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Boundaries - tidal waters |
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A reminder of the rules on boundaries that abut tidal waters (whether the
sea or rivers):
1. The owner of land abutting tidal water is presumed to own it down to
the mean high water mark. But this does not include the foreshore (the
area between mean high and low water marks). Since the foreshore
may well move with the sea, it follows that the foreshore is a movable
freehold (growing or decreasing with nature).
2. It is presumed that the bed of all tidal fl ows of water, whether rivers
or the sea, belong to the Crown (although, these days, 45% of the
foreshore is now owned by other bodies).
Accretion is the gaining of land as a result of the gradual change in the mean
high water level (and losing such land is known as erosion). As the high water
mark changes, so the boundaries change – irrespective of what may be shown
on old title deeds or on OS plans. However, the accretion rule only applies to
acts of nature; it does not apply to deliberate acts (eg the building of a wall
which then alters the foreshore). See [2008] 207 Property Law Journal 18 © Practical Lawyer
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May 2008 |