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Easement – not abolished on merger |
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The traditional view has been that a merger of a lease with the freehold
will mean that any easement granted by the lease will automatically end.
This is what LR Practice Guide 26 says:
‘On determination of a lease, any beneficial easements granted by the lease
come to an end. You should therefore check whether the reversionary estate has
the benefit of an equivalent beneficial easement, if necessary. If not, you will
need to decide whether the two estates should continue to be held separately
and the lease should not, therefore, be determined.’
Because of this, many freeholders have in the past decided not to merge
a lease with the freehold, so that they can ensure that they preserve the
benefit of any leasehold easements. But, a recent CA decision has changed the law in this regard (and led to the LR withdrawing its above
advice).
The case involved two neighbouring properties subject to 999-year
leases, with one of them having a right of way over the other. The
problem was that a subsequent owner of the lease with the right of way
also bought the freehold of that property, and the question eventually
arose as to whether or not the right of way still existed (or whether it was
lost when the lease was extinguished through merger into the freehold).
The CA took the view that the right of way did survive. It was wrong to
think of the easement as being ‘attached to the lease’; the legal
requirement is that an easement has to be appurtenant to a dominant
tenement, but not necessarily to any particular interest in the land for
the time being. Thus, an easement might be for a term of years (eg for
999 years), but it does not necessarily have to be attached to a
leasehold interest of equivalent duration. All that is required is that the
grantee does have an interest that is at least co-extensive with the
period of the easement. Accordingly, the merger of the lease into the
freehold did not bring the easement to an end.
For many years the assumption has been that a leasehold easement will
automatically end if the lease is merged into the freehold. But, what the
CA discovered was that there was no existing authority to that effect; it
was merely an assumption, and it was an assumption that was wrong.
Accordingly, the traditional practice of not merging a leasehold and
a freehold (so as to safeguard any easements) would no longer
seem to be necessary. Wall v Collins [2007] EWCA Civ 444. Source:
www.practicallaw.com (subscription service). © Practical Lawyer
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July 2007 |