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Adverse possession after Pye Print

The litigants in J A Pye (Oxford) Ltd and J A Pye (Oxford) Land Ltd v UK have finally battled their way through all available appeals processes. By way of light relief to their saga, there has also been Beaulane Properties Ltd v Palmer to consider. Add in the introduction of a new procedure under the Land Registration Act 2002, and it becomes clear that the law of adverse possession has had a period of intensive examination and overhaul in the past few years. Now the dust has settled, it is possible to undertake a brief survey of where we are, to assess the extent to which the law has changed.

PYE IN THE DOMESTIC COURTS

The headline-grabbing issue in Pye was whether the Human Rights Act 1998 (HRA 1998) operated so as to nullify or modify the old adverse possession procedure in relation to registered land, under the Limitation Act 1980 and the Land Registration Act 1925. To do so it would need to have retrospective effect, and the Court of Appeal concluded that it did not.

The other aspect of the dispute concerned the meaning of ‘adverse’, in other words the nature of the possession required to deprive the paper owner of the property. In the House of Lords an orthodox version of the law prevailed so that ultimately the outcome of the domestic litigation was entirely conventional:

a) the HRA 1998 did not retrospectively affect the old adverse possession procedure; and

b) the claimants established adverse possession.

PYE IN EUROPE

The defendant companies then challenged the law of adverse possession in the European Court of Human Rights. This could not affect the question of who was entitled to the property under our domestic law, but could have entitled them to compensation from the government. They were initially successful, but after an appeal to the Grand Chamber of the Court, the final outcome was that the old adverse possession procedure did not breach human rights.

WHERE ARE WE NOW?

The end result of this marathon is that the defendant companies were entirely unsuccessful in their challenge to the law. In the meantime, though, the Beaulane case has changed the law in relation to situations where the HRA 1998 does apply. Also, in relation to registered land, a new procedure has been introduced under the Land Registration Act 2002 (LRA 2002). Both of these developments will make it much harder for adverse possession claims to succeed in the future, at least in relation to registered land.

There are now four different sets of circumstances that may apply, each with different legal consequences.

First, where there is registered or unregistered land that has 12 years’ adverse possession completed before 2 October 2000 (Pye):

  • the HRA 1998 does not apply;
  • the law remains unaltered; and
  • in the light of Pye, challenges to the law as it relates to unregistered land are unlikely.

Secondly, where there is registered land that has 12 years’ adverse possession, completed on or after 2 October 2000 but before 13 October 2003 (Beaulane):

  • the HRA 1998 applies;
  • the new adverse possession regime under the LRA 2002 does not apply; and
  • in accordance with the Beaulane decision, the adverse possessor must show that its possession was inconsistent with the use, or intended use, of the land by the owner, and not merely that it was without the owner’s consent – the Land Registry has issued brief, additional guidance to Practice Guide 5 confirming this (www.landregistry.gov.uk/).

Thirdly, where there is unregistered land that has 12 years’ adverse possession completed on or after 2 October 2000:

  • the HRA 1998 applies;
  • in the light of Pye, challenges to the law are unlikely; and
  • while both Pye and Beaulane were concerned with registered land, a court might still apply Beaulane in relation to unregistered land.

Finally, where there is registered land that has 12 years’ adverse possession that was not completed before 13 October 2003:

  • The new adverse possession regime under the LRA 2002 applies. It is not considered to be vulnerable to a human rights-based challenge.

By Mark Shelton, associate, Cobbetts LLP. E-mail:  © In-House Lawyer

February 2008
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