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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Cornwall Gardens PTE Ltd v R O Garrard & Co Ltd & Anor [2001] EWCA Civ 699 (9 May 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2001/699.html Cite as: [2001] EWCA Civ 699, [2002] 1 WLR 713 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION) sitting in CARDIFF
ON APPEAL FROM CARDIFF MERCANTILE COURT
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE CHAMBERS QC)
2 Park Street Cardiff CF1 1E2 Thursday 9 May 2001 |
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B e f o r e :
(LORD PHILLIPS)
LORD JUSTICE PILL
LORD JUSTICE CHADWICK
____________________
CORNWALL GARDENS PTE LIMITED | Claimants/Appellants | |
- v - | ||
1. R O GARRARD & CO LIMITED | ||
2. CHRISTIE OWEN & DAVIES PLC | ||
T/A CHRISTIE & CO | Defendants/Respondents |
____________________
Smith Bernal Reporting Limited, 190 Fleet Street,
London EC4A 2AG
Tel: 020 7421 4040 Fax: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
appeared on behalf of the Appellants.
MR S JOHN (Instructed by Messrs Stanley Tee, Hertfordshire, CM23 2LU)
appeared on behalf of the 1st Respondent.
MR D MACLEOD (Instructed by Messrs CMS Cameron McKenna, London, EC3N 4BB)
appeared on behalf of the 2nd Respondent.
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Introduction
(1)that the claim in respect of malicious falsehood was time barred under Section 4A of the Limitation Act 1980;
(2) that the claim in respect of unlawful interference with rights was also time barred under the principle in Letang v Cooper [1965] 1 QB 232, in that it was founded on the same facts as the claim in respect of malicious falsehood;
(3) that it was not an appropriate case to grant an extension of time pursuant to Section 32A of the 1980 Act; and thus
(4) that judgment should be entered for Christie & Co;
(5) that Cornwall Gardens should have permission to appeal.
The Facts
"6. The car parking spaces shown on the approved plan reference PL/002A received 24.1.96 shall be marked out on the site to the satisfaction of the Local Planning Authority, and these spaces shall thereafter be kept continuously available for car parking and shall not be used for any other purposes without the prior permission in writing of the Local Planning Authority."
"I refer to the proposed Holiday Inn at Western House. I know you are aware of the difficulties between your clients and the freeholders of Gordon and Wellington Houses over the right of way across the rear of the Holiday Inn site.
If these matters are not resolved in a mutually satisfactory manner beforehand and they open for business on this site, Holiday Inn will immediately be in breach of planning control because condition 6 of the planning permission requires that parking spaces shown on the approved drawing must be made continuously available. Some of these spaces are on the right of way and Holiday Inn may be prevented from using them by third parties.
This would result in a serious shortfall of on-site parking. The local planning authority could not ignore this and would have to consider legal action to enforce the condition. This might well force the hotel to close until the matter was sorted out with obvious effects on revenue.
In addition, unless you can resolve the right of way satisfactorily, it may not be possible for the Council to approve the traffic circulatory details under condition 11, because there is no certainty that your clients will be able to implement them. Until they are approved and laid out, the hotel may not open."
"....our client does not dispute that the occupiers of the Flats have exercised a right of way through Western House and our clients have no wish to interfere with this. The issue is the extent and nature of what is exercised.
It was apparent at the time of our client's purchase that vehicular parking took place along the rear boundary of the Property. The area had been laid out and marked for such parking at least from the time that the Property was used as offices.
The current layout for parking and traffic movement is a restatement of that previous position. Therefore, the occupiers of the Flats will continue to have the ability to exercise a right of way as previously enjoyed.
Condition 6 of planning permissions SCA/TPE 00122/8 acknowledges the parking layout. It does not provide for the layout to be further approved by your authority, merely that marking out shall be satisfactory."
"Thank you for forwarding me a copy of your letter of 3 March 1998 to Ealing Planning and Surveying Service in respect of the above.
The position as you have set out to them is inaccurate in respect of the right of way at the rear of Western House and I am surprised that you have written to the London Borough of Ealing in this vein.
The conveyance dated 1 April 1937 between Ardsley Estates Limited and J D Thackray reserved '....unto the Vendors their predecessors and successors in title and assigns owners or occupiers of the adjoining or neighbouring land or any part thereof in common with the Purchaser... the full and free right of way for all purposes over and along that part of the said land hereby conveyed which is coloured blue....' The conveyance shows the exact line of the right of way and its width. It provides all the detail necessary to identify the '....extent and nature of its use....' and is the '....documentary evidence of these matters....', as you put it in your letter.
We have made the Ealing's Planning and Surveying Service and Legal Departments aware of the 1937 Conveyance and should you also require a copy please let me know.
We have therefore informed Ealing that the issue is not '....the extent and nature of what is exercised' and that my client is prepared to serve an injunction to preserve their legal right of way.
Furthermore this issue is not just a matter of the right of way enjoyed by our client. The assessment of reasonable consideration for the proposal put to your clients has also taken into consideration other issues which are of equal importance. These include .... the legal inability of your clients to establish the traffic circulation system required by the planning conditions. I note that you have not addressed any of these issues.
For my part I am happy to discuss quantum with your hotel valuation advisors but my client requires a response today to my letter to you dated 23 February 1998.
Finally whilst writing I have just been informed that the contractors have marked out the car parking spaces on the right of way and my client is giving them a limited opportunity to remove the markings.
If these are not removed and a meaning[ful] dialogue does not commence today my clients will take the necessary legal steps, with all the unnecessary [sic] ramifications that this implies, to fully protect their position."
"I very much appreciate Ealing Borough Council making it clear to Land Architects that the problems associated with conditions 6 & 11 required the agreement of our client who are the freeholders of Frobisher House, Gordon House, Nelson House and Wellington House, situated immediately to the west of Western House, because, inter alia, their rights over the land proposed to be used to [sic] car parking would be infringed.
Mr Davies of Edwards Geldard has now written to you contending that such rights do not exist. Our client will today furnish Mr Davies with the necessary documentation regarding the rights of way at the rear of Western House. I have also asked our client to send a copy of [sic] Ms Harris for information. While I would agree that it is not for Ealing to be drawn into a legal dispute between our client and Cornwall Gardens PTE Ltd, regarding the rights, it is important for you to be aware that unless the issues between the parties are resolved this week our client intends to seek an injunction to protect his position, which will prevent the implementation of conditions 6 & 11.
However, time is now short as I understand that Holiday Inn intend to open the hotel on the 11th March, despite the fact that the issues relating to these conditions remain unresolved. In this situation, our client are (sic) now looking to Ealing to use its powers under the Planning and Compensation Act 1991 to deal with anticipated breaches of control, by applying to the High Court for an injunction to secure such restraint. The aim of this action should be to prevent the hotel opening until matters are resolved to everyone's satisfaction."
Cornwall Gardens pleaded Case
The claim for malicious falsehood
"that the conveyance dated 1st April 1937 between Ardsley Estates Limited and J D Thackray granted a right of way over the area coloured blue in favour of the freehold proprietors of Gordon House and Wellington House
that the effect of the conveyance dated 1st April 1937 was to create a legal easement over the area coloured blue in favour of the freehold proprietor of Gordon House and Wellington House notwithstanding the freehold titles to those properties and Western House at HM Land Registry does not disclose any such right to interest."
"that [Garrard & Co] were the legal proprietor of Frobisher House and Nelson House
that [Garrard & Co] as the legal proprietor of the freehold reversions of Gordon House and Wellington House had legal rights over the area coloured blue at the rear of Western House which would be infringed if the area was used for car parking
that consequently the implementation of planning conditions 6 & 11 required the agreement of [Garrard & Co]
that [Garrard & Co] was entitled at law to injunctive relief to prevent the implementation of planning conditions 6 & 11."
The claim for wrongful interference with rights
(i)Cornwall Gardens had to introduce a valet parking scheme and obtain planning permission approving this;
(ii)pending the approval of the valet parking scheme Cornwall Gardens were unable to satisfy their contractual obligation to hand over the hotel to Holiday Inns;
(iii) the opening of the hotel was delayed until 31 August 1998;
(iv)the expense of operating the valet parking scheme has continued to this day.
Subsequent Events
(1)Failing to give adequate advice on title in relation to the question of whether or not there was a right of way.
(2) Failing to advise on the implications of the right of way in the context of the proposed development.
(3) Negotiating the Section 106 Agreement on terms that were incompatible with Clause 6 of the planning permission.
"The time limit under section 2 of this Act shall not apply to an action for-
(a) libel or slander, or
(b) slander of title, slander of goods or other malicious falsehood,
but no such action shall be brought after the expiration of one year from the date on which the cause of action accrued."
"....in the case of actions for damages for negligence, nuisance or breach of duty (whether the duty exists by virtue of a contract or of provision made by or under a statute or independently of any contract or any such provision) where the damages claimed by the plaintiff for the negligence, nuisance or breach of duty consist of or include damages in respect of personal injuries to any person, this subsection shall have effect as if for the reference to six years there were substituted a reference to three years."
"A cause of action is simply a factual situation the existence of which entitles one person to obtain from the court a remedy against another person. Historically, the means by which the remedy was obtained varied with the nature of the factual situation and causes of action were divided into categories according to the 'form of action' by which the remedy was obtained in the particular kind of factual situation which constituted the cause of action. But that is legal history, not current law. If A, by failing to exercise reasonable care, inflicts direct personal injury upon B, those facts constitute a cause of action on the part of B against A for damages in respect of such personal injuries. The remedy for this cause of action could, before 1973, have been obtained by alternative forms of action, namely, originally either trespass vi et armis or trespass on the case, later either trespass to the person or negligence: (see Bullen & Leake, Precedents of Pleading, 3rd ed (1868)). Certain procedural consequences, the importance of which diminished considerably after the Common Law Procedure Act, 1852, flowed from the plaintiff's pleader's choice of the form of action used. The Judicature Act, 1873, abolished forms of action. It did not affect causes of action; so it was convenient for lawyers and legislators to continue use, to describe the various categories of factual situations which entitled one person to obtain from the court a remedy against another, the names of the various 'forms of action' by which formerly the remedy appropriate to the particular category of factual situation was obtained. But it is essential to realise that when, since 1873, the name of a form of action is used to identify a cause of action, it is used as a convenient and succinct description of a particular category of factual situation which entitles one person to obtain from the court a remedy against another person. To forget this will indeed encourage the old forms of action to rule us from their graves."
"The factual situation upon which the plaintiff's action was founded is set out in the statement of claim. It was that the defendant, by failing to exercise reasonable care, of which failure particulars were given, drove his motor car over the plaintiff's legs and so inflicted upon her direct personal injuries in respect of which the plaintiff claimed damages. That factual situation was the plaintiff's cause of action. It was the cause of action for which the plaintiff claimed damages in respect of the personal injuries which she sustained. That cause of action or factual situation falls within the description of the tort of negligence and an action founded on it, that is, brought to obtain the remedy to which the existence of that factual situation entitles the plaintiff, falls within the description of an action for negligence. The description 'negligence' was in fact used by the plaintiff's pleader; but this cannot be decisive for we are concerned not with the description applied by the pleader to the factual situation and the action founded on it, but with the description applied to it by Parliament in the enactment to be construed. It is true that that factual situation also falls within the description of the tort of trespass to the person. But that, as I have endeavoured to show, does not mean that there are two causes of action. It merely means that there are two apt descriptions of the same cause of action. It does not cease to be the tort of negligence because it can also be called by another name. An action founded upon it is nonetheless an action for negligence because it can also be called an action for trespass to the person."
(1)Wrongful interference with rights is an innominate and developing tort.(2)The elements of that tort are not the same as those of the tort of malicious falsehood.
(3)To establish a cause of action for wrongful interference with rights, a Claimant must prove:
(i)an intentional unlawful act;(ii)done by the Defendant with the intention of harming the Claimant; and(iv)in fact causing damage to the Claimant.
"The history of Lonrho v Fayed and the points in issue in that case could be said to give further support to the argument that unlawful means has the same meaning in the unlawful conspiracy context as in the interfering with business by unlawful means context and further support for the view that in either of those contexts the unlawful means do not have to be actionable at the suit of the plaintiff."
"Nomenclature. This tort attracts different names. In part this is due to the possible range of falsehoods concerned. It originated from 'slander of title', false allegations calculated to hamper the disposal of land. However, it developed, by analogy, to encompass 'slander of goods' and eventually disparagements as to quality as well as title were included. In Ratcliffe v Evans [1892] 2 QB 524, the Court of Appeal decided that the tort could apply to falsehoods calculated to cause and causing actual damage to a business. Thus, this tort can be labelled:
*injurious falsehood;
*trade libel;
*slander of title;
*slander of goods;
*disparagement of goods; or
*malicious falsehood.
The Defamation Act 1952 describes this wrong by the formula 'action for slander of title, slander of goods or other malicious falsehood'."
"In an action for words not actionable per se, but constituting an untrue statement maliciously published about the plaintiff's business, which statement is intended or reasonably likely to produce, and in the ordinary course of things does produce, a general loss of business as distinct from the loss of particular known customers, evidence of such general loss of business is admissible, and sufficient to support the action."
"2. In an action for slander in respect of words calculated to disparage the plaintiff in any office, profession, calling, trade or business held or carried on by him at the time of the publication, it shall not be necessary to allege or prove special damage, whether or not the words are spoken of the plaintiff in the way of his office, profession, calling, trade or business.
3. (1) In an action for slander of title, slander of goods or other malicious falsehood, it shall not be necessary to allege or prove special damage-
(a)if the words upon which the action is founded are calculated to cause pecuniary damage to the plaintiff and are published in writing or other permanent form; or
(b)if the said words are calculated to cause pecuniary damage to the plaintiff in respect of any office, profession, calling, trade or business held or carried on by him at the time of the publication."
Discretion to extend time
"Discretionary exclusion of time limit for actions for defamation or malicious falsehood
(1)If it appears to the court that it would be equitable to allow an action to proceed having regard to the degree to which-
(a)the operation of section 4A of this Act prejudices the plaintiff or any person whom he represents, and
(b)any decision of the court under this subsection would prejudice the defendant or any person whom he represents,
the court may direct that that section shall not apply to the action or shall not apply to any specified cause of action to which the action relates.
(2)In acting under this section the court shall have regard to all the circumstances of the case and in particular to-
(a)the length of, and the reasons for, the delay on the part of the plaintiff;
(b)where the reason or one of the reasons for the delay was that all or any of the facts relevant to the cause of action did not become known to the plaintiff until after the end of the period mentioned in section 4A-
(i)the date on which any such facts did become known to him, and
(ii) the extent to which he acted promptly and reasonably once he knew whether or not the facts in question might be capable of giving rise to an action; and
(c)the extent to which, having regard to the delay, relevant evidence is likely-
(i)to be unavailable, or
(ii) to be less cogent that if the action had been brought within the period mentioned in section 4A."
"Section 32A contains a non-exhaustive list of the matters to which the Court should have regard in considering how to exercise its discretion. Section 32A(2)(a) reads as follows:
'In acting under this section the courts [sic] should have regard to all the circumstances of the case and in particular to the length of and reasons for the delay on the part of the plaintiff.'
It seems to me that this requirement is no more than confirmatory of the fact that where a party to proceedings has put itself in a position by its own conduct that it requires the discretion of the Court to be exercised in its favour to be allowed to continue in those proceedings it must proffer an explanation to the Court as to how the state of affairs has arisen. This may happen in default proceedings where a party seeks to be allowed to defend after judgment has been entered against him. It may happen where a party has failed to comply with an order and wishes to be relieved from the consequences of failure to comply with that order. It seems to me that the principle is similarly applicable to a situation such as this. The Court is being asked to apply its discretion in favour of a party who would otherwise suffer the consequences of being statute barred. I have before me no good reason as to why there was delay on the part of Cornwall Gardens in starting these proceedings.
Mr Blackmore has done his best in his outline argument and has referred to other matters such as the fact that there was other litigation afoot, and also there was a need to clarify the situation as far as parking and planning permission were concerned. But of itself and without explanation there is no reason why, in parallel with such matters, there should not have been a preparation of this case so that it could have been brought in time.
Another factor that weighs with me is the very short period provided by section 4A as a limitation period in respect of malicious falsehood. I do not think it relevant to look at any history behind the introduction of section 4A. I think it quite sufficient to look at section 4A alone in the context of the other periods of limitation which are provided under the Act. One year is to be contrasted with three years in respect of personal injuries and six years in respect of matters such as breach of contract. It is therefore clear that, looking at the Act alone, the expectation is that proceedings of this nature will be brought promptly. It therefore seems to me that when considering the length of delay one should look at the delay in relation to the length of the limitation period. Ten months might, in appropriate circumstances, not seem terribly much in relation to a three-year limitation period, but in relation to a 12-month limitation period it is a lengthy delay.
In those circumstances it seems to me entirely in accordance with the spirit and the underlying principle of the Act that I should require very good reason to permit an action to proceed where there has been a delay of this nature. There is no such reason. In the circumstances it seems to me that it would be wholly inappropriate to exercise my discretion in favour of Cornwall Gardens. It is correct that prejudice is a relevant factor but it is only a factor amongst others. So far as those other factors are concerned, they quite simply have not been addressed. I do not have the material before me upon which I could properly exercise my discretion in favour of Cornwall Gardens, the burden being upon Cornwall Gardens to make good its application for the exercise of that discretion. It follows that that application must fail."
"I cannot think that, without being told more about the circumstances of the dislocation, any change in solicitors is to be regarded as a relevant component in my considerations. It could have been a relevant component had I been told of the degree of dislocation, but I know nothing about the change. For all I know it might have been a very smooth change."
(i)between March and August 1988 Cornwall Gardens' solicitors, Edwards Geldard, were busy considering whether Garrard & Co's claim to a right of way was sound in law and attempting to negotiate a settlement with them.
(ii) Edwards Geldard did not advise Cornwall Gardens that they had a claim against Garrard & Co and/or Christie & Co for malicious falsehood.
(iii) Simon & Simon were instructed in February 1999 and did not obtain complete files from Edwards Geldard until December 1999, which included the letters of 4 March. Only then were Cornwall Gardens advised to commence proceedings for malicious falsehood and wrongful interference with rights.
The application to amend
"the statements were fraudulent in that they were made recklessly not caring whether the statements were true or false. The particulars set out in paras 17.1 to 17.8 (inclusive) above are repeated."
"Accordingly, before settling any document containing any allegation of fraud (or allegation of a similar nature) you should satisfy yourself not only that you have clear instructions to make the allegation but that the 'material' upon which it is based amounts to evidence in a form which can be put before the Court. In particular, where the material relied on includes the evidence of any witness you should insist on being provided with a signed statement from the witness which is capable of being served.
Further, if it becomes clear at any later stage of the proceedings that evidence on which you relied has not been or is not going to be put before the Court (for example because a witness has retracted a statement that he gave), you should on no account maintain the allegation and should ensure that the other side is informed at once that the allegation is not being pursued."
"33B.1 Paragraphs 3 to 33 above are repeated.
33B.2In the first part of 1998 ROGL and Christie agreed to procure Ealing not to grant planning consent to CGPL by falsely claiming that ROGL had a right to a legal easement over the area coloured blue.
33B.3The purpose of the agreement was to prevent CGPL fulfilling its obligations to Holiday Inn under the Management Contract unless CGPL paid ROGL for the release of the alleges rights which ROGL claimed over the area coloured blue."