Farmer vows to ‘die in prison’ rather than pay fine for knocking down a wall
An 88-year-old farmer has said he would rather ‘die in prison’ than pay fines for knocking down part of a boundary wall he built himself.
Ron Knight says he’s faced six years of a ‘living nightmare’ after he received a planning enforcement notice for knocking down part of a concrete wall to allow access to his land.
He helped to build the wall in 1973, but claims when he took part of it down in 2017 he was told it was ‘historic’, in a ‘conservation area’ and needed planning permission.
Ron has now been to court four times after missing the deadline to appeal, and has racked up thousands of pounds in fines he cannot afford to pay.
Last month a judge told him he faced 45 days in prison unless he rebuilt the wall and paid the fines.
But Ron says he would rather be locked up ‘if it’s the last thing he does’ than accept he’s done anything wrong.
He said: ‘It is getting us all down. We are all sick and tired and fed up. It doesn’t matter what we say, they don’t take any notice.
‘Standing up for myself and being prepared to go to jail is the only way I can see to get anyone to see sense.
‘If going to prison is the last thing I do on this earth, I will do it to stop this madness.’
Ron moved to Milborne Port in 1957 and bought Cannon Court Farm with his two brothers around five years later.
When he sold it to retire to Devon in 1990 he kept six acres of land and three acres of allotments.
Rows then began with his neighbours who he claimed had ‘blocked access’ to his land and his ‘right of way’ through their own developments.
To allow him access to maintain the area and stop it becoming overgrown, he said he had no choice but to remove part of the wall.
Somerset Council has defended its actions and refused to consider his retrospective application while enforcement action remains ongoing.
Ron said: ‘Put politely, it’s been a bloody nuisance. Six years now it’s been going on.
‘I don’t know who reported us to the council but I had letter to say we had broken the law by digging out a conservation area – I did not know anything about a conservation area and neither did my two brothers.
‘Apparently the whole of Milborne Port was made one in 1988.
‘We had rebuilt that wall in 1973. They tried to argue we had taken down a historic wall. But if it’s a historic wall why was it not back exactly how it was before?
‘It is two foot lower now than it was. It is just a flat piece of concrete.’
Ron has lived with his wife Jean, 81, in Bampton, Devon, since selling the farm and said his family are concerned they might be forced to sell their home if costs continue to increase.
He added: ‘My argument is that if that wall was ours in 1973, it is our wall now. Why are they kicking up a fuss?
‘All we did was take down a part to make an entrance into our property we had no other way of getting into.
‘I have been to court four times for it and been fined over £1,000 each time. I am now being taken to court again on January 22 but I have absolutely no intention of paying any fine.
‘I would rather go to prison than pay it and I totally mean that. I am not paying it – why should I if it belongs to me. I don’t care what they say or what they do.
‘I told them that when I went to court. The judge looked up and said you have got to pay. But I am not paying £20 a month or whatever they ask for. I am not paying anything. I said you can do what you like – put me in prison for a couple of months.
‘That person had no rights to cover that track. We had a right of way to that property for as long as we were there.
‘I just thought it was nice to keep a bit for the family.”
Ron’s daughter Linda Knight said: ‘He bought the land in the 1950s and kept some back when it was sold – and that was one piece of it. The council was never interested what he had done all those years ago until now.
‘His case is it is his wall, why can’t he do work on it. There was no planning needed when he built it in 1970s.
‘Apparently the rules changed, where in ten years prior it would not have been an issue but new regulations were built in.
‘All correspondence goes to dad in Devon and he was served the enforcement notice in November 2017. He did not really understand what was going on. By the time we found out about it it was too late and he had lost the right to appeal.
‘The council have declined to determine the application, despite us spending more than £3,000 preparing it, and getting a planning heritage statement alongside it. They confirmed it was not a “historic wall” but this was not even looked at.
‘My dad is 88 and has his health problems. He’s got a pacemaker and this is having health implications on him and my mum. He really stresses over it and it has been like a dark cloud hanging over us for the last six years.’
Linda said the fines had reached £3,200 but they could not afford to pay it.
She added: ‘They have got nothing, and my dad said he would be prepared to spend time in jail than pay it. The council said it won’t come to that, but he is not paying the fine, so I don’t know what is the alternative.
‘They just don’t want to listen. It feels like victimisation. At the end of the day he took down part of a wall that belongs to him to attend to a piece of conservation land.
‘Do they not want it looked after? How else did they think we could do that? It is about time they showed some heart and compassion.’
Somerset Council said it was in the public interest to continue pursuing the matter, arguing that Mr Knight had caused ‘unjustified harm’ to a protected local structure.
A spokesman said: ‘The retrospective planning application was asking for the same requirements as the enforcement notice.
‘We have applied the expediency test and public interest test to each step of this case.
‘We consider that the creation of the access, necessitating the demolition or removal of a wide section of the historic stonewall and associated engineering work to the land behind, fails to safeguard the established character of the conservation area and has caused unjustified harm to a designated heritage asset.’
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