Private Nuisance Flashcards
Definition
Unlawful interference for a substantial length of time with a person’s right to enjoy their land in a reasonable way.
C must prove
- Right to claim
- Capable D
- Interference
- Interference is unlawful
- Right to claim
C must have legal interest in the affected land (Hunter v Canary Wharf).
- Capable D
Person being sued is:
D is creator of nuisance (Tetley v Chitty) OR adopting/ continuing/ failing to deal with nuisance (Sedleigh- Denfield v O’Callaghan).
- There is an interference
A) physical damage
B) loss of amenity in using land
- Interference is unlawful.
Must be sufficiently serious + materially interfere with ‘ordinary existence’ (Murdoch v Glacier Metal).
Unlawfulness factors the courts consider
a. Locality (Sturges v Bridgman)
b. Duration (Crown River Cruises v Kimbolton)
c. Sensitivity (Network Rail v Morris)
d. Social utility (Miller v Jackson)
e. Malice on part of D (Hollywood Silver Fox Farm v Emmett).
Defences
- Statutory authority (Allen v Gulf Oil Refining)
- Prescription (Sturges v Bridgman)
- Consent
Remedies
- Injunction (Milker v Jackson)
- Damages: physical damage (Hunter v Canary Wharf) + loss must be reasonably foreseeable (The Wagon Mound No 2)
- Abatement (Lemmon v Webb)