Meath Co Council have secured the Faughan Hill, Bohermeen property.

Council takes control of Bohermeen house built without planning permission on foot of High Court order

A Meath couple's almost 20 year battle to save their 6,220 sq ft home - built without planning permission - looks to have come to an end after Meath County Council took possession of the property.

In a statement released this morning, Meath County Council said it is "currently acting on foot of a High Court order issued this morning, Monday 16th March 2026, in relation to the property at Bohermeen.

"The Court directed that An Garda Síochána assist the Council in taking possession of the property, which has now been secured.

"As this is an ongoing legal matter, Meath County Council is unable to comment further at this time".

Chris and Rose Murray lost a last ditch legal bid last August aimed at preventing the demolition of their large Faughan Hill, Bohermeen, home built in “wilful breach” of planning laws almost 20 years ago.

Trailers were parked across the entrance to the house at Faughan Hill, Bohermeen. Photo by David Mullen

There was “no merit” to the appeals by Chris Murray and his wife Rose, Mr Justice Senan Allen said, when giving the three judge Court of Appeal’s judgement dismissing their appeal last August.

The appeals concerned an action that, while initiated in September 2022, was “the latest battle” in a 20-year war about the fate of the unauthorised development.

It was, he believed, obvious to Meath County Council from the outset that the action and appeal were “artifices calculated to postpone the evil day”.

After Mr Murray’s 2006 application for permission to build a house on the lands was refused, the couple, “undaunted, and in wilful breach of the planning laws”, built a house anyway of about 588 sq m (6,220 sq ft), twice the size of the house for which permission was refused, the judge said.

The council took proceedings in 2007 under the Planning Act and in 2017 the Supreme Court upheld High Court orders for the couple to remove any unauthorised development from their land. They were given one year to vacate the property.

When that was not complied with, the council issued contempt proceedings in 2019 that settled in 2020 on terms involving the Murrays agreeing to vacate the property within two years to facilitate the council demolishing it.

Three days before they were to vacate, the Murrays issued a case against the council, claiming there was new evidence relating to land sterilisation agreements made by the previous owners of the land that invalidated the council’s planning refusals.

Last year the High Court granted a council application to strike out that case as frivolous, vexatious and an abuse of process.

Security guards inside the property. Photo by David Mullen

In the Court of Appeal judgement, Mr Justice Allen said the couple built a 6,220 sq ft house without planning permission, “well knew” they would need permission “but hoped they would get away with it”.

The Murrays claimed, as a result of actions, inactions and misrepresentations by the council, they had acquired a “pig in a poke” title to the lands, he said.

While a planning condition for a nearby residence stated an agreement sterilising (preventing) the lands from any other housing or non-agricultural development should be entered into – and the council relied on that in refusing permission to the Murrays – it was accepted no sterilisation agreement was ever entered.

There was “no justification” for contending the council misrepresented the case to the court, he said.

The Murrays had not appealed the original permission refusal to An Bord Pleanála or sought to judicially review it, he said.

Security at the gate of a service entrance to the property. PHOTOS: DAVY MULLEN. Photo by David Mullen

They had had “every opportunity” to make whatever case they thought they had; the courts had considered all they had to say but the Supreme Court had, in 2017, decided the house “had to come down”.

While they argued in this appeal that adequate account was not taken of their new evidence, there was no appeal against the High Court conclusion it would not have affected the original outcome.

At the heart of their opposition to the council’s enforcement procedures was a grievance with the refusal of their original planning application but, as a matter of law, that grievance was “not justiciable”.

Any infirmity in the original refusal could not conceivably have provided any justification for unauthorised construction of a house, still less one twice the size, he said.

The top of the house can be seen over hedging while security guards stand inside an entrance to the property which is now under the control of Meath Co Council. Photo by David Mullen

It was “perverse” that the Murrays, having “driven a coach and four” through the planning Act, were complaining the council failed “to strictly comply with the prescribed procedures”.

A “so-called constitutional challenge” concerning the council’s use of section 160 of the Planning and Development Act 2000 in its proceedings was unrelated to the new evidence, he said.

The couple’s fresh permission retention applications were not relevant to whether their proceedings raised a fair issue to be tried, he held.

The couple had not identified any error in the decision under appeal, the court concluded.

The house will now face demolition but that process will most likely have to go to tender.