Of course you cant trespass on a public footpath lol, that's the point of it being public.they don't you muppet - there is no public footpath as pointed out previously
try reading the whole line:

Of course you cant trespass on a public footpath lol, that's the point of it being public.they don't you muppet - there is no public footpath as pointed out previously
try reading the whole line:
Are you telling me I can get into Alton Towers for free?
We don't own it - we can own the right to the freehold, which we can pass on. The land belongs to the crown and if you die without anyone to pass it onto the freehold reverts to the crown.
What actually happens to someones stuff if they die with no relatives or anything? I don't know what to search for![]()
public rights of way can exist on private land - it doesn't stop the land from being private... perhpas you've never left east london and so are not really aware of what a public footpath is..?
It's called trespassing![]()
If you want to be as lame about it and pedantic as you can, every piece of land in England belongs to the Queen, freehold just effectively means you have an eternal lease on it... not that it has any real significance![]()
Cuius est solum, eius est usque ad coelum et ad inferos (Latin for [for] whoever owns [the] soil, [it] is theirs all the way [up] to Heaven and [down] to Hell) often appearing in the shorter form Cuius est solum eius est usque ad coelum, omitting et ad inferos "and to hell", is a principle of property law, stating that property holders have rights not only to the plot of land itself, but also to the air above and (in the broader formulation) the ground below.
In modern law, this principle is still accepted in limited form, and the rights are divided into air rights above and subsurface rights below. Property holders generally have a right to the space immediately above and below the ground – preventing overhanging parts of neighboring buildings – but do not have rights to control flights far above their property, or subway construction below. In dense urban areas, air rights may be transferable (see transferable development rights) to allow construction of new buildings over existing buildings.