Japanese knotweed is back in the news – this time the Supreme Court  has considered the implications of this plant and its impact on property  owners.
Most homeowners have heard of Japanese knotweed. It is an invasive  plant and requires active treatment. It usually takes at  least three years to treat Japanese knotweed. Knotweed rhizomes (roots) can  remain dormant in the soil for many years and will regrow if disturbed or if  the soil is relocated. What homeowners must remember is that Japanese knotweed  is not the only problematic species of knotweed in the UK – it is just the most  common of four invasive knotweed plant species in the UK. These are:
    - Japanese  knotweed
 
    - Dwarf knotweed
 
    - Giant knotweed
 
    - Bohemian  (hybrid) knotweed
 
There have been a number of legal cases in recent years  involving the presence of Japanese knotweed growing on railway sidings and council-owned  land. The plant has grown and adjacent property owners whose land has been affected  by the plant have brought cases to try to claim compensation for damage to  their property due to the presence of Japanese knotweed next door.
A legal claim might be based on a misrepresentation; that  is, a property owner not being truthful about whether Japanese knotweed is on  their property that someone wants to buy. Another basis for a legal claim is  the tort of nuisance.
The courts have been prepared to allow affected property  owners to claim damages if they have had to take measures and spend money to  treat Japanese knotweed on their land. But what the courts have been more reluctant  to do is to allow claims to succeed where the basis of the claim is the just  the fact that the adjacent land might be worth less because of the presence of Japanese  knotweed next door (known as 'economic loss').
The recent Supreme Court case was decided on a narrow  point of law. In essence, the Borough Council on whose land the Japanese  knotweed was growing succeeded because the decrease in value of the adjoining  land was caused long before the duty of the Borough Council to deal with it  arose.
So, it is possible to claim for pure economic loss, but  whether it will be successful will depend on the specific facts of the case and  when the damage to neighbouring property was caused.
A seller will supply a Property Information Form to the buyer as part of  the conveyancing process and this form specifically asks the seller to disclose  whether or not they are aware of Japanese knotweed on the property. Of course,  a seller may not be aware – so a buyer may wish to consider having a specialist  survey carried out. The buyer's conveyancer will not visit their client's  property so a buyer should carefully inspect the property that they are buying  – including the garden areas and should report any suspicions to their  conveyancer. Due diligence at the time of purchase could save thousands of  pounds and years of stress.
To discuss this or any other property  matter, contact us.