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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 >> Oldcorn & Anor v Southern Water Services Ltd [2017] EWHC 62 (TCC) (23 January 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2017/62.html Cite as: [2017] Env LR 25, [2017] EWHC 62 (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 :
(Sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge)
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Lee Dennis Oldcorn Judith Audrey Oldcorn |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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Southern Water Services Limited |
Defendants |
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Mr Clifford Darton and Mr Paul Powlesland (instructed by Mayo Wynne Baxter Solicitors) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 2, 3, 7, 8, 9 and 30 November 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
His Honour Judge McKenna :
INTRODUCTION
BACKGROUND
THE 2009 FLOOD
THE 2012 FLOOD
EVENTS FOLLOWING THE 2012 FLOOD
" for knocking a hole in the dividing wall bigger than the incoming pipe diameter, so there is no flow restriction and also putting in a new Tideflex valve on the incoming pipe in the corner"
THE ISSUES
i) The relevant legal framework to be applied including the extent, if any, of the Defendants' common law duty to prevent the Property from flooding; whether the Property enjoyed a right of drainage into the Pipe and, if so, the extent of that right and if not, the consequences for the Claimants' claim and whether the Defendants are entitled to take advantage of the so-called common enemy defence.ii) The extent of the flooding at the Property.
iii) Whether the installation of the Tideflex was negligent.
iv) Whether the Property would have avoided flooding "but for" the presence of the Tideflex.
v) Quantum.
OVERVIEW OF THE EVIDENCE
i) Mr Andrew Adams the Defendants' Network Infrastructure Manager Wastewater, who provided a brief description of the Defendants' network, the regulatory code in which the Defendants operate and how the Property came to be placed on the Defendants' DG5 register and how a hydraulic model was provided by a company called Atkins in December 2011 and was, as it were, in the queue for verification by outside contractors, Mott MacDonald when the 2012 flood occurred.ii) Mr John Challoner the Defendants' County Sewerage Engineer (West Sussex) at the time of the 2009 flood. His evidence primarily related to the system of drainage for the Estate, the reliability of the Chamber Flap, the instructions he gave to the Defendants' sub-contractor Clancy Docwra, to install the Tideflex and his reasoning for that installation and how he requested a hydraulic investigation in January 2011 and how he gave instructions for an over-pumping point to be installed.
iii) Mr Martin Jones who became the County Sewerage Engineer in November 2012. His evidence largely addressed the Defendants' maintenance of the Storm Water System, complaints received by the Defendants as to flooding and the current status of the Pipe and the Bunker and the extent of the 2012 flooding.
iv) Mr Trevor Webb worked for Clancy Docwra at the time that the Tideflex was ordered and he gave some explanation as to how the Tideflex came to be installed.
DUTY
"If the defendant knew or ought to have known that in consequence of his conduct, harm to his neighbour was reasonably foreseeable, he is under a duty of care to prevent such consequences as are reasonably foreseeable. In such case the defendant is liable because he is considered negligent in relation to his neighbour, and here nuisance and negligence coincide. Whether his liability is described as falling under one legal rubric or the other would seem to be only a difference of words."
"34. In my view the cause of action in nuisance asserted by Mr Marcic is inconsistent with the statutory scheme. Mr Marcic's claim is expressed in various ways but in practical terms it always comes down to this: Thames Water ought to build more sewers. This is the only way Thames Water can prevent sewer flooding of Mr Marcic's property. This is the only way because it is not suggested that Thames Water failed to operate its existing sewage system properly by not cleaning or maintaining it. Nor can Thames Water control the volume of water entering the sewers under Old Church Lane. Every new house built has an absolute right to connect. Thames Water is obliged to accept these connections: section 106 of the 1991 Act. A sewage undertaker is unable to prevent connections being made to the existing system, and the ingress of water through these connections, even if this risks overloading the existing sewers. But, so Mr Marcic's claim runs, although Thames Water was operating its existing system properly, and although Thames Water had no control over the volume of water entering the system, it was within Thames Water's power to build more sewers, as the company now has done, to cope with the increased volume of water entering the system. Mr Marcic, it is said, has a cause of action at law in respect of Thames Water's failure to construct more sewers before it eventually did in June 2003.
35. The difficulty I have with this line of argument is that it ignores the statutory limitations on the enforcement of sewerage undertakers' drainage obligations. Since sewerage undertakers have no control over the volume of water entering their sewage systems it would be surprising if Parliament intended that whenever sewer flooding occurs, every householder whose property has been affected can sue the appointed sewerage undertaker for an order that the company build more sewers or pay damages. On the contrary, it is abundantly clear that one important purpose of the enforcement scheme in the 1991 Act is that individual householders should not be able to launch proceedings in respect of failure to build sufficient sewers. When flooding occurs the first enforcement step under the statute is that the Director, as the regulator of the industry, will consider whether to make an enforcement order. He will look at the position of an individual householder but in the context of the wider considerations spelled out in the statute. Individual householders may bring proceedings in respect of inadequate drainage only when the undertaker has failed to comply with an enforcement order made by the Secretary of State or the Director. The existence of a parallel common law right, whereby individual householders who suffer sewer flooding may themselves bring court proceedings when no enforcement order has been made, would set at nought the statutory scheme. It would effectively supplant the regulatory role the Director was intended to discharge when questions of sewer flooding arise."
"61. Why should sewers be different? If the Sedleigh-Denfield case [1940] AC 880 lays down a general principle that an owner of land has a duty to take reasonable steps to prevent a nuisance arising from a known source of hazard, even though he did not himself create it, why should that not require him to construct new sewers if the court thinks it would have been reasonable to do so?
62. The difference in my opinion is that the Sedleigh-Denfield, Goldman and Leakey cases were dealing with disputes between neighbouring land owners simply in their capacity as individual land owners. In such cases it is fair and efficient to impose reciprocal duties upon each landowner to take whatever steps are reasonable to prevent his land becoming a source of injury to his neighbour. Even then, the question of what measures should reasonably have been taken may not be uncomplicated. As Lord Wilberforce said in Goldman's case [1967] 1 AC 645, 663, the court must (unusually) have regard to the individual circumstances of the defendant. In Leakey's case [1980] QB 485, 526 Megaw LJ recoiled from the prospect of a detailed examination of the defendant's financial resources and said it should be done on a broad basis."
"140. I consider that there is, in principle, a boundary to be drawn between matters which would fall within the duties under s. 94(1) and are actionable solely under s. 18 and matters which are actionable apart from the existence of any statutory duty. That boundary may be difficult to draw and may depend on such uncertain phrases as matters or decisions relating to "policy" or "capital expenditure" matters or decisions as contrasted with "operational" or "current expenditure" matters or decisions. In Marcic the boundary fell between building new sewers and cleaning and maintaining the existing sewers.
143. There are, in my judgment, two aspects to the reasoning. First, there is the emphasis on absence of fault. Secondly, there is the concept of an inconsistent court process which conflicts with the statutory scheme. If there is fault in the form of negligence and if there is a different cause of action which is not inconsistent and does not conflict then I consider there is nothing to preclude a claim being made on that basis. Policy matters are likely to lead to such inconsistency and conflict whilst operational matters are less likely to do so. It must be a question of fact and degree. Where an allegation is tantamount to requiring major plant renewal that will fall on one side of the line whilst an allegation that a filter should be cleaned will lie on the other side. The mere fact that the effect of the cause of action is to enforce the duty in s. 94(1) does not in itself preclude the cause of action."
"Whilst the principle in Marcic precludes the Claimants from bringing claims which require the court to embark on a process which is inconsistent and conflicts with the statutory process under the WIA, it does not preclude the Claimants from bringing a claim in nuisance involving allegations of negligence where, as a matter of fact and degree, the exercise of adjudicating on that cause of action is not inconsistent and does not involve conflicts with the statutory process under the WIA"
"31. However, to my mind there is an important distinction between the present case and Lingke. For the moment, I set to one side the claims based on the blocking of the pipe and I limit my consideration to the claim based on the refusal to permit connection. In Lingke the alternative cause of action referred to was a free-standing cause of action in nuisance which was in no sense dependent on any provision of the statute. By contrast, in the present case the essence of this limb of the proposed cause of action in nuisance is that DCC should have permitted connection and received sewage from Barratt's land into its sewer. That obligation cannot be derived from DCC's use or occupation of its sewers alone but is dependent on the duty under section 106 to permit connection. There is no free-standing cause of action in nuisance, independent of section 106. Section 106 is the basis for the contention that DCC's refusal is an unlawful interference with Barratt's enjoyment of its land.
32. The present case differs from Marcic and Dobson in the same respect. While it is correct that in Dobson Ramsey J. held that the claimants were seeking to enforce duties arising under 94(1)(b) (at paras. 42-84), the causes of action relied on by the claimants were not dependent on obligations imposed by the 1991 Act. Thus Ramsey J. observed (at para. 81):
"In Marcic's case the claim was not phrased as a claim under s 94(1)(a) anymore than the claimants here seek to rely on s 94(1)(b)"
38. The present question for consideration is whether the right conferred by section 106 can be invoked by Barratt as the basis of a cause of action in nuisance. I have come to the conclusion that it cannot. I have explained earlier in this judgment (at paras. 31 and 32) why I consider that there is no cause of action in nuisance in respect of the failure to permit connection, independent of the duty under section 106. Here, section 106 is the basis for the contention that DCC's refusal is an unlawful interference with Barratt's enjoyment of its land. To my mind, the unchallenged conclusions in relation to the policy of the statute apply with equal force to the proposed cause of action in nuisance in respect of the failure to permit connection. The policy of the statute is clear: section 106 is not intended to confer a right to compensation for breach. If failure to perform a statutory duty does not give rise to a private right to sue for damages for breach it is difficult to see how it can provide the essential basis for a cause of action for damages in nuisance.
39. A further consideration in relation to this limb of Barratt's claim in nuisance is that if Barratt is correct and section 106 may found a claim for damages in nuisance, this cause of action would be available in every case in which an undertaker was in breach of its obligation to permit connection. While not conclusive, this does provide further support for the view that it cannot have been the intention of Parliament that section 106 might be used in this way."
"20 Ms Nicholson's claim includes a claim in negligence at common law. Marcic showed why and where no claim in nuisance could exist at common law in light of the statutory scheme. On the face of it, the reasoning leading to that conclusion would argue powerfully for the same conclusion in relation to a claim in negligence.
21 Apparently recognising this, Counsel for Ms Nicholson, Mr Tim Found, said in his closing submissions that allegations concerning the care with which the sewer was maintained were not allegations on which Ms Nicholson could succeed. Instead he focussed on the clean-up after the escape and what was described as "advice" tendered in the course of that process.
22 Mr Found argued that in the present case Thames Water did a number of things that led to its assuming responsibility as a foundation of a claim in negligence. Nothing in the 1991 Act, said Mr Found, prevents Thames Water assuming responsibility in a particular case and the potential for liability in negligence in consequence.
23 He emphasised what Lord Hoffmann had emphasised in Gorringe v Calderdale Metropolitan Borough Council [2004] UKHL 15; [2004] 1 WLR 1057 at [38], namely that there are "cases in which public authorities have actually done acts or entered into relationships or undertaken responsibilities which give rise to a common law duty of care" and in such cases "the fact that the public authority acted pursuant to a statutory power or public duty does not necessarily negate the existence of a duty." The room for a claim in negligence against a sewerage undertaker "where, as a matter of fact and degree, the exercise of adjudicating on the cause of action is not inconsistent and does not involve conflicts with the statutory process under the 1991 Act" was specifically identified by Ramsey J (in a finding not challenged on the later appeal from the decision) in Dobson and others v Thames Water Utilities Limited (Water Services Regulation Authority (Ofwat) intervening [2007] EWHC 2021 (TCC); [2008] 2 All ER 362 at [262]
24 Mr Found pointed first to the following: (a) a Thames Water guideline leaflet entitled "Household Customer Wastewater Flooding Guidelines", (b) the fact that Thames Water attended the scene after the escape, (c) the preparedness of Thames Water to pay for external cleaning, (d) the provision by Thames Water of a telephone number, for use where there was an escape, staffed by Thames Water and (e) the engagement by Thames Water of another contractor (MTS) to attend and assist and the use of "dual branding" (ie MTS and Thames Water branding) by MTS in carrying out the engagement.
25 These matters in my judgment do not begin to make out an assumption of responsibility capable of grounding a claim in negligence. They are consistent with the statutory scheme under the 1991 Act and the service described by Lord Nicholls. I add that in her own case in opening it was stated that Ms Nicholson did not accept she was given a copy of or referred to the guideline leaflet and I find that she was not."
"Mr Lewison forcefully submitted that in the present case the plaintiffs have retained in their possession and control something ancillary to the demised premises, that is the landlords' part of the green drain, the maintenance of which in proper repair is necessary for the proper protection of the demised premises and the safe enjoyment of them by the defendant. Accordingly, he submitted, the plaintiffs are under a duty to take reasonable care that the landlords' part of the green drain is not in such a condition as to cause damage to the demised premises. It matters not, in his submission, whether the duty is properly to be considered as arising at common law, having regard to the principles governing the torts of nuisance or negligence, or in contract, having regard to the duty of the landlords not to derogate from their grant or to interfere with the tenant's quiet enjoyment of his premises (as to which see clause 5 of the lease). Whichever be the right way of looking at the matter, in his submission the duty exists, as a legal consequence of the relationship between the plaintiffs and the defendant, quite irrespective of clause 2(IV) of the lease. True it is that a servient owner is normally under no liability to repair the subject-matter of the easement. However, Mr Lewison contended, the position is different where a landlord and tenant relationship subsists. He referred by way of analogy to the decision of this court in Hilton v James Smith & Sons (Norwood) Ltd (1979) 251 E. G. 1063 as illustrating that landlords may be under a positive duty to their tenants to prevent obstruction of a right of way.
Mr Lewison's argument was very well presented and we found it an attractive one. Nevertheless, we are not persuaded by it. To explain our reasons, we begin by emphasising that this is not a case such as Hargroves, Arinson & Co v Hartopp [1905] 1KB 472 or Cockburn v Smith [1924] 2KB 119 (and a number of others in the same line of authority) where there has been an escape of some dangerous, noxious or unwelcome substance from the landlords' premises to the demised premises. The situation in the present case is quite different. Here the essence of the defendant's complaint is that because of the lack of repair of the green drain, he has been prevented from discharging noxious water from his own premises on to the landlords' premises through the green drain. It is the water from the tenant's own premises which has caused the demised premises damage.
However, in the absence of a specific right enjoyed by his neighbour, there is no general duty on a landowner to receive noxious water flowing from his neighbour's land. In the present case, it is the tenant's easement of drainage which alone entitles him to discharge noxious water into the plaintiffs' land through the landlords' part of the green drain.
In these circumstances, the obstacles in the way of the tenant in seeking to establish liability on the part of the landlords to repair the landlords' part of the green drain, on the basis of cases such as Hargroves, Arinson & Co v Hartopp [1905] 1KB 472, are in our judgment insuperable. To establish such a liability, he has to establish the requisite duty on the part of the landlords to repair the drain. In the absence of any express or implied covenant in the lease, however, this he cannot do. The general law of easements applies and, as we have already pointed out, clearly imposes no such obligation on the landlord."
"32. So far as can be discerned from the books the rule was first recognised in the Court of Session in 1741 in Farquharson v Farquharson. The report it is only a note states:
"It was found lawful for one to build a fence upon his own ground, by the side of a river, to prevent damage to his ground by the overflow of the river, though thereby a damage should happen to his neighbour by throwing the whole overflow in time of flood upon his ground. But it was found not lawful to use any operation in the alveus."
I shall come back to the alveus. It means an established watercourse (even if dry for part of the year or from time to time) as opposed to a flood plain, which is an area of land liable to flooding not contained in a specific watercourse or alveus. In the course of argument Lord Thomas made it clear, notwithstanding assertions in his skeleton argument to the contrary, that he accepted that Grove Fields was a flood plain, and so was not (nor did it comprise) an alveus.
33. The common enemy rule has consistently been accepted in the English cases. I will not cite all the learning. The first case in the books is R v The Commissioners of Sewers for the Levels of Pagham. There, the common enemy was not a river's overflow, but the inroads of the sea. The Commissioners erected groynes and other works to defend the stretch of coast for which they were responsible against the sea's encroachment. But the consequence was that the sea flowed with greater force upon adjoining land, whose owner brought proceedings. Lord Tenterden CJ said at 361:
"I am of opinion that the only safe rule to lay down is this, thateach land-owner for himself, or the commissioners acting for several land-owners, may erect such defences for the land under their care as the necessity of the case requires, leaving it to others, in like manner, to protect themselves against the common enemy."
"A rule which required the court to measure, in a case like the present, the level of importance subjectively attached by the decision-maker to the goal of flood prevention in comparison with other possible benefits would be obviously unworkable and therefore disreputable. It is enough that flood prevention be a perceived and actual benefit. I do not find it necessary to discuss the possible but eccentric case where flood prevention was neither perceived nor intended as a consequence of the proposed works, but in fact eventuated from their execution."
"The case was determined by reference to the law of easements ("The general law of easements applies and clearly imposes no such obligation" to repair: at page 703A). Ms Jessica Brooke for the Coopes contends that, if there was no duty of care even when there was an easement, the Wards, who lack any easement, can obtain no greater right than the beneficiary of an easement would have enjoyed. Goldman was not cited in this case, nor was this case cited in the cases to which I am about to refer."
"36. Munby J, with whom Chadwick LJ agreed, was at pains to observe that Abbahall's claim would at one time have been thought unmaintainable because of the observations of Sir Wilfred Greene MR in Bond v Nottingham Corp and Lord Denning MR in Phipps v Pears [1965] 1 QB 76 but held that matters had been "transformed" by the developments in the law of nuisance and negligence heralded in Goldman and developed in Leakey , Holbeck Hall and Bybrook Barn Centre Ltd v Kent County Council [2001] LGR 239 and Rees v Skerrett [2001] 1 WLR 1541 . The two cases first mentioned remained good authority on the law of easements but, as he put it, "they tell us nothing about the proper content of the modern law of nuisance and negligence".
37. In those circumstances I decline to regard the Duke of Westminster case as precluding the existence of any duty of care relating to lack of support. The argument that, since there can be no duty if there was no easement of support, there can be no duty if any easement has been extinguished, does not, therefore, arise. (If valid it would appear to mean that, no measured duty of care could arise in circumstances where an easement of support might have arisen but had not). Whether or not such a duty of care exists is to be determined by the law of negligence, not the law of property, and it is plain that such a duty can exist where no question of easement arises e.g. Goldman. The fact that tortious principles lead to a liability when principles of property law would not does not render the law incoherent, as was suggested.
38. The circumstances of the Duke of Westminster case [1985] QB 688 were also markedly different. There was a contractual relationship between the parties the effect of which might be said to limit the existence of a duty of care or what could reasonably be required of the lessor. Secondly the tenant had the right to drain on to the landlord's premises and the blockage in the drain was on those premises. Ms Stevens-Hoare submitted that the only thing that created any hazard was the exercise by the tenant of the easement whereby effluent drained into the Duke's land. It could not, therefore, be said that there was any hazard on that land, which might give rise to duty of care. Ms Brooke submits that the hazard was the drain through which water could not flow. It may be that the case is distinguishable on either of these grounds (on which I express no view); but, whether it is or not, the case cannot, in the light of the development of the law of nuisance and negligence in the authorities to which I have referred, stand in the way of the existence of a measured duty of care if the circumstances contemplated by those cases are applicable."
"So here. The defendant's duty is to do that which it is reasonable for him to do. The criteria of reasonableness include, in respect of a duty of this nature, the factor of what the particular man - not the average man - can be expected to do, having regard, amongst other things, where a serious expenditure of money is required to eliminate or reduce the danger, to his means. Just as, where physical effort is required to avert an immediate danger, the defendant's age and physical condition may be relevant in deciding what is reasonable, so also logic and good sense require that, where the expenditure of money is required, the defendant's capacity to find the money is relevant. But this can only be in the way of a broad, and not a detailed, assessment; and, in arriving at a judgment on reasonableness, a similar broad assessment may be relevant in some cases as to the neighbour's capacity to protect himself from damage, whether by way of some form of barrier on his own land or by way of providing funds for expenditure on agreed works on the land of the defendant."
"Society has changed over the last century and the common law, as always, has adapted to those changes. There is now liability on landowners for non-feasance in respect of natural nuisances. Nevertheless the common law rules imposing such liability still bear the imprint of an earlier age. The landowner's liability is described as a "measured duty" and it is subject to qualifications not usually found in the law of tort."
"Where then does the law now stand in relation to the liability of land owners for non-feasance in respect of natural nuisance? I would not presume to paraphrase the vast body of learning which has accumulated on this topic. Nevertheless I extract from the authorities discussed above the following principles which are relevant to the determination of this appeal:
(i) A landowner owes a measured duty in both negligence and nuisance to take reasonable steps to prevent natural occurrences on his land from causing damage to neighbouring properties.
(ii) In determining the content of the measured duty, the court must consider what is fair, just and reasonable as between the two neighbouring landowners. It must have regard to all the circumstances, including the extent of the foreseeable risk, the available preventive measures, the costs of such measures and the resources of both parties.
(iii) Where the defendant is a public authority with substantial resources, the court must take into account the competing demands on those resources and the public purposes for which they are held. It may not be fair, just or reasonable to require a public authority to expend those resources on infrastructure works in order to protect a few individuals against a modest risk of property damage."
THE EXTENT OF THE FLOODING OF THE PROPERTY
"The flood water entered the interior of the Property at approximately 01:00 hours on the 11 June. The flood water continued to rise and the claimants had to be rescued by boat by the fire service. The Property was flooded to an approximate depth of 620mm".
"The entire ground floor was flooded to a depth of about a metre. The floors, skirting and plaster had to be stripped out again. The Property had to be cleaned and dried before reinstatement works could commence."
"Storm exceptional rain fall resulted in the drainage system being unable to cope and backing up and flood water surrounding the entire property which was submerged internally to a depth of approximately 1m."
"The flood waters were at their deepest during the evening of Monday 11 June 2012. I was on site early that evening and recorded the extent of the flooding in my photographs, some of which have been included in Appendix D. Appendix K contains a copy of our drawing 12169/01 which shows the appropriate area of Felpham and the extent of the flood based on my observations. The approximate area covered by the flood waters has been hatched in green occupying an approximate area of 80 metres by 330 metres i.e. some 26,400m² or 2.64 hectares. In addition to the area shown on this plan the flooding extended northwards to other areas including the A259. I have not included those in my calculations. I have estimated that the flood waters reached a level of 3.600m AOD which was some 450mm above the level of the flood waters on 9 February 2009. This appears to have been the worst flooding that has ever been reported in this area."
It is to be noted that the figure quoted there is the equivalent of 620mm in the Property.
"The flood waters continued to increase in depth during that day reaching their peak during the evening. The food waters at a level of around 3.600m AOD reached a depth of around 750mm in the interior of 2 Minton Road and around 620mm in the interior of 1 Davenport Road."
To my mind, although it is fair to say, as the Defendants submit, that at one point in his report Mr Cowan said that, when he was leaving, the flood waters were still rising, it is plain from a fair reading of his report both in his opinion and his conclusion sections, a flood level of 3.600 AOD represents his firm opinion. That opinion is of course supported by the photographs and, of course, both experts agreed that the appropriate level that should be replicated in their respective models was 620mm. In other words, the experts, having considered all the evidence, came to the view that the flooding level was about 3.6m AOD i.e. 620mm internally.
"I have looked again at the photograph in Mr Diamond's evidence of the large item of furniture near the front door. I note that in this photograph the door handle of the front door is visible and it can be seen that this is above the level of the top of the item of furniture. I have measured the height of the door handle on my own front door and at other houses and these range between 1.03m and 1.07m. On this basis the height of the item of furniture can be no more than 1m high.
The tide mark on the door of the furniture can be seen as there is a white appearance below that. I scaled the photograph as best I can and my assessment is that the "tide" mark is 60% of the way up the item of furniture. This would make the maximum internal flood depth of no more than 600mm".
WAS THE INSTALLATION OF THE TIDEFLEX NEGLIGENT MAINTENANCE?
THE INSTALLATION OF THE TIDEFLEX
" There are two circumstances under which flooding can occur: one is at high tide when there is heavy rainfall, and one is at low tide when there is heavy rainfall. Those two risks have to be balanced. The balancing of the risk in my view is to- because the risk is, how shall we say-during periods of high tide, because the risk of storm water causing flooding is greater if the system is inundated by seawater, in my view the protection of the system against the inundation of sea water is important. "
"Historically, it was clearly the case. But there are two such scenarios. There is the scenario where you have got low tide and heavy rainfall, and I accept that the valve will slightly increase the risk under those circumstances."
CAUSATION
"10:30pm 10 June 2012 flood waters reach an AOD of 2.821 and enter the Claimants' garage.
00.00 11 June 2012 flood waters reach AOD of 2.979 and enter the Property.
6.19pm 11 June 2012 Mr Cowan records a height of 3.6 AOD
12.00 12 June 2012 Mr Cowan's photographs indicate a height above 3.1 AOD"
QUANTUM
DISPOSAL