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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions >> Seele Austria GmbH & Co Kg v Tokio Marine Europe Insurance Ltd [2009] EWHC 2066 (TCC) (06 August 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2009/2066.html Cite as: [2010] Lloyd's Rep IR 490, [2009] BLR 481, 126 Con LR 69, [2009] EWHC 2066 (TCC) |
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HT-08-331 |
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
Royal Courts of Justice Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
SEELE AUSTRIA GmbH &CO KG |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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TOKIO MARINE EUROPE INSURANCE LIMITED |
Defendant |
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Paul Reed & Jeffrey Thomson (instructed by Kennedys) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 27th & 28th July 2009
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE CHRISTOPHER CLARKE:
The policy
"in respect of Section 1 only
(3) All other Contractors and/or Sub-Contractors and/or Work/Trade Contractors of whatsoever tier and/or Suppliers engaged for the purpose of The Project (as to the extent stated in Memorandum 15)."
"…The Insurer hereby agrees to indemnify the Insured …in respect of
any occurrence of loss damage or liability during the period of insurance …"
"The Insurer(s) will indemnify the Insured against loss of or damage to the Insured Property from any cause other than as hereinafter excepted"
"...in respect of intentional damage necessarily caused to the Insured Property (a) to enable the replacement repair or rectification of Insured Property (a) which is in a defective condition subject to the Insureds Retained Liability being the first £ 10,000 of the cost of each and every occurrence or series of occurrences arising out of any one event.. ".
Property (a) was the entire Works. Exception 4 in Section 1 provided that the Insurer (s) would not be liable for "penalties under contract for delay or non-completion or consequential loss not specifically provided for herein".
"intentional damage necessarily caused to the Insured Property (including the punched hole windows) to enable the replacement repair or rectification of Insured Property (i.e. the punched hole windows)".
Costs in this category were, it claims, deducted by Bovis Land Lease Ltd ("Bovis"), the Project Manager, from payments which would otherwise have been due to Seele. On 12th May 2003 Bovis sent Seele a schedule setting out its claim for "Delay Effect Cost" and "Contra Change Cost". Seele relied on this schedule ("the delay costs schedule") as showing (when some apportionment had taken place) the access damage costs to be allocated to the relevant windows.
"Whether or not workmanship deficiencies to each window are to be treated as one occurrence or one event for the purposes of memorandum 18 (3)."
Field J had understood that Seele had conceded that the deficiencies in each window constituted a separate occurrence so that the retained liability was
£ 10,000 per window. Quite how that understanding arose is unclear. The Court of Appeal thought that the most likely explanation was that Seele had suggested that Issue 13 should be answered "Yes" in the mistaken belief that the issue was asking whether the defects were to be aggregated. I consider this further in paragraphs 65 and 66 below.
"56 …..I do not think that the installation of defective windows can be regarded as an event for these purposes either, however. If they had all suffered from a common defect in design or manufacture which lay at the root of the problem, it might have been possible to argue, despite the number of separate units involved, that the installation of windows with a common defect was an event for these purposes, but as I understand the judge's findings, that is not really the case. It is true that there were defects in the design or manufacture of the termination bars, but it is not at all clear that that of itself was sufficient to cause each of the seals to fail. Rather, the impression one obtains from the findings in paragraph 5 of the judgment below is that poor workmanship was really to blame. It seems fairly clear that similar shortcomings in workmanship affected all the windows and I am prepared to assume for present purposes that in each case the same mistakes were made. However, there is no evidence that those mistakes were attributable to a single event, such as giving a workman wrong instructions which they then conscientiously followed so as to produce a series of similar defects. Again, had that been the case, it might have been possible to argue that giving faulty instructions was a unifying event, but the judge's findings pointed to the conclusion that the defects were simply the result of poor workmanship repeated over and over again.
57. That leaves the implementation of the programme of work to make good the defects in the windows. The fact that all the access damage formed part of a single programme of remedial works no doubt represents a unifying factor of a kind, but I do not think that either the decision to carry out the programme of remedial work or the implementation of that programme amounts to an event of the kind contemplated by the clause. The remedial work provided the context in which the damage was caused, but was not itself the underlying cause of it. That lay in the defects which gave rise to the need for it. In these circumstances I do not think that it is possible to identify a single event that can be regarded as the underlying cause of all the access damage required to enable the defective sealing membranes to be renewed."
"The workmanship deficiencies to each window represent a separate occurrence; there was a series of occurrences, but they did not arise out of one event."
The pleadings
"The total cost thereby incurred by the Claimant in respect of the remedial works was £ 1,237,709.48 which (in summary) was made up as follow, namely:
14.1 | The cost of dismantling and/or reinstating works by others | £ 638,860.11 |
14.2 | The cost of supervising dismantling/reinstatement of work by others | £ 84,808.63 |
14.3 | The cost of installing replacement windows | £ 427,987.00 |
14.4 | Materials | £ 40,081.84 |
14.5 | Additional tests | £ 13,604.14 |
14.6 | Supervision of the Claimant's own remedial works | £ 32,367.76 |
£ 1,237,709.48 |
"14 As can be expected the amount of dismantling and reinstatement work required to be carried out varied depending on how much work other contractors had already done on or around each defective window. In summary, the windows can be broadly divided into overlapping categories as follows:
Category | No of Windows | Removal/Reinstatement (Access) Works required |
D | All (150) | Remove decorative stone work (masonry) |
C | 76 | As in D+ plasterboard |
B | 39 (part of the 76) | As in C + ceilings and floors |
A | 18(part of the 39) | As in B + outer stone cladding |
15 The third-party access costs, which Seele incurred and is claiming for are, in summary, as follows:
15.1. | Category D | Not Claimed |
15.2. | Category C | £ 56,191.36 |
15.3. | Category B | £ 93,024.70 |
15.4. | Category A | £ 740,856.65 |
15.5. | Total for all categories | £ 890,072.71 |
16 A breakdown of these costs is attached to these Particulars of Claim as Annex 3.
17 Additionally, Seele was responsible for supervising the dismantling/reinstatement works were £ 84,808.95.
18 Seele's total costs for which it claims under the Policy are therefore £ 974,881.34 subject to a deductible of £ 10,000."
(a) in respect of the 18 windows where the costs fell into all of the first three categories the total costs were £ 647,730.50 for 14 windows on level 2 and £ 97,53.93 for 4 windows on level 3, at a cost per window of £ 46,226.46 and £ 23,133,23 respectively;
(b) in respect of the 21 windows (39-18) where the costs fell only within the second and third category the total costs were £ 62,017.97 being £ 2,953.24 per window; and in respect of the 37 windows (76 – 39) whose costs fell only within the third category the total costs were £ 26,858.92, being £ 725,92 per window.
"Turning now to the Amended Particulars of Claim, we are concerned that in an effort to remain as close as possible to the draft Amended Particulars of Claim, the Amended Particulars of Claim may appear to be confusing , particularly in light of the judgment of Coulson, J.
We therefore write to make it crystal clear that, since Coulson J held that a deductible of £ 10,000 per window applies, our client's claim is limited to the Category A windows in these sums and on the basis of the calculation (allowing for the apportionment) set out in detail in annex 3 to the Particulars of Claim and the Schedule contained in the quantum file as follows:
Category A Windows | Number | Apportioned Cost per window £ | Total £ |
Level 2 | 14 | 46,266.46 | 647,730.44 |
Level 3 | 4 | 23,133.23 | 92,532.92 |
Subtotal | 740,263.36 | ||
Less Deducible | 18 | 10,000 | 180,000 |
Net Claim after Deductible | £ 560,263.36 |
We hope this clarifies our clients' position
We trust that you do not require a formal Re-Amendment of the Particulars of Claim, but if contrary to our expectation, you do so require, we propose to provide a draft of the Re-Amended Particulars of Claim in advance of the trial and apply for formal leave at the commencement of the trial."
"the Claimant admits that, contrary to its initial assessment, some of the access costs claimed for relate to more than 18 windows and, the claimant further accept, that parts of those access costs must therefore be allocated so as to take fairly into account those additional windows."
"Our clients' claim is as set out in the Amended Reply, the Methodology Statement, the corrected Summary of Rebuild Costs and the Sketch Elevation cost Comparison. This is the case our clients are putting forward and which your clients, if so advised, are required to respond to.
Accordingly there is no question of there being two different claims which your clients are required to meet.
With respect to the deductibles, we believe the position is simple. Our clients' original case was that there was only one deductible for all the windows, but the Court of Appeal has, in effect held, that each window is one separate incident and therefore one deductible of £ 10,000 applies to every window in respect of which a claim is made.
………
Your letter to Mr Justice Coulson
We believe that you are misstating our clients' claim, which is very simple and is for the Access Costs which have arisen.
……
These Access Costs then need to be allocated to individual windows or, where appropriate, classes of windows and once this exercise has been done one gets Access Costs per window, with each window being a distinct claim subject to a deductible of £ 10,000.
…..
Again, our clients' basic case on this has not changed from that put forward in the Amended Particulars are Claim…."
That letter recognised, in my opinion rightly, that each window was a separate incident and a distinct claim.
The rules and the law
"A subsequent statement of case must not contradict or be inconsistent with an earlier one: for example a reply to a defence must not bring in a new claim. Where new matters have come to light the appropriate course may be to seek the court's permission to amend the statement of case."
"35 New claims in pending actions: rules of court.
(1) For the purposes of this Act, any new claim made in the course of any action shall be deemed to be a separate action and to have been commenced
(a) in the case of a new claim made in or by way of third party proceedings, on the date on which those proceedings were commenced; and
(b) in the case of any other new claim, on the same date as the original action.
(2) In this section a new claim means any claim by way of set-off or counterclaim and any claim involving either —
(a) the addition or substitution of a new cause of action; or...
.
(3) Except as provided by section 33 of this Act or by rules of court, neither the High Court nor any county court shall allow a new claim within subsection (1) (b) above, other than an original set-off or counterclaim, to be made in the course of any action after the expiry of any time limit under this Act which would affect a new action to enforce that claim….
(4) Rules of court may provide for allowing a new claim to which subsection(3) above applies to be made as there mentioned, but only if the conditions specified in subsection (5) below are satisfied, and subject to any further restrictions the rules may impose.
(5) The conditions referred to in subsection (4) above are the following —
(a) in the case of a claim involving a new cause of action, if the new cause of action arises out of the same facts or substantially the same facts as are already in issue on any claim previously made in the original action; "
"(2) The court may allow an amendment whose effect will be to add or substitute a new claim, but only if the new claim arises out of the same facts or substantially the same facts as a claim in respect of which the party applying for permission has already claimed a remedy in the proceedings."
A new claim?
"The scope of the proposed coverage extends to two matters. The Claim must be in respect of a risk for which the policy provides indemnity … and its amount must exceed the retention of $ 25,000,000. Unless both conditions are satisfied the Claim is outwith the scope of the cover provided by the policy......Such a conclusion is also consistent with the approach of Lord Templeman in Lord Napier & Ettrick v Hunter [1993] AC 713…."
"88 Mr Williamson's next point was the submission that, because the operation of the deductible formed no part of the claimant's cause of action, issue estoppel could not arise. I have concluded that, if the application of the issue estoppel principle should be so restricted (as to which I reach no conclusion), the principle would still apply in the present case.
89 I accept Mr Reed's submission that the £ 10,000 deductible was identified in the relevant contract of insurance and was described as a "Retained Liability". In other words, if an event had occurred which cost £ 9,999 to remedy then the claimant would have had no cause of action at all, because the claimant's retained liability would have overtopped the amount of any putative claim.
90 On that analysis, in order to have a valid cause of action in a situation like this, the claimant needs to demonstrate a liability on the part of the defendant which was greater than the liability which the claimant itself had retained. Being able to demonstrate this was an inherent ingredient of the claimant's cause of action. Thus, the Court of Appeal's decision on the deductible point at Issue 13, which was itself a reflection of the 'design v workmanship' issue, went to an element of the claimant's cause of action. The principle of issue estoppel would therefore apply in this case."
Limitation
"contract of indemnity gives rise to an action for unliquidated damages, arising from the failure of the indemnifier to prevent the indemnified person from suffering damage": per Lord Goff in The Fanti [1991] 2 AC 1, 35;
see also The 'Italia Express' (No 2) [1992] 2 Lloyd's Rep 281; Sprung v Royal Insurance Co (UK) Ltd [1997] CLC 70. The right arises on the occurrence of the damage since, as a general rule "Indemnity requires that the party to be indemnified shall never be called upon to pay": In Re Richardson [1911] 2 KB 705, per Buckley, LJ.
Same or substantially the same facts
"131 While it is good sense not to be pernickety about pleadings, the basic requirement that material facts should be pleaded is there for a good reason - so that the other side can respond to the pleaded case by way of admission or denial of facts, thereby defining the issues for decision for the benefit of the parties and the court. Proper pleading of the material facts is central for the orderly progress of the case and for its sound determination. The definition of the issues has an impact on such important matters as disclosure of relevant documents and the relevant oral evidence to be at used at trial. In my view, the fact that the nature of the grievance may be obvious to the respondent or that the respondent can ask for further information to be supplied by the claimant are not normally valid excuses for a claimant's failure to formulate and serve a properly pleaded case setting out of the material facts in support of the cause of action. If the pleading has to be amended, it is reasonable that the party, who has not complied with well-known pleading requirements, should suffer the consequences with regard to such matters as limitation."
Discretion
"Workmanship deficiencies in each window are to be treated as one occurrence or event": para 11 (B).
Issue 13 raised the question whether that was so, but not in terms which would suggest with any clarity that what was being said by Seele was that there was a single £10,000 retention because all the loss arose from a series of occurrences resulting from a single event namely the defective design of the windows. This was very much a point for Seele to make and to make clearly. Field J was left with the impression that the defendants' position was conceded[1]. Whatever the reason for that he could scarcely have assumed what he did if Seele had clearly put forward and maintained their design defect case.
"Trade Contract Sum | £ 3,762,071 |
Seeele's claims | (£ 2,165,829) |
Reduction | (£ 350,000) |
Countercharges | (£ 947,109) |
Total | £ 4,630,790 |
Say | £ 4,650,000" |
"Trade Contract Value | £ 3,762,071 |
Adjustment | |
Major Variations | £ 700,000 |
Agreed Minor Variations | £ 280,000 |
Other Minor Variations | £ 208,000 |
Mark up | £ 49,929 |
Sub-total | £ 5,000,000 |
Less Set off | £ (350,000) |
Total Fixed Account Sum | £ 4,650,000" |
"At the final meeting held on 21st October 2003, Seele Austria GmbH & Co KG still argued over the validity and quantum of the Set-Offs then pending at £ 352,704.37. Bovis Lend Lease Ltd contended that having now agreed the final accounts of all of the other Trade Contractors on the Project, the level of the Set-Off was valid and properly incurred by them.
To progress the settlement, Bovis Land Lease Limited agreed to reduce the level of their Set –Off to £ 350,000 and to withdraw their previous stance over recovery of additional costs of £ 500,000 (Loss of bonus) and £ 142,880,000 (Prelims).
Seele Austria GmbH & Co KG having been informed that the level of the Set-Offs had actually been incurred by Bovis Land Lease Limited they would, without admitting full liability for the level of costs, accept a Final Account incorporating a deduction of £ 350,000 (see Appendix J) providing they were given a copy of the claim submitted by Bovis Land Lease Ltd under the Combined Contracts Works and Third Party Liability Insurance Policy in order to use the same as the basis of their claim …"
Note 1 His judgment records:
“Issue 13: Whether or not workmanship deficiencies to each window are to be treated as one occurrence or one event for the purposes of memorandum 18 (3)?
Answer: Seele rightly concedes that the answer to this question is yes”.
[Back] Note 2 £ 2,165,829 - £ 1,922, 181 = £ 243,648. £ 947,109 - £ 697,151 = £ 249,958. [Back]