Building Barriers – a Scottish neighbour dispute
June 30, 2026
Building Barriers – a Scottish neighbour disputeJune 30, 2026 We previously commented on the Sheriff’s decision in this action concerning a group of neighbours who were successful in blocking two homeowners’ attempts to build a front boundary wall and electric gate round their corner plot. The homeowners were recently successful in their appeal to the Sheriff Appeal Court. The decision clarifies the scope of Deeds of Conditions and Deeds of Real Burdens which are commonly used in new residential developments in Scotland to preserve the character of a development and protect neighbouring interests. They set out the rights and obligations of the homeowners on the development, and apply to each of the properties. They can also be enforced if a homeowner does something not permitted by the Deeds. An interesting decision for developers and homeowners of land in Scotland. The developmentThe development was subject to shared legal rules (“real burdens”) which prohibited structures such as walls and gates without the written consent of nearby neighbours. The homeowners obtained planning permission to install a boundary wall and gate but did not seek the required consent. The neighbours sought an interdict (injunction) to prevent the work on the basis that they had not consented and arguing,, amongst other things, that the wall would undermine the open-plan character of the estate. The sheriff at first instance agreed, finding that although not all concerns were justified, the wall would significantly affect the appearance of the street and could encourage similar changes by others. He held that this would amount to a material impact on their enjoyment of their properties, giving them the legal right to enforce the restriction. The Appeal Court’s findingsOn appeal, the homeowners were successful in arguing that the sheriff had applied the wrong test, relying too heavily on subjective views and speculation rather than objective evidence of real harm. The neighbours had therefore failed to prove material detriment sufficient to give then an interest to enforce a real burden. The case therefore offers an useful reminder of how strictly courts should assess whether neighbours have sufficient interest before they can enforce property rules. Takeaways
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