehicles, over a small area of the appellant’s land, hatched in blue on an attached plan (the blue land), which separated the building plot from the road; that right was granted “for all purposes connected with the use and enjoyment of the property but not for any other purpose”.

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