Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Preface
- Contents
- Property Law, Contract Law and Environmental Law: Shaking Hands with the (Historical) Enemy
- Sustainable Obligations in (Dutch) Property Law
- Contractual Regulation of Property Rights: Opportunities for Sustainability and Environmental Protection
- Towards Sustainable Real Estate in a Circular Economy
- Quebec Private Law, Destined to Preserve the Environment?
- Real Burdens in Scots Law: An Environmental Perspective
- Positive and Negative Obligations of Landowners in South African Law: An Environmental Perspective
- The Introduction of Conservation Covenants in English Law
- The ‘Obligation Réelle Environnementale’ in French Law
- Environmental Duties in the German Land Register
- Nordic Perspectives on Contract and Property Law with an Environmental Perspective: Examples from Norway
- Property Law Series
Real Burdens in Scots Law: An Environmental Perspective
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 December 2020
- Frontmatter
- Preface
- Contents
- Property Law, Contract Law and Environmental Law: Shaking Hands with the (Historical) Enemy
- Sustainable Obligations in (Dutch) Property Law
- Contractual Regulation of Property Rights: Opportunities for Sustainability and Environmental Protection
- Towards Sustainable Real Estate in a Circular Economy
- Quebec Private Law, Destined to Preserve the Environment?
- Real Burdens in Scots Law: An Environmental Perspective
- Positive and Negative Obligations of Landowners in South African Law: An Environmental Perspective
- The Introduction of Conservation Covenants in English Law
- The ‘Obligation Réelle Environnementale’ in French Law
- Environmental Duties in the German Land Register
- Nordic Perspectives on Contract and Property Law with an Environmental Perspective: Examples from Norway
- Property Law Series
Summary
INTRODUCTION
The use of land may be constrained by both private and public law. In Scotland, as elsewhere, there are significant public controls whose policy is to protect the environment. Protection, however, may also be achieved through private law and this chapter considers the role of real burdens in this regard.
In succinct terms, a real burden is a positive or negative obligation affecting land which binds not only the current owner, but also that person's successors. The land which is encumbered by the real burden can be referred to as the ‘burdened property’ and the land whose owner is entitled to enforce the real burden can be referred to as the ‘benefited property’.
Real burdens share much in common with servitudes, but as we shall see there are differences. The law of real burdens was effectively codified by the Title Conditions (Scotland) Act 2003, which came into force when the feudal system was abolished on 28 November 2004. An innovation of the new legislation is the ‘personal real burden’, that is to say a burden which is enforceable by a particular person and which does not require a benefited property. From the perspective of environmental protection, two personal real burdens are relevant: the conservation burden and the climate change burden. These will be considered in detail.
THE COMMON LAW ON REAL BURDENS
The origins of the modern real burden lie in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries in a period of growing urbanisation in Scotland. In the days long before the advent of modern planning and building law, a device was needed to regulate land use. Contracts of course were inadequate because they only bind the parties thereto and not successors.
Like continental European jurisdictions, Scotland received the servitude from Roman law. Servitudes, however, are limited in what they can do. In particular they cannot impose positive obligations, that is to say make the land owner do something. At common law in Scotland, there is also a more or less fixed list of servitudes known to the law. It is difficult to add to that list.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Contract and Property with an Environmental Perspective , pp. 143 - 162Publisher: IntersentiaPrint publication year: 2020