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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Keydon Estates Ltd v Eversheds LLP [2005] EWHC 972 (Ch) (20 May 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2005/972.html Cite as: [2005] EWHC 972 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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KEYDON ESTATES LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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EVERSHEDS LLP |
Defendant |
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David Hodge QC (instructed by Weightmans) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 25th – 29th April 2005
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Crown Copyright ©
The Hon. Mr. Justice Evans-Lombe :
"I understand you are already in conversation with our Cardiff office, however I will speak to them direct and confirm your details with them to ensure you receive the regional service required. To this end I have discussed your requirement with our Birmingham and Bristol offices as this is an area which you will also consider. The details of your requirement are as follows:-
- Maximum lot size of circa £1.5M
- A double figure yield hence it is likely that the majority of the properties we consider would be of secondary nature.
- A building of less than 20 years old with the minimum of circa 5 years remaining on the lease.
- An opportunity to increase the value either through review, development, or strategic management.
- The area covered would be Birmingham to the North, Winchester to the South, Swansea to the West and High Wycombe to the East."
"16 In June 2001 DTZ brought to our attention before any general marketing a freehold shopping investment in Talbot Green near Cardiff. Within a week of inspection we had agreed to buy for £685,000. As DTZ knew that Keydon was looking to purchase such an investment and was ready and able to proceed, they brought this property to our attention before commencing any general marketing. I attach at pages 14 to 21 agents particulars in respect of this property, together with my letter to the Royal bank of Scotland of 24 May 2001 which sets out why we wished to buy this investment and the one in Newbury referred to below. The main tenant of the Talbot Green shopping centre is the Department of Environment who held their property on a long lease of 15 years without a break from December 1996 expiring December 2011 with a rent review due in December 2001. This unit provided over 30% of the total rent from the investment. The next substantial tenant was Barclays Bank which held a 14-year lease from 1991 expiring in June 2005 and with a rent review in 2001. We knew when we bought the investment that Barclays, having been there since the early 1970's, were likely to renew their lease in 2005. Indeed I now understand from Keydon's agent Emmanuel Jones that Barclays agents Donaldsons have indicated that their client wishes to renew the lease. I attach a tenancy schedule provided by DTZ at the time at page 22. Keydon felt that this was a more secure investment than Raglan house let on short leases and Keydon's bankers, Royal Bank of Scotland, lent us £400,000 against a purchase price of £685,000 with I personally lending the residue. Eversheds not only acted for the company in the purchase but also the subsequent rent reviews with the Department of Environment and Barclays Bank and other transactions involving the smaller tenants within the parade. On purchasing this investment the rents received totalled £81,580 but have now been increased to £92,500. DTZ valued this investment in July 2004 at £1.1 million which will be increased further assuming Barclays enter into a new lease."
"Investment Requirement
1. The maximum lot size to be around £1-1¼ million.
2. The yield to be dependent on the potential. For a good secondary we should hope to buy at a double figure yield; anything better down [to] 8%.
3. A commercial building of less than 20 years, preferably multi-let and with reviews or reversions within the next 3 years.
4. The majority of the income to be secured on leases of at least 10 years unexpired.
5. The possibility to increase rental levels by on-hand management, development or rent reviews.
6. The geographical spread to be between Birmingham in the north, Southampton in the south, the outskirts of London to the east and West Wales to the west."
"In the meantime let me know what progress you are making on the underlease, which has apparently been granted by the head lessees Western Power Distribution Plc. If this is going to be a deal breaker let me know straight away."
"I have informed the freeholders' solicitors of this [i.e. the coinciding expiry of the leases] and have indicated that we believe that the underlease will operate as an assignment. He has referred me to Aldridge on Leaseholds… which I haven't located as yet. However he is arguing that because the lease is within the LTA 1954 then strictly speaking the term will not be coterminous with that of the under lease which is excluded from the LTA.
We do not want any room for argument on this as the reason why the premises were underlet was that the landlord refused consent for assignment on grounds of the strength of the under-tenant's covenant (the under tenant is a group company of the tenant).
Could you let me have an answer ASAP as this may be a deal breaker as far as the client is concerned and we are due to exchange contracts by Friday."
"72 If a person is under a duty to take reasonable care to provide information on which someone else will decide upon a course of action, he is responsible only for the consequences of the information being wrong. If he is under a duty to advise whether or not a course of action should be taken, and is negligent, he is responsible for all the foreseeable loss which is a consequence of that course of action having been taken: South Australia Asset Management Corp v York Montague Ltd [1997] AC 191, at 214. The distinction was applied, e.g., in Dent v Davis Blank Furniss [2001] Lloyd's Rep PN 534.
73 Where a claimant claims that he has suffered loss by entering into a transaction as a result of negligent advice or information provided by the defendant, the first question is whether the claimant can establish that the defendant's negligence caused him to enter into the transaction. The claimant must then go on to show what (if any) part of his loss is attributable to the defendant's negligence: Allied Maples Group Ltd v Simmons & Simmons [1995] 1 WLR 1602; Bristol & West Building Society v Mothew [1998] Ch 1; Boateng v Hughmans [2002] Lloyd's Rep PN 449; Dent v Davis Blank Furniss [2001] Lloyd's Rep PN 534.
74 Consequently the fact that the claimant would not have purchased the property but for the defendant's negligence does not mean that the defendant is necessarily liable for all the consequences which would not have happened but for the negligence: South Australia Asset Management Corp v York Montague Ltd [1997] AC 191, at 214; Cottingham v Attey Bower & Jones [2000] Lloyd's Rep PN 591. The defendant is liable to compensate the claimant for the foreseeable consequences of the fact that it purchased as a result of the negligence.
75 A solicitor is generally under a duty to provide specific information or advice, and not to advise on the wisdom of transactions in general, and the loss for which he is responsible will normally be limited to the consequences of the specific information being inaccurate: for a recent example see Cottingham v Attey Bower & Jones [2000] Lloyd's Rep PN 591.
76 As Sir Thomas Bingham MR (as he then was) said in Reeves v Thrings & Long [1996] 1 PNLR 265 at 278 (in a judgment in which he dissented on liability): "The assessment of damages is ultimately a factual exercise, designed to compensate but not over-compensate the plaintiff for a civil wrong he has suffered. While this is not an area free of legal rules, it is an area in which legal rules may have to bow to the peculiar facts of the case." So also Cooke P (as he then was) said in McElroy Milne v Commercial Electronics Ltd [1993] 1 NZLR 39, 41: " … in the end assessment of damages is a question of fact: … there is no such thing as a rule, applicable to all cases: … the ultimate question as to compensatory damages is whether the particular damage claimed is sufficiently linked to the breach of the particular duty to merit recovery in all the circumstances."
77 In County Personnel (Employment Agency) Ltd v Alan R. Pulver & Co [1987] 1 WLR 916, 925–926, Bingham LJ reviewed the principles governing the assessment of damages in cases where a solicitor's negligence has led to a client acquiring defective property. This judgment has been applied on numerous occasions both at first instance and in subsequent decisions of the Court of Appeal. Bingham LJ made the following points: (a) the diminution in value rule appears almost always, if not always, to be appropriate in cases where property is acquired following negligent advice by surveyors and solicitors; (b) that was not, however, an invariable approach, at least in claims against solicitors, and should not be mechanistically applied in circumstances where it may appear inappropriate; (c) consequently the court may make a more general assessment, taking account of the "general expectation of loss", and in other cases the measure of damage may properly include the cost of making good the error of a negligent adviser; (d) while the general rule is that damages are to be assessed as at the date of breach, the rule should not be mechanistically applied in circumstances where assessment at another date may more accurately reflect the overriding compensatory rule. See also Reeves v Thrings & Long [1996] 1 PNLR 265, 278; Oates v Pitman & Co [1998] PNLR 683, 694–695; Gregory v Shepherds [1996] PNLR 769, 782.
78 The diminution in value approach has been applied in the context of solicitors' negligence in Ford v White & Co [1964] 1 WLR 885; Dent v Davis Blank Furniss [2001] Lloyd's Rep PN 534; Shaw v Fraser Southwell [1999] Lloyd's Rep PN 633; and Oates v Pitman & Co [1998] PNLR 683."
"86 The weight of authority supports the conclusion that prima facie the diminution in value approach to damages is the appropriate one. In my judgment there is no alternative basis of assessment which can do justice in this case. I accept that in an appropriate case the court may award the costs incurred in removing the defects together with compensation for losses owing to their existence…."
"But in principle there is no reason why the valuer should not be entitled to prove that the lender has suffered no loss because he would have used his money in some altogether different but equally disastrous venture. Likewise the lender is entitled to prove that, even though he would not have lent to that borrower on that security, he would have done something more advantageous than keep his money on deposit: a possibility contemplated by Lord Lowry in Swingcastle Ltd…,. Every transaction induced by a negligent valuation is a 'no-transaction' case in the sense that ex hypothesi the transaction which actually happened would not have happened. A "successful transaction" in the sense in which that expression is used by the Court of Appeal (meaning a disastrous transaction which would have been somewhat less disastrous if the lender had known the true value of the property) is only the most common example of a case in which the court finds that, on the balance of probability, some other transaction would have happened instead."
"In my judgment the best course in a case of this kind is to begin by comparing the position of the plaintiff as it would have been if the act complained of had not taken place with the position of the plaintiff as it actually became. This establishes the actual loss which the plaintiff has suffered and often helps to avoid the pitfalls of double counting, omissions and impermissible awards of both a capital and an income element in respect of the same loss…
It is only when this exercise is complete that attention can be given to whether on grounds of principle some items must be omitted or, exceptionally, added. In the present case the act complained of is the making of the fraudulent representation, coupled with the reliance placed upon it by the plaintiffs in concluding the bargain. If this had not happened the plaintiffs would, on the judge's findings, have sold the Oxford business and bought a new business in Bournemouth, albeit not the one in Exeter Road. Thus, by the time the writ was issued they would have had the capital asset constituted by the new business, plus the profits made by that new business in the intervening period. One may assume the value of this capital asset to be the same as the value which the plaintiffs placed on the Exeter Road business, namely £20,000. In the event, the plaintiffs' position is that they have no business they are out of pocket in respect of the legal fees, improvements and accumulated losses on Exeter Road, and they are in pocket to the extent of £7,500 made on the realisation of the premises. If one then subtracts the one from the other, the plaintiffs' loss is shown to be £20,000 minus £7,500, namely £12,500, plus accumulated losses and resale expenditures and the profits which would have been derived from the putative new Bournemouth business. This is what the judge has in fact awarded.
It is objected that the loss of profits is not properly recoverable because it is appropriate not to a claim in fraud but to a claim based on a contractual warranty of profits, for in such a case the loss of profits does not stem from the making of the contract but from the fact that the profit made was not what was anticipated.
I should have thought this argument sound if the judge had included an item for loss of the Exeter Road profits but he has not done so. The loss of profits awarded relates to the hypothetical profitable business in which the plaintiffs would have engaged but for buying the Exeter Road business, and the profits of the latter are treated by the judge solely as some evidence of what the profits of the other business might have been. In my judgment there is no error of principle here."
"The liability of solicitors in circumstances which are broadly similar to those in the present case has been considered in a number of authorities. As Pennycuick J. explained in Ford v White & Co. [l964] 1 WLR 885 at 888:
"In the simple case of the purchase of property at a price in excess of its market value as a result of wrong advice, the measure of damage must be the difference between
1) the market value of the property at the date of purchase, and
2) the price actually paid."
This has been described as "the diminution in value rule". But the rule cannot be applied indiscriminately and it is necessary to examine the facts of the individual case."
He continues at page 694:-
"From these authorities and the other authorities to which our attention was directed it seems that where a claim is made against a solicitor for damages for negligence in circumstances such as the present the assessment of damages can be approached in at least three possible ways, provided always that it is remembered that, in the words of Lord Hoffmann in [SAAMCO] it is necessary "to decide for what kind of loss" the plaintiff is entitled to compensation.
In the ordinary case it may be possible to apply the diminution in value rule without difficulty by considering evidence as to the market value of comparable properties. Such evidence, from witnesses with knowledge of the relevant market, should enable the court to decide the market value of the property in question with the attributes, or lack of attributes, which it possessed at the time of the transaction concerned.
The application of the diminution in value rule may be more difficult, however, where the property is unusual, or where, to the knowledge of the solicitor, it is being purchased for a particular purpose, or where a substantial interval has elapsed between the purchase and the defects coming to light. In such a case there may be no satisfactory evidence which would enable the court, by making a comparison with other properties, to decide the market value of the property in question. The court may then have to consider the price which the hypothetical reasonable buyer would have been willing to pay had he known of the defects, and the estimated cost of removing or correcting the defects may be the most reliable guide to the reduced market value. Any other method of calculating the market value might be too speculative.
In a third class of case the negligent advice or other negligent conduct of the solicitor may have led the plaintiff to enter into a transaction from which subsequently he has had to extricate himself. Hayes was such a case, and the damages were assessed in effect on the basis of the cost of extrication."
It was Mr Steevens' evidence that there are other buildings on the St Mellons business park available to let but which are still empty and which are competition for the Property. At paragraph (3) of his supplemental report he describes one of those as follows:-
"Unit B Pascal is of similar age, style and size to Willow House and is located on the next plot but one in Pascal Close. It has been on the market for assignment at nil premium for three years. The rent passing is low at £8.67 per sq ft and the tenant IPE informed me that they have spent a considerable sum of money upgrading the space. It therefore appears, although I have not been inside the building, and from the agent's letting particulars, that the accommodation is of a similar standard to Willow House. Logically, Unit B could be expected to be an intending tenants first choice as Knight Frank are quoting terms above this level of rent on Willow House.
It would in these circumstances not be wrong to allow three years plus to let Willow House. I adopted a period of two years as a compromise figure between what the agents maintained (and I believe still maintain) and the period Unit B has already been on the market (and at a low rental) and failed to let. A letting void period should run from the present time as nothing in the previous twelve months letting period will serve to foreshorten the future period needed to let."
Mr Steevens qualified that passage in his second supplemental report and added to it in the following terms:-
"I carried out a further inspection of St Mellons on Friday 15 April. As previously referred to in my supplemental report I had not inspected Unit B Pascal Close. Having now seen inside, the accommodation is mis-described in the letting brochure in Appendix 12 to my report. Only a small part is fitted out to provide "good quality office accommodation". The majority of the space has a bare uncarpeted concrete floor without a suspended ceiling. It is therefore not comparable to Willow House except that the rent passing at £8.67 per sq ft now fully supports an extra £2 per sq ft for Willow House as at 2002.
St Mellons currently has a substantial amount of vacant space to let. Virtually all of this is in later phases in better two and three storey modern buildings i.e. Abacus House, (22,500 sq ft air-conditioned asking £12.50 per sq ft), Conway House, (5,390 sq ft centrally heated asking £11.00 per sq ft). The letting agents informed me that both these buildings had been on the market to let for 12 months and were suffering from competition from the ready availability of offices in Cardiff City Centre. In addition new buildings are in the course of erection for sale to owner occupiers or to let."
In his third supplemental report Mr Steevens values the Property at the date of that report, 22nd April of this year, with vacant possession, at £550,000.