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Everything about Right To Light totally explained

In English Law a right to light is a form of easement that gives a long-standing owner of a building with windows a right to maintain the level of illumination. They are most usually acquired under the Prescription Act 1832. Ancient lights is an archaic term describing the right.
   In effect, the owner of a building with windows that have received natural daylight for 20 years or more is entitled to forbid any construction or other obstruction that would deprive him of that illumination. Neighbors can't build anything that would block the light without permission. The owner may build more or larger windows but can't enlarge his new windows before the new period of 20 years has expired. It is also possible for a right to light to exist if granted expressly by deed, or granted impliedly, for example under the rule in Wheeldon v. Burrows.
   Once a right to light exists the owner of the right is entitled to "sufficient light according to the ordinary notions of mankind": Colls v. Home & Colonial Stores Ltd (1904). Courts rely on expert witnesses to define this term. Since the 1920s experts have used a method proposed by Percy Waldram to assist them with this. Waldram suggested that ordinary people require 1 foot-candle of illuminance (approximately 10 lux) for reading and other work involving visual discrimination. This equates to a sky factor (similar to the daylight factor) of 0.2 per cent. Today, Waldram's methods are increasingly subject to criticism (External Link) (External Link) and the future of expert evidence in rights to light cases is currently the subject of much debate within the surveying profession. (External Link) After World War II, owners of buildings could gain new rights by registering properties that had been destroyed in bombings and the period was temporarily increased to 27 years.
   In the centre of London, near Chinatown and Covent Garden, particularly in back alleyways, signs saying "Ancient Lights" can be seen marking individual windows.
   Under United States tort law, in Fontainebleau Hotel Corp. v. Forty-Five Twenty-Five, Inc. (1959) the Florida Appellate Court stated that the "ancient lights" doctrine has been unanimously repudiated in the United States.

Articles

Books

  • Lance Harris (2006) Anstey's Rights of Light, Fourth Edition, RICS Books.
  • Stephen Bickford-Smith & Andrew Francis (2007) Rights of Light: The Modern Law, Second Edition, Jordans.Further Information

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