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England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions >> Aldgate Construction Company Ltd v Unibar Plumbing & Heating Ltd [2010] EWHC 1063 (TCC) (14 May 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2010/1063.html Cite as: 130 Con LR 190, [2010] EWHC 1063 (TCC) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
ALDGATE CONSTRUCTION COMPANY LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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UNIBAR PLUMBING & HEATING LIMITED |
Defendant |
____________________
Michael Taylor (instructed by Keoghs) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 26-28 April 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Akenhead:
Introduction
The Facts and the History
(a) Blunham: this was a single plot on which the company started work first in 1996 as the work was being done part-time. The gross profit was 27%.
(b) Offord: Aldgate purchased this two house development site in 1997. the gross profit margin was 29%.
(c) Keyston: this was a two plot site purchased by Aldgate in about 1998 but was not developed until 2000 and the two properties were sold in 2001. The gross profit was 41%.
(d) Melbourn: this was a three house development in which Aldgate were merely the contractors for a company called Amber Homes; the work was done in 1998. The gross profit margin was 23%.
(e) Steeple Morden: again retained as contractors in 1999 by Amber Homes, Aldgate constructed some of the work on a six house development. Gross profit was 17%.
(f) Potton: Aldgate purchased this dual property site in about 2001. Gross profit margin was 47%.
(g) Bees House: Aldgate was employed as a contractor in 2002 to build a interesting and challenging house construction on some 14 acres of land. The gross profit was 30%.
(h) The Baulk: in 2003, Aldgate did substantial renovation and expansion work on a property owned by Mrs Shipp's parents. The gross profit was 33%.
(i) Mr Lakofski: in 2004, Aldgate was persuaded to do an interesting refurbishment and extension job for a neighbour next to Bees House. Gross profit was 45%.
(j) 33-35 Cambridge Road, Dunton: Aldgate purchased this dual property site in 2003 and, although some work was done on it, that was interrupted by the work for Mr Lakofski and at The Baulk. No 33 had been completed by January 2005 when it was sold by Aldgate for £475,000.
(h) 2, Ermine Street, Great Stukeley: this was a site owned by a Mr Bussetil, a property developer, and on which planning permission for three houses had been given. Aldgate purchased one of the plots (Plot 3) in February 2005 intending if possible later to purchase a second plot. However, unknown to Mr Shipp, Mr Bussetil had decided in about October 2004 to construct a house on Plot 2 for himself and had applied for planning permission in February 2005 (obtaining it in late March, 2005). In late March or April 2005, a Mr and Mrs Stockley had put in and had accepted an offer subject to contract for Plot 1, contracts being exchanged on 8 June 2005 with completion on 24 June 2005.
The Issues
The Law
(a) One first needs to ascertain whether the type or head of loss claimed is recoverable as a matter of law in the context of the facts of the given case. On this topic, one will have regard for instance in contract cases to the principles set out in Hadley v Baxendale (1854) 9 Ex 341 and to the opinion of Lord Hoffman in South Australia Asset Management Corporation v York Montague Ltd and others [1997] AC 191. A type or head of loss which is not recoverable is said to be too remote.
(b) Next, one needs to determine as a matter of fact whether and to what extent loss within the recoverable types or heads of loss has actually been or will be incurred. That is "causation" and is a question of fact. There are variants on this such as the loss of chance or opportunity cases but even in those circumstances a claimant still has to establish as a matter of fact that it lost the chance or opportunity by reason of the breach of duty (contractual, statutory or tortious). The so-called "but for" test may be called into play. Remoteness of damage comes into consideration under this head but simply as a question of fact. Judges and lawyers sometimes also say that a particular loss actually suffered which was historically or otherwise so far removed from the breach of duty is too remote; that is another way of saying that causation of parts of the loss has simply not been proved on a balance of probabilities.
(c) Finally, one comes to consider whether concurrent or later events (post breach) have caused some of the losses in such a way as to prevent the claimant recovering them or reduce the amount of recoverable loss. Into this category may come the new intervening act or force (novus actus interveniens) or in certain cases contributory negligence.
"14. A duty of care such as the valuer owes does not however exist in the abstract. A plaintiff who sues for breach of a duty imposed by the law (whether in contract or tort or under statute) must do more than prove that the defendant has failed to comply. He must show that the duty was owed to him and that it was a duty in respect of the kind of loss which he has suffered. Both of these requirements are illustrated by Caparo Industries Plc. v. Dickman http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKHL/1990/2.html[1990] 2 AC 605. The auditors' failure to use reasonable care in auditing the company's statutory accounts was a breach of their duty of care. But they were not liable to an outside take-over bidder because the duty was not owed to him. Nor were they liable to shareholders who had bought more shares in reliance on the accounts because, although they were owed a duty of care, it was in their capacity as members of the company and not in the capacity (which they shared with everyone else) of potential buyers of its shares. Accordingly, the duty which they were owed was not in respect of loss which they might suffer by buying its shares. As Lord Bridge of Harwich said, at p. 627:
"It is never sufficient to ask simply whether A owes B a duty of care. It is always necessary to determine the scope of the duty by reference to the kind of damage from which A must take care to save B harmless."
In the present case, there is no dispute that the duty was owed to the lenders. The real question in this case is the kind of loss in respect of which the duty was owed.
18. Rules which make the wrongdoer liable for all the consequences of his wrongful conduct are exceptional and need to be justified by some special policy. Normally the law limits liability to those consequences which are attributable to that which made the act wrongful. In the case of liability in negligence for providing inaccurate information, this would mean liability for the consequences of the information being inaccurate.
19. I can illustrate the difference between the ordinary principle and that adopted by the Court of Appeal by an example. A mountaineer about to undertake a difficult climb is concerned about the fitness of his knee. He goes to a doctor who negligently makes a superficial examination and pronounces the knee fit. The climber goes on the expedition, which he would not have undertaken if the doctor had told him the true state of his knee. He suffers an injury which is an entirely foreseeable consequence of mountaineering but has nothing to do with his knee.
22. Your Lordships might, I would suggest, think that there was something wrong with a principle which, in the example which I have given, produced the result that the doctor was liable. What is the reason for this feeling? I think that the Court of Appeal's principle offends common sense because it makes the doctor responsible for consequences which, though in general terms foreseeable, do not appear to have a sufficient causal connection with the subject matter of the duty. The doctor was asked for information on only one of the considerations which might affect the safety of the mountaineer on the expedition. There seems no reason of policy which requires that the negligence of the doctor should require the transfer to him of all the foreseeable risks of the expedition.
23. I think that one can to some extent generalise the principle upon which this response depends. It is that a person under a duty to take reasonable care to provide information on which someone else will decide upon a course of action is, if negligent, not generally regarded as responsible for all the consequences of that course of action. He is responsible only for the consequences of the information being wrong. A duty of care which imposes upon the informant responsibility for losses which would have occurred even if the information which he gave had been correct is not in my view fair and reasonable as between the parties. It is therefore inappropriate either as an implied term of a contract or as a tortious duty arising from the relationship between them."
This was a different case on its facts and involved the careless provision of information and advice, as opposed to something akin to the careless causing of a fire. The case goes primarily to the scope of a given duty. It does underline however a genuine concern about an award of damages "which make the wrongdoer liable for all the consequences of his wrongful conduct". The further away in time the loss is from the breach of duty, the greater becomes the difficulty for a claimant to establish as a matter of fact that the loss is caused by the breach.
"...the question whether damage is sufficiently direct consequence of negligence to be recoverable, or is too remote, is rather a question of first impression. I am clear that if a negligent driver on the road injures himself in a collision with another vehicle, whose driver and a stranger thereupon take the injured man to hospital and meet with an accident in so doing, neither of them can recover damages for the accident from the negligent driver as consequences of his original negligence."
Put another way, it is a question of fact and probability whether the later loss is caused by the original negligence. One has to be cautious about deciding cases on first impressions. Other cases such as Galoo v Bright Grahame Murray [1993] EWCA Civ 3 talk about causation being a matter of common sense; of course, that will generally be the case but, as ever, the claimant seeking to prove that any otherwise recoverable loss has actually been incurred must prove as a matter of fact on a balance of probabilities that the loss was caused by, or sufficiently causatively linked to, the relevant breach of duty relied upon. Judges will use their common sense and general experience in determining whether causation has been proved.
"35. The first question is whether the Court of Appeal was wrong to limit the period for which damages were recoverable by reference to what was within the reasonable contemplation of the Bank at the time of the breach. Potter LJ said in para 31 that, whatever the judge's view was of the percentage chance that Samson would in fact in the following years have been Economy Bag's supplier of dog chews, the Bank's reasonable contemplation at the date of the breach introduced a cut-off point beyond which the Bank was not liable. He said that this was the effect of the rule as to remoteness in Hadley v Baxendale 9 Exch 341.
36. In my opinion there are two errors in this approach to the assessment of damages. This first may appear to be the somewhat technical point, that it is the date of the making of the contract, not the date of the breach, that was identified as the relevant date in Hadley v Baxendale. I say that it may appear to be somewhat technical because in this case the date of the making of the contract and the date of the breach were only about two months apart. There is no evidence that the facts that were relevant to what the Bank had in reasonable contemplation changed to any significant extent between 22 January 1993 when the letter of credit was issued and 15 March 1993 when the Bank sent Pet Products' invoice to Economy Bag. But the error was an error of principle. The choice of dates is more important than the differences, if any, in those facts. The parties have the opportunity to limit their liability in damages when they are making their contract. They have the opportunity at that stage to draw attention to any special circumstances outside the ordinary course of things which they ought to have in contemplation when entering into the contract. If no cut-off point is provided by the contract, there is no arbitrary limit that can be set to the amount of the damages once the test of remoteness according to one or other of the rules in Hadley v Baxendale has been satisfied.
37. The second error flows from the first. The Bank did not include any provision in the letter of credit limiting its liability for the loss of repeat business to any particular period. So the only limit on the period of its liability is that which the trial judge identified. This is when, on the facts, the question whether any loss has been sustained has become too speculative to permit the making of any award. He held that as time passed it was increasing likely that Economy Bag would have acquired the motive and the means to squeeze Samson's profit margins and would ultimately have ended their business relationship. Miss Andrews did not challenge this approach, although she contended that the judge should have extended his award over a longer period. It seems to me that it is amply supported by the facts of the case. Samson were in a precarious position. Mr Taylor knew who the suppliers were and he had met Mr Veerachai. He knew where he could be contacted. It was only a matter of time before the harsh reality of doing business persuaded him that he should take a closer interest in what his arrangements with Samson were costing him and ask himself whether those costs could be cut down and perhaps eliminated."
(a) One must first determine whether the type or kind of loss claimed falls within either category or limb of Hadley v Baxendale.
(b) If and to the extent that it does, one must then determine simply as a matter of fact on the balance of probabilities what loss of that type or kind has actually been caused by the breach of contract, in this case the fire.
(c) If all or any part of that established loss is caused by another event, which may or may not be the fault of the claimant, but which was not reasonably foreseeable by the defendant as at the date of the contract with the claimant, the loss may not be recoverable.
"In these circumstances, where the Plaintiffs' loss depends upon the actions of an independent third party, it is necessary to consider as a matter of law what it is necessary to establish as a matter of causation, and where causation ends and quantification of damage begins.
1. What has to be proved to establish a causal link between the negligence of the Defendants and the loss sustained by the Plaintiffs depends in the first instance on whether the negligence consists on some positive act or misfeasance, or an omission or non feasance. In the former case, the question of causation is one of historical fact. The Court has to determine on the balance of probability whether the defendant's act, for example the careless driving, caused the plaintiff's loss consisting of his broken leg. Once established on balance of probability, that fact is taken as true and the plaintiff recovers his damage in full. There is no discount because the judge considers that the balance is only just tipped in favour of the plaintiff; and the plaintiff gets nothing if he fails to establish that it is more likely than not that the accident resulted in the injury.
Questions of quantification of the plaintiff's loss, however, may depend upon future uncertain events. For example, whether and to what extent he will suffer osteoarthritis, whether he will continue to earn at the same rate until retirement, whether, but for the accident, he might have been promoted. It is trite law that these questions are not decided on a balance of probability, but rather on the court's assessment, often expressed in percentage terms, of the risk eventuating or the prospect of promotion, which it should be noted depends in part at least on the hypothetical acts of a third party, namely the plaintiff's employer.
2. If the defendant's negligence consists of an omission, for example to provide proper equipment, given proper instructions or advice, causation depends, not upon a question of historical fact, but on the answer to the hypothetical question, what would the plaintiff have done if the equipment had been provided or the instruction or advice given. This can only be a matter of inference to be determined from all the circumstances. The plaintiff's own evidence that he would have acted to obtain the benefit or avoid the risk, while important, may not be believed by the judge, especially if there is compelling evidence that he would not. In the ordinary way, where the action required of the plaintiff is clearly for his benefit, the court has little difficulty in concluding that he would have taken it. But in many cases the risk is not obvious and the precaution may be tedious or uncomfortable, for example the need to use eardefenders in noisy surroundings or breathing apparatus in dusty ones. It is unfortunately not unknown for workmen persistently not to wear them even if they are available and known to be so…
Although the question is a hypothetical one, it is well established that the plaintiff must prove on balance of probability that he would have taken action to obtain the benefit or avoid the risk. But again, if he does establish that, there is no discount because the balance is only just tipped in his favour…
3. In many cases the plaintiff's loss depends on the hypothetical action of a third party, either in addition to action by the plaintiff, as in this case, or independently of it. In such a case does the plaintiff have to prove on balance of probability, as Mr Jackson submits, that the third party would have acted so as to confer the benefit or avoid the risk to the plaintiff, or can the plaintiff succeed provided he shows that he had a substantial chance rather than a speculative one, the evaluation of the substantial chance being a question of quantification of damages?
Although there is not a great deal of authority, and none in the Court of Appeal, relating to solicitors failing to give advice which is directly in point, I have no doubt that Mr Jackson's submission is wrong and the second alternative is correct…"
The learned judge then went on to consider the loss of opportunity cases in this category such as Chaplin v Hicks [1911] 2 KB 786 and later Davies v Taylor [1995] AC 207 and said at page 1614 C:
"In that case the Court was not concerned to distinguish between causation and quantification of loss. But, in my judgment, the plaintiff must prove as a matter of causation that he has a real or substantial chance as opposed to a speculative one. If he succeeds in doing so, the evaluation of the chance is part of the assessment of the quantum of damage, the range lying somewhere between something that just qualifies as real or substantial on the one hand and near certainty on the other. I do not think that it is helpful to seek to lay down in percentage terms what the lower and upper ends of the bracket should be."
This is all self-explanatory.
Discussion
(a) whether Aldgate would have been able to and would have proceeded on the dual property development at 2, Ermine Street,
(b) if so, for how long and between what approximate dates up until sale of the properties that development would have proceeded,
(c) if not, for how long and between what approximate dates up until sale, for Plot 3, Ermine Street and another separate property, those developments would have proceeded,
(d) depending on the answers to (b) or (c), whether, and if so, when and between what approximate dates up until sale another dual property or separate properties development would have been undertaken.
(e) depending on the answer to (d) whether, and if so, when and between what approximate dates up until sale a further dual property or separate properties development would have been undertaken.
(a) A period of about 3 months from purchase to commencement of work is a realistic period taking into account the need to review, and as necessary obtain, any requisite planning permissions. There was a variety of properties on the market ranging from those which had no planning permission, to those which had outline or detailed planning permission. Even if outline permission had been obtained by the vendor, details would still remain to be agreed with and approved by the planning authority. Aldgate's own evidence suggests a period of two months.
(b) A period of 12 months for construction is also a realistic period which allows for the many contingencies which arise on building developments, such as problems with ground conditions (such as were experienced on the Ramsey Heights development) as well as the need to divert resources from time to time elsewhere. There was no suggestion that there were any particular problems which Aldgate faced in the construction of Plot 3, Ermine Street, apart from the suspension of work for three months whilst No. 35 was rebuilt; still a construction period of 14 months was needed on that, only part of which can have related to the need to mothball and then later recommence work before and after the suspension.
(c) The sale period after construction is completed would be anything between several weeks and six months. It is likely that this could be shortened if Aldgate wanted to shorten it by, for instance, by reducing the purchase price and securing a "lockout" agreement with a purchaser. A four-month period is realistic and allows for the potentially slower sale outside what the evidence suggested was the best selling period of Spring and early Summer.
(d) This produces a period of about 19 months. This period also allows for the fact that, as on Nos. 33 and 35, Cambridge Road, the two parts of the dual development will often be completed and sold at different times with the result that the process of moving onto the next dual development is somewhat delayed pending the disposal of the later of the two parts. It is of course possible that the different parts of the process of buying, developing and selling would be more or less than the times which I have allotted but the 19 month period represents the realistic probability of how long the process would have lasted.
(a) whether two plots were developed at Ermine Street or simply one plot at Ermine Street and one plot elsewhere, both developments would have taken 19 months starting in about July 2005 through to sale in about February 2007.
(b) Allowing about two months after the sale of the first two plots (the period allowed for in Aldgate's expert calculations), a further dual development site would in all probability had been acquired in about April 2007 with sales completed by about November 2008.
(c) Thus, because in fact Aldgate did develop one plot at Ermine Street (Plot 3), Aldgate has lost the ability to effect three developments, one broadly parallel in time with Plot 3 Ermine Street, and a dual development which would have been carried out after either a dual development at Ermine Street or separate developments at Ermine Street and elsewhere.
Value of uplift on two properties @ £15,300: | £30,600 |
Less extra cost (over and above £174,000 figure) needed to acquire Plot 1 (£192,500-£174,000): | £18,500 |
Total | £12,100 |
Allow 50% for lost opportunity | £6,050 |
Loss of profit on one property development in July 2005/February 2007 | £153,008 |
Loss of opportunity to effect a dual development over that period | £6,050 |
Loss of profit on one dual development April 2007/November 2008: 2 x £168,308 | £336,616 |
Sub-total | £495,674 |
Less receipts on Ramsey Heights | 94,421 |
Total damages | £401,253 |
The Decision