100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached
logo-home
Summary Nuisance & Rylands v Fletcher - Tort Law (LLB) £2.99   Add to cart

Summary

Summary Nuisance & Rylands v Fletcher - Tort Law (LLB)

 81 views  1 purchase

Nuisance and Rylands v Fletcher case Summarised Notes for the Tort Law module, LLB, at City, University of London - can of course be used for other universities as well! Should be used with the full bundle of notes!

Preview 3 out of 7  pages

  • May 20, 2020
  • 7
  • 2018/2019
  • Summary
All documents for this subject (16)
avatar-seller
law-notes
NUISANCE AND RYLANDS V FLETCHER
-One of the oldest torts longer history then negligence
-2 forms: PRIVATE and PUBLIC nuisance

PRIVATE NUISANCE
Private= unreasonable interference with use + enjoyment of land or some right over it

NATURE OF PRIVATE NUISANCE
 No requirement conduct of D is careless but must be some unreasonableness
 Nuisance is strict liability
 Nuisances can be continuing can be deliberate activities, issue is for continuing nuisances is
whether should be an injunction to stop unreasonable interference
 Nuisance requires interference ‘unreasonable’ assess all circumstances, but conduct no need

MUST PROVE
(1) AN UNREASONABLE INTERFERENCE;
(2) WITH C’S USE OR ENJOYMENT OF HIS OR HER LAND – show has right or exclusive possession
(3) FOR WHICH D IS RESPONSIBLE

INTERFERENCE
Hunter v Canary Wharf [1997]: ‘3 kinds of private nuisance.(1) nuisance by encroachment on a
neighbour's land; (2) direct physical injury to a neighbour's land; and (3) nuisance by interference
with a neighbour's quiet enjoyment of his land’ (most common i.e. loud noises, smells etc)
o Facts: erection of buildings in Canary Wharf affected TV receptions held no right of action in
nuisance for interference of TV reception + interest in property required for nuisance action

Midtown v London Property [1904]: claimants right of light to building interference= nuisance

UNREASONABLENESS OF INTERFERENCE see if ‘Reasonable user’
Cambridge Water v Eastern Counties [1994]
Reasonable user would have to put up with a certain amount of annoyance, cannot merely sue for
minor things as then too much lawsuits

FACTORS TO SEE IF CONDUCT AMOUNTS TO ‘UNREASONABLE USER’
LOCALITY OF THE NUISANCE – see planning permissions + character of neighbourhood
Sturges v Bridgman [1879]: leading case, Court stated what would be a nuisance in Belgrave square
would not be in a less posh area – some areas court would expect to put up with things that would
not in other areas – depends on kind of area e.g. living in countryside and there is pig noises cannot
claim courts look at locality

Helen’s Smelting v Tipping [1865]: claimant got house with 1300 acres of land close to D copper
smelting business, damage caused by smelting works to crops + trees, other industrial businesses in
locality held where physical damage, locality principle irrelevant injunction restrain works
’Reasonable user’ considers Ds use of land not effect on claimant where no material damage
Reasonable user different from conduct, as some activities unreasonable even if careful

Coventry v Lawrence [2014]: racing stadium, claimants brought a house there, complained about
noise, local authority served notice for noise reduction works, works completed, claimant action in
nuisance held planning permission did not authorise nuisance even by changing character of
neighbourhood planning permission not same as statutory authority (given by local authority)




1

,SENSITIVITY OF CLAIMANT’S USE OF LAND – not protect sensitive claimants
Robinson v Kilvert [1889]: hot dry air cellar caused damage to brown paper stored by plaintiff, on
the floor above, ordinary paper would not have been damaged claim failed not ordinary use and
enjoyment of neighbour’s property
-Courts see whether a reasonable person would find it interfering

DURATION OF THE INTERFERENCE
Crown River v Kimbolton [1996]: fireworks display some of fireworks landed on claimant’s boat and
made it catch fire; it was only 20minutesproperty damage so nuisance still despite short time

PUBLIC BENEFIT (relevant only when considering remedy)
Approach of courts, they look at public benefit to see what remedy to use
Miller v Jackson [1977]: cricket, claimants moved next to cricket grounds, asked for an injunction to
shut down cricket groundnuisance as regular – public benefit only relevant for remedy

Dennis v Ministry of Defence [2003]: D Ministry of Defence, was practising a low level flying next to
Dennis’s home, very annoyed by loud noises, RAF argued they have to practise it somewhere and
wherever they go there would be someone that would be annoyed, as they need it for public
securitynuisance but important so claimant got damages (950k) bur RAF still able to practice

MALICE –Whether D was malicious in producing the interference
Christie v Davey [1893]: claimants music teachers, taught lessons at home, semi-detached house
and D lived on other side of wall, D wrote letter to claimant expressing annoyance, claimants ignored
letter, when heard music lessons he knocked on walls and made noises, he argued practice his own
music held he was annoying neighbours, claimants not liable as not malicious he was malicious

Silver Fox Farm v Emmett [1936]: animal being bread in Silver Fox Farm, argument between D and
claimant, D took revenge as asked son to fire shot gun making animals nervous and affecting
breading, court argued D was malicious damages + injunction

WHO CAN SUE?
 Only sue if have RIGHT IN LAND AFFECTED or have EXCLUSIVE POSSESSION of land
 Need to have a legal interest in land with possession e.g. as tenant, licensee, with full control

Hunter v Canary Wharf [1997]: building interfered with TV reception, many claimants some
children, court held children cannot sue as not have exclusive possession or do not have right in land
 Damages in nuisance are calculated with a ‘loss of rent’ calculation: of the property were rented,
how much less would a tenant be able to pay the claimant to rent it in its ‘damaged’ state
 Dust may constitute a nuisance if it reduces the value of the claimant’s land

Note impact of Article 8 ECHR: so if cannot sue in nuisance, may do in Art.8 where there is
unreasonable interference with private home e.g. if caused by public authority

Dobson v Thames Water [2009]: court stated where people have right in land affect can sue, if do
not then might be able to sue in Art.8 (right for private life)




2

, WHO CAN BE SUED?
-What is the necessary relationship with D and the nuisance simplest if where occupier is also
creator of nuisance, similar to servant or agent of occupier, harder for tenants + licenses
-Occupier who adopts or continues nuisance created by a trespasser: things on land producing
nuisance, something put by trespasser and occupier starts using it, if take reasonable steps to stop it
then not liable, but if use it liable

Occupiers who do not create nuisance (nonfeasance)
 Created by someone else e.g. previous occupier, then adopted by occupier where makes use of
whatever constitutes as the nuisance, sufficient even if created by a trespasser, there are positive
duties for nuisances arising on land even where occupier is not originator which require occupier
to take ‘reasonable steps’ to abate (decrease) the nuisance + standard subjective

Sedleigh-Denfield v O’Callaghan [1940]
Pipe was laid on Ds land without knowledge or consent by a trespasser, after became aware a
grating was placed on pipe, became blocked and water overflowed plaintiff’s land held D had
sufficient connection with nuisance as adapted + continued it sufficient for liability in nuisance
Knowledge + opportunity take steps to abate amounts to sufficient link

Holbeck Hotel v Scarborough Council [2000]: hotel, landslide, council owned undercliff between the
cliff and sea, sea eroded as council did not prevent causing massive landslide, hotel fell, nuisance
created by nature, claimants argued landowners owed a duty of care held no liability as would not
be fair just and reasonable to impose liability, extent of landslide was not reasonably foreseeable

Goldman v Hargrave [1967]: Lightning set fire Ds tree, let burn out, fire spread to neighbours
adjoining property, damage liable 3 conditions for adjoining neighbour cases (D satisfied all)
(1) D knowledge of danger, (2) damage foreseeable consequence, (3) D had ability abate foreseeable
consequence occurring  appears like a negligence case, but also raises issue of positive duty

Nuisance created by tenants + licensees
Hussain v Lancaster Council [2000]: claimant argued tenants were being racist against him, and
council should be liable for not stoppingheld landlord not liable for tenants in nuisance, unless
authorised tenants for the nuisance, just knowledge of nuisance not same as authorising

Lippiatt v Gloucester Council [2000]: Ds allowed some gypsies to reside on their land, adjacent to
claimant’s land, gypsies caused nuisance on claimant’s land held liable as council’s land was used
as a base for nuisance and there was no highway involved, direct adjacency distinction= if landlord
ceased occupation as tenant occupier
 ‘Landlord who granted a tenancy is not in general liable in nuisance if tenant commits tort’

Nonfeasance and statute
Marcic v Thames Water [2004]: held sewage undertaker liable in nuisance for external flooding by
foul water suffered by plaintiff’s home + COA suggested taking ‘reasonable steps’ to alleviate a
nuisance was a defence, if remedy under nuisance not sufficient, could have used HRA 1998 Held
damages restricted to statutory ones + issues of Art. ECHR private and family life serious
interference with their home, burden of justifying interference rests with Thames Water ‘even so,
claim under HR law failed because of existence of statutory remedy’ (D regulated under 1991 Act)




3

The benefits of buying summaries with Stuvia:

Guaranteed quality through customer reviews

Guaranteed quality through customer reviews

Stuvia customers have reviewed more than 700,000 summaries. This how you know that you are buying the best documents.

Quick and easy check-out

Quick and easy check-out

You can quickly pay through credit card for the summaries. There is no membership needed.

Focus on what matters

Focus on what matters

Your fellow students write the study notes themselves, which is why the documents are always reliable and up-to-date. This ensures you quickly get to the core!

Frequently asked questions

What do I get when I buy this document?

You get a PDF, available immediately after your purchase. The purchased document is accessible anytime, anywhere and indefinitely through your profile.

Satisfaction guarantee: how does it work?

Our satisfaction guarantee ensures that you always find a study document that suits you well. You fill out a form, and our customer service team takes care of the rest.

Who am I buying these notes from?

Stuvia is a marketplace, so you are not buying this document from us, but from seller law-notes. Stuvia facilitates payment to the seller.

Will I be stuck with a subscription?

No, you only buy these notes for £2.99. You're not tied to anything after your purchase.

Can Stuvia be trusted?

4.6 stars on Google & Trustpilot (+1000 reviews)

78834 documents were sold in the last 30 days

Founded in 2010, the go-to place to buy revision notes and other study material for 14 years now

Start selling
£2.99  1x  sold
  • (0)
  Add to cart