With thanks to Herringtonconsulting.co.uk |
The Law Commission has started
consulting on significant changes to the legal regime surrounding rights to
light. At this stage the proposals are provisional but the organisation has
stressed that the Commission’s final recommendations to the Government will be
strongly influenced by responses.
The four provisional proposals
are:
- in the future it should no longer be possible to acquire rights to light by prescription
- a new statutory test is proposed to clarify the current law on when courts may order a person to pay damages instead of ordering that person to demolish or stop constructing a building that interferes with a right to light
- new statutory notice procedure is planned requiring those with the benefit of rights to light to make clear whether they intend to apply to the court for an injunction (ordering a neighbouring landowner not to build in a way that infringes their right to light), with the aim of introducing greater certainty into rights to light disputes
- a move to allow the Lands Chamber of the Upper Tribunal to be able to extinguish rights to light that are obsolete or have no practical benefit, with payment of compensation in appropriate cases, as it can do under the present law in respect of restrictive covenants.
The Law Commission said: “This
project investigates whether the law by which rights to light are acquired and
enforced provides an appropriate balance between the important interests of
landowners and the need to facilitate the appropriate development of land.
“It considers the
interrelationship of rights to light with the planning system, and examines
whether the remedies available to the courts where rights to light are
infringed are reasonable, sufficient and proportionate.”
The Commission stressed it
wants to introduce “greater certainty and transparency into the law as it
relates to rights to light, making disputes simpler, easier and quicker to
resolve”.
It also made it clear that it
wants to ensure that rights to light do not act as an unnecessary constraint on
development: “The availability of modern, good quality residential, office and
commercial space is important to the success of increasingly dense, modern town
and city centres and to the economy more generally.”
Originally posted on The Planning Portal