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Ernstbrunner v Manchester City Council and another

Definitive map and statement — Part III of the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981 – Evidence of footpath route– Appellant applying for order requiring respondent council to secure removal of gate obstructing claimed route of public footpath on private road – Crown court refusing order and finding that definitive map showing diversion from private road — Whether description of footpath in definitive statement precluding finding – Whether map and statement inconsistent – Whether highway rights established by earlier definitive map and statement capable of continuing in force notwithstanding absence from current version – Appeal dismissed

The appellant was a member and local representative of the Ramblers’ Association. In November 2004, he applied to the magistrates’ court for an order, under section 130B(2) of the Highways Act 1980, requiring the first respondent council to take action to secure the removal of a gate, which, he contended, obstructed a public footpath that ran through a farm owned by the second respondent. The first respondents were the highway authority for the area and, under Part III of the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981, were the surveying authority responsible for maintaining the definitive map and statement for the area; the relevant map and statement dated from 1984. The court found that the gate was not on the line of the footpath, a decision was upheld by the crown court on appeal.

The crown court rejected the appellant’s argument that the description of the footpath in the definitive statement, when construed in the light of the 1963 definitive statement drawn up under previous legislation, indicated a route passing along the private road on which the gate stood. It found that the definitive map, which showed a distinctive kink in the footpath to the north as it passed the farmyard, was intended to and did show the footpath as diverging from the private road and following the edge of the second respondent’s property along a line that was marked on the ground by stone setts laid between a fence and a row of conifers. The court further held that the map did not conflict with the definitive statement.

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