Section 15 Commons Act 2006 allows land to be registered as a ‘town
or village green’ where:
‘A significant number of the inhabitants of any locality, or of any neighbourhood
within a locality, have indulged as of right in lawful sports and pastimes on the land
for a period of at least 20 years.’
There has, of course, been much litigation on this topic, and s15
amounts to a rewording of the earlier definition in an effort to bring
clarity. Overall, it is fair to say that the definition is widely construed. In
particular:
- ‘A significant number’: does not have to be a large number. All that is
needed is that land is not used simply by a few individuals, but rather
by local inhabitants in general.
- ‘lawful sports and pastimes’: can include dog walking, ball games,
fireworks, bike riding and picnics.
-
20-years’ use: there does not have to be ‘use’ every day. It can be
occasional but regular (eg in one case a field used for a bonfire party
once a year for 20 years was registered as a village green.
-
condition of the land: arguments were raised in the past that an
application could not extend to a site that was overgrown. But, it now
seems that any piece of land can potentially be a village green (eg in
the Oxford [2006] case, the registration involved nine acres of
shrubland, one-third of which was submerged, and yet all nine acres
were registered).
Registration does not just protect the specific ‘sports and pastimes’
relied on, but gives a general right. For instance, whilst an annual bonfire
party may have enabled registration, that land can then be used by local
inhabitants for all other sports and pastimes.
Under the pre-2006 regime, applications faced a serious problem
because the use had to be continuing at the time the application was
made. This meant that if a landowner fenced off land before a planning
application was made, then the use might well have stopped at the date
of the application. Now, however, the rules have been relaxed and in
deciding the point at which the ‘use’ must be carried out, there are three
possibilities:
1 Where the use continues at the time of the application; or
2 The use ceases before the application and after 6 April 2007, but
the application is made within the period of two years beginning
with the cessation; or
3 Where the use ceased before 6 April 2007, and the application is
made within a period of five years beginning with the cessation.
Thus there is a five-year grace period expiring in April 2012. Note
that this does not apply if planning permission was granted before
23 June 2006, with construction works beginning before that date,
and that then making the land permanently unusable for the
‘sports and pastimes’.
Finally, do not be misled by the quaint phrase ‘village greens’ into
thinking that the 2006 Act only applies in rural settings. It can apply in
urban environments. The end result is that any developer thinking of
acquiring land that has been open and unused for 20 years should
always be made fully aware of the inherent risks of a village green
registration application being made. For a useful introduction see article
in [2008] 203 Property Law Journal 16. © Practical Lawyer
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