Nuisance and the Rule in Rylands v Fletcher
- Created by: cephillips
- Created on: 11-05-14 15:40
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- Nuisance and the Rule in Rylands & Fletcher
- 3 Types of Nuisance
- 1. Statutory - An N operating by virtue of Statute and cannot be sued for
- 2. Public - An N affecting a cross section of people. Sometimes both a tort and a crime
- PYA Quarries [1957]
- May receive damages, injunctions.
- 3. Private - "unlawful interference with a persons use of enjoyment of land or some right over, or a connection with it."
- 3 Forms: 1. Physical Injury to land 2. Substantial interference with Enjoyment of Land 3. Encroachment on Neighbors land
- "Reasonable User" test - Sedleigh-Denfield v O'Calloghan [1940]
- 5 Factors:
- 1. Nature of Locality - "What would be a nuisance in belgrave square may not be in bermondey" Lord Theisger in Sturges [1879]
- 2. Duration and Frequency - although a rare but substantial interference is still a nuisance - Barr v Biffa Waste [2012]
- 3. Utility of Defendants Conduct? - Planning permission does not authorize nuisance - Wheeler v Saunders [1995]
- 4. Abnormal Sensitivity - Will not make X an nuisance - Kilvert v Robinson [1889]
- 5. Malice encourages the courts to find a nuisance - Christie v Davy [1893]
- unless it stops C from having something he had no right too - Hollywood Silver Fox Farm [1936]
- 5 Factors:
- Only those with propriety interest can sue (Hunter v Canary Whard [1997]
- Smell is a nuisance: Haley v Esso [1961]
- Dust is a nuisance: London Docjlands [1997]
- TV interference is a nuisance: Hunter v Canary Wharf [1997]
- Cannot sue in nuisance for public injury - Re Corby [2008]
- Defenses to Nuisance
- 1. Statutory Authority - Allen v Gulf Oil [1981]
- 2. 20 year prescription - Sturges v Brigman [1879]
- 3. Inevitable accident
- 4. Unforseen act of a stranger
- 5. Abnormal Sensitivity
- Not Defences
- Coming to the Nuisance - Masters v Brent LBC [1978]
- Utility - Adams v Ursell [1913]
- Jus Tertii - Nicholls [1936]
- 4. Due to many - Laniston [1894]
- Rylands v Fletcher [1868]
- "Isolated Escape" Incidents with Four Requirements
- 1. D has brought onto his land something likely to cause mischief
- 2. The thing escapes (Read v Lyons [1947] if intentional its tresspass)
- 3. Non-natural use of land
- 4. Foreseeability of the type of damage
- Defences
- 1. Claimant's fault
- 2. Unforeseeable act of stranger
- 3. Act of God
- 4. Statutory Authority
- 5. Consent
- "Isolated Escape" Incidents with Four Requirements
- 3 Types of Nuisance
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