Wind farm damages action settled

A couple claimed the 'unbearable' noise of a windfarm drove them from their home in Lincolnshire
12 April 2012

A couple have settled a High Court damages action against the owners and operators of a wind farm they say drove them from their farmhouse home with its "unbearable" noise.

A judge was told the terms of the settlement agreed by tenant farmers Sarah Jane and Julian Davis were strictly confidential.

The couple moved out of Grays Farm in Deeping St Nicholas, near Spalding, Lincolnshire, in December 2006 six months after the eight-turbine wind farm began operating about half a mile from their home.

They blamed the "whoom whoom whoom" and the low frequency "hum" of giant turbine blades for their exile in a case that was closely watched by the wind farm industry.

They said the "intolerable" noise disrupted their sleep, made them feel ill and was so severe that it warranted a reduction in council tax and rendered the £2.5 million farmhouse no longer marketable as a family home.

Mr and Mrs Davis were accused of being "over-sensitive" to the noise and "exaggerating and overreacting". The couple launched a claim for damages and an injunction against defendants including Fenland Windfarms Ltd and Fenland Green Power Co-operative Ltd.

The long-running hearing was due to resume on Wednesday, but trial judge Mr Justice Hickinbottom was told the case was settled.

Both sides said in a joint press release: "The terms of that settlement are strictly confidential, and the parties will not be answering any questions about the terms of that agreement."

When the case was before the court in July, Peter Harrison QC, appearing for former nurse Mrs Davis, 55, and her husband, 46, told the judge: "Wind farms have emphatically not been the source of trouble-free, green renewable energy which the firms promoting and profiting from wind energy would have the general public believe."

Mr and Mrs Davis, who have two grown-up children, were seeking an injunction to bring about modification of the operation of the wind farm, plus £400,000 damages to compensate them for the noise nuisance. Alternatively the couple asked for damages plus a "like for like" replacement for their farm home they estimate is worth about £2.5 million.

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