Back
Legal

A material change in circumstances imposes a positive duty to seek discharge

Readers may remember the Court of Appeal decision in Ineos Upstream Ltd and others v Persons Unknown and others [2019] EWCA Civ 515 where Ineos Group, at that time the largest participant in the UK onshore fracking sector, obtained a quia timet, or anticipatory, injunction to prevent trespass by the defendants at eight sites owned by individual claimants where fracking was being explored.

The seventh defendant was added to the claim, on his application, since he anticipated breaching the terms of the injunction and becoming a newcomer bound by the decision South Cambridgeshire District Council v Gammell [2005] PLSCS 188, but no order was in fact made against him. In April 2019, the Court of Appeal discharged the injunction against some of the categories of persons unknown but maintained it in two other categories pending remission to the court below for reconsideration as to the grant of interim relief in light of the Human Rights Act 1998 and, if granted, an appropriate temporal limit.

Little happened after that until March 2022, when the court heard two applications: the seventh defendant’s application to strike out the claim with costs; and the claimants’ application for a general stay of the claim with permission to apply to reinstate the injunction in the case of any material change of circumstances including the lifting of the government’s moratorium on fracking. In Ineos Upstream Ltd and others v Persons Unknown and others [2022] EWHC 684 (Ch) the court refused both applications.

Start your free trial today

Your trusted daily source of commercial real estate news and analysis. Register now for unlimited digital access throughout April.

Including:

  • Breaking news, interviews and market updates
  • Expert legal commentary, market trends and case law
  • In-depth reports and expert analysis

Up next…