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High Court Awards Damages in School Football Nuisance Case

A Winchester couple received £1,000 after stray footballs from a school pitch were deemed a nuisance, but the court denied their request to halt its use.

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Marie-Anne and Mohamed Bakhaty said that “about 140” footballs landed in their garden, left, from the school’s five-a-side pitch, outlined in red, over an 11-month period
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Overview

  • Mohamed and Marie-Anne Bakhaty successfully sued Hampshire County Council over frequent stray footballs from a nearby school pitch entering their garden.
  • The High Court ruled that the repeated intrusion of footballs constituted a common law nuisance, awarding the couple £1,000 in damages for a period of excessive interference.
  • The court acknowledged the school's mitigation efforts, including installing a net and limiting pitch use to school hours, which significantly reduced the problem.
  • Judge Philip Glen found that occasional stray balls since the mitigation measures were not substantial enough to warrant further legal action or an injunction.
  • The ruling highlights the balance between private property rights and the community value of shared facilities, as the pitch serves both students and external groups.