judgment -...
TRANSCRIPT
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The Republic of Trinidad & Tobago
In the High Court of Justice
Claim No. CV2007-02417
BETWEEN
JENNY LIND THOMPSON
KALONJI MONTSHO JAHI
(formerly Anderson Thompson) Claimants
AND
THE INCORPORATED TRUSTEES OF THE
ETHIOPIAN ORTHODOX CHURCH OF TRINIDAD
HIRAM SCOTT
HENRY JAMES
Defendants
Before the Honourable Mr. Justice James Christopher Aboud
Dated: 10 May 2013
Representation:
Ms Samantha Lawson with Mr Joseph Ottley for the claimants
Mr Garvin Simonette instructed by Ms Sophia Vailloo for the defendants
JUDGMENT
1. This is a dispute over entitlement to a parcel of land in the Darrel Spring Road
neighbourhood, in the Parish of St. Andrew, Tobago. The boundaries and the size of the
land are disputed, and it is a somewhat complicated dispute. Delineations are needed at
the outset. The layout of the land is set out in a survey plan dated 23 February 2007
drawn by Winston Doyle, a licensed land surveyor. It is annexed as Appendix “A” to this
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judgment, and will hereafter be referred to as “the Doyle plan”. The Doyle plan shows a
parcel of land roughly in the shape of an axe that is divided into a northern and southern
portion. The two portions together comprise 0.5758 hectares (which I have, using
conversion tables, approximated at 61,978 square feet). The Claim Form and Statement
of Case seek, among other things, a declaration that the two claimants (who are brother
and sister) are owners of and entitled by adverse possession to 0.5758 hectares. The
pleadings therefore make a claim for orders in respect of the northern and southern
portions of the disputed lands.
2. In the course of the trial it was disclosed that the second claimant was previously
unsuccessful in seeking an identical high court declaration of adverse possession in
relation to the northern and southern portions. That was a case involving the owners of
the southern portion. The court held it was owned by the heirs of Arthur Moses; it
declined to make any declaration in relation to the northern portion. The second
claimant’s appeal from that decision is now pending. Notwithstanding what is claimed in
the Claim Form, the claimants’ evidence was mostly directed to a claim in respect of the
northern portion.1 The defendants say that the northern portion is owned by the first
defendant, The Incorporated Trustees of the Ethiopian Orthodox Church of Trinidad (“the
church”) by virtue of certain deeds2. The defendants say that the church acquired this
parcel of land in 1956 and they built a mission house on it a few years later. They say
1 The defendants submitted that the claim as pleaded was abusive and that the claimants were estopped from re-litigating.
While the poorly drafted pleadings sought a declaration for all the disputed lands the nub of the claimants’ case was really set out in their witness statements and they were only interested in the northern portion. In the interest resolving the real issues I turned a blind eye to the drafting errors, but do not condone them. 2 The proper name of the first defendant, by virtue of its incorporating statute is “The Incorporated Trustees of the Ethiopian
Orthodox Church in Trinidad” (not “of Trinidad”, as they have been named in the suit and throughout the evidence).
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that the church is the legal and equitable owner of the northern portion of the disputed
lands.
3. The church building is not shown on the Doyle plan. There is no dispute about the lands
upon which it was built. The church building and the curtilage around the building is
located on the eastern boundary of the northern portion or along the base of the handle of
the axe, so to speak. Immediately east of the church building and also not shown on the
Doyle plan is Darrel Spring Road. To the south of the northern portion one will see two
lots of land numbered 5 and 6 bearing the names of the two claimants. These lands are
held under the Real Property Ordinance. I will henceforth refer to these lands as “the
claimants’ RPO lands”. The two claimants have built homes on lots 5 and 6.
4. On 23 October 2007 the claimants filed this claim seeking a number of reliefs in respect
of the disputed lands (encompassing its northern and southern portions). The reliefs
include damages in trespass to 0.5758 hectares of land, a declaration that they are entitled
to possession of 0.5758 hectares , a prohibitory injunction and damages for destruction of
a chain link fence. In their Statement of Case the claimants say that they were born and
grew-up on ‘a large portion of land’, including the disputed lands (i.e. the northern and
southern portions). They contend that the church acquired a parcel of land by a deed of
conveyance in 1956 but, in a 1986 deed of rectification of the 1956 deed, the church’s
“parcel of land expanded to include a portion of the claimants’ land”. The nub of this
part of their case is that the 1986 deed of rectification misdescribed the boundaries that
were originally described in the 1956 deed and by so doing laid legal claim to “a portion”
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of the 0.5758 hectares, which, on the basis of the evidence led at the trial (and not on the
pleadings), is the northern portion shown on the Doyle plan. The Statement of Case sets
out a rough chronology of how the claimants and their siblings became entitled under the
then Real Property Ordinance (“RPO”) to certain lands adjoining the northern portion on
the south, that is, the claimants’ RPO lands. It is also said that the claimants and their
siblings fenced ‘a large portion’ of the disputed lands since 1980 and that their parents
and later themselves and their siblings, planted fruit trees and short crops and also reared
animals and poultry. The claimants plead that the planting and rearing of animals
continue to the date of the action.
5. The claimants also allege that on 23 September 2006 the second and third defendants,
who are church officials, together with others, destroyed a chain link fence that they had
erected on the far eastern boundary of the northern portion bordering the church building.
The allegation is that in late 2006 the claimants erected a chain-link fence to prevent the
members of the church from gaining access to the northern portion, and then the church
caused the fence to be unlawfully removed. This event precipitated the high court
action.
6. The defendants by way of Defence contend that the church is the legal owner of the
northern portion, as well as the lands upon which the church building is built. In 1954
Frank Peterkin, a trustee of the church, purchased these lands from Francis Knatt by way
of a deed registered as No. 9458 of 1956 (“the first 1956 deed”). He later transferred
these lands to the church by deed registered as No.12525 of 1956, conveying as a trustee
of the church (“the second 1956 deed”). Both of these deeds describe the lands by way of
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its size (one acre) and by reference to the names of adjoining owners or adjoining
landmarks. There are no plans attached to these deeds. The two descriptions are
identical.
7. By a deed (“the 1986 deed of rectification”) made in 1986, registered as No. 8008 of
1986, and made between certain persons described as “Trustees of the Incorporated
Trustees of the Ethiopian Orthodox Church” of the one part and the “Incorporated
Trustees of the Ethiopian Orthodox Church of Trinidad” of the other part, the second
deed was rectified. The rectification was said to have been necessitated by a re-survey of
the lands that was undertaken by G.A. Farrell, a former director of surveys, in 1985. A
copy of his survey plan dated 21 January 1986 was attached to the 1986 deed of
rectification (“the Farrell plan”). The resurvey describes the lands as comprising 1.1
acres instead of 1 acre. The increase, by my calculation (evidence not having been led),
is point one of an acre, which would amount to an increase of 4,356 square feet.3 The
configuration or shape of the land comprising the northern portion in the 1985 Farrell
plan seems very similar to the configuration or shape of the northern portion in the 2007
Doyle plan. The similar configuration does not mean that the parcels in the two surveys
are identical in size.
8. It is the defendants’ contention that the northern portion has always formed part of the
parcel of land described in the first and second deeds, thus making the first defendant the
fee simple owner of the entire parcel of land (i.e. the northern portion together with the
lands upon which the church building is built). They say that in August 2006 the
claimants began foundation work for a structure and erected a chain-link fence near to
3 Both sides agree that point one of an acre amounts to 1/10
th or 10% of an acre.
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their church building, excluding them access to the northern portion. They admit
removing the chain-link fence. These events precipitated the exchange of letters and led
to this litigation.
9. The defendants have filed a counterclaim in which they seek a declaration that the church
and it predecessors were at all material time entitled to an estate in fee simple in
possession in land comprising 1.1 acres; in the alternative they counterclaim for a
declaration that the first defendant is entitled to a possessory title by virtue of adverse
possession, an injunction to demolish and remove the concrete structure, and damages for
trespass.
The Evidence
10. The claimants filed six witness statements but due to the absence of one witness his
witness statement was expunged. Three witnesses testified for the defendants. I will now
analyse the evidence of each witness. I use the order in which the witness statements
were presented in the trial bundle, and not the order in which the witnesses were called.
Evidence for the Claimants
Jenny Lind Thompson
11. In her witness statement this claimant testified that she and the second claimant are
jointly in occupation and possession of the northern portion. She says that since the early
1960s she started planting several fruit trees and short crops, and since the 1980s she had
a fowl coop and reared sheep on the disputed lands. She later began construction of a
concrete structure on the disputed lands in 2006. The church is said to be the legal owner
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of the area east of the northern portion where the church building is constructed, bounded
by Darrel Spring Road, and not the northern portion. Ms. Thompson says that their
proper western boundary is the area where they erected a chain link fence in 2006,
namely at the bottom or butt of the axe-shaped parcel of land. There is a ravine running
along that line. Prior to the claimants’ 2006 installation of the chain link fence along the
path of the ravine she says that there was no enclosure or fence between the church
building and the northern portion.
12. This witness compared the schedule in the second deed to the schedule in the 1986 deed
of rectification; she pointed out the changes in the names of the owners of the lands
bounding the northern, southern, and western boundaries in the 1986 deed of
rectification. Her evidence in chief is that by the 1986 deed of rectification the church’s
land holding was “expanded to include” the northern portion in the Doyle plan. I will
return to this point later in the judgment.
13. She says that the church has never been in possession of the northern portion of the
disputed lands. She also testifies that there is a barbed wire fence on the northern and
western boundaries of the northern portion and that this barbed wire fence was placed
there since the early 1980s by her brother, the second claimant. She further says that she
began construction of a structure measuring 25 feet by 20 feet on the northern portion in
August 2006. It is her evidence that she has been in occupation and possession of this
land since childhood.
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Cross-examination
14. Under cross-examination this witness admitted that her family home was located on
Darrel Spring Road. This is where her grandmother (known as “Mother T”) lived. The
claimants’ mother, together with the claimants and their siblings were born and grew up
there. The family home is shown on Lot 1 on the survey plan of Peter Beard dated 4
September 1993 (“the Beard plan”). The Beard plan is attached to this judgment as
Appendix “B”. Lot 1 is one of six lots that comprise the claimants’ RPO lands that were
acquired by way of an R.P.O application in 1972. These RPO lands are described by the
claimants to be the lands adjoining their ancestors’ lands comprising, it is claimed, the
northern and the southern portions. Lot 1 is separated from lots 2 through 6 by Darrel
Spring Road. The Thompson family was familiar with or used the expression “down the
yard”. During her cross-examination it was put to Ms Thompson that whenever Mother
T sent her “down the yard” it referred to the lands comprised in the Beard survey plan
numbered 2 through 6 on the opposite side of Darrel Spring Road. Her response was
“yes, and beyond”. I took that to allege that Mother T sent her grandchildren to the RPO
lands and the lands beyond the RPO lands. Looking at the two plans in the Appendices,
the distance between the family home and the lands “beyond” the RPO lands is not
inconsiderable. I did not mark her demeanour at this point to be particularly reassuring or
convincing. When questioned as to how far, she replied “all down by the river, the
Spring River”. Again, looking at the two attached plans, the Spring River is the furthest
point from the family home, at the extreme western boundary of the northern portion.
This court had an opportunity to visit the locus in quo on the invitation of both counsel.
Observations were made. I will deal with these observations later in this judgment. At
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this point I will however say that the incline from the family home slopes down from
Darrel Spring Road at a fairly steep gradient, and that the northern portion is intersected
by a fairly steep gorge running north to south. Lot 6 on the RPO lands (where the second
claimant built his home) is in the vicinity of this gorge. I did not find this witness to be
confident when she said that Mother T, in sending her “down the yard”, meant that she
would go all the way to the Spring River. She seemed somewhat tentative. I must bear
in mind the likelihood of such activities by a young child on this type of terrain. She
also indicated to counsel that she began planting at the age of six in the company of
Mother T. When asked to look at the Doyle plan and to point out to the court where
exactly on the plan these plantings occurred she replied “I use to plant with mother T and
she use to plant all over, that would be in the early 1960’s”.
Q: “You don’t recall where you first started planting?”
A: “No, she had me all over”.
I was not satisfied with the continuity of her alleged planting activities. She admitted
being married for a short while, moving out of Mother T’s home and then having a full
time job and two children to raise. This witness testified that the northern portion of the
disputed lands was cultivated by herself, the second claimant, her sister Clara May and
‘other siblings’.
15. It was further elicited from Jenny Lind Thompson that her family and the priest at the
church would exchange crops. She recalled that the priests at the church used to exchange
short crops with the Thompson family. It was put to her that the priests gave the
Thompson family a variety of crops, but she only admitted receipt of a few. According to
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her, these crops were provided over many years. She admitted that it could have been
from the 1960s to the 1980s “and even beyond” in her words. In answer to the question
of where the church’s crops were grown she said “it was grown on the compound of the
church building”. This is on the east of the northern portion. This eastern most line on
the Doyle plan follows the length of the shallow ravine to which I earlier referred. The
church house is just east of the ravine. She was asked if she remembered whether any
priests or church members planted on the northern portion of the disputed lands, she
replied “No, I don’t remember”. She was further asked whether the area of land between
the ravine and the back of the church building is relatively small, she replied “I don’t
know what is small; it’s reasonable enough to plant these crops”. I felt unsatisfied with
her demeanour at this point; I expected her evidence on these matters to be more
vigorous and unequivocal.
16. This witness also denied that the church was ever in possession of any part of the
northern portion or that the members of the church had access to it across the shallow
(and until 2006 unfenced) ravine.
17. This witness satisfied me that there was no issue of any encroachment in the construction
of her house on Lot 5 in 1985 that necessitated the unusual triangular-shaped
configuration to the east of Lot 5. The suggestion was made to her that one Father
Haddis had generously permitted the curtilage of her home to extend into the small
triangular-shaped region in 1985. This suggestion was put to the two claimants and
formed part of the defendants evidence in chief and I should deal with it now. The
claimants’ RPO lands were demarcated since its acquisition in 1972 and the unusual
boundary line was in existence since then. It therefore cannot be the result of any
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generosity by the resident priest in 1985. It cannot be said how this unusual boundary
came to be drawn in 1972, but, at the same time, it cannot be denied that there was
comity between the church and the Thompson family from the 1960s to 2006. If it is
that this idiosyncratic triangular line was created by adjoining owners it could not have
been in 1985 but in or before 1972. It is either that the 1972 RPO application was made
with this idiosyncratic boundary line as a matter of right or as a matter of private
agreement between adjoining owners. If it was by private agreement it would have had
been in 1972 and not 1985. The defendants’ reliance on this act of generosity was either
wrong as to its date or wrong as to its occurrence. In any event, it is not a fact that by
itself, or in conjunction with other facts, is determinative of the dispute.
18. During cross-examination this witness’ knowledge of the neighbourhood was tested. She
said that the original families that comprised the Darrel Spring Road community were the
Peterkin, Moses, Thompson, Trotman and Proctor families. I took a note that this witness
had no familiarity with the family name John Parks who is shown as the owner of the
lands north of the claimants’ RPO lands (i.e. the owner of the northern portion). Finally,
this witness admitted in cross-examination that she has never paid land taxes for the
disputed lands (northern or southern portions) despite being aware of a legal duty to do
so.
Kalonji Montsho Jahi
19. The second claimant, Kalonji Montsho Jahi, stated in his witness statement that since
1924 his grandparents and mother occupied the northern and southern portions of the
disputed lands. He said that he and the first claimant are ‘jointly in occupation and
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possession’ at all material times of the entire disputed lands, upon which he says since the
1950s he has planted several fruit trees including mangoes, grapefruit, lime, cherries and
golden apple. He said that he has ploughed, fertilised, treated and tended to these fruit
trees from the 1950s to the present. He said since the 1980s he had a fowl coop on the
northern portion of the disputed lands and reared fowls. He also said that he reared sheep
up to the present time.
20. A substantial portion of the second claimant’s witness statement is devoted to the
narrative of how the claimants’ acquired the RPO title in the lands adjoining the northern
portion; he also analyses the differences in the boundaries in the second 1956 deed and
the 1986 deed of rectification. I will return later in this judgment to a detailed analysis of
the boundaries. In relation to the claimants’ RPO lands that adjoin the northern and
southern portions of the disputed land I noticed the following material allegations:
The northern portion of the disputed land was first occupied by his grandmother
in 1924;
At that time, it was “owned” by Benjamin A. Thompson, his ancestor;
Benjamin A. Thompson died, and in 1930 Georgianna Thompson became the
owner of an adjacent parcel of land (which eventually became the claimants’ RPO
parcel). This alleged common law title was passed to Joseph A. Thompson in
1945 and then to Allison Elder in 1964;
Allison Elder brought these Thompson family lands under the RPO in 1975;
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Allison Elder’s acquisition of these family lands from Joseph Thompson in 1964
was described by this witness as having occurred without his knowledge, and, for
reasons or consideration not disclosed on the evidence, Allison Elder transferred
these alleged Thompson family lands to the second claimant and he thereafter
subdivided the same into six lots transferring the lots to himself and his family.
21. The second claimant is suggesting that the claimants RPO lands that adjoin the northern
and southern portions of the disputed land represent only a portion of the lands owned by
his grandmother since the 1924. No explanation or evidence is given as to why in the
administration of various estates of his ancestors the Thompson lands were not
administered as a whole or why the only portion of the lands which was applied for under
the RPO and which he eventually distributed to his siblings was the claimants’ RPO
lands, south of the northern portion. No RPO application was made for all of these
alleged Thompson lands throughout the course of time since the 1920s, up until 2007.
One possible explanation is that the other lands alleged to be part of the Thompson
family lands were not brought under the RPO through inadvertence. This is the
explanation given in certain correspondence of the claimants’ attorney at law that was
attached to their Statement of Case. The letter is dated 10 March 2007. It refers to
approximately one acre of land originally owned by the claimants’ ancestor, Benjamin A.
Thompson, which lands included the northern portion. Paragraphs 8 and 9 of this letter:
8. In or about 19754 Allison Elder made an application to bring the said parcel of
land under the Real Property Ordinance. However, only a portion of the said
4 The Certificate of Title is dated 1972 not 1975, contrary to this assertion.
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lands was actually brought under the Real Property Ordinance through some
inadvertence.
9. In or about 1978 the said portion of the parcel of land that was brought under
the Real Property Ordinance was sold to one of our clients, Anderson Thompson,
now called Kalonji Montsho Jahi.
22. I take these paragraphs to suggest that the claimants and their siblings were entitled in the
course of time to lay claim to portions of land larger than those comprised in the
claimants’ RPO lands but failed to do so through some conspicuously unexplained
“inadvertence”. There is another explanation. It was canvassed throughout the trial by
the defendants’ counsel. It is that the Thompson family lands (the lands said to be
“down the yard” from the family house) are confined to the boundaries of the claimants’
RPO lands, on which all the siblings now live. This possibility cannot be overlooked.
23. This witness stated in his witness statement that he, his sisters Clara, Jenny Lind and
Anne built their homes on the claimants’ RPO lands and that they each “use the disputed
lands to ingress and egress” their homes. However, a quick examination of Appendix A
and B will show that all the Thompson lots are serviced by a road 6.5 meters wide and by
Darrel Spring Road. This bit of sworn evidence plainly gives a false impression about
access to and from the claimants’ homes.
Cross-examination
24. During cross-examination this witness was asked by counsel whether he was born on the
lands and he said yes. However, upon further cross-examination he admitted that he was
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born and raised in Mother T’s home on Lot 15. Mr. Jahi testified that he has been in
possession of the disputed lands in excess of 30 years and this is evidenced, according to
him, by the planting of fruit trees and the rearing of poultry and animals by him, his
siblings, and his grandmother. When asked to give his age when he planted his first tree,
he said “I was 7 or 8 years of age when I planted ‘down the yard’.” When the court
asked him to explain the expression ‘down the yard’ he said “Down the yard is over the
road across from the house. The house is the house on Lot 1”. When it was put to him
that the lands ‘down the yard’ must refer to the Thompson lands, the subject of the
claimants RPO title, he said “No, it’s a much larger area. It includes the disputed lands”.
I take this to mean that the claimants and his family are saying that they have an
historical relationship with the claimants R.P.O lands and, as well, with the disputed
lands (including the northern and southern portions). The question for the court is to
determine whether the claimants have provided sufficient evidence to make a finding that
they have a possessory title to lands beyond the borders of the claimants RPO parcel.
25. Upon further cross-examination Mr. Jahi said that he “can’t recall” any planting by the
priests on the northern portion of the lands. He noted that since early childhood he
planted on the northern portion and irrigated those lands by taking buckets of water in
hand and on his head from Lot 1. When questioned by counsel as to the terrain that he
was required to traverse in order to irrigate crops on the northern portion Mr. Jahi
disagreed that it was uphill and downhill. Rather, he stated that “It’s a comfortable walk,
except in one area”. Later in this judgment I will describe my visit to and the
observations I made at the locus in quo. I will however at this point say that it does not
5 See the Beard plan, Appendix B
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seem to me to be a “comfortable walk” from Lot 1 on Darrel Spring Road, down the
sloping road, past all his siblings’ houses on the claimant’s RPO parcel and then beyond
those lots to all areas on the northern portion. It seems to me to be an onerous walk for a
child of tender age (or indeed an adult) to irrigate plants with a bucket in his hand or on
his head. Irrigation of this type suggests a walking back and forth, which makes it more
gruelling. But even if it were only one bucket of water to be carried, it would still not be
accurate to say that it was a comfortable walk for a young child. I have difficulty
believing this part of the witness’ evidence. In addition, I did not find his testimony of
these events (in this and the previous paragraph of this judgment) to be as forceful or as
attentive to detail as I would have expected.
26. This witness, like the first claimant, admitted that he never paid land taxes for the
disputed lands. He was asked whether he said in his witness statement that he had fenced
the northern portion in the 1980’s. He denied saying that. He was then referred to
paragraphs 36 and 37 of his witness statement which describes his enclosure of the
northern and western boundaries of the northern portion by a barbed wire fence in the
early 1980s. It is there stated that he put that fence there when unidentified neighbours
attempted to encroach on it. After reading these paragraphs in the witness box he
conceded that that was indeed what was stated in paragraphs 36 and 37. A
straightforward question was then put to him:
Q: “What are you now saying?”
A: “In the 1980’s most of the fence was on the Moses side, later on the church put
the northern fence on the boundary with Boyce”.
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The name Boyce is represented in the Doyle plan as being the owner on the north of the
northern portion. The witness was then asked whether he was now saying that the barbed
wire fence on the northern boundary with Boyce was put there by the church. His answer
was “No, I didn’t say so”. The court was then asked to read its note of the evidence and I
read it in the exact terms quoted above. The witness remained silent after the note was
read back to him. I marked this bit of evidence as inconsistent. The witness was
equivocating as to who was responsible for erecting the barbed wire fence on the northern
boundary. I did not feel confident that he erected that barbed wire fence. In fact, I felt
much more confident that the church had erected it. I observed that very barbed wire
fence at my visit to the locus in quo and I will say more on this later. There was no re-
examination on this point.
27. This witness maintained that the shallow ravine on the east of the northern portion was
the boundary of the church lands. He said it had never been fenced by any party and that
even though the church members could physically walk across the ravine they did not do
so because it was the boundary. This witness admitted that he lived for four years in
Trinidad after age 21 and that he has resided and worked in the United States since 1990.
His absence from the land during this period raises doubts in my mind about the
continuity of his alleged agricultural undertakings. In paragraph 59 of his witness
statement, for example, he says “I have ploughed, fertilised, treated and tended to the said
fruit trees from the 1990’s to the present”. This cannot be so, as the second claimant
lives and works in Maryland, USA and there is no evidence of any agents doing so on his
behalf.
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Evidence of Clara Thompson
28. Clara Thompson is the sister of the two claimants. In her witness statement she testified
that from a very young age she and her siblings played on the northern portion. She
particularly recalls playing “doll house” in the exact location where the recent structure is
under construction. She alleges that as children she set dove traps on the northern
portion. She said that she assisted with planting and cultivation of short crops on the
northern portion since the 1960s, but she does not say exactly where these agricultural
activities took place.
29. She states that the first defendant has never been in possession of the northern portion
and that that barbed wire fencing was placed on most of the northern portion by her
brother, the second claimant, in the early 1980s.
Cross-examination
30. During cross-examination this witness accepted that she was close with the church priests
and members and, in fact, she recalled that members of the church would give her family
produce. She denied however that the church planted on the northern portion, saying that
they only planted on the curtilage of the church building, east of the ravine. She admitted
that prior to 2006 there was no fence along the ravine and she agreed that nothing
prevented the church members from freely walking across it.
Evidence of Kurt Moses
31. In his witness statement Kurt Moses said that he knew the claimants for over nineteen
years. He has been doing construction work for the family for some time. He said that if
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the claimants won their case he would get the job to complete the house which is now
under construction. He stated that the claimants had and still have several fruit trees and
vegetables on the northern portion and that he observed the claimants, their servants and
or their agents planting a variety of short crops. In addition he said that the claimants rear
sheep and fowls on the land up to the present time.
Cross-examination
32. Under cross-examination Mr. Moses contradicted himself and admitted to counsel that he
never saw the first claimant plant any trees. Cross-examination came to an abrupt end
when the defendants’ counsel noted that the witness could not read his own witness
statement. It was apparent to me that he was illiterate. However, there was no
endorsement on the witness statement that the contents had been read over to him and
fully understood. There was no re-examination on this point. The independence of this
witness is, in any event, somewhat compromised by his admission of a pecuniary interest
in the outcome of the trial.
Evidence of Winston Doyle
33. Mr. Doyle testified that his survey conducted in November 2006 was intended to support
an application by the second claimant to bring the northern and the southern portions
under the provisions of the RPO. However, that exercise came to a halt due to objections
from adjoining owners, among them the heirs of Arthur Moses and the church. His
evidence was not otherwise noteworthy, save for the production of his useful plan.
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Evidence for the Defendants
Hiram Scott
34. In his witness statement Mr Scott said that he is the deacon at the Ethiopian Orthodox
Church of which he has been a member since 1972. His evidence was basically a history
of the Church’s occupation of the northern portion of the disputed land and the erection
by the claimants of a chain link fence on the church lands in 2006. He stated that the
northern portion was always maintained by members of the church. He said further that
throughout the 1980’s, 1990’s and up to May 2002 prisoners of the Tobago prison under
the supervision of the prison officers maintained the lands.
35. Mr. Scott stated that members of the church removed the claimants’ chain link fence and
sometime in the month of October 2006 the claimants cut down the church’s fruit trees
that were planted on the church lands. He further stated that in December 2006 the
claimants cleared a portion of the church’s lands, located near the southern boundary, and
proceeded to erect a concrete foundation.
Cross-examination
36. During cross-examination this witness steadfastly maintained that he saw the first
claimant together with her sister Ann, another family member, and yet another individual
with a chain saw cutting down trees and vegetation that the church had planted on the
northern portion. Upon further questioning he appeared confused as to who cut which
trees, and when. He was sure that the second claimant did not cut any trees. This
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evidence was not very useful to unravelling the main issue of the case. The boundaries of
the lands described in the second 1956 deed and the 1986 deed of rectification were put
to him in detail using the names of the respective owners on the north, south, and west. I
will closely analyse this later in the judgment. In addition, this witness was probingly
cross examined on the issue of who were “the trustees of the trustees” described as a
party in the 1985 deed of rectification. This line of enquiry was designed to support the
claimants’ plea that the deed of rectification should be “rectified” as it effected an
improper “enlargement” of the lands described in the first 1956 deed to encompass all of
the northern portion. Finally, there was no cross-examination on his evidence that
prisoners assisted throughout the years to help maintain the northern portion.
Henry James
37. Mr. James stated that he is a deacon at the Ethiopian Orthodox Church and that the
northern portion of the lands is legally owned by the church. He says the land has been
maintained by church members since 1956 and that throughout the late 1980s to the early
1990s and up to May 2002 prisoners of the Tobago prison, supervised by prison officers
with authority from the Commissioner of Prisons, helped to maintain the northern
portion.
38. He said that ‘records’ show that the claimants encroached onto the church’s lands
(northern portion) in 1985 and the resident priest did not object to this but rather allowed
them to have the land identified as the triangle, as demarcated in the Farrell plan attached
to the 1986 deed of rectification. However, as I have found before, the boundaries of the
claimants’ RPO lands had been established since 1972. This witness further testified in
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his witness statement that in “early 2007 the claimants proceeded to construct a
galvanised fence on the church lands running north to south on the boundary of the
church lands with the intention of fencing off the same”.
Cross-examination
39. Under cross-examination this witness was understandably confused in relation to the
questions posed by counsel about the difference between the two parties to the 1986 deed
of rectification, namely “the Incorporated Trustees of the Ethiopian Orthodox Church of
Trinidad” and “the Trustees of the Incorporated Trustees of the Ethiopian Orthodox
Church of Trinidad”. I do not expect an attorney’s technical descriptions of parties to a
deed to be easily understood by lay people: they pay more attention to the legal effects of
instruments, not their legal bases. He did however say that the Trustees of the
Incorporated Trustees and the Incorporated Trustees were the same. At one point in his
intense cross-examination he testified that lots 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6 on the Beard plan (the
claimants’ RPO lands) were actually owned by the church. It was a clearly ludicrous
statement, and Mr James appeared fairly dumbfounded . A short break was thereafter
taken on account of the witness’s ‘low blood sugar’ (according to his counsel) and the
cross-examination resumed. After the break he did not complain of being unwell and
seemed to have recovered his composure. I did not mark this lapse of coherence too
severely as the evidence was plainly wrong and Mr James seemed disoriented. Mr.
James was also questioned extensively on the differences between the boundaries
described in the second 1956 deed and the 1986 deed of rectification. He basically
admitted that the names of the adjoining owners were not the same. Mr James was
curiously not cross examined on his evidence that prisoners were used to help maintain
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the northern portion. It was also put to this witness that his description of the claimants’
2007 galvanised fence as being ‘on the boundary of the church lands’ meant that the
church’s landholding ended where the galvanised fence was located within the shallow
ravine on the east of the northern portion. However the witness was quite clear that the
fence was built “on the church’s lands…with the intention of fencing off the same”
(witness statement Para 7) and that the galvanised fence “runs along the boundary of the
church” (cross-examination 16 March 2011). I take his reference to “the boundary of the
church” to mean the compound of the church building, and not its entire landholding.
Violet Peterkin
40. In my view, Mrs Peterkin is a key witness in this case. Prior to the adduction of her
witness statement, permission was granted (with the consent of Ms Lawson) to amplify it.
She orally testified to the following matters:
a) She is 72 years old.
b) She became a member of the church on 16 August 1953. She and her husband
used to “keep service” on the opposite side of Darrell Spring Road from where the
church is now located, on lands belonging to relatives of her parents.
c) Her husband was a lay reader; he had a conversation with her as a result of which
she became aware that lands of Francis Knatt opposite to where they held their
services were for sale.
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d) The church gave her husband permission to negotiate with the owner and he did
so in 1954; he did so on behalf of the church because it was not statutorily
incorporated until 1956.
e) The church purchased one acre of land and “the church is on the acre of land”.
f) She was familiar with all the families in that district who she described as good
friends and closely-knit neighbours. She specifically mentioned the Thompson
family as well as the Moses family and the Trotman family.
g) Wherever in her testimony she refers to church lands she means the lands
adjoining the parcel where the church building is situated, which were identified
by her in court as the northern portion shown on the Doyle plan. It was this
portion that the church has always maintained by cleaning, cutting of bushes and
planting of short crops.
41. In her witness statement she testifies that she lives three houses away from the church
and that she is aware of all matters concerning the purchase of the church lands by her
husband Frank Peterkin, deceased. She said she was born at 44 Darrell Spring Road
where she has lived all her life and she is very familiar with the neighbourhood. Indeed,
the presence of the Peterkin family as an original family was acknowledged by the first
claimant. Mrs Peterkin said this area once formed part of the estate of Calder Hall and
that to this day the Elections and Boundaries Commission refers to this district as ‘Calder
Hall/Scarborough’. She testified further that her husband purchased one acre of land at
Darrell Spring Road. She describes the one-acre parcel as “the church lands”. The
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church lands include the area where the church building is located, as well as the northern
portion.
42. The first 1956 deed is dated 7 July 1954 and registered as No. 9458 of 1956. This was a
deed made between Frank Peterkin (described as a pastor of the church) and Francis
Knatt. Mrs Peterkin testified that by the second 1956 deed (dated 1 October 1956,
registered as No. 12525 of 1956) her husband, as trustee of the church, conveyed the
same one acre parcel to the church. The descriptions of the boundaries of the one acre
parcel are given by the names of the adjoining owners in the first and second deeds. The
names of the adjoining owners are identical in both deeds.
43. Mrs Peterkin testified that by the 1986 deed of rectification the size of the land in the
schedule to the first and second deeds was rectified. She said that the one-acre parcel has
always been maintained by the church and that during the late 1980s to the 1990s
members of the church together with prisoners of the Tobago prison, supervised by
prison officers, with the authority of the Commissioner of Prisons, helped to maintain the
land.
44. She gave further testimony that the resident priest permitted the first claimant to encroach
onto a small triangular shaped piece of land in 1985. But, as I have already held, the
triangular shaped portion of land was in existence since 1972.
Cross-examination
45. A first point to note is that no question was put to Mrs Peterkin to contradict her
statement that prisoners helped to maintain the northern portion. Ms. Peterkin was shown
the first 1956 deed and said that at the time of purchase from Francis Knatt the lands
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were ‘naked bush’. A couple questions were put to her that were unfair and to which
objection was taken but she conceded that since she is not a land surveyor she could not
say whether the first 1956 deed or second 1956 deed actually conveyed one acre of land
as it purports to do in their respective schedules.
46. This witness was extensively cross examined on the names of the adjoining owners stated
in the schedules to the first and second deed. In relation to the description on the north
she said that there was no building on the north where John Parks was and that the land
was “in bush”, although it is today planted-up by its present-day (unnamed) owners. I
take this to mean that the present-day owners of the lands north of the northern portion
are successors in title of either John Parks or whoever else might have been north of the
lands acquired by the church from Francis Knatt.
47. This witness expressed familiarity with the lands acquired by her husband and satisfied
the court as to her knowledge. Her straightforward manner in answering the following
questions gave me a sense of confidence in her truthfulness:
Q: When did you see the 1956 deed?
A: He showed me in 1956. He was my husband. He showed it to the
members too.
Q: When did you first go on the land purchased by your husband?
A: The day that he bought it we went, because it was right opposite.
Q: Was Mr. Knatt present?
A: No M ’am.
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Q: Did you ever go with Mr. Knatt?
A: No, but my husband went.
Q: The boundaries were pointed out to you?
A: No, not to me, but to my husband.
A short while later the insinuation was made that she did not really know about the
church land except what her husband told her. She firmly, unequivocally, and
convincingly declared: “I know about the land. I am on the land from the time of its
purchase”. She was a witness who convinced me that she was very familiar with the
land, the circumstances of its purchase, its size, and its use since 1954.
Visit by the court to the locus in quo
48. On the 16 March 2011 at the invitation of the parties the court convened on Darrell
Spring Road just outside the church building. The parties and their attorneys
accompanied me. I walked from Mother T’s home on Darrell Spring Road, down the
paved road reserve to lot 6. The road reserve is on an incline; it sloped down from
Mother T’s home on Darrell Spring Road. It was not a slight incline, and in parts the
slope of the road was quite steep. I entered the northern portion by passing through lot 6.
The attorneys (in each other’s presence, and in the presence of their clients) pointed out
several landmarks on the northern portion. I walked across most of the northern portion
except towards the western area, as there was a rather steep gorge or hill, precipitous in
parts, fairly close to where the second claimant had built his house on lot 6. The steep
incline or hill ran in a north-south direction from near the western boundary of lot 6 all
the way to the northern boundary of the northern portion.
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49. On the northern boundary I observed the remnants of an old barbed wire fence. The
fence posts were green, but mostly rusted or corroded, and many of them were lying on
the ground. The old fence posts run along the length of the northern boundary of the
northern portion. While standing there, at a point midway across the length of the
northern boundary, I saw a loose piece of the fence post and pried it off. I did this in the
presence of the attorneys. Later, while standing within the curtilage of the church
building, to the east of the northern portion, I observed remnants of the same old fence
posts. They appeared to me to be identical in colour and age to the fence posts on the
northern boundary of the northern portion.
50. I observed evidence of human habitation or of physical presence along a narrow band of
land running alongside, and adjoining, lots 5 and 6 where the first and second claimants
live. For example, there was an old, derelict fowl coop and an old bench under a tree on
the northern portion just in front of lot 6. Nearby, there was a wooden retaining wall
where the land sloped sharply downwards. The old wooden retaining wall was protecting
slippage of the land in the area near the fowl coop and the bench. It was built in the area
of the fowl coop and the bench. In addition, just in front of lot 5 there was a lawn that
appeared to be an extension of the lawn of the first claimant’s home, with a little garden
gate leading from her house. I saw a concrete structure in the process of construction on
the northern portion. It was just across from lot 5. Between the concrete structure and lot
5 was the lawn area of which I spoke. I told both counsel of my observations as I made
them, and kept notes and markings on a spare copy of the Doyle plan.
51. My general observations of the remainder of the northern lot, that is, the parts on the west
that sloped downward (where it was difficult to walk), is that it was uncultivated,
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untended, and covered in bush and several wild trees. There was no sign of human
habitation or presence save for the remnants of the old barbed wire fence that ran
intermittently along the northern boundary. The majority of the northern portion is in
bush, save the areas in the east close to lots 5 and 6, and as well, the area close to the
church building. I saw four citrus trees and an old sickly mango tree between the
concrete structure and the church building. There was evidence of tree cutting in this
area consistent with the evidence of the defendants. I should also mention that the front
of the houses on lots 5 and 6 faced the road reserve; the back of their houses adjoined the
northern lot. In addition, access to and from both houses to Darrell Spring Road was via
the paved road reserve. It is untrue to say that “ingress and egress” from these lots is via
the northern portion, although this is stated unequivocally in the claimants’ witness
statements. The northern portion is not serviced by any road, except by passing through
the church compound or one of the claimants’ houses. The parcel is land-locked.
52. The court immediately re-convened at the Hall of Justice in Scarborough after the site
visit. I then invited the parties to engage in discussions aimed at a peaceful resolution. I
mentioned three critical observations that I made at the locus in quo and enquired
whether the parties would be minded to consider some sort of partition or sharing of the
northern portion. The trial was stood down and the parties held lengthy but unsuccessful
discussions. The matter was then adjourned to continue on 6 July 2011 on which morning
I made the following statement in open court, recording it verbatim in my judge’s
notebook as I spoke, which I now reproduce:
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“The court wishes, for the avoidance of doubt, to draw to the attention of counsel
three observations made at the site visit on the last day, which may have been
mentioned to the parties on that day, but are now formally recorded.
1) On the north of the disputed parcel the court observed remnants of an old
barbed wire fence with rusted fence posts painted green and observed that
the identical remnants of the fence were also found on the church property
proper, that is, on the boundary between the church house and Boyce. The
court took a sample [I then raised up a small rusted piece of galvanised
pipe and showed it to the parties in the courtroom].
2) There is an area of land on the disputed lands which appears to be within
the curtilage of lot 6 (Kalonji’s house) containing a bench under a tree, an
old fowl coop and what appeared to be a little retaining wall made of
wood in a small semi-circle which did not appear to be recently installed
or constructed (‘the area with the bench’) and also a small area just north
of lot 5 (Jenny Lind’s house) that appears to be maintained with a lawn on
it, between the unfurnished concrete structure and her house (‘the grassy
area’).
3) At the site visit the court walked down the road shown on the Beard plan
marked ‘road reserve’ from Lot 1 down towards lot 6. The distance of
road is not shown on the plan but it appears to be
a) over 200 feet long; and
b) to be a steep incline.
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These are my observations and I will allow all necessary applications to clarify,
add, colour or explain these observations in terms of evidence.”
53. I then invited counsel in the presence of the litigants to advise the court on the estimated
width of two areas, namely “the area with the bench” and “the grassy area”. In relation to
the former Mr. Simonette said that the area with the bench was about 10 feet from the
house on lot 6 and Ms. Lawson said it was about 20 feet away. In relation to the latter Mr.
Simonette said that the grassy area was about 10 feet wide and Ms. Lawson said it was
about 10 to 15 feet wide. The court then requested both counsel to agree these
measurements and also two other measurements, namely, the length of the road reserve
and the distance between the concrete structure and the northern boundary of the northern
portion.
54. The visit to the locus in quo took place on 16 March 2011, on day three of the trial. An
earlier site visit was cancelled due to scheduling conflicts. On days one and two the
claimants’ witnesses and two of the defendants’ witnesses were cross examined. My
observations and request for measurements were at the start of day four, the last day of
the trial. On that day the defendants’ remaining witnesses (Hiram Scott and Henry
James) were cross examined late into the evening. The further cross- examination of
Violet Peterkin reserved from day three was declined. At no time on day four did either
counsel apply to adduce any evidence “to clarify, add, colour or explain” any of the
observations recorded at the start of the day. An attempt was made by Mr Simonette at
the close of the trial to recall the claimants for further cross-examination on the court’s
observations, but it was resisted by Ms Lawson on the ground that the defendants should
apply to adduce their own evidence and not adduce it through cross- examination of the
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claimants. I upheld the objection. What is noteworthy is that the claimants made no
application to adduce any evidence, and neither did they, in the course of cross-
examination on that day, attempt to elicit any evidence that might clarify, add, colour or
explain my observations. At the close, both parties took directions for the filing of
written addresses. The evidence adduced in the trial, and the observations made at the
site visit, were therefore allowed to stand.
55. The measurements I requested were never taken. Correspondence from the defendants’
attorney sought to make arrangements for a qualified person to visit and take these
measurements. It was attached to the defendants’ closing written address. The
claimants’ attorney was uncompromising and refused permission for a qualified person to
attend and take accurate measurements. In my view, the approach was unreasonable. The
absence of any evidence relative to the observations and the unreasonable refusal of the
claimants’ attorney to cooperate with the taking of accurate measurements as requested
by the court has left me to draw conclusions as to measurements based upon the actual
land marks I observed on my site visit, the estimates made by counsel, and the evidence
inside the courtroom.
Issues to be decided
56. The issues to be decided in this case are
(a) Whether the church has proven that it has a legal title to the northern portion;
(b) Whether the claimants are or have been in adverse possession of the whole of
the northern portion so as to extinguish the legal title of the paper owner;
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(c) Whether the 1986 deed of rectification should be “rectified”;
(d) Whether the defendants are liable for trespass.
The legal title to the northern portion
57. In their written closing address the claimants contend that they were in occupation and
possession of the northern portion without let of hindrance since the 1920s. They
submitted that, in light of the questions raised about the efficacy of the 1986 deed of
rectification, the burden of proof must shift upon the defendants to establish their legal
title to the northern portion. I disagree. The burden of proving adverse possession rests
on he who makes the allegation. As I will explain below, there is insufficient evidence to
adequately dislodge the legal effect of the 1986 deed of rectification, or, at any rate, the
conveyance of one acre to the church in 1956.
58. The crux of the claimants’ case is that the land conveyed in the second 1956 deed is
restricted to the area where the church building is located, which is (by my observation)
substantially smaller than one acre. The church building and the curtilage around it
adjoins Darrel Spring Road. There is no evidence whatsoever that the church building
and its curtilage occupied only one acre of land. In fact, it was never put to any of the
defendants’ witnesses that the church building and its curtilage occupied one acre of land.
The claimants never produced any evidence to prove this allegation. Despite the
claimants’ failure to adduce such evidence the question must still be asked: What area of
land was acquired from Francis Knatt in 1954 and conveyed to the church in 1956? The
question becomes important because the 1986 deed of rectification (a) revises the size of
the land as 1.1 acres instead of one acre and (b) gives different descriptions of the
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adjoining owners/landmarks on the north, south and west. This deed was made some 30
years after the original acquisition. The claimants are saying that it wrongly “expanded”
or, to use Ms Lawson’s expression, “grew” on paper to encompass all of the northern
portion. Their case is that the northern portion was always in factual possession and
control of their ancestors, themselves, and their siblings since the 1920s, regardless of
what is stated on paper, and regardless of what evidence was led by the defendants.
59. In order to resolve this issue I pose three sub-issues: (a) Did the church ever own or
occupy one acre of land? (b) Did the 1986 deed of rectification amount to an enlargement
of its 1956 land holding to include all of the northern portion? (c) Did the 1986 deed of
rectification purport to convey a parcel of land entirely different in size and location from
the second 1956 deed?
(a) Whether the church became entitled to or occupied one acre of land
60. The claimants have not successfully proven that the church acquired less than an acre of
land in 1956. In my view the church acquired one acre of land and the acquired parcel
was larger than the compound on which the church building was constructed. I say so
having regard to the following evidence, which I accept on a balance of probabilities:
a) Violet Peterkin’s husband bought one acre of land in 1954 on behalf of the
church. He took her to see the land pointing out its boundaries to her. To amount
to one acre, the land would have been substantially larger than the area where the
church structure was built. The onus of proving that the one-acre parcel was
restricted to the area of the church structure is on the claimants and they have not
discharged that burden.
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b) No member of the Thompson family is said to have raised any objection to or
been alarmed or concerned by the acquisition of these lands or the construction of
the church so close to their alleged lands. Moreover, upon its construction, no
member of the Thompson family sought to separate the northern portion from the
church structure by erecting a fence between the building and the northern
portion.
c) The land in the 1956 deed is clearly stated to comprise one acre. Most people can
make a rough estimate of what comprises one acre of land. It is difficult to
believe that when Mrs Peterkin’s husband conveyed the one-acre parcel, whoever
or whatever may have been said to be on its northern, western and southern
boundaries, that the church members did not feel themselves entitled or become
entitled to one acre of land. It is clearly stated as their landholding in the second
1956 deed.
d) I felt very reassured by the evidence and demeanour of Mrs Peterkin who said that
the church held its services across the road from Francis Knatt’s lands, on the
opposite side of Darrel Spring Road, and that she walked the Knatt lands with her
husband in 1954 and in many years thereafter, and that they included the northern
portion. She was very clear about that. The other witnesses for the defendants,
although somewhat unsteady when cross-examined as to the legal capacity of the
parties to the 1986 deed of rectification or the date, if at all, of the encroachment
into the triangular portion, or when and by whom the trees were cut, were
nonetheless unambiguous and convincing about being in possession of land much
larger than the church compound.
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e) In addition, I do not believe that the church members were only growing crops
within the curtilage of the church building. There was nothing to prevent the
members from crossing the shallow ravine and I believed the defendants’
witnesses when they said that they grew crops and maintained the northern
portion. The church’s evidence of the assistance of the prisoners in maintaining
the northern portion remains uncontradicted. I also believe that it was the church
and not the second claimant that fenced the northern boundary of the northern
portion.
(b) Whether the 1986 deed of rectification takes effect as an enlargement of the
church’s land holding so that it encompassed all of the northern portion
61. In my opinion, the 1986 deed could not have the effect of fictionally creating a legal
estate in the northern portion because, on a balance of probabilities, the northern portion
already substantially formed part of the church’s legal landholding. I say so for the
following reasons:
(a) The 1986 deed of rectification only purports to increase the square footage by
point one (0.1) of an acre which, by my calculation, is 4,356 square feet. This is
less than a lot of land. The claimants are hard pressed to prove how the entire
northern portion, which they allege comprises 2,499 square metres (or 24,990
square feet), could be the subject of a overall invasion by virtue of the 1986 deed.
The 1986 deed represents a very minor increase in square footage and can in no
way be said to encompass all of the northern portion. It is not known whether the
Knatt lands actually comprised 1.1 acres in 1956. If so, the word “increase” is a
misnomer. If not, then we do not know from where the additional 4,356 square
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feet was augmented, whether from the northern, southern, eastern, or western
boundaries.
(b) I must also take account of the fact that the claimants’ RPO lands were
specifically defined as far back as 1972. These lands were described by Ms
Lawson as “the Thompson lands” at one point during her cross-examination. If
they were entitled, as they allege, to any lands beyond those specific boundaries
on the north they did not make any such claim between 1972 and 2007, a period
of 35 years. It was only in 2007 that an attempt was made to bring the northern
portion under the RPO, but it failed due to objections by neighbours.6
(c) The second claimant described a root of title to the northern portion and the
claimants’ RPO lands, stretching back to 1924. The absence of any
documentation to support the alleged root of title from 1924 unsettles me. No
records of the administration of the estate of any Thompsons were tendered in
evidence, and no explanation for their absence was offered. The title allegedly
passes to various members of the Thompson family, but some of the land is
apparently un-administered and the part that is administered, which is the
claimants’ RPO lands, eventually is bought by one Alison Elder in 1964. Alison
Elder eventually successfully applies for an RPO title to these Thompson family
lands. Who is Allison Elder? On what basis does she apply for an RPO title to
lands continuously and exclusively occupied by the claimants and their family
since 1924? Would she not have to serve notice of her application on the
6 As previously stated, an attempt to claim a possessory title to the southern portion based on similar facts also failed
in the earlier unsuccessful High Court proceedings.
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neighbours, including those living in Mother T’s home, which house lot was, in
part, the subject of the very application? How can the claimants assert that her
activities were unknown to them? Was she a member or agent of the Thompson
family? Where is her RPO application or the memorandum of transfer between
her and the second claimant? On what terms did she transfer these Thompson
lands to the second claimant? Starved of evidence on these matters, the court is
left to wonder whether the Thompson lands were restricted to the current six lots
now divided among the siblings, and did not include the northern portion. In
other words, does the expression “down the yard” refer only to the RPO lands? In
my view, on the basis of the documentary evidence supplied by the claimants, the
northern portion cannot, on a balance of probalities, be said to form part of the
Thompson family landholding. In the circumstances, the 1986 deed of
rectification cannot amount to an appropriation of the northern lands by legal
instrument. Their case rests entirely on their oral evidence of factual possession,
which I shall come to shortly.
(c) Did the 1986 deed of rectification purport to convey a parcel of land entirely
different in size and location from the second 1956 deed?
62. In order to answer this I will have to scrutinize the schedules of both deeds. There is no
doubt that different descriptions were given in both deeds. The nub of the claimants’
argument is that the second 1956 deed and the 1986 deed of rectification described
entirely different parcels of land. I do not agree. The descriptions are proximate enough
for the court to hold on a balance of probabilities that they refer to the same parcel, save
that its area is increased by 4,356 square feet.
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63. I should at this point mention the perennial problem of land titles in Tobago. It began, I
think, on the desks of solicitors and conveyancers in years past. The unsafe practice of
simply duplicating the schedule from the previous deed often led to misdescription in the
names of adjoining owners who have died or have sold their lands. Sometimes the
schedule is replicated verbatim several times. The confusion is compounded for all when
adjoining parcels also change hands in a similar fashion. Notwithstanding the dangers of
these inaccurate schedule descriptions, confirmation is not sought in the assessment rolls
(which themselves are often out of date due to a failure to promptly report changes of
ownership). In many cases, land in Tobago was un-serviced by roads (a key boundary
landmark), undeveloped, and largely unfenced and thus the dangers of misdescription by
boundaries was made more acute. The drafting of the early deeds and the relationship
between adjoining landowners seem to be based on an accident-prone informality. One
might have expected that in this scenario there would have been more survey plans
attached to deeds, but there was no such practice. Moreover, lands are claimed to be
owned by persons who have long since died and their estates remain unadministered
through several generations. All of these omissions and informalities of the past have
been brought acutely to the forefront in modern days by the stupendous increase in land
prices on the Island. I cannot speak of present day conveyancing practices in Tobago, but
only express the hope that professional standards have improved.
64. These practices of the past have created confusion that has led to countless unnecessary
and costly law suits. In my view, they appear to be responsible for inaccurate
descriptions on the southern and western boundaries of the northern portion. I will
examine the differences in the deeds by analysing all four boundaries in detail:
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a) The Northern Boundary: The 1956 deed speaks of John Parks on the north. The
1986 deed describes the boundary on the north as partly by lands of Carlton
Moses, partly by a river and partly by Darrel Spring Road. There is no mention of
John Parks on the north in the 1986 deed. However, the name John Parks is not
unknown to Violet Peterkin whose antiquity as a resident is recognised by the first
claimant herself. An opportunity was given to the first claimant (after a failed
objection by the defendants’ counsel) to clarify the Parks family name in re-
examination, but it was not taken. The 1986 description correctly describes the
northern boundary as being bounded partly by the river and partly by Darrell
Spring Road,7 but it is unknown how the lands of Carlton Moses could be said to
be bounded on the north in 1986. The Doyle survey in 2007 describes the
northern boundary identically with the 1986 deed save that the name Carlton
Moses on the north is substituted by Keturah Boyce. There is nothing in the Doyle
survey to suggest that it is not a correct plan, and no such suggestion was put to
him. It is not inconceivable that through the passage of almost 60 years that lands
said originally to belong to John Parks in the north might have devolved or
thought to have been devolved or be owned or claimed by Carlton Moses and then
by Keturah Boyce. The failure of the 1956 conveyancer to include the words
“partly by a river and partly by a road reserve”8 does not, in my view create
sufficient doubt and must be considered an incomplete and thus partially
inaccurate description.
7 This coincides with the 2007 Doyle survey.
8 The 1956 road reserve eventually was named Darrell Spring Road.
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b) The Western Boundary: The 1956 deed refers to lands of Thomas Benjamin on
the west but the 1986 deed describes the western boundary as a river. Again,
looking at the Doyle survey plan there is indeed a river on the west of the northern
portion. It is not known how the name Thomas Benjamin came to be described as
being on the western boundary of the lands described in the 1956 deed, but Violet
Peterkin recognised the name Thomas Benjamin as being on the west of the
northern portion and went so far as to describe how many houses were west of
that boundary. All the surveyors from 1986 onwards locate a river as the western
boundary but it has not itself been surveyed so little is known about the owners of
its embankments, if any. Moreover, it is not known whether the river was
diverted through the lands of Thomas Benjamin at any point in history. If Thomas
Benjamin was dispossessed by the church in 1956 he has made no complaint that
I know of, and no title document has been adduced to prove that Mr Benjamin had
a legal title anywhere in the west, whether within or without of the northern
portion. There is no evidence in the trial that Thomas Benjamin and Benjamin
Thompson are the same person, and no such suggestion was put to the court. On
the western boundary the error in description is most noticeable, but taken
together with the descriptions on the north, south and east, it is not sufficient, in
my view, to support the contention that the 1956 conveyance did not include the
northern portion.
c) The Southern Boundary: The 1956 deed describes the southern boundary as a
ravine. The 1986 deed describes the southern boundary as being bounded partly
by lands of Allison Elder, partly by Darrel Spring Road and partly by a river. The
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one consistent landmark is the description of a watercourse on the south,
described as both a ravine and a river. It cannot refer to Spring River which is on
the west and north. It most likely refers to the very ravine along which the
claimants unilaterally erected the chain link fence. That ravine along the most
easterly boundary on the Doyle survey, applying proper cardinal points, is indeed
partly on the south of the northern portion. It is not known why the names of the
other owners on the south were not named in the 1956 deed but a watercourse on
the south was certainly one of the bounds and still is to this day.
d) The Eastern Boundary: The eastern boundary is consistent in both deeds as being
bounded by Darrell Spring Road.
65. In coming to my findings I also take account of the following further matters: (a) It
seems to me that a proper explanation should have been advanced as to why all the lands
allegedly owned by the Thompson family were not brought under the RPO in 1972 or
before, or why Allison Elder was permitted by the Thompson family to obtain an RPO
title to lands under their direct occupation without their consent. These questions increase
the likelihood that the claimants’ RPO lands are the Thompson family lands, which are
the lands “down the yard” across from the ancestral home of ‘Mother T’ on Lot 1.
(b) There is no evidence of the Thompsons ever paying any land taxes for the northern
portion, something that surely would have been advisable when the church building was
erected in the late 1950s directly on its perimeter with no separating fence or wall.
(c) There is no evidence of any survey by the Thompsons to demarcate their claim to the
northern portion at any time until 2007. (d) I did not believe the claimants’ evidence that
they had no notice of the 1985 survey undertaken by G. A. Farrell. Their testimony on
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this was unconvincing. The 1986 deed attached the G. A. Farrell survey plan. G. A.
Farrell was a former Director of Surveys. I cannot easily accept the suggestion that his
1986 survey plan, which was partly based on his own physical survey of the land in 1985,
would have been undertaken without notice to the adjoining landowners. A man with his
credentials would be expected to have complied with proper surveying practice and there
is no evidence to rebut this assumption save the unpersuasive testimony of the claimants’
witnesses. While it is true that the burden of proving the service of the requisite notice
was on the defendants, the allegation that the notices were served was largely
uncontradicted in cross-examination. In addition, the Statement of Case did not
specifically plead, as one of the grounds to challenge the 1986 deed of rectification, that
notice of the survey was not given. If so, the defendants would have had an opportunity
to plead a response.
66. In all the circumstances I find that the church’s legal title to the northern portion has been
proven.
Whether the claimants have proven that they were in adverse possession of the
northern portion.
67. To establish a claim of adverse possession it is essential to prove that the possession was
open (nec clam), peaceful (nec vi) and adverse (nec precario). Additionally, it is a
requirement that it is accompanied by an animus possidendi, that is, an intention to enjoy
possession to the exclusion of the paper owner or the world. A combination of these
requirements would constitute uninterrupted and undisturbed possession of the land,
thereby rendering a possessory title to the occupier and extinguishing the paper title of
the legal owner.
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68. In the well-known case of Powell v Mc Farlane9 Slade J outlined the basic conceptual
principles of possession:
(i) In the absence of evidence to the contrary, the owner of land with paper
title is deemed to be in possession of the land, as being the person with the
prima facie right to possession. The law will thus, without reluctance,
ascribe possession either to the paper owner or to persons who can
establish a title as claiming through the paper owner.
(ii) If the law is to attribute possession of land to a person who can establish no
paper title to possession, he must be shown to have both factual possession
and the requisite intention to possess (“animus possidendi”);
(iii) Factual possession signifies an appropriate degree of physical control.
(iv) The animus possidendi, which is also necessary to constitute possession,
was defined by Lindley M R in Littledale v Liverpool College (1900) 1 Ch.
19 at p 23 as “the intention of excluding the owner as well as other people.”
69. As to what constitutes factual possession, Mr Justice Mendonca in Latmore Smith v
Benjamin CA Civ App 67/2007 said this: “…for there to be possession under the
Limitation Act there must be the absence of consent of the paper title owner, or, where
relevant, his predecessor in title, factual possession, and an intention to possess”. These
elements are not disjunctive, but must all be proven to the required standard.
70. In relation to the question of what acts of the possessor amount to exclusive physical
control, Lord Walker, sitting recently in the Privy Council in Anthony Armbrister and
Anor v Marion E Lightbourne and Anor [2012] UKPC 40, said this at p 31 of the
judgment:
9 (1977) 38 P. & C.R. 452 at page 470
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“The clearest statement of the law is in the speech of Lord Browne-Wilkinson in J A
Pye (Oxford) Ltd v Graham [2002] UK HL 30, [2003] 1 AC 419, with which the rest
of the House agreed. Lord Browne-Wilkinson (at para 41) approved the principles
stated by Slade J in Powell v McFarlane (1977) 38 P & CR 452, 470-471:
‘The question what acts constitute a sufficient degree of exclusive physical
control must depend on the circumstances, in particular the nature of the
land and the manner in which land of that nature is commonly used or
enjoyed…Everything must depend on the particular circumstances, but
broadly, I think what must be shown as constituting factual possession is
that the alleged possessor had been dealing with the land in question as an
occupying owner might have been expected to deal with it and that no one
else had done so.’”
71. In Pye Lord Brown Wilkinson also said this at paragraph 43:
"The requirement is of an intention, in one’s own name and on one’s own behalf, to
exclude the world at large, including the owner with the paper title if he be not
himself the possessor, so far as is reasonably practicable and so far as the processes
of the law will allow".
72. In Jnm Pty Ltd v Adelaide Banner Pty Ltd [2009] VSC 327 Mr. Justice Byrne sitting in
the Supreme Court of Victoria said this at page 5:
27. As Gillard J observed in Riley v Penttila [1974] VR 547 at 561, the acts of the
claimants implying dispossession necessary to establish a possessory title must be
considered with reference to the peculiar circumstances of the case. These will
include “the character and value of the property, the suitable and natural mode of
using it, having regard to all the circumstances, and the course of conduct which the
proprietor might be reasonably expected to follow with due regard to his own
interests…”.
28. A very relevant indication of adverse possession is enclosure…
29. Adverse possessors must show possessory acts; to adopt the expression of Slade
J, they must show that they have used the disputed strip as “an occupying owner
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might have been expected to deal with it and that no one else has done so”. They
must exercise this dominion over the whole of the land unless they can rely upon the
doctrine of constructive possession, namely, that the circumstances are such that
possession of part indicates possession of the whole.
73. Later on in his judgment Byrne J discussed the concept of constructive possession. He
said this:
37. The Lord Advocate v Lord Blantyre (1879 4 AC 770) concerned a claim for
adverse possession of foreshore land fronting a navigable tidal river. The point was
raised as to the fact that the claimant’s act of ownership did not extend to the whole
of the 700 acres in dispute. Lord Blackburn disposed of this contention by observing
that acts of the claimant tending to prove possession as owners of part may tend to
prove ownership of the whole “provided that there is such a common character of
locality as would raise the reasonable inference that if the Barons possessed one part
as owners they possessed the whole, the weight depending on the nature of the tract,
what kind of possession could be had of it and what the kind of possession proved
was”.
38. Another case decided in the Privy Council 90 years later is to the same effect.
Higgs v Nassauvian Ltd [1975] AC 464 concerned a claim for adverse possession of
about 105 acres on the Island of New Providence in the Bahamas. The advice of the
Privy Councillors was given by Sir Harry Gibbs. The point here at issue was whether
the farming of parts of the land in rotation over many years established adverse
possession of the whole. After quoting the passage from the speech of Lord
Blackburn in Lord Blantyre’s case, to which I have referred, Sir Harry observed that
the principle is not applicable to a question of undefined and disputed boundaries.
The rule will apply only where the whole of the land, of which the acts of dominion
of the adverse possessor relate to part only, is sufficiently defined by fence or
physical barrier or otherwise.
…
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40. Another decision of the Privy Council in West Bank Estate Ltd v Arthur [1967]
AC 665 to the same effect is closer to the present. The disputed land was a mile long
strip whose width varied from 100 yards to 30 yards. The respondent claimed
adverse possession of this strip, asserting that it had used part of it for cultivation
purposes. The Privy Council rejected this contention but went on to consider a
further argument offered by the appellant. This was directed to the adverse
possessor’s contention that a dam to the north of the disputed land constituted the
boundary of this land. The Privy Council accepted the finding that this was not an
agreed boundary. The lack of a defined boundary meant that the claimant had to
establish actual possession of the whole of the disputed land. The principle of
constructive possession had therefore no role to play.
74. In my opinion the claimants have failed to prove to the required standard that they
exercised the necessary physical control of the northern portion to support a finding of
factual possession of the whole of the northern portion. They have failed to satisfy me
that they have extinguished the title of the church. I did not believe the claimants’
witnesses when they said that they grew crops and reared animals on the northern
portion. Firstly, there was a lack of exactitude in describing precisely where on the
northern portion these alleged activities occurred. In many ways a finding of factual
possession is an act of anthropologic enquiry, where evidence of human habitation or
land use must be scientifically proven. Saying that “’down the yard’ was all over”, as the
first claimant said, creates geographic uncertainty10
. The other witnesses were also
somewhat vague as to where exactly on the northern portion the agriculture occurred.
Moreover, some of the alleged acts are said to have been done by several siblings and it is
not known whether they were acting on behalf of themselves or the two claimants.
10
See West Bank Estates Ltd v Shakespeare [1967] 1 AC 665
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75. A number of points are to be noted with respect to the acts allegedly evidencing actual
physical control. The parcel is not fenced on all sides and I was not convinced that the
alleged agriculture, even if undertaken (which I do not believe), was continuous and
exclusive for 16 years preceding the action, or at all. Land of that size and hilly terrain
would require real manpower to maintain, more manpower than could be expected from
an absentee owner living in Maryland and a working mother in Tobago, together with
two sisters. There is no evidence that they hired workers or sought the assistance of any
neighbours. This must be compared to the uncontradicted evidence of the church (which
I accept) that they obtained the assistance of the prisoners on numerous occasions over
many years up to 2002 to maintain the northern portion. The long-ago setting of traps for
doves or the ‘playing of doll house’ by little girls cannot be sufficient to dislodge the
paper title owner. That is really child’s play and not by itself indicative of an animus
possidendi. I do not believe, as I said before, that infant children could have
“comfortably” walked to and from Mother T’s house with buckets of water to irrigate
crops. It would be an arduous task for any child, no matter how hardy they might be. In
the 16 years preceding the action there is no evidence of exclusive physical possession of
the whole of the northern portion. On the basis of my observations at the site I noted that
there are no crops being grown and no evidence of agricultural or other undertakings on
the land. There was an old derelict fowl coop that could hold perhaps 5 hens, but it was
empty. It was near to the second claimant’s house. There were no sheep to be seen
anywhere. Save for the first claimant’s construction of the concrete structure in 2006
there is no activity on the northern portion to speak of.
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76. There are no acts that constitute a sufficient degree of exclusive physical control capable
of satisfying Lord Browne-Wilkinson’s test. The claimants have not, in my opinion, been
“dealing with the land in question as an occupying owner might have been expected to
deal with it” and they have not proven that the church has not been so dealing with it.
For their part, I expect that they would have (a) applied earlier for an RPO title,
(b) fenced the northern portion, particularly on the eastern boundary where the church
was built and church services were being held, (c) cut or maintained the land with the
help of workers or neighbours, (d) paid land taxes, or (e) even used the land for some
other purpose indicative of ownership. I take into account the fact that the second
claimant contradicted himself in cross-examination when he admitted that the church put
the barbed wire fence on the northern boundary. My observations at the locus in quo
supported the finding (which I now make) that it was the church and not the second
claimant that put that barbed wire fence on the northern boundary. The claimants cannot
be said to be dealing with the northern portion as an occupying owner would be expected
to do. Taken together with their unconvincing oral evidence, their failure to enclose the
lands they claim to possess rebuts any possibility of a finding of constructive possession
of the whole. The shallow ravine was an unobstructed point of access for the church and
the lack of any fence between the church and the northern portion from 1956 to 2007 (a
period of 51 years) further rebuts the suggestion that the claimants’ were in exclusive
possession of the whole, or indeed of such a part as to make them constructively in
possession of the whole.
77. This is in contradistinction to the activities of the church, the witnesses of whom I
believed. They paid land taxes, they put a fence on the northern boundary, and they
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planted crops. They also obtained the assistance of prison labour to cut and maintain the
land. I do not accept that their agriculture was restricted to the area within the curtilage
of the church building. The area appeared too small to me on my site visit, and the first
claimant’s evidence on this was not convincing. In addition, the church had the land
surveyed. When the claimants put up their fence on the eastern boundary the defendants
immediately tore it down. All of these acts are indicative of the church dealing with the
northern portion as an occupying owner is expected to do.
‘Rectification’ of the 1986 deed of rectification
78. The Claimants are seeking a rectification of the 1986 deed of rectification but they
haven’t pleaded exactly how it should be rectified. I imagine that they obliquely want
the deed to be declared void. They seek this relief on two bases, set out in their written
closing submissions (but not in their pleading). Firstly, they say that all the boundaries
are wrong and that the 1986 deed has illegally effected an incursion into their lands. I
have already dealt with that point, and it altogether disposes of their right to this relief:
they have no estate in the northern portion capable of being infringed or compromised by
a faulty deed of rectification. Secondly, they say that “the trustees of the Incorporated
Trustees” were not parties to the 1956 deed and therefore could not properly rectify it.
When a deed of rectification is made, the parties to it ought to be the same parties to the
original deed. If the original parties have died then their legal personal representatives
ought to make the deed of rectification.
79. “The Incorporated Trustees of the Ethiopian Orthodox Church in Trinidad” is a legal
entity, created by statute. In 1954, Frank Peterkin, acting as “Pastor of the (then
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unincorporated) Ethiopian Orthodox Church” purchased the Francis Knatt lands. In
1956, after the incorporation of the church, he conveyed the Knatt lands to the church,
now named in its official capacity. He conveyed as ‘Trustee’ of the legal entity. Frank
Peterkin was not a party to the 1986 deed of rectification. It is not known whether he was
alive in 1986 or if he had by then ceased holding the office of trustee or was otherwise
incapacitated. There is no allegation of this in the Statement of Case and thus it was not
an issue on the pleadings.
80. Though the officers of the respective parties to the two deeds had changed between 1956
and 1986, the office of trustee of the (now incorporated) church was said to be in
existence by the lawyer who drafted the deed of rectification. Frank Peterkin was
described as the trustee of the church in 1956 and his substitute in the 1986 deed of
rectification is also described as trustee of the incorporated entity. The new trustee now
includes three persons instead of one. I was not told whether this has anything to do with
the internal regulations or bye-laws of the statutory body because it was not pleaded in
the Statement of Case and therefore not addressed as such in the Defence. In fact, there
are no particulars of fraud or deceit in the Statement of Case specifically setting out why
the deed of rectification should be rectified. In my view there is sufficient continuity in
the office of the two parties in both deeds to disallow my interference in the deed on
behalf of these claimants. My opinion here is confined exclusively to the relief sought by
these claimants. The position would be different if the claim was made by different
claimants who had legal or equitable rights to the northern portion to protect, and who
pleaded it properly. A purchaser or a bank might well have a valid issue with the
formalities used in the execution of this deed, but, in light of my earlier findings, not
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these claimants. I therefore refuse to order ‘a rectification’ of the 1986 deed of
rectification.
Whether the church is entitled to a declaration of adverse possession
81. I have already found that the church’s paper title to the northern portion is a good legal
title and further that it has not been extinguished by the claimants. This finding will
dispose of the church’s own alternate claim for a declaration of adverse possession. If I
did not find that the legal title was good I would have been minded to consider the grant
of this declaration. However, it seems to me that the church always considered the
northern portion to be legally owned by itself and the issue of whether the necessary
animus possidendi could exist in relation to one’s own lands was not canvassed. I
express no opinion on that.
The issue of trespass
82. In my opinion the claimants trespassed on the northern portion by erecting the fence and
constructing a building in late 2006. I am however not satisfied with the defendants’
evidence that the two claimants cut down the trees. I found that part of their evidence to
be inexplicit so that I am not sure who was responsible for cutting down which trees.
Certainly, the second claimant had no hand in it. Moreover, no evidence was adduced as
to the value of the trees.
Usefulness of the observations made at the locus in quo
83. I turn now to consider the court’s observations at the site and to take account of my
findings there in crafting the necessary declarations in this case.
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84. A first point to consider is the legal effect of a visit to the locus in quo. In my view it is
the visual collection and examination of physical evidence that has been adduced with the
consent of both parties. In Buckingham v Daily News Ltd [1956] 2 QB 534 an issue arose
as to whether the trial Judge was entitled to follow his own impressions formed at a visit
to the locus in quo. The English Court of Appeal found that he could do so. In that case
the trial Judge on the invitation of the parties went to the defendant’s premises and in the
presence of both counsel inspected a machine and watched a demonstration by the
plaintiff of the manner in which he was cleaning certain blades when an accident
occurred. Lord Justice Birkitt approved the dicta of Lord Justice Denning in Goold v
Evans and Co [1952] TLR 1189:
“It is a fundamental principle of our law that a Judge must act on the evidence before
him and not on outside information; and, further, the evidence on which he acts must
be given in the presence of both parties, or, at any rate, each party must be given an
opportunity of being present. Speaking for myself, I think that a view is part of the
evidence just as much as an exhibit. It is real evidence. The tribunal sees the real
thing instead of having a drawing or a photograph of it but, even if a view is not
evidence, the same principles apply.”
Lord Birkitt went on to say:
“If a Judge sees machinery in operation, and the parties are present and everything is
done regularly and in order, it is the same as if the machine were brought into court
and demonstration was made in the well of the court for the Judge to see it there… in
Payton and Co v Snelling, Lampard and Co. [1901] AC 308 Lord Macnaghten said:
‘One word with regard to the evidence I should like to say. I think, as I have
said before, that a great deal of the evidence is absolutely irrelevant, and I do
not myself altogether approve of the way in which the questions were put to
the witnesses. They were put in the form of leading questions, and the
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witnesses were asked whether a person going into a shop as a customer would
be likely to be deceived [by a product in a passing off action], and they said
they thought he would. But it is not a matter for the witness; it is for the judge.
The judge, looking at the exhibits before him and also paying due attention to
the evidence adduced, must not surrender his own independent judgment to
any witness.’
That is very high authority, coming from Lord Macnaghten. Looking at the
exhibits, whether they are in the court or the judge goes to see them, paying due
attention to the evidence adduced, he must not surrender his own independent
judgment to any witness.”
85. At my visit to the locus in quo I made the observations that were described earlier.
Having considered my examination of the physical evidence at the site, hearing the
evidence in the courtroom, and inviting both counsel to apply if necessary to adduce any
further evidence “to clarify, add, colour, or explain” my stated observations I have come
to the following conclusion: the claimants have satisfied me that they have extinguished
by adverse possession the legal title of the church to a narrow band or strip of land
directly in front of their homes which I have previously described as “the area with the
bench” and “the grassy area”. There was an understandable difference of opinion
between the parties as to the width of this strip of land. The area with the bench in front
of the second claimant’s house was said to be 20 feet wide by the claimants and 10 feet
wide by the defendants. The grassy area in front the first claimant’s house was said to be
10-15 feet wide by the claimants and 10 feet wide by the defendants. My direction for
proper measurements to be taken was not complied with due to the unreasonable
intransigence of the claimants. As a result of the failure to supply the court with accurate
measurements I must rely on my own independent observation of the width of this strip
of land having walked there and carefully examined its dimensions. I also take account
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of the estimates of counsel in this matter who were there with me and who expressed
them in the presence of their clients. I put the width of this strip of land at an even 12
feet from the respective boundary walls of the claimants properties on lots 5 and 6. The
claimants’ concrete structure is not within this strip of land and will have to be removed.
86. For reasons already given I decline to make an order for damages for trespass on the
claim and counterclaim, and I also decline to make any order for damages for destruction
of trees on the claim. The claim succeeds only insofar as the narrow strip of land is
concerned, and the defendants’ counterclaim succeeds save in respect of the narrow strip.
87. In all the circumstances therefore, and having regard to my findings of law and fact, I
make the following orders:
(a) A declaration is granted in favour of the claimants that they are entitled to
possession of a strip of land 12 feet wide running parallel to their northern
boundaries on lots 5 and 6 on lands described in the survey plan of Peter R. Beard
dated 4 September 1993 situate at Darrell Spring in the Parish of St. Andrew,
Tobago so that each claimant is separately entitled to possess the strip of land to
the north of their respective lots.
(b) A declaration is granted in favour of the first defendant that it is the legal owner
and entitled to an estate in fee simple in possession in a parcel of land in the
Parish of St. Andrew, Tobago comprising One point One (1.1) acres more
particularly described in the survey plan of G. A. Farrell dated 25 January 1986
SAVE AND EXCEPT for the strip of land described in the declaration above at
clause (a).
(c) An injunction is granted compelling the claimants within 21 days of today’s date
to pull down, demolish, and remove all concrete structures, fences, fence posts, or
walls of whatever nature on the first defendant’s land as described above at clause
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(b) above. In default of the claimants’ compliance with this injunction within the
stipulated time the first defendant is granted liberty to itself pull down, demolish,
and remove all concrete structures, fences, fence posts or walls on the said parcel
of land.
(d) An injunction is granted restraining the claimants whether by themselves or their
servants, agents, licensees or howsoever otherwise from entering, being,
remaining, trespassing, or building any structure on the first defendant’s parcel of
land as described at clause (b) above.
(e) The claimants will pay two-thirds of the defendants’ costs on the counterclaim
prescribed in the sum of $9,334.00 with no order as to costs on the claim.
James Christopher Aboud
Judge
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