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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Holt v Holley & Steer Solicitors (a firm) [2020] EWCA Civ 851 (07 July 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2020/851.html Cite as: [2020] EWCA Civ 851, [2020] WLR 4638, [2020] WLR(D) 414, [2020] PNLR 26, [2021] 1 FLR 246, [2020] 3 FCR 632, [2020] 1 WLR 4638 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE COUNTY COURT AT BRISTOL
His Honour Judge Ralton
E90BS412
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE KING
and
MR JUSTICE KEEHAN
____________________
JULIA PATRICIA HOLT |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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HOLLEY & STEER SOLICITORS (A Firm) |
Respondent |
____________________
Benjamin Fowler (instructed by DAC Beechcroft LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 24 June 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice McCombe:
Introduction
Background Facts
The Present Proceedings
The Application for Summary Judgment and the Judgments Below
"… not necessarily the date on when [sic: which] the claim is permanently damaged or lost (e.g. by being struck out) because of the negligence but when the negligence causes a material diminution in the claimant's prospects of success and thus its value" (Judgment at [41(5)])
"43. In my judgment the latest possible date of quantifiable damage must be 16th March 2012 – the last day of the final hearing – because the parties would know without doubt on that date that District Judge Daniel would make his mind up on the basis of the values presented. The loss to the Claimant at that date was measurable as the difference between the value of her properties and jewellery as presented and their true value albeit it was known that the value to be given to the jewellery was contentious and required a discrete factual finding.
44. It is arguable that the date of damage was earlier albeit I cannot see that date arising until after the financial dispute resolution and the fixing of a hearing date for the final hearing…
46. I do not accept that the professional negligence in this case resulted only in a contingency. The damage done could be provisionally valued on 16th February 2012 (when the final hearing started) and that value might have required adjustment up or down when the judge handed down his judgment but as I read the authorities such "crystallisation" (if that is the right description) does not mean that the cause of action starts on that date any more than the causes of action in the lost civil claims started on the date when they were struck out …"
(Emphasis and underlining in the original)
Appeal to this Court and my Conclusions
"…1.1 the Appellant did not suffer loss or damage until, at the earliest 30 May 2012; …
1.2 the Appellant was not financially worse off until, at the earliest 30 May 2012;
1.3 the Appellant did not suffer measurable/recoverable loss or damage until, at the earliest, 30 May 2012 …
…2.2 accordingly, in terms of alleged professional negligence in the conduct of Ancillary Relief litigation, there is now apparent uncertainty as to whether time runs from the point when the relevant mistake could no longer be corrected, leaving a risk that the spouse's case was thereby weakened, or whether time runs from the point when the mistake actually made a difference through the Family Court's judgment at a final hearing."
"Relevant loss is suffered when the lender is financially worse off by reason of a breach of the duty of care than he would otherwise have been"
"In Forster v. Outred & Co. [1982] 1 W.L.R. 86, 94, Stephenson L.J. recorded the submission of Mr. Stuart-Smith Q.C.
"What is meant by actual damage? Mr. Stuart-Smith says that it is any detriment, liability or loss capable of assessment in money terms and it includes liabilities which may arise on a contingency, particularly a contingency over which the plaintiff has no control; things like loss of earning capacity, loss of a chance or bargain, loss of profit, losses incurred from onerous provisions or covenants in leases. They are all illustrations of a kind of loss which is meant by 'actual' damage. It was also suggested in argument … that 'actual' is really used in contrast to 'presumed' or 'assumed.' Whereas damage is presumed in trespass and libel, it is not presumed in negligence and has to be proved. There has to be some actual damage."
Stephenson L.J., at p. 98, accepted this submission. I agree with him. I add only the cautionary reminder that the loss must be relevant loss. To constitute actual damage for the purpose of constituting a tort, the loss sustained must be loss falling within the measure of damage applicable to the wrong in question."
"When, then, does the lender first sustain measurable, relevant loss? The first step in answering this question is to identify the relevant measure of loss. It is axiomatic that in assessing loss caused by the defendant's negligence the basic measure is the comparison between (a) what the plaintiff's position would have been if the defendant had fulfilled his duty of care and (b) the plaintiff's actual position…"
… For what, then, is the valuer liable? The valuer is liable for the adverse consequences, flowing from entering into the transaction, which are attributable to the deficiency in the valuation. This principle of liability, easier to formulate than to apply, has next to be translated into practical terms. As to this, the basic comparison remains in point, as the means of identifying whether the lender has suffered any loss in consequence of entering into the transaction. If he has not, then currently he has no cause of action against the valuer. The deficiency in security has, in practice, caused him no damage. However, if the basic comparison throws (1632) up a loss, then it is necessary to inquire further and see what part of the loss is the consequence of the deficiency in the security"
"In my judgment there must be a correlation between the measure of damages and the incurring of loss for the purposes of the accrual of the cause of action. This is because loss must be recoverable loss if its incurring is to be relevant for accrual purposes: see per Lord Nicholls in the Nykredit (No. 2) case [1997] 1 WLR 1627, 1630F. I would however agree with the judge that damage can be incurred when a transaction is entered into even if damages fall to be assessed on the "no transaction basis". In this case, on the assumed facts, loss was incurred by NIG when it wrote the policies." (Emphasis added)
"12. Stephenson LJ recorded at p. 93, the submission of Mr Stuart-Smith QC, for the defendants:
"when she [Mrs Forster] signed the mortgage deed she suffered actual damage. By entering into a burdensome bond or contract or mortgage she sustained immediate economic loss; her valuable freehold became encumbered with a charge and its value to her was diminished because she had merely the equity of redemption, varying in value at the whim of her son's creditors …"
13. Later, at p 94, he recorded Mr Stuart-Smith's submission on the meaning of the "actual damage" needed to complete a cause of action in negligence:
"any detriment, liability or loss capable of assessment in money terms and it includes liabilities which may arise on a contingency, particularly a contingency over which the plaintiff has no control; things like loss of earning capacity, loss of a chance or bargain, loss of profit, losses incurred from onerous provisions or covenants in leases."
14. Stephenson LJ said, at p 98, that he accepted Mr Stuart-Smith's statement of the law. The ambiguity in these passages (in an unreserved judgment in an interlocutory appeal) arises from the inclusion of the words "it includes liabilities which may arise on a contingency" in the second quotation. As appears from the first passage, the thrust of Mr Stuart-Smith's argument was that the mortgage, although the liability which it secured was contingent, had the immediate effect of depressing the value of Mrs Forster's farm. But the reference to contingent liabilities in the second passage could give the impression that merely incurring a possible future liability (for example, by giving a guarantee or indemnity unsecured upon any property) counted as immediate damage."
"19. My second quotation from the judgment of Stephenson LJ in Forster v Outred & Co [1982] 1 WLR 86, 94 was approved by this House in Nykredit Mortgage Bank plc v Edward Erdman Group Ltd (No 2) [1997] 1 WLR 1627, 1630, but the House did nothing to resolve the ambiguity (551) which I have identified. There was no need to do so because the context was altogether different. In the Nykredit (No 2) case the surveyor's negligent valuation had led to the plaintiff obtaining what turned out to be inadequate security for his loan. There was no question of a contingent liability; the issue was whether a cause of action arose immediately or when the amount he was owed exceeded the value of his rights under the transaction (borrower's covenant plus security). The House decided that it was the latter…"
At [20], Lord Hoffmann continued:
"20. The Nykredit (No 2) case [1997] 1 WLR 1627 therefore decides that in a transaction in which there are benefits (covenant for repayment and security) as well as burdens (payment of the loan) and the measure of damages is the extent to which the lender is worse off than he would have been if he had not entered into the transaction, the lender suffers loss and damage only when it is possible to say that he is on balance worse off. It does not discuss the question of a purely contingent liability."
"40. …Sephton contend that the Law Society was worse off from the time of each new misappropriation following the issue of successive untrue certificates (and knew it was worse off from the moment of the investigating accountant's report as to the true facts). The need to wait for claims on the compensation fund to be made and settled, in order to quantify the damage, did not mean that damage had not already been suffered."
41. This last point is plainly right, in the limited sense that a claimant does not have to wait for final quantification of his damage. It is a commonplace of negligence actions of all sorts that a cause of action may arise long before it is possible to quantify precisely the damages eventually recoverable. But there are other situations in which the correct legal analysis is that, however great may be the prospect (or risk) of economic loss, actionable damage has not yet occurred (just as there are situations in which there is grave and obvious risk of personal injury or damage to property, but actionable damage has not yet occurred)."
"I can see no necessity for the law to travel the commercially unrealistic road. The amount of a plaintiff's loss frequently becomes clearer after court proceedings have been started and while awaiting trial. This is an everyday experience. There is no reason to think that the approach I have spelled out will give rise to any insuperable difficulties in practice. In their practical conduct of litigation courts are well able to ensure that assessments of damages are made in a sensible way. It is not necessary, in order to achieve a sensible and fair result, to go so far as asserting that the plaintiff has no cause of action, and hence may not issue a writ, until the assessment can be made with the degree of precision that accompanies a realisation of the security. Further, within the bounds of sense and reasonableness the policy of the law should be to advance, rather than retard, the accrual of a cause of action. This is especially so if the law provides parallel causes of action in contract and in tort in respect of the same conduct. The disparity between the time when these parallel causes of action arise should be smaller, rather than greater."
"In my view there was a real risk that prior to the date of the settlement had Ms Berney's solicitor … made an application to the court to extend time for service, she would have been confined either to a sum of £50,000 which she had originally claimed, or to such lesser sum as the evidence based on the medical reports disclosed at that time …"
At [88] he continued,
"Nor do I agree that it is incorrect to characterise Ms Berney's claim as one for "diminution of the value of her chose in action" … [I]t is true that she claimed for having to settle her loss at a figure far below the true value of the claim. It remains for her to prove that the true value was greater. But non constat that the cause of action did not commence at a date before the settlement. A claimant cannot avoid the identification of an earlier date as the date when she suffered actual damage merely by the form of her pleading, whether relying on an actual strike out or a settlement. If in fact the value of her claim was diminished before settlement then her cause of action arose before settlement.
89. This proposition is made good by reference to the passage … of Schiemann LJ in Khan v Falvey:
"The mere fact that the claimant does not plead any damage prior to the strike out does not necessarily mean that he has suffered no damage prior to that time."
The same must be true where damage has been suffered prior to settlement …"
Then at [91] Moses LJ said:
"Prior to the settlement, a real risk had arisen that the claim would have been restricted to a value less than that which the claimant now asserts. It had entered that period to which Chadwick LJ refers in Khan, when it was impossible to say that damage had not occurred as a consequence of previous delay.
92. …[U]p to 25 January 2005 there was no risk that time would not have been extended or that the claim would have been restricted…
93. … After that time, … there was a real risk that Ms Berney's claim would have been restricted. From 25 January onwards she had suffered actual damage, measurable by the risk of a restriction being imposed …"
Proposed Outcome
Lady Justice King:
Mr Justice Keehan:
Note 1 In the end Ms Berney’s claim was dismissed by the High Court. The trial judge found that she had suffered no loss in fact because the sum of £25,000 was not a sum which she could have bettered in the light of the medical reports she held. Permission to appeal to this court was refused on the papers by Gloster LJ and was also refused on a renewed oral application for permission on 9 November 2016 by Longmore LJ: see [2016] EWCA Civ 1190. [Back]