toyboy
Well-Known Member
The common law right to navigate tidal waters is puzzling. There is a PRN on the Orwell so surely anything built under the high water mark is an obstruction to the PRN. So how is MDL allowed to build pontoons into the river?
It's quite simple. The default right of navigation through tidal waters can be amended, abrogated in full or in part or otherwise modified by statute or instrument
Felixstowe z and the Orwell are statutory harbours within the boundaries of which the relevant harbour authority has the power to, amongst other things, restrict navigation
This is the basic misunderstanding of common law, it is subject to amendment by statute law and the latter always supercedes (until new common law is created in the courts taking into account the statutes involved)
Or for that matter Felxstowe docks?![]()
You misunderstand what common law is (or you've been misled by the rubbish plastered all over the Internet about it)
Common law is simply law created by the decisions of the courts as opposed to statute law which is created by parliament (and which includes orders and instruments made under statute law)
There is nothing magical about common law, it confers no special rights or powers, it is simply law like any other law differing only in the way it was created
Like I said, a Common law, like statute law, can be restricted, repealed, amended and modified by subsequent statute or common law
I would assume, logically, that the statute law underlying the creation of statutory harbours deals with the common law right to navigate through tidal waters (otherwise the actions and function of a harbour authority would be impossible to carry out)
However I cannot see how they can stop anyone from mooring where the big boats go????
I'm no legal expert, but I have always believed that the statutes creating harbour authorities give the authority the power to create by laws for navigation within their limits. Without such powers it's hard to imagine how a port could operate. I would look to these by-laws, not the act, to see how the harbour authority prevents lunatic hotties bringing up alongside Felixstowe container terminal.
Years ago, I moored alongside a visiting warship in Ipswich (Cliff Reach - Vopak terminal) for a couple of drinks in the wardroom.
About an hour later, someone from Ipswich Port Authority showed up to tell us that we were not allowed to moor up there. Ship's CO didn't mind though.
Two hours later, another chappie showed up to tell us the same thing. However, by that time I was no longer in a fit state to take the boat anywhere.
So, chappie left. I slept aboard and we left the next morning.
I'm no legal expert, but I have always believed that the statutes creating harbour authorities give the authority the power to create by laws for navigation within their limits. Without such powers it's hard to imagine how a port could operate. I would look to these by-laws, not the act, to see how the harbour authority prevents lunatic hotties bringing up alongside Felixstowe container terminal.
Ferzackerly
And the right is a right to navigate, to pass through tidal waters including anchoring in the course of navigation (because legal precedent established that anchoring to see out the tide or bad weather is a normal part of navigation - we're talking law established in the days of sailing ships here)
There is no legal right to come alongside at any dock, jetty or other structure nor to lay a permanent mooring
And it would probably take a High Court or above judgement to decide whether the legal right to navigate means you can plough your own furrow through the seas regardless of structures and installations. I rather think that you're expected to avoid bashing into things like piers, jetties and wind turbines etc.!
Bear in mind that common law is also the law of common sense (because it is established by legal precedent in the courts). Despite the high profile "W.T.F.?" judgements from the occasional buffoon, judges are generally very wise in the ways of men with long experience as barristers before being called to the bench.
"The man on the Clapham Omnibus" is the acid test for such judgements. It means that the courts, in the absence of any specific legislation or previous precedent, judge matters on the basis of what a normal, reasonably intelligent, ordinary commuter from Clapham would consider reasonable
(For info, I learnt far more about this sort of stuff than I ever really wanted to know whilst dealing with public rights of way as an officer of the Green Lane Association many years ago. When you've gone head to head with the Ramblers Association you have a pretty good understanding of the meaning of words such as "intransigent", "pig headed" and "selfish"!)
Ferzackerly
And the right is a right to navigate, to pass through tidal waters including anchoring in the course of navigation (because legal precedent established that anchoring to see out the tide or bad weather is a normal part of navigation - we're talking law established in the days of sailing ships here)
There is no legal right to come alongside at any dock, jetty or other structure nor to lay a permanent mooring
And it would probably take a High Court or above judgement to decide whether the legal right to navigate means you can plough your own furrow through the seas regardless of structures and installations. I rather think that you're expected to avoid bashing into things like piers, jetties and wind turbines etc.!
Bear in mind that common law is also the law of common sense (because it is established by legal precedent in the courts). Despite the high profile "W.T.F.?" judgements from the occasional buffoon, judges are generally very wise in the ways of men with long experience as barristers before being called to the bench.
"The man on the Clapham Omnibus" is the acid test for such judgements. It means that the courts, in the absence of any specific legislation or previous precedent, judge matters on the basis of what a normal, reasonably intelligent, ordinary commuter from Clapham would consider reasonable
(For info, I learnt far more about this sort of stuff than I ever really wanted to know whilst dealing with public rights of way as an officer of the Green Lane Association many years ago. When you've gone head to head with the Ramblers Association you have a pretty good understanding of the meaning of words such as "intransigent", "pig headed" and "selfish"!)
I think its called " the right of innocent passage".
That's the right afforded to warships under the various conventions which require, amongst other things, that submarines transit territorial waters on the surface.
& anything wearing a red ensign, including yotties.
& anything wearing a red ensign, including yotties.
However this right would allow any official from the territorial waters transited to board and search your vessel. I have been stopped but not boarded but interrogated by the Douanes off Guadeloupe. I have been stopped and searched by Border Protection [or whatever they are called now] while coming up the English Channel. A German acquaintance [German flagged boat] was stopped by US Customs, boarded and searched approximately 50 miles outside US waters as he was approaching Cuban Territorial Waters.
I suppose that the officials concerned first have to prove to themselves that you are innocent before your right to proceed is granted.
And they are in a RIB equipped with two lots of horsepower outboards that can probably outrun my 6 knot cruising speed. When I was stopped in the Channel by Border Protection they were also backed up by a big grey gunboat. But very courteous with lots of 'please' and 'sir' interspersed with their 'requests' for me to stop and allow them to board and search.By "any official", I presume you mean a boatload of military types, equipped with all sorts of hardware, who also outnumber you!