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England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions >> Tate Gallery (Board of Trustees of) v Duffy Construction Ltd & Anor (No. 2) [2007] EWHC 912 (TCC) (02 April 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2007/912.html Cite as: [2008] Lloyd's Rep IR 159, [2007] EWHC 912 (TCC) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH
DIVISION
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
131-137 Fetter Lane London EC4A 1HD | ||
B e f o r e :
____________________
THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES OF TATE THE GALLERY | Claimant | |
and | ||
(1) DUFFY CONSTRUCTION LIMITED | ||
(2) SPECIALIST SERVICES (ELECTRICAL) LIMITED | Defendants | |
(No. 2) |
____________________
appeared on behalf of the Claimant.
MR R WILMOT-SMITH QC and MR K
GHALY (instructed by Davies Lavery)
appeared on behalf of the First
Defendant.
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE JACKSON:
Part 1. Introduction
Part 2. The Course of Proceedings since February 2007
"7. In breach of the first limb of General Condition 4(a) to the Policy Duffy failed to take all reasonable precautions to prevent loss and damage by the escape of water from the connection.Particulars 7.1 as set out in paragraph 10 of the Amended Particulars of Claim, the escape of water was caused by the absence of any or any sufficient external restraint to the connection assembly or the flexible pipe.7.2 Duffy was aware of the need for external restrain by reason of the fact that:(a) as set out at paragraph 7.4 of the Defence of the Second Defendant ("SSEL"), upon completion of the repair SSEL expressly informed servants or agents of Duffy of the need for a concrete restraint to be fitted as soon as possible; and/or(b) the warning label on the coupling referred to at paragraph 11(5) of the Amended Particulars of Claim was still attached to the coupling when those servants or agents of Duffy carried out their inspection of the repair, as referred to in paragraph 7.4 of SSEL's Defence;(c) as set out in paragraph 7.5 of SSEL's Defence, SSEL handed to those servants or agents of Duffy the product literature for the coupling which contained warnings about the need for external restraint set out at paragraphs 11(4) and/or 11(6) of the Amended Particulars of Claim.7.3 The failure on the part of those servants or agents of Duffy to provide external restrain in the face of their knowledge of the need for such restraint (as set out in (2) above) was unreasonable and was reckless.7.4 The failure on the part of those servants or agents of Duffy to provide external restraint constitutes a failure on the part of Duffy to take all reasonable precautions, one or other or both of those servants or agents being the individuals within Duffy's organisation responsible for ensuring that the external restrain was provided and whose knowledge, acts and omissions are to be attributed to Duffy for this purpose. Further particulars of the status and responsibilities of the said servants or agents will be provided following disclosure. Without prejudice to the foregoing, on a date unknown but prior to the escape of water, Mana Chetty was or was acting as Duffy's Project Manager. For the avoidance of doubt, Tate does not admit that as at the date of the reinstatement of the water supply, either Mana Chetty or Kieran were supervising foremen, as alleged by SSEL in its Defence.8. Further or alternatively, Duffy is in breach of the second limb of General Condition 4(a) in that it failed to cause one or other or both of the supervising foremen to take all reasonable precautions and provide the necessary external restraint.
9. Further or alternatively, Duffy is in breach of the first and/or second limbs of General Condition 4 by reason of the fact that Duffy knew that, by reason of the facts and matters set out in Appendix 1, its servants and agents engaged upon the Trade Contract were not competent and/or not willing to meet Duffy's contractual obligations, and failed to take steps to allocate competent and/or willing persons in their place. In the premises, by entrusting the reinstatement of the water supply to those servants and agents, Duffy failed to take or cause to be taken all reasonable precaution to prevent loss or damage.
The Particulars set out in Appendix 1 are the best Particulars that Tate is presently able to provide. Further particulars will be provided upon disclosure."
Part 3. The Present Application
Part 4. The Law
"The assured shall take reasonable precautions to prevent accidents and to comply with all statutory obligations".
An accident occurred when a scaffolding plank, upon which several of the plaintiff's employees were standing, gave way. One man was killed and others were injured. The accident was caused by the negligence of Mr. Gaskell, the plaintiff's foreman, whose job it was select the scaffolding planks and to superintend the erection of scaffolding. The foreman had selected a scaffolding plank which was too weak. The plaintiff was held liable in damages to the workmen who were injured and to the dependants of the deceased. The plaintiff made a claim on its employers' liability policy which underwriters resisted on grounds of breach of condition 5. The plaintiff succeeded against the insurers both at first instance and on appeal.
"In approaching the construction of that condition it is important to remember the context in which it is found… In the present case the duty which this condition purports to impose is a contractual duty imposed on the plaintiffs towards the underwriters, who are indemnifying the plaintiffs against a variety of risks, an important proportion of which arise in cases of negligence either by the plaintiffs themselves or by persons for whose negligence they are vicariously responsibility to their employees… The argument that was presented to us with great skill and ingenuity by Mr. Beney was that the condition in question imposed on the plaintiffs a duty to take care co-terminous with and similar in quality to the obligation to take care which lies on an employer vis-à-vis his workmen. In my judgment, that is the wrong method of approach to this question. The effect of Mr. Beney's argument would be to exclude from the scope of the indemnity which the policy purports to give a very large and important class of case which in the body of the policy is expressed to fall within in."
Lord Greene went on to say that if underwriters wished to cut down their liability to a surprising extent they should use clear words, which they had not done in the instant case. Lord Greene construed condition 5 as requiring the plaintiff to take precautions which were reasonable as between assured and underwriters. The plaintiff had done so by employing Mr. Gaskell on whom it reasonably relied.
"The fallacy which underlies Mr. Beney's contention becomes apparent when it is borne in mind that we here construing words in a contract between underwriters and assured and not works in a contract between employer and employed. When that is appreciated it becomes reasonably clear that condition 5 is introduced for the protection of the underwriters, to limit the field of their liability to the extent that they must be regarded as saying: "We will ensure you against the consequences of your negligence, but please understand that we do so on the footing that you are not to regard yourselves as free to carry on your business in a reckless manner, but that you must take the reasonable precautions to prevent accidents which ordinary business people take, that is to say, you are to run your business in the ordinary way and not in a way which invites accidents." If an employer provided no lights where there were stairs which could not be seen in the dark, or failed to provide fencing where, if there were no fencing, it would be reasonable to expect people to fall, or if in his business he used explosives and left them about where any youth who was employed could tamper with them and cause damage and destruction, I think it would be said that he was not taking reasonable precautions to prevent accidents, but, in my opinion, it is fallacious to read this condition as meaning that the underwriters are to be excused from indemnifying the assured if they are guilty of any breach of the duty which the law imposes as between employer and employed in not taking some precaution which a jury or a court think ought to have been taken, and so become liable to the employed for negligence. That would be granting an indemnity with one hand and taking it away with the other."
"The plaintiffs never warranted that everybody whom they employed would take reasonable precautions, or, indeed, that anybody except themselves would take reasonable precautions, and they took reasonable precautions. It is not right to say that they delegated to another the duty which they owed to the underwriters. In its nature that is a duty which they cannot delegate, and when they appointed another person to see that provision was made for the safety of their workmen they were not delegating their duty to take reasonable precautions, but were performing it."
"The first point to consider is the question of construction of that condition. It must be construed, of course, in the context of a policy of insurance against specified risks. The risks so specified, which are "liability at law for damages" are liability for breach of statutory duty, for which the power or occupier of the factory would always be personally liable, negligence at common law of the employer, for which he would be personally liable, and also the negligence of his servants, for which he would vicariously liable. Therefore, when one approaches the construction of the condition, one does so in this context, and applies the rule that one does not construe a condition as repugnant to the commercial purpose of the contract.
There are three considerations to be borne in mind on the wording of this condition. (1) It is the insured personally who must take reasonable precautions. Failure by an employee to do so, although the employer might be liable vicariously for the employee's negligence or breach of statutory duty, would not be a breach of the condition. That was established in, and was the ratio decidendi of Woolfall & Rimmer Ltd v Moyle. (2) The obligation of the employer is to take precautions to prevent accidents. This means in my view to take measures to avert dangers which are likely to cause bodily injury to employees. (3) The third word to be construed in this context is "reasonable." "The insured shall take reasonable precautions to prevent accidents…" "Reasonable" does not mean reasonable as between the employer and the employee. It means reasonable as between the insured and the insurer having regard to the commercial purpose of the contract, which is inter alia to indemnify the insured against liability for his (the insured's) personal negligence. That, too, is established by the case which I have cited. Obviously, the condition cannot mean that the insured must take measures to avert dangers which he does not himself foresee, although the hypothetical reasonably careful employer would foresee them. That would be repugnant to the commercial purpose of the contract, for failure to foresee dangers is one of the commonest grounds of liability in negligence. What, in my view, is "reasonable" as between the insured and the insurer, without being repugnant to the commercial object of the contract, is that the insured should not deliberately court a danger, the existence of which he recognises, by refraining from taking any reasons to avert it… What, in my judgment, is reasonable as between the insured and the insurer, without being repugnant to the commercial purpose of the contract, is that the insured, where he does recognise a danger should not deliberately court it by taking measures which he himself knows are inadequate to avert it. In other words, it is not enough that the employer's omission to take any particular precautions to avoid accidents should be negligent; it must be at least reckless, that is to say, made with actual recognition by the insured himself that danger exists, and not caring whether or not it is averted."
"The insured shall take all reasonable precautions for the protection and safeguarding of the goods and/or merchandise and use such protective appliances as may be specified in the policy and all vehicles and protective devices shall be maintained in good order."
"It is plain that the plaintiffs in the person of the two Mr. Cannons were well aware that the danger existed, but to say that they did not care whether or not it was averted is a very different matter. Having seen them, I have not the slightest doubt that they cared deeply about it. They are carriers of repute. The last thing in the world they would have wanted would have been wittingly to have taken on a dishonest employee, and to suggest that they refrained on this occasion from taking the normal precautions because they knew that they were covered against loss by the policy would be to impute to them a though which I am certain never for one moment entered into their heads.
It seems to me, therefore, that applying that test enunciated by Diplock L.J. underwriters have failed to show that the assured were reckless, and even if, therefore, I had accepted Mr. Evan's suggested construction of the opening words of the clause, I should still have decided this case in the plaintiff's favour on the ground that it has not been shown that they were reckless in the way they acted even though they neglected to take reasonable precautions."
The two Mr. Cannons whom Roskill J. referred to in that passage were two brothers who controlled the plaintiff firm.
(1) In a policy of liability or property insurance a reasonable precautions clause in the conventional form is not breached by mere negligence. Recklessness is what constitutes a breach of such a clause.(2) The recklessness which must established is recklessness by the insured himself, as opposed to his employees.
(3) The first two propositions are canons of construction developed by the courts, because it is improbable that the parties intend to negate a core part of the insurance cover. Nevertheless, if a reasonable precautions clause were drafted with sufficient clarity, it would be possible to achieve that harsh result.
Part 5. Should the Reply and the Appendix be struck out?
(1) None of the matters set out in the appendix constitute acts of recklessness by Duffy which would constitute a breach of general condition 4(a).(2) The allegations in the appendix are diffuse and wide ranging. Investigation of these matters would require extensive disclosure, extensive factual and expert evidence, and a trial of many weeks. The investigation and trial of these issues would be disproportionate.
(3) Even if (contrary to my view) any of the matters in the appendix constitutes recklessness, such recklessness is unrelated to the flood of April 2000. None of the authorities cited by Mr. Bartlett in his speech in reply establishes that insurers could rely upon such matters in order to avoid liability in respect of the flood.
Part 6. Conclusion