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The fad for eco-friendly townies to install wind turbines on their houses
has led some to query whether there can be any legal right to an
unrestricted airflow to keep the turbine turning.
The starting point is to say that every freeholder owns the air above the
land ‘up to the sky’ but, that does not, of itself, give a right to an
uninterrupted airflow. Since such a right is unlikely to have been granted
by an express agreement (eg easement or restrictive covenant) the only
realistic way of claiming such a right would be through an implied
easement. However, Webb [1863] makes it clear that there is no natural
right to access to air coming across one’s property, and nor can this be
acquired by an easement to give a general free and uninterrupted
passage of air to a windmill or a chimney. Indeed, such a right would not
‘lie in grant’ because it would be too uncertain (ie neighbours would not
know the extent of the obligation on them). In summary, your typical
householder is unlikely to have a legal right to an unrestricted airflow.
For the authorities see article in [2007] NLJ 850. © Practical Lawyer
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July 2007 |