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 >> Arroyo & Ors v Equion Energia Ltd [2013] EWHC 3150 (TCC) (18 October 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2013/3150.html Cite as: [2013] EWHC 3150 (TCC) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
Pedro Emiro Florez Arroyo & Ors |
Claimants |
|
- and - |
||
Equion Energia Limited (Formerly known as BP Exploration Company (Colombia) Limited) |
Defendant |
____________________
Charles Gibson QC, Oliver Campbell, Noel Dilworth (instructed by Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing Dates: 2, 3 and 18 October 2013
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
The Honourable Mr Justice Stuart-Smith:
"1. The Claimants require the permission of the Court to include a claim for general damages as set out in the Further and Better Particulars of the Claims for General Damages dated 24 April 2013;
2. The Claimants are refused permission to include the claim for general damages as set out in the Further and Better Particulars of Claims for General Damages dated 24 April 2013;
Alternatively, 3. The Claimants' claim for general damages as set out in the Further and Better Particulars of the Claims for General Damages dated 24 April 2013 be struck out;
Alternatively, 4. There be summary judgment on the Claimants' claim for general damages as set out in the Further and Better Particulars of the Claims for General Damages dated 24 April 2013. "
Issue 1: Do the Claimants require permission of the Court to include a claim for general damages as set out in the F&PBs?
Pleadings and Amendments
"Amendments in general ought to be allowed so that the real dispute between the parties can be adjudicated upon… ." [Emphasis added].
"… it is the duty of the Plaintiff's counsel, a duty which ought to be enforced by the judge, when he asks for an amendment which raises a fresh issue or a fresh cause of action, to formulate and state in writing the exact amendment that he asks, in justice to the defendant, in order that he may know exactly the new case that he has to meet, and to the judge in order that he may know exactly what he is asked to try, and to the Court of Appeal in order that they may know what has been tried and decided."
General and Special Damages
The formulation of the Claimants case up to the F&BPs
"17. Details of the damage alleged to have been caused to the Affected Property as a result of construction of the OCENSA PIPELINE.
Details of whether, prior to construction of the OCENSA PIPELINE, the Affected Property, was used for: agriculture, rearing livestock, forestry or mining.
19. Details of whether the Affected Property has been used for agriculture, rearing livestock, forestry or mining since construction of the OCENSA PIPELINE.
20. Details of any consequential losses claimed by the Claimant.
21. Details of the current state of the Affected Property and whether or not it generates any income. "
"the intention in my judgment was to give the Defendant the information they needed to check whether there was any damage to the land and whether it had been caused by the pipeline and if so if it had caused the consequential losses. I am quite certain that if there had been any intention to claim damages based on the future cost of remediation of the Claimant's land I would have insisted (and no doubt the Defendant would as well) on them being asked to give some indication, at the very least, of any remediation work they intended to carry out and probably a "ballpark" figure for the cost thereof. As the Claimants themselves maintain, reinstatement cost is a well known measure of loss the availability of which would have been well known to their lawyers at the time and if there had been any intention to claim it they would or should have intimated the fact."
"The purpose of these documents was to allow the court and the Defendant to know; (a) what damage the pipeline was alleged to have caused and; (b) the value of the claims and (c) to enable the court and the parties to craft appropriate directions including the selection of lead cases."
On the information available to the Court on the present applications, that was plainly right.
"By reason of the facts and matters set out above the … Claimants have suffered loss and damage and claim accordingly. In this regard, a Schedule of Loss was served on 6 July 2007. Further particulars will be served in due course. The Claimants claim compensation pursuant to Colombian law, quantified pursuant to English law and/or damages"
Once again, therefore, the formulation of the claim on Quantum reverted to and did not expand upon the formulation adopted by the Schedules in and from 2007.
i) Productivity/Fertility of the ROW (Right of Way);ii) Productivity/Fertility of Sedimented Fields/Land;
iii) Productivity/Fertility of Swampy/Flooded Areas;
iv) Reduced Productivity of the Property as a whole.
"I Summary of Claim
II General Damages
(1) Cost of Reinstatement
(2) Moral Damages
(3) Loss of Amenity/Quality of Life
(4) Past Loss of Domestic Consumption
(5) Future Loss of Domestic Consumption
(6) Outlay of Labour or Resources
III Past Expenses
IV Past Loss of Income
V Losses and Expenses Affecting the [ ] Family
VI Interest
VII Future Expenses
VIII Future Loss of Income
IX Payments for which Credit is Given"
"14.1 The anguish and uncertainty caused by the damage to the soil on pasture fields and water sources on the Property, which occurred all at once over a short period of time, and the damages attendant thereon which had an immediately affected a number of activities which the Claimants relied on for their livelihood (notably, loss of livestock, fruit trees, timber, and fish);
14.2 In particular, the uncertainty as to the availability of drinking water due to damage caused to the water source used by [the families]. ... The Claimants also suffered the anxiety of having to search for alternative sources of drinking water and were forced to construct a new well at another location on the property. However, the quality of the well water was not as good as the one previously used. The Claimants' anxiety in not having suitable drinking water available was only allayed after they were provided an aqueduct to replace the loss of the well.
14.3 The anguish and uncertainty as to the general lack of availability and accessibility of suitable water on the Property upon which the various farm activities depended (in particular cattle, fishing and crop irrigation). ... This caused a situation of real anxiety and insecurity for the Claimants in circumstances where a large number of family members and the main farming activities depended upon these sources and suitable alternatives are limited for a number of reasons, not least because they are located at great distances which are inconvenient."
"3. The Lead Claimants will contend that, in circumstances where they are precluded from claiming for the cost of reinstatement to their land, the actual financial loss caused to each of them by the Defendants' actionable breach of duty as pleaded in the Schedules of Loss is inadequate to satisfy the basic criterion for the award of damages, namely to put them in the same position as they would have been in if they had not sustained the said breaches of duty.
4. They will ask the court to award them, in addition to the damages referred to in the Schedules of Loss, such sum by way of general damages as the court, in its function as tribunal of fact equivalent to a jury considers to be just and equitable in all the circumstances of the case to provide them adequate compensation for the damage to their land. In this regard, in addition to the general principles of law founding such a claim for general damages, the Lead Claimants will rely on the court's power under section 50 of the Senior Courts Act 1981 to award damages in lieu of specific performance or injunction."
The Case Advanced by the F&BPS
"Giving Effect to the Underlying Principle
11. In these cases, the court cannot adopt any of the approaches usually adopted by English courts in the assessment of damage to immovable property. An assessment based on a diminution in value is unrealistic in these cases, in view of the particular circumstances of the Lead Claimants and their properties and not least in view of the changing and uncertain security situation which prevails in this part of Colombia. The Defendant has not contended the contrary. The same goes for the cost of replacement land, which in any event would not be a just approach to adopt. Claims based on the cost of reinstatement, which were advanced by the Claimants, have been excluded by order of the court. It is therefore necessary for the court to adopt another approach to assess the sum which it should award each Lead Claimant.
12. The Claimants will ask the court to assess such general damages at large pursuant to its fact-finding or 'jury' function. As noted below, it should do so in light of all the circumstances of the case.
13. The Claimants will submit that the court should first reach at least a provisional view as to what sums to award in respect of each of the heads in the Revised Schedule of Loss, and that it should then consider whether those sums adequately give effect to the underlying compensatory or indemnity principle. If and to the extent that they do not, then the application of that underlying principle requires that the court make an additional award of general damages to make good that deficiency.
For example (and without limitation), the court's assessment of moral damages or damages for loss of amenity / quality of life will be directed particularly to the personal non-pecuniary loss suffered by the particular Lead Claimants, whereas the court may consider that an award under those heads will have taken no account, or only inadequate account, of the damage to that Lead Claimants' property. The court may further consider that the quantitative exercise which the Claimants will ask it to undertake in respect of the Claimants' pecuniary losses by way of loss of productivity and other matters fails, or fails adequately, to compensate for non-pecuniary losses suffered by reason of the damage to the Claimants' land.
14. Such an approach is in line with the court's approach to the assessment of damages for trespass. Examples of cases in which such an approach has been adopted are the decisions of the Court of Appeal in Scutt v Lomax (unrep, 25 January 1990) and Bryant v. Macklin [2005] EWCA Civ 762.
15. In considering whether the award of damages does satisfy the underlying principle, the Claimants will ask the court to consider one or more of a number of cross-checks to benchmark its assessment.
16. First, it could consider an upward revision of its multiplier in respect of future loss of productivity to take account of the matters which it has not, or not adequately, reflected in its assessment of the other heads of loss.
17. Secondly, it could consider an award of damages on a 'perpetuity' basis in place of a multiplier-based approach.
18. Thirdly, it could consider the Wrotham Park case law, following the decision of Brightman J. in Wrotham Park Estate Co. Ltd v. Parkside Homes Ltd [1974] 1 WLR 798. In the current state of the law, Wrotham Park awards may (relevantly) refer to (1) compensatory damages which exceed the actual financial loss caused to the Claimants by the actionable breach of duty; or (2) damages awarded (in lieu of specific performance or an injunction) under the jurisdiction created by Lord Cairns's Act and now to be found in section 50 of the Senior Courts Act 1981: see Pell Frischmann Engineering Ltd v. Bow Valley Ian Ltd [2009] UKPC 45, para. 46
19. The Claimants rely on each of these two descriptions of Wrotham Park damages. One of the bases on which Wrotham Park damages may be assessed is to consider the sum for which a reasonable and reasonably advised person, with knowledge of all available options, in the position of the Claimants, would have negotiated for compensation with a reasonable counter-party if he or she had known in advance that damage would occur of the nature and extent which did occur ('hypothetical lost bargain basis')."
i) In her 16th Witness Statement, Ms Srinivasan gives detailed reasons why the Claimants consider that diminution in value is not an appropriate measure of damages for the damage to the Claimants' land. In briefest summary, she says that issues relating to security and public order tend to be the most important depreciating factor, that armed groups may illegally occupy farms at any time and that there is no stable information about property values. That may be right, but it does not follow that diminution in value is an irrelevant consideration. For reasons that are discussed later, the value of the land in its undamaged and damaged states may be a relevant factor when deciding what constitutes appropriate compensation, whatever is adopted as the primary approach to quantification of loss;ii) For similar reasons, it is not obvious why the cost of replacement land is irrelevant to the assessment of damage to the Claimants' immoveable property. If, for example, it were to be shown that the claims based upon loss of productivity, or the claims as now being formulated as claims for damage to land, were to result in sums being claimed that were exorbitantly greater than the cost of replacement land, the cost of replacement land could be a material consideration, acknowledging all the while that removal of the Claimants from their damaged land would be a major step and is not one that they presently appear to contemplate;
iii) The assertion in [11] that "it is therefore necessary for the court to adopt another approach to assess the sum which it should award each Lead Claimant" neglects the fact that the only reason why the Claimants' preferred approach to the assessment of damages for damage to the land as such (cost of reinstatement) is unavailable is because the Claimants did not advance it until it was too late for the claim to be brought fairly. It would be wrong to suggest that it was otherwise "necessary" as a matter of principle for an alternative measure of loss to be devised;
iv) The suggestion in [12] that the Court should assess "such" general damages "at large pursuant to its fact-finding or "jury" function" and that it should do so in light of all the circumstances of the case, provides no clue as to how the Defendant is expected to address this head of claim or how the Court is to approach its functions. The only identification of the principles to be adopted by the Court are in [13] where it is suggested that the Court should assess the other heads of damage and "should then consider whether those sums adequately give effect to the underlying compensatory or indemnity principle." This will necessarily include making a "fact-finding" or "jury-function" assessment of the claimed loss which would, but for the Claimants' procedural failures to advance the claim in good time, have been measured by reference to the cost of reinstatement. In circumstances where the Claimant rejects the relevance of replacement costs or diminution in value but has consistently advanced a financial case based upon diminution in the income stream for a period of 20 years, there seems to be no sound basis upon which or by reference to which the Court is meant to address this supposedly fact-finding assessment, unless it be by reference to costs of reinstatement, which the Claimants have consistently asserted is the preferable measure of loss. What has happened in this case is that the Claimants have attempted to bring an appropriate claim for damage to their land but have done so too late. The Livingstone v Rawyards Coal principle applies where all necessary and appropriate claims are brought forward to provide adequate vehicles for the provision of full compensation. It does not state or imply that where a legally recognisable and conventional head of claim is ruled inadmissible because of a party's procedural default, the deficit shall be made up by damages awarded "at large."
i) "It is intended that the property will stay within the family. Therefore, insofar as the damage to the property remains unremediated, the patrimony of [the Claimant] is reduced. The family heirs will continue to contend with damaged land and damaged water sources into the future."[8] This includes two separate matters. First, the effect upon the present Claimants patrimony, which is clarified later[9]; and, second, the fact that the heirs (who are not Claimants) will have to contend with damaged land. This implies a claim for the financial consequences to the heirs of inheriting the property "insofar as the damage to the property remains unremediated". It does not state whether the property will or will not remain unremediated and does not advance a claim that the present owners have suffered financially measurable loss as a result of the damage to their land;ii) "[The Claimant] has had to contend with the acute distress of witnessing the undoing of the work he, his late brother and his family members had done due to the damage suffered to the property."[10] This appears to lay the basis for a claim for Moral Damages or, possibly, loss of amenity damages. It does not appear to be relevant to an assessment of compensation for damage to the land as such;
iii) "The land was intended to provide security to the Claimants and their entire extended family far into the future... . [The Claimant] is now faced with a situation wherein the lifetime of work designed to provide such security to his and his entire extended family at present and into the future has been undermined by the damage to the property."[11] The loss of productivity during the expected life of the pipeline is already claimed and, if proved, will compensate for the lack of security during that period. The Claimants do not identify what else is being referred to either in terms of period or of quantification of the "loss of security". The pleaded facts and matters could also be the basis for a claim for Moral Damages or Loss of Amenity Damages. Viewed either on its own or in context, the nature of the case being advanced is unclear;
iv) "The Claimants have suffered particularly acutely due to the damage to the water sources on the property. The well relied upon by the Claimants became substantially sedimented and, during the initial period of damage, the Claimants' family members, including young children, fell ill after drinking the sedimented water. No assessment has ever been made of either the physical harm or the emotional distress arising out of this incident.. Ultimately, an aqueduct was installed with the intention of remedying the ongoing problems with the water quality. However, the aqueduct has not solved the problems of obtaining sufficient drinking water."[12] This advances a claim for personal injuries and claims for emotional distress and continuing difficulties in obtaining drinking water which appear to fall within the ambit of the claims for Moral Damages or Loss of Amenity Damages. The opening words ("The Claimants have suffered ...") indicate that this is not a claim in respect of damage to land as such but for the impact it has had on the quality of life of the Claimants;
v) "The Claimants and their large family have lost the ability to rely on available resources (both natural and man made) on their farm to the extent they did before the damage caused by the OCENSA pipeline."[13] It is not clear what, if anything, this is intended to add to the loss of productivity claim and the claims that are already admitted in respect of loss of domestic production. The facts alleged might be intended to form the basis of a claim for Moral Damages or Loss of Amenity but the F&BPs do not identify their relevance apart from the statement at [5] that they do not concern those heads of damage but do "concern the damage to the Lead Claimants' land." How they are intended to affect the assessment of damages "at large" for damage to land is not stated and is not self-evident;
vi) "The ongoing damage to water sources means that the land is significantly impaired both as an asset and in its functions as a farm and a place for domestic life. This has not been valued adequately or at all by claims for loss of productivity."[14] Any impairment of the land "as an asset" would be compensable by reference to diminution in value or cost of reinstatement. Impairment "in its functions as a farm" has no obvious meaning if it is not a reference to loss of productivity. Impairment "as a place for domestic life" is the subject of the claims for Moral Damages or Loss of Amenity. If and to the extent that the financial consequences are not reflected in the loss of productivity claim, that is a consequence of the Claimants' failure to advance a claim for damage to their land as such on one of the conventional bases or to limit their loss of productivity claim to a period of 20 years;
vii) After pleading that the contracts entered into before the pipeline was constructed were inadequate to provide full compensation, it is alleged that "a reasonably advised person, with knowledge of all available option, in the position of the Claimants, would have negotiated for compensation which would have represented the severity and extent of damage suffered, and which would have reflected the ongoing nature of the damage which would outlast the Claimants lives ..." This is a reference to the Wrotham Park Estate line of authority which had previously been suggested as a cross-check with which the Court could bench-mark its assessment.
i) "An upward revision of its multiplier in respect of future loss of productivity to take account of the matters which it has not, or not adequately, reflected in its assessment of the other heads of loss";ii) "An award of damages on a "perpetuity" basis in place of a multiplier-based approach"; and
iii) The Wrotham Park case law, under which awards "may (relevantly) refer to (1) compensatory damages which exceed the actual financial loss caused to the Claimants by the actionable breach of duty; or (2) damages awarded (in lieu of specific performance or an injunction) under the jurisdiction created by Lord Cairns's Act and now to be found in section 50 of the Senior Courts Act 1981."
Discussion
Issue 2: Should permission be granted to include the claim for general damages as set out in the F&BPs.
Do the proposed amendments raise a real dispute to be tried?
"When the court makes an award of damages on the Wrotham Park basis it does so because it is satisfied that that is a just response to circumstances in which the compensation which is the claimant's due cannot be measured (or cannot be measured solely) by reference to identifiable financial loss. ... [T]he underlying feature is that the court recognises the need to compensate the claimant in circumstances where he cannot demonstrate identifiable financial loss."
Exercising the Court's Discretion
i) It is quite unrealistic to expect the Court to get a "feel" and to convert that feeling into a monetary award in a vacuum. This is effectively acknowledged by the Claimants when proposing their cross-checks. Yet their proposed cross-checks cannot be implemented without resort to considerations which are not presently in play. For example, the Court would wish to test the suggested perpetuity basis against matters such as the original value of the land, the diminution in value caused by the damage, the prospect and cost of full or partial remediation, and the feasibility of relocation. If, as at present seems likely for at least some Lead Cases, the perpetuity basis would generate a claim that is substantially in excess of any of these measures, the validity of the perpetuity basis as a reasonable and fair approach to the assessment of damages would be called into question. The Claimants' Wrotham Park cross-check calculation raises precisely the same questions;ii) Even if the Claimants had not proposed their cross-checks, the conventional approaches to valuing damage to land would be relevant and important considerations for the Court when trying to get the "feel" for the appropriate level of compensation for damage to land in a region of Colombia with which the Court is not intimately familiar. It is no answer for the Claimants to submit that their cross-checks merely provide a range of figures for the Court's consideration, that range being from zero to the sum produced by the sample calculations. What is material is that the Claimants do not limit their claims within the range of figures provided. To the contrary they plead that "the Claimants do not seek to limit the court's powers to award whatever sums it considers to be appropriate", implying that the Court may be invited to award figures outside the range if it thinks appropriate. At the very least, the Claimants are proposing that the figures generated by their calculations are within the range that the Court might feel it appropriate to award.
iii) I therefore accept the Defendant's submission that, in order to meet the proposed general damages claim on an equal footing with the Claimants, it must be entitled to carry out investigations so that it can place before the Court evidence about diminution in value, cost of replacement and cost of reinstatement. That would involve the instruction of experts who are not presently instructed and substantial further inspections of the Lead Claimants properties over and beyond those that have been undertaken or planned. Because of the constraints upon carrying out investigations in Colombia, which are detailed in the 2012 Judgment and in the 7th Witness Statement of Mr Isted (whose evidence on this topic I accept) I conclude that it is not possible for such investigations to be undertaken and evidence fairly gathered and presented to the Court under the current timetable. Neither party applies for a further adjournment of the trial. In that sense, the bringing forward of the disputed general damages claim involves a "late" application for permission to amend since there is not time in the very unusual circumstances applicable to this case for the new claim to be accommodated fairly in the time available.
i) The original site investigations would have been conducted differently and with a view to different issues;ii) The Defendant engaged in the selection of Lead Cases by reference to the claim and the issues that the Claimants had raised. I accept the evidence of Mr Isted in his 7th Statement that, if the proposed general damages claim had been in issue, the Defendant would have taken the view that it necessitated an assessment of the cost of reinstatement, diminution in value, and replacement of land values; and that the Defendant would have taken those issues into account when selecting lead cases. It is not feasible now to revisit the selection of lead cases taking those issues into account;
iii) Different or additional experts would have been engaged from the outset.
Conclusion and the Way Forward
Note 1 Lead Claimant 61 [Back] Note 2 Lead Claimant 82 [Back] Note 3 Note 7.0.2, White Book 2013 Vol 1, 324. [Back] Note 4 See Swain Mason v Mills & Reeve LLP (Practice Note) [2011] EWCA Civ 14 [Back] Note 5 See for slightly greater detail McGregor on Damages 18th Edn. 1-029 – 1-031. [Back] Note 7 This is the text as it was after amendment of [50] in October 2010. The amendments are not material for present purposes. [Back] Note 9 [23.3.4] pleads that “Due to the damage ... this has meant the Second Claimant will lose the opportunity to pass on his and his late broth’s asset ... to their children and/or close family members in a suitable condition as they would have been able to had the damage not been caused.” [Back] Note 18 See Claimants’ Skeleton at [15] – [17]. [Back] Note 20 Pell Frischmann Engineering Ltd v Bow Valley Iran Ltd and ors [2009] UKPC Case Ref 45, in particular at [46-48]; Tamares (Vincent Square) Limited v Fairpoint Properties (Vincent Square) Limited [2007] EWHC 212 (Ch), in particular at [22] [Back] Note 21 Lead Claimant 61 [Back] Note 22 Lead Claimant 10 [Back]