BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £5, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions >> Oxford Architects Partnership v Cheltenham Ladies College [2006] EWHC 3156 (TCC) (17 November 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2006/3156.html Cite as: [2006] EWHC 3156 (TCC), [2007] BusLR D25, [2007] PNLR 18, [2007] BLR 293, [2007] Bus LR D25 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Buy ICLR report: [2007] Bus LR D25] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
133-137 Fetter Lane London, EC4A 1HD |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
THE OXFORD ARCHITECTS PARTNERSHIP |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
THE CHELTENHAM LADIES COLLEGE |
Defendant |
____________________
Midway House, 27/29 Cursitor Street, London EC4A 1LT.
Telephone No: 020 7405 5010. Fax No: 020 7405 5026
MS LYNNE McCAFFERTY (instructed by Thring Townsend) for the Defendant
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MR. JUSTICE RAMSEY:
"No action or proceedings for any breach of this Agreement or arising out of or in connection with all or any of the Services undertaken by the Architect in or pursuant to this Agreement, shall be commenced against the Architect after the expiry of [six] years from completion of the Architect's Services, or, where the Services specific to building projects Stages K-L are provided by the Architect, from the date of Practical Completion of the Project."
"(v) it is averred that for the purpose of assessing Limitation, the said Arbitration has been commenced within the limitation period agreed between the parties, as referred to above."
"CE/95 envisages such a situation and the parties accepted, in completing Article 5 and inserting the 'six' year period, the provision as binding on them.
Under these circumstances I am satisfied that the action against them is not time barred, in so far as it relates to the basement tanking."
"I am persuaded that the provisions of Article 5 must prevail in the circumstances brought to my attention. It follows that the action against them in relation to the fire doors was not time barred."
"From the information before me it appears that if there was a breach of the Architects' duty, that breach occurred well before Practical Completion. In its pleaded case the College relies on correspondence passing between the Architects and ZBP between July 1996 and April 1997. Although the absence of instructions or information required by ZBP may have related to revisions to the Architects' design, the alleged breach of their duty is not one that arose out of a failure to their design. Rather it is an alleged failure to administer that part of the Contract. By the time of Practical Completion the event had passed and there was nothing that the Architects could do to retrieve or remedy the ensuing loss by the College."
"Despite the distinction between the Architect's obligation to review their design and any possible failure to supply information to the employer's other consultants, I am persuaded that the same provisions were accepted by the parties in terms of Article 5. It seems to me that in making their agreement the parties did not anticipate that there would be any distinction between any of the services to be provided by the Architects. Article 5 refers to a period following completion of the Architects' services or, where stage K - L are provided, from the date of Practical Completion. In my judgment to reach a different conclusion on the missing information point would be inconsistent. Accordingly, I conclude that the action against the Architects in relation to the alleged failure to pass information to ZBP is not time barred. "
The Relationship Between Article 5 of CE/95 and the Limitation Act 1980
The causes of action
"Except in an emergency the Architect shall make no material alteration or addition to or omission from the approved design during construction without the knowledge of and consent of the Client."
"In my judgment, the duty does not require the Architect to review any particular aspect of the design that he has already completed unless he has good reason for so doing. What is a good reason must be determined objectively, and the standard is set by reference to what a reasonably competent Architect would do in the circumstances."
"exercise reasonable skill and care in conformity with the Normal Standards of the Architect's profession"
The cause of action will therefore accrue if the Architects fail to review the design within a reasonable time of the duty arising or upon a failure properly to review the design in accordance with his duty.
"It seems to me, that except perhaps where the advice of an Architect or consulting engineer leads to the erection of a building which is so defective as to be doomed from the start, the cause of action accrues only when physical damage occurs to the building."
"... a building in that defective state is a damaged building. It is a damaged article in the sense this it is not a sound one ... a building is a manufactured thing, and if it is unsuitable or defective when it is handed over it seems to me that the cause of action arises when the person acquires it in its defective state."
"I would accept that on the facts there alleged any cause of action for damage resulting from negligent design of, or supervision of, installation of the plant was rightly treated as arising when the building in that state was handed over to the client. In applying the principle established in the Pirelli case, as Judge Stabb sought to do in the Tozer Kemsley case, I see no reason why on the facts of a particular case the defect resulting from negligent design or supervision should not constitute physical damage to the building provided that the damaging consequences of the defect are immediately effective. In such circumstances there is no need for subsequent or later damage to complete the cause of action."
"17. So what is the present state of the law of England? With three House of Lords' cases to guide us it ought to be possible to give a clear answer to this question, but I regret that I feel unable to do so with any confidence. Murphy establishes that, absent a special relationship, a claimant may only sue in tort for personal injury or damage to property caused by a latent defect in a building. But it is not clear whether this extends to damage to the building itself before the defect is discovered. And what is the position where there is a special relationship? It is clear that the duty in such a case extends to taking care not to cause economic loss. But when does such loss occur in a case such as the present and does the duty not to cause physical damage to property constitute a separate cause of action for limitation purposes?
18. Mr. Holwill for the engineers submits that in a case like the present a claimant will only suffer economic loss. In this case that loss occurred at the time when the defectively designed work to the bay window was completed, at which point the claimant suffered economic loss because their building was defective. Mr. Holwill further submits that the claimants' cause of action for negligent design was 'single and indivisible' and accrued when damage (economic loss) was first suffered. The fact that the claimants had chosen to claim the cost of carrying out work to remedy the physical damage to their building was not relevant and could not be used to get round the fact that their true claim was time barred.
19. I think the simple answer to these submissions is that we are bound by the decisions in Pirelli and Ketteman to uphold the decision of the District Judge. The facts in Pirelli are indistinguishable from those in the present case. Pirelli was approved in Ketteman and was cited without disapproval in Murphy by the House which included two members (Lords Bridge and Brandon) who were parties to the decision in Pirelli. It has not been expressly overruled and I am not persuaded that this has been done impliedly. Lord Lloyd left open the question as to whether Pirelli was still the law in England. It seems to me that only the House of Lords can decide whether it is or not.
20. If, contrary to what I have said, we are not bound by Pirelli and the claimants' cause of action accrued at the time they suffered economic loss, I do not accept Mr. Holwill's submission that this occurred in March 1997. The defective design had not caused any loss at that time. It would only do so when it manifested itself in some way which would affect the value of the building, measured either by the cost of repairs or depreciation in the market value. In other words I accept Lord Lloyd's analysis in Invercargill which, as he says, avoids almost all the practical and theoretical difficulties which cases of this kind have caused. The present case is, I think, the common case where the occurrence of the loss and its discovery coincide. On this view the cause of action in the present case accrued in 1999 so the claim was not time barred."
The basement tanking claim
February 1997: The Architects prepared the General Specification for the new arts and technology block. This included at section J40 the specification of the basement tanking.
27 February 1997: Sworn King & Partners ("SKP") issued a letter of invitation to tender to six contractors including Cowlin.
27 March 1997: Tenders for building contract due to returned.
23 April 1997: SKP submitted a Tender Report to the College recommending acceptance of Cowlin's tender.
30 June 1997: The Architects issued a drawing schedule and issue record which included drawing number 391 (details of services through DPM) and drawing number 392 (DPC to existing stairwell).
11 July 1997: The College entered into a contract with Cowlin in the JCT 1980 edition in the sum of £2.8 million.
1 December 1997: Fax from the Architects to Cowlin enclosing drawing number 392A which set out a revised specification for the works to the basement.
November 1998: The basement tanking failed as a result, the College says, of the Architects' defective design. This resulted in the first incident of water ingress. The Architects orally instructed Cowlin to carry out remedial works.
6 November 1998: Cowlin confirmed the Architect's instructions to carry out remedial works to the basement tanking.
25 November 1998: Practical Completion of the Works.
26 November 1998: Cowlin requested that the Architects provide a formal Architects' instruction for the remedial works to the basement tanking.
3 December 1998: The Architects issued the Certificate of Practical Completion certifying that Practical Completion occurred on 25 November 1998.
6 January 1999: The Architects reported a new breach of the basement tanking to Cowlin and requested that Cowlin effect a solution.
"(i) Failed to provide any or sufficient detail as to the waterproofing detail for any basement wall penetration
(ii) Failed to respond in good time as to a requests made by Cowlin for information as to the damp proofing detail to the basement so as to achieve a speedy and economical completion of the works ...
(vi) Failed to provide for express instruction within the Contract documents for Cowlin to comply with the guidance of BS8000 ...
(viii) Failed to respond to Cowlin's correspondence which stated clearly on a number of occasions that the membrane had been constructed with an open cavity with no physical restraints in accordance with the OAP's design, thus resulting in a dispute with Cowlin in relation to the cost of the remedial works."
The fire doors claim
February 1997: The Architects prepared the General Specification for the new arts and technology block.
11 July 1997: The College entered into the Contract with Cowlin.
3 November 1998: On a site visit by the Architects, it became apparent that the fire doors in the new building were warped and distorted.
23 November 1998: The Architects issued Architects' Instruction number 17 instructing Cowlin to carry out further works to the fire doors to try to alleviate the problem of warping and deflection of the fire doors.
25 November 1998: Practical Completion of the Works.
3 December 1998: The Architects issued the Certificate of Practical Completion certifying that Practical Completion occurred on 25 November 1998.
7 December 1998: The Architects included the fire doors on the snagging list issued following the Practical Completion inspection.
"Failed to properly design the fire doors sets, in that the specified material was the incorrect material to meet 1 hour fire regulations and in general unsuitable for a door construction."
(1) Causes of action for breach of contract or negligence in relation to the original design of the fire doors and inclusion of that design in the building contract accrued by 11 July 1997 in contract and by 3 November 1998 in negligence in relation to distortion and warping and, accordingly, are statute barred.
(2) A cause of action based on breach of contract in relation to the review of the design carried out in November 1998 accrued on the carrying out of the design and its issue to Cowlin which occurred on 23 November 1998 and is therefore statute barred. A cause of action based on negligence in relation to that design review will be statute barred depending on the occurrence of relevant damage as to which there is currently no pleaded allegation.
(3) Otherwise any cause of action based on a breach of contract on or before 24 November 1998 will be statute barred and any cause of action based on negligence where a relevant damage occurred on or before 24 November 1998 will also be statute barred.
The ZBP claim
December 1995: The College appointed ZBP as consulting mechanical and electrical engineers.
14 June 1996: The College appointed the Architects as Architect.
25 July 1996: Letter from ZBP to the Architects requesting information required to advance its design of mechanical electrical services.
16 September 1996: Letter from ZBP to the Architects again requesting information required to advance its design of the mechanical electrical services.
13 November 1996: Letter from ZBP to the Architects again requesting information.
20 December 1996: Letter from ZBP to the Architects again requesting information.
21 February 1997: Two letters from ZBP to the Architects requesting information.
10 March 1997: Letter from ZBP to the Architects also requesting information.
8 April 1997: Letter from ZBP to the Architects again requesting information.
24 April 1997: Letter from Architects to ZBP outlining the effect of the Council's instructions on the design of the mechanical electrical services.
In relation to each of the letters from ZBP to the Architects the College says that the Architects failed to comply with this request in a timely manner and that is a matter of fact which is assumed for the purpose of this issue.
Summary