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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 >> Consortium Commercial Developments Ltd v ABB Ltd [2015] EWHC 2128 (TCC) (30 July 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2015/2128.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 2128 (TCC) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
TECHNOLOGYAND CONSTRUCTION COURT
Rolls Building 7 Rolls Building, London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
(sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge)
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CONSORTIUM COMMERCIAL DEVELOPMENTS LIMITED |
Claimant |
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and |
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ABB LIMITED |
Defendant |
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Simon Pritchett Esq. (instructed by DLA Piper UK LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 8 - 10th July 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
Andrew Bartlett QC:
The claim and the issues
i) | Repair | £244,351.88 |
ii) | Redecoration | nil |
iii) | Reinstatement items1 | £11,000.00 |
iv) | Statutory items | £2,300.00 |
v) | Aggregate of above works costs | £257,651.88 |
vi) | Preliminaries at 10% | £25,765.19 |
vii) | Total cost of works | £283,417.07 |
viii) | Fees for contract administration (10%) | £28,341.71 |
ix) | Preparation of schedule | £3,500.00 |
x) | TOTAL | £315,258.77 |
i) | Repairs | £295,665.77 |
ii) | Reinstatement items | £13,310.00 |
iii) | Statutory items | £2,783.00 |
iv) | Preparation of schedule | £3,500.00 |
v) | TOTAL | £315,258.77 |
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This set of figures differs from that in the expert building surveyors' joint statement because on Day 3 of the trial the parties re-allocated to repairs some items which the surveyors had included under reinstatement, and reached a further compromise on the values. The parties' agreement has slightly increased the claim, from £314,225.73.
i) The diminution in the value of the reversion by reason of the lack of repair, and hence whether the head of claimfor repair costs (fl95,665.77)is capped by s18(1) of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1927;
ii) Whether on the facts ofthe case the correct measure of damages for the reinstatement items and statutory items is their remedial costs or their effect on diminution in value, and, if the latter, what damages should be awarded;
iii) Whether or to what extent the claimant can additionally recover rent and rates for the estimated duration of the remedial works;
iv) Whether the credit to the defendant for overpaid rent should include VAT;
v) The appropriate rate for awarding interest.
Evidence
The premises
History and condition
i) because the air-conditioning system was not maintained, it became unusable and needs to be wholly replaced at a cost of £106,480;
ii) the external areas became overgrown to such an extent that their restoration will cost £51,920;
iii) the carpeting needs to be wholly replaced at a cost of £24,290.
Events since the expiry of the term
i) Agreement was not reached and the offer did not mature into an actual transaction.
ii) Synovate were also considering other potential premises at the time, and it is unclear how keen they really were on Capella House, which appears to have been somewhat larger than their requirements.
iii) The proposed division between the office area and the warehouse area (which drove the total rent offered) was presumably dependent upon Synovate's own particular requirements, which may not have matched howthe market in general would have viewed the potential division of uses within the building.
iv) A capital value cannot be derived from the proposed effective rental without making a judgment as to the appropriate yield at the relevant time and inthe relevant circumstances.
Issue (i) valuation
i) In good condition —Mr. Steevens £1,150,000, Mr. Locke £775,000;
ii) In actual condition —Mr. Steevens £600,000, Mr. Locke £700,000.
i) The sale of Linford Pavilion was by an administrative receiver, who would be under a duty to obtain a proper price, but might be under some pressure to get a sale concluded, particularly after a substantial marketing period.
ii) The building is a little older than Capella House.
iii) Unlike Linford Pavilion, Capella House has a suspended ceiling throughout. Both buildings have a degree of flexibility in the proportions of office space And other space. At Linford Pavilion, part of the warehouse area was converted to office use by a tenant. At Capella House the office proportion is (I accept Mr. Locke's view that the VAT is not relevant for (the purpose of considering Linford Pavilion as a comparable.) Capable of being increased, albeit at a lesser standard, by relying on artificial light towards the rear. Of the two, Capella House has the greater flexibility for increasing the amount of office use; this tends to increase the value, because office space is valued more highly psf than storage or other non-office space.
iv) The full air-conditioning at Capella House (combined heating and cooling) is also an advantage over Linford Pavilion.
v) While Linford Pavilion was sold in "reasonable condition", there were some dilapidations needing to be remedied.
i) While neither property had raised floors through the office area, in Linford Pavilion a tenant had installed raised floors in part of the warehouse area used as a computer room.
ii) Linford Pavilion has an additional half acre of land, which may be attractive for expansion.
i) His in-repair value was on the basis of an assumption that the property would be improved by installation of a raised floor at the seller's expense.
ii) I have determined above that his in-repair value is too high.
iii) He stated in oral evidence that a buyer would take a pound-for-pound approach. On this 1 accept Mr. Locke's contrary view as more persuasive. Mr. Steevens stated in his report that any estimate of repair costs made by a buyer would be on the generous side.If this was intended to suggest that the diminution in value would be greater than the repair cost, this would be even more extreme than a pound-for-poundapproach; in my. View it is not justifiable.
iv) He suggested in his report that a buyer would allow about £27 psf for refurbishment works, plus professional fees.The derivation of the figure of £27 psf, from a stated bracket of £25 to £35 psf, was unclear. Allowing for fees would increase the £27 to around £30 psf (which would calculate out at a little under £450,000), butthisallowance does not explain the £550,000 diminution which he put forward in his report. In his oral evidence he said the difference represented the time to do the works, finance costs of the acquisition, a margin to cover contingencies, and a profit for the trouble of doing the work.This does not generate confidence in his views; if he had properly thought through the exercise of assessing the diminution, these further considerations should have been mentioned in his report.
Issue (ii) Reinstatement items and statutoryitems
Issue (iii) claim for lost rent and rates
"It is uncontroversial that a landlord is entitled to recover, in addition to the cost of the remedial works, any consequential losses suffered as result of the breaches (see Dowding & Reynolds on Dilapidations (5th Ed) para 29-21 for a convenient summary of the law on point).The issue is one of causation and quantum".
"It may have been promptly re-let and in any event it could have begun to be marketed. Hence the marketing period, commencing the process of re-letting would have begun then, indeed it could have been marketed earlier. If, counter- factually, CH [Capella House] had been in repair/progressing to a state of repair before the term date, the marketing could have commenced before the term date. The Lease reserves to the landlord rights of entry to place a letting sign and "... for the purpose of disposing of any interest" (Sch. 2, paras 5.5 & 5.6)
Hence, if CH had been in repair, or at least progressing toward a state of repair late term, CR could have been effectively marketed before the term date."
Issue (iv) the credit for overpaid rent
Issue (v) rate of interest
"What takes this case out of the norm is that ABB, a large corporation, negotiated a payment by its sub-tenant (FITC) of £160,000 to release HTC from its terminal dilapidations Liabilities to ABB under the sub-tenancy, yet AEB has not applied this sum to complying with its(ABB's covenants) under its lease from CCD. Rather, AJ3B elected to Leave CH in gross disrepair on the term date."
Conclusions
Diminution of value owing to lack of repair | £225,000.00 |
Reinstatement items | £13,310.00 |
Statutory items | £2,783.00 |
Preparation of schedule | £3,500.00 |
Loss of rent and rates | £nil |
Sub-total | £244,593.00 |
Less credit for overpayment | (£51,682.22) |
Net damages | £192,910.78 |
Note 1 The evidence did not identify the precise period, which was variously slated as five or three years. [Back]