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Tower Hamlets London Borough Council v Barrett and another

Tenancy — Appellants acquiring tenancy and then freehold of public house Appellants using fenced land adjoining property — Whether appellants acquiring adverse title to land — Appeal allowed

From 1977, the appellants were the tenants of a public house (the property) under an annual tenancy. In 1993, they became the freeholders in possession. The respondent council were the statutory successors to the Greater London Council (GLC) as the registered proprietors of an area to the west of the property (the disputed land) to which the appellants claimed to have acquired title by adverse possession.

All the buildings on, and in the immediate vicinity of, the disputed land had been demolished. The GLC had enclosed the land with metal fencing and had erected wooden props to support the western wall of the property and to provide protection for its brickwork. At that time, the brewery was the appellants’ landlord as the registered proprietor of the freehold of the public house.

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