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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 >> Bowling & Co Solicitors v Edehomo [2011] EWHC 393 (Ch) (02 March 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2011/393.html Cite as: [2011] PNLR 18, [2011] EWHC 393 (Ch), [2011] 21 EG 96, [2011] NPC 27, [2011] 10 EG 106, [2011] 1 WLR 2217 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
BOWLING & CO SOLICITORS |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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MRS ROSE EDEHOMO |
Respondent |
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Philippa Daniels (instructed by Alomo Solicitors) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 16 February 2011
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Roth :
The Facts
The Proceedings
"It was an implied term of the aforesaid agreement [ie the agreement resulting from Mr Edehomo's instructions] or alternatively it was the duty of [Bowlings] their servants or agents:
(a) to take reasonable or appropriate steps to establish the identity of [Mr Edehomo] and the claimant believes [sic] the persons unknown that were impersonating the claimant, at all material times
(b) to undertake the aforesaid contractual and conveyancing work with all due care, skill, competence and diligence to be expected of solicitors experienced in the conduct of conveyancing;
(c) to take or advise the claimant to take all necessary steps to protect her interests in respect of the proposed sale."
The argument for the claimant on this appeal, as in the court below, has been largely based on (a) of the above allegations.
"An action founded on tort shall not be brought after the expiration of six years from the date on which the cause of action accrued."
The Appeal
"What is meant by actual damage? Mr Stuart-Smith says that it is any detriment, liability or loss capable of assessment in money terms and it includes liabilities which may arise on a contingency, particularly a contingency over which the plaintiff has no control; things like loss of earning capacity, loss of a chance or bargain, loss of profit, losses incurred from onerous provisions or covenants in leases. They are all illustrations of a kind of loss which is meant by "actual" damage."
And Dunn LJ said (at 100A-C):
"In this case, as soon as she executed the mortgage the plaintiff not only became liable under its express terms but also - and more importantly - the value of the equity of redemption of her property was reduced. Before she executed the mortgage deed she owned the property free from encumbrances; thereafter she became the owner of a property subject to a mortgage. That, in my view, was a quantifiable loss and as from that date her cause of action against her solicitor was complete, because at that date she had suffered damage. The actual quantum of damages would, of course, depend on events between that date and the date when the damages had finally to be assessed, but the cause of action was complete when she executed the mortgage, without proof of special damage."
"29. There was no valuation evidence before the judge directed to this issue but Mr Jones [Counsel for Mr Nouri] accepts that had a potential purchaser been told of the forged transfer in the period prior to registration of Mr Marvi's title, this would undoubtedly have led to a diminution in the price he would have been willing to pay. Although the contract and the transfer to Mr Marvi were of no legal effect, they did expose any purchaser to the risk of possible litigation even if that risk was more apparent than real. This is the point taken in the respondent's notice.
30. On this basis there will have been a diminution in the open market value of the Flat following completion on 2nd April 2001. Mr Jones contests this conclusion because it proceeds, he says, on a false assumption: i.e. that a potential purchaser would have been made aware of the difficulties caused by the forged transfer. He submits that there was no realistic possibility of Mr Nouri having discovered the fraud before registration on 4th July and therefore no question of his being under any obligation to disclose those matters to a potential purchaser. The facts were that he remained in ignorance of the fraud until much later.
31. I do not accept this analysis. It is well established that a cause of action in tort can accrue for the purposes of the Limitation Act without the claimant being aware of it. The decisions of the House of Lords in Cartledge v E. Jopling & Sons Ltd [1963] AC 758 and Pirelli General Cable Works Ltd v Oscar Faber & Partners [1983] 2 AC 1 led to limited changes to the Act to provide alternative time limits of three years running from the date of knowledge. These are now contained in ss.11 and 14A of the 1980 Act.
32. In this case Mr Nouri was not assisted by s.14A because he had the requisite knowledge of the fraudulent sale to Mr Marvi by 2002. But the provision of these alternative time periods to address the problem of lack of knowledge has left intact the principle that time will run under s.2 even if the claimant is unaware of the circumstances which have led to it. The existence of actual damage for these purposes does not therefore depend on the claimant's state of knowledge in relation to the breach of duty or its consequences but on whether the breach has in fact caused actual loss.
33. For this purpose the correct hypothesis must be to ask whether Mr Nouri could have maintained an action for damages against [the solicitors] following completion of the sale to Mr Marvi. That requires one to assume that he was aware of the breach and to assess the impact of that on his property or other assets as at that date. Consistently with this hypothesis, any diminution in the value of the Flat attributable to the breach has to be determined on the basis that Mr Nouri was aware of the forged transfer and was under a corresponding duty to alert a purchaser to that problem. The Flat was unsaleable without such disclosure. It must therefore follow that its open market value was what a purchaser would pay for it with knowledge of the forged transfer. There was therefore actual damage suffered by Mr Nouri as of 2nd April 2001."
"In considering whether damage was suffered in 1978 one can test the matter by considering what would have happened if in, say, 1980 the plaintiff had learned of his solicitors' default and brought an action for damages. Of course, he would have taken steps to remedy the default. But he would have been entitled at least to recover from the defendants the cost incurred in going to other solicitors for advice on what should be done and for their assistance in lodging the appropriate caution. The cost would have been modest, but not negligible."