ABSTRACT
A right to park vehicles:
London & Blenheim Estates Ltd v
Ladbroke Retail Parks (1993)
A right of support of a party wall:
Bradburn v Lindsay (1983)
A right to have common areas in a
building maintained eg stairs, lifts:
Liverpool City Co v Irwin (1977)
A right to privacy: Browne v Flower (1911)
A right of joint user: Grisby v Melville (1974)
A right involving expenditure but note exceptions:
Liverpool City Co (above); Crow v Wood (1971) a right to have a dividing fence kept in good repair
Some rights which are not capable of being
easements
The creation of easements
By implied grant or reservation
CREATION
By express grant or reservation
By prescriptionBy a conveyance s 62LPA 1925
Creation by implied grant or reservation
Implied easement of necessity because without it the land
cannot be enjoyed at all: Nickerson v Barraclough (1981)
Implied by common intention
at the time of conveyance:
Wong v Beaumont (1965)
Quasi easement under the rule in
Wheeldon v Burrows
Creation by s 62 LPA 1925 Section 62 implies into all conveyances made by deed, that privileges existing at the time of the conveyance become rights.