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Scottish Sheriff Court Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Sheriff Court Decisions >> Kelvin Homes Ltd v. Ritchie Brothers (Public Works Contractors Ltd) [2006] ScotSC 85 (21 August 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotSC/2006/85.html Cite as: [2006] ScotSC 85 |
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SHERIFFDOM OF LOTHIAN &
BORDERS AT LINLITHGOW
KELVIN
HOMES LIMITED Against
RITCHIE BROTHERS
(PUBLIC WORKS CONTRACTORS) LTD
Represented
by Mr Paul O'Brien,
Represented by Mr Kenneth Hogg,
Advocate Solicitor
PURSUERS
DEFENDERS
Linlithgow,
The
Sheriff, having resumed consideration of the cause, FINDS IN FACT as follows:
1. The pursuers are building
contractors working from premises in
2. The parties worked together
as principal contractor/ groundworks contractor
respectively on a number of contracts prior to 1999. Early that year the
pursuers, having been appointed as principal contractors in a building project
at Old Monklands, Coatbridge, approached the
defenders to work with them as subcontractors. The project concerned the
building of 80 dwelling houses for Clyde Valley Housing Association.
3. The houses were to be of timber
frame construction on a brick base and the defenders were inter alia to build
the foundations, brick walls up to ground floor level and the ground floors
themselves. The timber frames, outer skin of brickwork and all other parts of
the houses would then be built onto this base by the pursuers. The defenders
submitted a quotation in the form of a Bill of Quantities. Negotiations
proceeded and further information was provided by both parties. On
4. The parties wished to work
together and work commenced on site on 11th May. At that stage it
was arranged that in the interests of progress the defenders would start work
on the basis that overall terms between the parties would shortly be agreed.
Negotiations continued, and by that stage it was known exactly what the
defenders had to do, but there was a substantial difference between the parties
on price. A meeting was therefore arranged for
Of those present some were
not present during the whole meeting. No written minutes of the meeting were
taken.
5. Both parties were keen to
reach a deal on price and they discussed ways in which they could work together
to cut costs. One large cost element was the expense of removing spoil from
site. It was particularly acute as this was a brownfield
site with heaps of spoil from houses which had been demolished. Two solutions
were suggested. Firstly, the 150mm layers of hardcore referred to in the
engineer's drawing could be limited to one layer and beneath that layer spoil
either from the demolished buildings or dug from the site itself could be
substituted. This was not in clear contravention of the terms of the drawing as
the depth of the solum on which the hardcore was to
be placed and the number of layers was not specified. The solum
could therefore be raised with spoil. The pursuers stated that the spoil would
be suitable for this purpose. Secondly,
the level of the floors themselves could be raised to accommodate spoil. In
these ways, it was the pursuers' position that the defenders by employing both
these solutions would not have to remove any spoil from site, and the defenders
agreed on that basis that they would delete the charge for that exercise from
their quotation. It was not entirely
predictable if all the spoil could be disposed of in this way, as the extent to
which the houses could be raised depended on the topography of the ground, and
there was an element of risk to the defenders that they would have to pay to
remove some spoil. The final agreement on the price of £830,000, however, reached during the meeting, was
reached on the basis that the defenders would be permitted to dispose of spoil
in the two ways described and were unlikely to have to remove spoil from site.
6. After the meeting, the work
continued. The verbal agreement reached on 18th May as to disposal
of the spoil was not reduced to writing. By Purchase Order Form dated
7. The lack of writing on the
issue of disposal of spoil was reflected also in the lack of an altered
engineer's drawing or written instruction to incorporate the arrangements. The
on-site representative of the engineers, an engineering technician named
Crawford Anderson, was aware that spoil was to be put under the floors. He did
not have sufficient qualifications to agree to the changes himself, and did not
pass details to his employers. He nevertheless acquiesced in the change in the
specification.
8. At some time during the early
progress of the sitework, after
9. This further change to the
specification made it all the more important that the material on which the
floors were resting was suitable and well compacted, as that material was now
performing a structural function.
10. The houses were built and
occupied. In 2001 Clyde Valley Housing
informed the pursuers that in a number of the houses the floors had sunk
respective to the walls, leaving gaps at the skirting boards. The particular
houses were numbers 5,7,9,13 and
11. The floors were examined by experts. Bore
holes at the sunken areas showed that at
least in these areas the material to a depth of 1.5 to 2.5 metres below the
floor was soft sand and clay. It was
made ground, that is it had been dug out from somewhere else rather than being
the original solum. The supporting strength of the
material became greater with depth but for a material proportion of the total
depth in all the affected floors was well below the "N5" rating which would
have been the minimum to support the floors.
In addition in most of the houses where sinking had occurred there were
voids below the floor slab. The voids could have been caused by the nature of
the material, its shrinking after being placed in position when wet or by its
having been inadequately compacted before the floors were cast. The floors had
sunk at these points as they had no support and the concrete was to a limited
extent flexible. There was no hardcore present.
12. The pursuers were legally
obliged to remedy the defects and did so at a reasonable cost of £67592.44.
13. The pursuers were aware that
the defenders were using spoil to fill the voids below the floors and that the
spoil was not as reliable a supporting material as type 1 hardcore. They were
aware that the floors were not supported by the walls. They were aware that the
changes to the specification had not been formally agreed with the engineers.
They did not formalise the changes as they did not wish to inform the clients
in case they did not agree.
FINDS IN FACT AND LAW as
follows:
1. The parties contracted that
the defenders carry out the groundworks at this site
and the elements of the agreement relevant to this case were the nature of material
to be used beneath the floors and the manner in which that material should be
put in place. It was agreed that the defenders could dispose of spoil material
on site by placing it on the natural solum area
within the substructure walls with the effect of raising that solum to a level only 150 mm below the underside of the
concrete slab floor. The spoil material could be either from the heaps already
on site from demolition work or newly dug from the site. The only qualification
to this was an implied duty that wholly and obviously unsuitable items like
large boulders should not be put under the floor. The defenders used the
material they were instructed to use. There was no evidence of any breach of
the qualification. As to the manner in which the material was put in place, the
defenders had a contractual duty to compact the spoil in accordance with the
standards of reasonably competent construction workers. They also had a duty to
top it with a 150mm layer of hardcore or granular material.. They failed in
both these aspects in most areas immediately below the sections of the floors
which have subsided.
2. The groundworks
were completed and the houses constructed. The floors referred to have subsided
and the pursuers were contractually obliged to make good the defects. They have
carried out the repair work at a cost of £67592.44, a sum admitted to be
reasonable, and have accordingly suffered loss and damage to that extent.
3. Whether the failure of the
defenders to correctly compact the material below the floors and cover it with
a layer of hardcore caused the floors to subside is not established.
Therefore, repels
the pursuer's pleas in law and sustains the defender's third plea in law. Assoilzies the defenders from the crave of the Initial Writ
and continues the cause until
2006 for the consideration of expenses.
W. Donald Muirhead.
Sheriff of Lothian &Borders at Linlithgow.
NOTE: I heard evidence in this case from
representatives and experts from both sides.
For the pursuers the first witness was David Earlie. He was the pursuer's chief estimator and a
qualified quantity surveyor. He was also the son of the chief shareholder of
the company. He explained the various stages leading up to the crucial meeting
on
He then described the meeting on 18th
May. He was vague about the details. He said that he attended along with a
Gordon Nicholls, a Jim Ritchie and a John Allan. Under cross examination he
accepted that a Derek McAllister had been present. He said that there were
discussions to reduce the price. It was agreed that the defenders could dispose
of spoil material in gardens and communal areas. He denied that there had been
agreement to put spoil under the houses. He accepted that this had happened but
said that the defenders had broken their contract in doing so. On the other
hand he accepted that he had agreed to the change from "suspended" floors to
"slab on solid" floors.
The second witness for the pursuers was Gordon
Nicholls. He was the pursuers' construction manager. He gave similar evidence
on the uncontroversial early stages of the negotiations. As to the crucial
meeting, he again was vague on the details. He said that it had been agreed to
permit the defenders to dispose of spoil in non-structural areas. He said that
Derek McAllister was not present. He said in examination in chief that he had
been party to the decision to change the floors from suspended slabs to slab on
solid, then in cross examination said that he had not been, although he was
sure that the engineer Crawford Anderson had been.
The third witness for the pursuers was Crawford
Anderson. He had worked as an engineering technician with Halcrow-Waterman
from 1995 to 2000, and had been their representative on the Old Monklands contract. He had prepared the drawings showing
the detail under the floors, although the specification had been checked by a
qualified engineer. He had attended regular site meetings during the course of
the contract. He denied knowing about the use of spoil in the floor voids and
said he only vaguely remembered talk of changing the floors from suspended to
slab on solid. He denied having approved the change, saying that he would not
have had the qualifications or the authority to do so and that it would have
been necessary to arrange solum tests to check if the
underlying ground was suitable.
The fourth witness was John Allan. He was the
pursuers' site manager. Asked in cross examination about the meeting on 18th
June, he said firstly that Derek McAllister was definitely not there, later
that perhaps he was. He confirmed that they were all trying to achieve savings.
He explained how David Earlie made it clear that the
defenders had licence to lose as much of the hardcore as they could to make the
deal work. It was his view that it was agreed that spoil from the site could be
used to fill the voids under the houses. He said that as the job progressed he
watched the filling of the voids from time to time, and could remember making
sure that the defenders did not put big boulders into the voids. He said that a
layer of hardcore had to go on top of the spoil and to be compacted. He
accepted that the core results showed that in these particular areas the spoil
was not suitable and had not been compacted. Asked about the change from
suspended floors to slab on solid, he remembered the engineer being aware of
this and saying that he would prepare another drawing, although they went ahead
without it. He pointed out that there had been a number of supervisors watching
over the subcontractors as well as himself, namely the clerk of works
representing the clients, Mr Anderson from the engineers, the defenders' site
manager David Coleman, and from time to time their contracts manager Derek
McAllister.
The next witness from the parties was James Ritchie
of the defenders. Asked about the meeting of 18th June, he said
discussion had centred on cost savings and in particular on the expense of
removing spoil. The pursuers had suggested that floor levels could be raised to
make room for spoil. Under cross examination he accepted that this had been
agreed, and that the spoil would be used in such a way as to make sure that
none had to be removed from the site. The pursuers considered that as the spoil
was from a brownfield site it would be suitable. If
they were changing the levels of the solum the
defenders would use spoil material duly compacted.
The next witness from the defenders was Derek
McAllister. He had been their contracts manager and conducted much of the
negotiation up to the stage of calling in Mr Ritchie when the final "horse
trading" over price had to be done. He accepted that the arrangements were not
reduced to writing and that therefore best practice had not been used. He
described the meeting on 18th June, which he had definitely
attended. He described how it was agreed that suitable spoil would be put in
the voids under the houses, and the levels of the houses could be adjusted to
make more room for the spoil. The impression was given at the meeting by the
pursuers that there would be no opposition to this from the engineer, indeed
that they seemed to have control over him. He accepted that perhaps the
material should have been tested.
David Coleman was the last "domestic" witness. He
had been the defenders' site agent. He accepted that the voids were to be
filled with spoil with 150 mm of "scalpings" on top.
This was a material similar to hardcore. The filling was to be finally finished
with sand or a similar fine material. If
necessary, the material under the floors was to be mechanically compacted. He
accepted that the material under the floors as disclosed by the boreholes was
not in accordance with the agreement between the parties.
I have given more detail than usual of the evidence given
by these witnesses as the manner in which the evidence came out was most
unusual. It became clear that the pursuer's witnesses were most reluctant to
give a clear and true picture of the agreement as they were well aware that it
was reached without the client's consent in a manner designed to benefit
themselves and their chosen subcontractor. The whole object of building
contract law is to vertically tie the workforce however remote in contractual
terms to the agreement with the clients, and to make sure that the professional
advisors working for the clients are consulted wherever appropriate. By
reaching a private deal with the defenders and failing to reduce it to writing
the pursuers were making sure that the clients knew as little as possible of what
was happening. The defenders were of course complicit in this. The role of the
engineers' representative I would describe as "murky". He was evasive in giving
evidence and there seemed no doubt by the end of the proof that he knew a great
deal more about the changes in the specification than he admitted to. On the
reasons why he did not properly exercise his responsibility to his firm's
clients I do not wish to speculate.
As it was, the pursuers' witnesses were much more
guarded than the defenders' as to what was agreed, although the site manager Mr
Allan accepted that the deal over putting spoil under the houses was reached,
entirely contrary to the recollection of his boss Mr Eadie.
By the time we reached Mr McAllister, the position was becoming very clear, and
he was the most relaxed and candid of those giving evidence. Mr Coleman, too,
was prepared to tell the court something close to the true picture. Mr Eadie, Mr Nicholls and Mr Anderson were being very careful
what they said.
These facts being reasonably clear, I had to decide
if the changes to specification were changes in the contract. Perhaps the
contract being apparently in writing could not be altered by informal agreement
and I would have to move to consider issues of personal bar. This was canvassed
with Mr O'Brien during his submissions. He accepted that as far as the change
from suspended to slab-on-solid was concerned, either there was a change in the
contract or his clients were personally barred from holding the defenders to
the original specification. Not too helpful! On the other hand, he accepted
that the written Purchase Order Form of
What were these arrangements? As to suitability of
the material, I am satisfied that the pursuers indicated to the defenders that
spoil material was suitable to go under the floors. At the time they were
discussing the matter on 18th May they were trying to persuade the
defenders to take the risk that none of the spoil material would have to be
dumped. It was in their interests to persuade the defenders that all the spoil
material could be hidden under the buildings and therefore their price could be
adjusted by deleting the cost of trucking it offsite and dumping it. To sell
this to the defenders they maintained that the material was suitable. The only
qualification to this was items like the boulders referred to by Mr Allan,
items wholly and obviously unsuitable. Unexploded bombs and dead cats also
spring to mind. Otherwise, the pursuers had specifically permitted the
defenders to dispose of the spoil this way and stated that it was suitable.
All questions of suitability are in any event
coloured by the question "suitable for what"? At the time of discussions on
what was to go under the floors that material had no substantial structural
function, as was explained by Mr Nimmo. Later the
specification was changed to give the material a structural function but there
is no suggestion that in light of that fact there was any change in the
arrangements.
The defenders' obligations on the choice of material
which could be disposed of under the floors were therefore very limited.
What about the manner in which the material was put
in place, and the layer of hardcore on top? I will deal firstly with the issue
of compaction. There was clearly no specific agreement on this, and the
pursuers had to look first to their standard terms and conditions and secondly
to the possible existence of an implied term.
As to the standard terms and conditions, I must
consider their terms. The only relevant condition says "all workmanship and/or
materials supplied must meet the requirements of the governing specification
and be to our satisfaction and to that of the Architect, Engineer or Agent
appointed and acting for and on behalf of the Employer under the Principal
Contract" There was no evidence that there had been any such failure. The
employers had a clerk of works on site and regular visits from the
representative of the engineers. The pursuers had Mr Allan constantly on site.
There is no evidence that the compacting of the spoil did at any time fail to
meet the requirements of the pursuers or the Architect, Engineer or Agent.
The question of an implied term remains. I take the view that the defenders were
obliged to use reasonable care in compacting the material. Two means of doing
this were described. There is apparently a machine known as a "whacker" which has a steel plate on the front which moves
up and down onto the material. There is also a small hand controlled roller
which can be driven over the material. Once the spoil had been dumped in the
floor voids, it should have been spread out evenly and compacted with one or
both of these pieces of equipment to provide a reasonably solid surface on
which to lay the concrete floor. There was no evidence that this was
specifically discussed, it would have been so obvious to make discussion
unnecessary. Unlike the suitability issue, I find that there was an implied
term in the contract as to compaction.
It is ludicrous to suggest that there would have to
be specific instructions in the contract governing every turn of the operatives
roller. The implied term does not extend, however, to specifying how hard the
spoil was to be after the men had finished rolling it. They would not be
engineers. The question as to how strong the underfloor
had to be has exercised a number of experts in this case. There are specific
terms as to how the technical aspects of the job were to be controlled. All
that could be expected of the labourers was to make sure that the spoil was
strong enough to take the weight of their machines and lay the concrete on. As
to the hardcore, it is clear from the drawing that at least one 150mm layer was
to go on top of the solum, whether natural or raised
by spoil.
The duties which I have found established,
therefore, were a duty not to put anything extraordinary under the floors, to
make sure that the spoil was sufficiently compacted to take the weight of the
compacting machines and provide a base for the concrete, and to cover it with a
layer of hardcore. There was no evidence that anything extraordinary was put
under the floors. The engineers on the other hand gave evidence that the level
of measured hardness of the underfloor material could
in the areas where the boreholes were made be so limited as to be difficult to
walk on, and that there was no hardcore.
It is established, therefore, that the defenders'
operatives left areas of the underfloor material
close to the walls (where the boreholes were taken) so soft that it would have
been difficult to walk, and did not use the required hardcore. This was a breach of contract. Did it cause
the floors to sink?
The pursuers' case on Record, and their instructions
to their expert engineer, were based on the premise that the original
specification of underfloor material as per Mr
Anderson's drawing should be followed. The breach of contract was to fail to
follow the drawing, and their expert was asked if the problems were caused by
this failure. As the case progressed, however, it became very clear that at
least in verbal terms the pursuers agreed to a departure from the drawings, and
the breach of contract was a much narrower one. There seems little doubt that
if the drawing had been followed the householders would have been left with
good sound floors. That is not the same test, however, as that which must be
used to decide on causation leading to liability.
As far as the pursuer's evidence is concerned I was
presented with an expert's report giving the answers to the wrong questions. I
have to assess whether his verbal testimony was sufficiently focused on the
breach to establish causation, and whether the pursuers could find any
assistance in the evidence of the defender's expert Mr Henderson.
Mr Nimmo was a competent
engineer whose testimony was of high quality. He was, still, however, being
asked the wrong questions. In his report he took the view that the departure
from the specification had caused the subsiding floors. In examination in chief
he repeated this, and stated that the specification were to change this would would have to be in written form sanctioned by the engineer.
Here he was speaking in correct contractual terms, on the assumption that the
parties were following the terms of the main contract and the appropriate
written form of sub contract. He was not asked in examination in chief what
would be the position if there had been an informal change. In cross
examination this was put to him and he simply repeated that the engineer would
have to be involved. He was unable to comment on the nature of the spoil. He
gave no view as to whether lack of compaction had been the cause of the
problem. He also stated that if the floor had remained a suspended floor the
dangers to have avoided would not have been an unstable underfloor
area but vegetation growing under the floor.
As to Mr Henderson, he was a geotechnical engineer
with a great deal of experience of ground problems. He had been given a wider
brief. He was simply asked by the defenders to give a view on the cause of the
settlement in light of the borehole results.
He gave in his report a range of factors which could
have contributed. The spoil could have been unsuitable because it was too wet
or too dry. It could have been insufficiently compacted. Many combinations of
these factors could have cause the subsidence. He was unable to determine the
actual cause.
In giving evidence, he explained in more detail than
Mr Nimmo the penetration tests which had been used to
assess the material used under the floors and which had resulted in the
unsuitably low readings of N2 to 4. He said that it would be difficult to walk on
material of that softness, and certainly difficult to use compaction machinery
on it. He said that where as here material under a floor was being used for
structural purposes it should be tested by a drilling contractor under the
instructions of the engineer. He confirmed that the wetness or dryness of the
material was crucial, as if it were too wet it could shrink on drying out and
if too dry would not compact properly. He repeated the conclusion to his
report, that there was certainly something wrong with the material under the
floors which had caused the problem but he was not sure what it was. There were
too many unknowns.
While therefore there was in my view a breach of
duty, it was limited to the elements described above and I am not satisfied on
the evidence that it caused the loss. The defenders are therefore entitled to absolvitor.
There were four other matters touched on in
submissions with which I should deal.
2. There was in my view a gap in the pleadings
as there were no averments as to
why the pursuers had to carry out the remedial work, thereby suffering
loss.
Clearly they would have been in breach of the principal contract but
there
were no averments to that effect. It was agreed that I should ignore
that point.
3. The question of the thickness of the
concrete floor slabs was pled as a ground
of claim with averments that the slabs had not been thick enough. Mr
O'Brien made it clear during submissions that he was not insisting in
that
head for the purposes of my judgement.
4. The fourth
issue concerned quantum. The parties agreed by way of Joint
Minute no 24 of process that invoices
for remedial work totalling £67592.44
would be duly recoverable in the event of the
Pursuers' success. There
remained
in dispute, however, invoices referred to in paragraph 4 of the Joint
Minute. I heard evidence on this issue from Mr
Earlie of the pursuers. These
particular invoices had not been agreed as
they did not specify the houses to
which they related. Mr Hogg pointed out that
he therefore had no way of
investigating whether they were correctly charged
or not. I heard submissions
on this issue and preferred Mr Hogg's to the effect
of excluding this sum of
£3493.62 from the claim in the event of
success. The total due in that event
would therefore be £67592.44
.
.
Sheriff
of Lothian & Borders at Linlithgow.