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View from the bar: Overlooking is not a nuisance

All law students learn at an early stage the distinction between the criminal law, by which (usually) the state prosecutes individuals or companies who have transgressed rules designed to govern the way in which we live, and the civil law, which governs rights between individuals, without involving a criminal sanction. Famously, therefore, the sign saying “Bill stickers will be prosecuted” is a nonsense, because the sticking of bills is simply a trespass, not a prosecutable criminal offence. Having said that, such a sign did enable JRR Tolkien to create a short story for his children based on the notorious activities of the underworld criminal Bill Stickers – so it has had its uses.

Development of the law

Trespass was an early example of what lawyers refer to as torts – ie civil rather than criminal wrongs – and provided a remedy where somebody occupied another’s land without consent. It was obvious that land rights would be among the first to be protected in a society where ownership of land was critical to power, wealth and status.

The tort of nuisance was soon to follow in the Middle Ages, initially as something designed to protect easements such as rights of way and rights to light, but soon broadening in its scope to ensure that everyone must so use their land as not to do damage to another’s. Thus it was that Lord Chief Justice Holt (incidentally, he who it is said played a major role in ending the prosecution of witches in English law) was able to state in a late 17th century judgment that every man “must keep in the filth of his house of office that it may not flow in upon and damnify his neighbour”.

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