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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 >> HOW Engineering Services Ltd v Southern Insulation (Medway) Ltd [2010] EWHC 1878 (TCC) (23 July 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2010/1878.html Cite as: [2010] EWHC 1878 (TCC) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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HOW ENGINEERING SERVICES LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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SOUTHERN INSULATION (MEDWAY) LIMITED |
Defendant |
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Michael Soole QC and Clare Dixon (instructed by Kennedys) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 9 July 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Akenhead:
Introduction
The Facts, the Contracts and the Pleadings
Works carried out | 1995/6 |
Collateral Warranty McAlpine/Linklaters* | 13.2.95 |
McAlpine's sub-contract with How* | Feb/Oct 1995 |
How's sub-sub-contract with Southern | November 1995 |
Collateral Warranty Linklaters/How* | 24.1.96 |
Contract Developers/McAlpine* | 12.8.96 |
Practical completion of Main Works | 20.9.96 |
Discovery of a leak | July 2006 |
Linklaters inform McAlpine/ How of leaks | 15.3 .07 |
Standstill Agreement | 17.9.08 |
Linklaters' claim against McAlpine issued | 6.10 .09 |
McAlpine's 20 claim against How | 16.11 .09 |
How's Part 20 claim against Southern | 16.12 .09 |
Linklaters' claim against How issued | 4.2.10 |
How's claim against Southern issued | 9.4.10 |
* Executed as a deed or under seal |
"18. It was reasonably foreseeable to Southern that:
(a) because the provision of collateral warranties was common practice, [How] would or might provide collateral warranties to persons other than its own employer warranting that the Subcontract Works (which included the Southern Contract Works) had been and/or would be performed with reasonable skill and care;
(b) if the Southern Contract Works were not properly performed then [How] might sustain economic loss in the form of a contractual and/or tortious liability to [McAlpine] and/or [McAlpine's holding company] and/or a liability under the terms of any collateral warranty which it had provided, alternatively pursuant to any duty of care owed to LBS and/or a liability pursuant to the provisions of the [Civil Liability (Contribution) Act 1978 Act]
19. In the premises, Southern owed [How] a duty at common law, coextensive with its contractual duty, to carry out its obligations with reasonable skill and care so as to protect [How] from any such economic loss."
The Arguments
The Law
"From these statements, and from their application in Hedley Byrne, we can derive some understanding of the breadth of the principle underlying the case. We can see that it rests upon a relationship between the parties, which may be general or specific to the particular transaction, and which may or may not be contractual in nature…Again, though Hedley Byrne was concerned with the provision of information and advice, the example given by Lord Devlin of the relationship between solicitor and client, and his and Lord Morris's statements of principle, show that the principle extends beyond the provision of information and advice to include a performance of other services. " (page 180C-F)
His Lordship reviewed the authorities and approved particularly and in some depth the judgement of Oliver J in Midland Bank Trust Co Ltd v Hett Stubbs & Kemp [1979] Ch 384 which was a solicitor's negligence case in which it was held that a solicitor could be sued either in contract or in tort so that the client could take advantage of the more favourable limitation position in tort. He acknowledged that a concurrent liability in tort could not be admitted to circumvent or avoid a contractual exclusion or limitation of liability or indeed widen the contractual scope. He went on to say at page 193B:
"Yet the law of tort is the general law, out of which parties can, if they wish, contract; and, as Oliver J. demonstrated, the same assumption of responsibility may, and frequently does, occur in a contractual context. Approach is a matter of principle, therefore, it is right to attribute to that assumption of responsibility, together with its concomitant reliance, a tortious liability, and then to enquire whether or not that liability is excluded by the contract because the latter is inconsistent with it. This is the reasoning which Oliver J., found implicit, where not explicit, in the speeches in Hedley Byrne. With his conclusion I respectfully agree. But even if I am wrong in this, I am of the opinion that this House should now, if necessary, develop the principle of assumption of responsibility as stated in Hedley Byrne so as to make it clear that a tortious duty of care may arise not only in cases where the relevant services are rendered gratuitously, but also where they are rendered under a contract."
At Page 193H, he said:
"My own belief is that, in the present context, the common law is not antipathetic to concurrent liability, and that there is no sound basis for a rule which automatically restricts the claimant to either a tortious or a contractual remedy. The results may be untidy; but, given that the tortious duty is imposed by the general law, and the contractual duty is attributable to the will of the parties, I do not find it objectionable that the claimant may be entitled to take advantage of the remedy which is most advantageous to him, subject only to ascertaining whether the tortious duty is so inconsistent with the applicable contract that, in accordance with the ordinary principle, the parties must be taken to have agreed that the tortious remedy is to be limited or excluded."
"8. Much of the discussion, both in the judgment of the Court of Appeal and in argument at the Bar, has assumed that the case is about the correct measure of damages for the loss which the lender has suffered. The Court of Appeal began its judgment, at pp. 401-402, with the citation of three well known cases (Robinson v. Harman (1848) 1 Exch 850, 855; Livingstone v. Rawyards Coal Co. (1880) 5 App.Cas. 25, 39; British Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Co. Ltd. v. Underground Electric Railways Co. of London Ltd. [1912] AC 673, 688-689) stating the principle that where an injury is to be compensated by damages, the damages should be as nearly as possible the sum which would put the plaintiff in the position in which he would have been if he had not been injured. It described this principle, at p. 403, as "the necessary point of departure."
9. I think that this was the wrong place to begin. Before one can consider the principle on which one should calculate the damages to which a plaintiff is entitled as compensation for loss, it is necessary to decide for what kind of loss he is entitled to compensation. A correct description of the loss for which the valuer is liable must precede any consideration of the measure of damages. For this purpose it is better to begin at the beginning and consider the lender's cause of action.
14. A duty of care such as the valuer owes does not however exist in the abstract. A plaintiff who sues for breach of a duty imposed by the law (whether in contract or tort or under statute) must do more than prove that the defendant has failed to comply. He must show that the duty was owed to him and that it was a duty in respect of the kind of loss which he has suffered. Both of these requirements are illustrated by Caparo Industries Plc. v. Dickman http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKHL/1990/2.html[1990] 2 AC 605. The auditors' failure to use reasonable care in auditing the company's statutory accounts was a breach of their duty of care. But they were not liable to an outside take-over bidder because the duty was not owed to him. Nor were they liable to shareholders who had bought more shares in reliance on the accounts because, although they were owed a duty of care, it was in their capacity as members of the company and not in the capacity (which they shared with everyone else) of potential buyers of its shares. Accordingly, the duty which they were owed was not in respect of loss which they might suffer by buying its shares. As Lord Bridge of Harwich said, at p. 627:
"It is never sufficient to ask simply whether A owes B a duty of care. It is always necessary to determine the scope of the duty by reference to the kind of damage from which A must take care to save B harmless."
In the present case, there is no dispute that the duty was owed to the lenders. The real question in this case is the kind of loss in respect of which the duty was owed.
15. How is the scope of the duty determined? In the case of a statutory duty, the question is answered by deducing the purpose of the duty from the language and context of the statute: Gorris v. Scott (1874) L.R. 9 Ex. 125. In the case of tort, it will similarly depend upon the purpose of the rule imposing the duty. Most of the judgments in the Caparo case are occupied in examining the Companies Act 1985 to ascertain the purpose of the auditor's duty to take care that the statutory accounts comply with the Act. In the case of an implied contractual duty, the nature and extent of the liability is defined by the term which the law implies. As in the case of any implied term, the process is one of construction of the agreement as a whole in its commercial setting. The contractual duty to provide a valuation and the known purpose of that valuation compel the conclusion that the contract includes a duty of care. The scope of the duty, in the sense of the consequences for which the valuer is responsible, is that which the law regards as best giving effect to the express obligations assumed by the valuer: neither cutting them down so that the lender obtains less than he was reasonably entitled to expect, nor extending them so as to impose on the valuer a liability greater than he could reasonably have thought he was undertaking."
"15. In other words, one must first decide whether the loss for which compensation is sought is of a "kind" or "type" for which the contract-breaker ought fairly to be taken to have accepted responsibility….
22. What is the basis for deciding whether loss is of the same type or a different type? It is not a question of Platonist metaphysics. The distinction must rest upon some principle of the law of contract. In my opinion, the only rational basis for the distinction is that it reflects what would have reasonable have been regarded by the contracting party as significant for the purposes of the risk he was undertaking. In Victoria Laundry (Windsor) Ltd v Newman Industries Ltd [1949] 2 KB 528, where the plaintiffs claimed for loss of the profits from their laundry business because of late delivery of a boiler, the Court of Appeal did not regard "loss of profits from the laundry business" as a single type of loss. They distinguished (at p 543) losses from "particularly lucrative dyeing contracts" as a different type of loss which would only be recoverable if the defendant had sufficient knowledge of them to make it reasonable to attribute to him acceptance of liability for such losses. The vendor of the boilers would have regarded the profits on these contracts as a different and higher form of risk than the general risk of loss of profits by the laundry."
Considering these two cases together, the following steps need to be taken by the Court or tribunal considering a breach of contract and concurrent duty of care case:
(a) The Court must determine for what kind of loss the innocent party to a breach of contract is entitled to compensation.
(b) One does that by way of contractual construction (obviously in the light of any relevant matrix of fact) to ascertain what kind or kinds of loss are envisaged. One needs to consider the consequences for which the contract breaker was contractually responsible; one does this by having regard to the express obligations assumed by the contract breaker.
(c) With that exercise, one seeks to give effect to the presumed commercial intentions of the parties.
(d) Once one has determined the kind of loss which the innocent party is contractually entitled to expect to recover, that measure of loss can effectively be applied to the breach of any concurrent duty of care in tort, save and to the extent there is some overriding principle in the law of tort which prevents it (if any). Generally, at least, the damages recoverable in negligence will not exceed what would have been recoverable in contract.
"The terms of the direct contractual relationship between the subcontractors and the employers involve the warranties already set out in this judgement and no other obligations imposed upon the sub-contractors or by way of a direct duty towards the employers. In line with the approach of Robert Goff LJ in Muirhead v Industrial Tank Specialities Ltd 1986 QB 507 and that of Bingham LJ in Simaan v General Contracting Co v Pilkington Glass Ltd (No 2) [1988] QB 758 in considering whether there should be a concurrent but more extensive liability in tort as between the two parties arising out of the execution of the contract, it is relevant to bear in mind-(a) the parties had an actual opportunity to choose their relationship by means of contract and took it; and (b) that the general contractual structure as between the employers, the main contractors and sub-contractors as well as the professional advisers provided a channel of claim which was open to employers such as Bingham LJ in Simaan v General Contracting Co v Pilkington Glass Ltd (No 2) as being available in that case to the Sheikh. Although this is new ground, doing the best I can to distil from the mass of authorities which have already been considered in detail in the two judgements of Robert Goff LJ and Bingham LJ, I do not believe that it would be in accordance with the present policy to extend Junior Books Ltd v Veitchi Co Ltd [1983] 1 AC 785 rather than to restrict it. This does give rise to an apparent inconsistency, namely the effect of enhancing the close relationship upon which Lord Roskill based his duty in tort in Junior Books Ltd v Veitchi Co Ltd by adding a direct contractual relationship does not confirm a duty to avoid economic loss but negatives that liability. But in this compartment of consideration it is not only the proximity of the relationship giving rise to reliance which is critical but also the policy of the law as to whether or not in these circumstances damages for pecuniary loss ought to be recoverable…
…In order to establish what might be called the Hedley Byrne type of liability, it must be possible to cull from the close relationship of the parties the assumption by the tortfeasor of a duty not to cause pecuniary loss to the victim. In Hedley Byrne & Co Ltd v Heller & Partners Ltd [1964] AC 465 the relationship was not affected by a direct contractual relationship and this was also the position in Junior Books Ltd v Veitchi Co Ltd [1983] 1 AC 520, and there was, therefore, no contractual influence on the relationship. In the present case the tortfeasor had contracted to be liable for failure to use reasonable skill and care in the design of the pile driving operation and in the selection of materials and goods…but the contract was significantly silent as to liability for the manner in which the work was executed. Once it is established that there is no general liability in tort for pecuniary loss dissociated from physical damage…it would be difficult to construct a special obligation of this nature in tort to which liabilities created by a collateral contract did not extend…"
(a) It could be when the negligently executed sub-sub-contract work is handed over up the line on the basis that there what is handed over is something which is worth financially less than it would have been if the work had been properly carried out.
(b) It could be when the negligently executed subcontract all main contract works are handed over up the line on the same basis.
(c) It could be when physical damage first occurred.
(d) It could be when the economic loss, that is in this case arguably the cost of the remedial works, was incurred by Linklaters.
(e) It could be when (and if) judgement is entered against How and it incurs an enforceable liability to pay any sums awarded.
By not asking me to address, the issue as to when any cause of action in negligence accrues, the parties have not required me to address with any precision what the economic loss actually must be.
Discussion
"(1)An action for damages for negligence, other than one to which section 11 of this Act applies, shall not be brought after the expiration of fifteen years from the date (or, if more than one, from the last of the dates) on which there occurred any act or omission—
(a)which is alleged to constitute negligence; and
(b)to which the damage in respect of which damages are claimed is alleged to be attributable (in whole or in part).
(2)This section bars the right of action in a case to which subsection (1) above applies notwithstanding that—
(a)the cause of action has not yet accrued; or
(b)where section 14A of this Act applies to the action, the date which is for the purposes of that section the starting date for reckoning the period mentioned in subsection (4)(b) of that section has not yet occurred;
before the end of the period of limitation prescribed by this section."
There is thus a 15 year "long stop" with regards to negligence claims (except for personal injuries claims) of 15 years from the alleged breach of duty. As indicated earlier in this judgment, the parties have not addressed me on the date when limitation accrued in this case because it is accepted that there is a triable issue on this topic and it is not so cut and dried as to merit a striking out application.
Decision