Nuisance Flashcards
What are the 2 types of nuisance?
Public and private nuisance
What is nuisance?
Unlawful and continuous interference with a person’s use or enjoyment of land coming from neighbouring land.
Requirement 1 - Claimant has an interest in land
The claimant must have a interest in the land, meaning legal interest. They can be owners of tenants but cannot be children, family or friends (Hunter v Canary Wharf)
Requirement 2 - Defendant is the person allowing the nuisance.
The defendant must be the person causing or allowing the nuisance to happen - even if it is naturally occurring. This also includes if they have adopted the nuisance (Tetley v Chitty) (Sedleigh-Denfield)
Requirement 3 - Unlawful interference with the claimant’s use and enjoyment of the property.
Does not mean the action has to be illegal - just that it is unreasonable in the way it is affecting the claimant. Includes: Smells (Aadams); noise (Kennaway); vibrations (Sturges); Hot air (Robinson. Does not include: Right to view the countryside; right to light or right to TV reception (Hunter).
Requirement 4 - Unreasonable use of the land by the defendant
This regards balancing interest of both parties. The factors considered are: Locality (is it urban/residential/rural etc)(Sturges); Duration (one off - Crown river cruises); Sensitivity of the claimant (is the claimant being particularly sensitive); Malice (are the actions deliberately harmful?); social benefit (do the actions have a community benefit)
What are the 5 defences that can be used for nuisance?
1)Consent (Volenti)
2)prescription
3)Statutory authority
4)Planning permission
5)Acts of a stranger
What defences aren’t available?
- That the defendant moved to the nuisance.
- Usefulness of the activity or that the defendant took care and skill.
What is Prescription as a defence?
A unique defence to nuisance that can only be used if the nuisance has existed for 20+ years (Coventry v Lawrence)
What is statutory authority as a defence?
This means that there is an act of parliament which gives the defendant permission to be carrying out the act which is causing the nuisance. (Allen v gulf oil refinery)
What is planning permission as a defence?
Not usually a defence to private nuisance but can work only if the planned development for a neighbourhood is likely to dramatically change the character of that neighbourhood.
What are Acts of a stranger as a defence?
Defendants may be liable for a third arty of acts of a stranger if they have ‘continued’ or ‘adopted’ the nuisance. (Sedleigh-Denfield)
What are the 3 remedies for nuisance?
1)Injunctions
2)Abatement
3)Damages
What is an injunction?
An order to stop the activity or restrict it. (Kennaway v Thompson)
What is an abatement?
This allows the claimant to enter the defendant’s land to prevent further nuisance. (Lemmon v Webb)