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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 >> Willmott Dixon Construction Ltd v Robert West Consulting Ltd [2016] EWHC 3291 (TCC) (21 December 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2016/3291.html Cite as: [2017] TCLR 1, [2016] EWHC 3291 (TCC), [2017] PNLR 17, [2017] BLR 67 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL. |
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B e f o r e :
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WILLMOTT DIXON CONSTRUCTION LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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ROBERT WEST CONSULTING LIMITED |
Defendant |
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Ms Lynne McCafferty (instructed by Beale & Co) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 16 December 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
The Hon. Mr Justice Coulson:
1. THE APPLICATION
"…the defendant will rely upon the exception in cases where the sub-contractor is entrusted with work which involve the withdrawal of support from neighbouring property per Alcock v Wraith [1992] BLR 20 and Johnson (t/a Johnson Butchers) v BJW Property Developments Ltd [2002] 3 All ER 574."
2. THE APPLICATION TO AMEND/PRINCIPLES AND ISSUES
"38. Drawing these authorities together, the relevant principles can be stated simply as follows:
(a) whether to allow an amendment is a matter for the discretion of the court. In exercising that discretion, the overriding objective is of the greatest importance. Applications always involve the court striking a balance between injustice to the applicant if the amendment is refused, and injustice to the opposing party and other litigants in general, if the amendment is permitted;
(b) where a very late application to amend is made the correct approach is not that the amendments ought, in general, to be allowed so that the real dispute between the parties can be adjudicated upon. Rather, a heavy burden lies on a party seeking a very late amendment to show the strength of the new case and why justice to him, his opponent and other court users requires him to be able to pursue it. The risk to a trial date may mean that the lateness of the application to amend will of itself cause the balance to be loaded heavily against the grant of permission;
(c) a very late amendment is one made when the trial date has been fixed and where permitting the amendments would cause the trial date to be lost. Parties and the court have a legitimate expectation that trial fixtures will be kept;
(d) lateness is not an absolute, but a relative concept. It depends on a review of the nature of the proposed amendment, the quality of the explanation for its timing, and a fair appreciation of the consequences in terms of work wasted and consequential work to be done;
(e) gone are the days when it was sufficient for the amending party to argue that no prejudice had been suffered, save as to costs. In the modern era it is more readily recognised that the payment of costs may not be adequate compensation;
(f) it is incumbent on a party seeking the indulgence of the court to be allowed to raise a late claim to provide a good explanation for the delay;
(g) a much stricter view is taken nowadays of non-compliance with the Civil Procedure Rules and directions of the Court. The achievement of justice means something different now. Parties can no longer expect indulgence if they fail to comply with their procedural obligations because those obligations not only serve the purpose of ensuring that they conduct the litigation proportionately in order to ensure their own costs are kept within proportionate bounds but also the wider public interest of ensuring that other litigants can obtain justice efficiently and proportionately, and that the courts enable them to do so."
3. DID THE CLAIMANT OWE A NON-DELEGABLE DUTY AND CAN THE DEFENDANT RELY ON IT FOR THE PURPOSES OF CONTRIBUTORY NEGLIGENCE?
"3. In principle, liability in tort depends upon proof of a personal breach of duty. To that principle, there is at common law only one true exception, namely vicarious liability. Where a defendant is vicariously liable for the tort of another, he commits no tort himself and may not even owe the relevant duty, but is held liable as a matter of public policy for the tort of the other…The boundaries of vicarious liability have been expanded by recent decisions of the courts to embrace tortfeasors who are not employees of the defendant, but stand in a relationship which is sufficiently analogous to employment…But it has never extended to the negligence of those who are truly independent contractors, such as Mrs Stopford appears to have been in this case.
4. The issue on this appeal is, however, nothing to do with vicarious liability, except in the sense that it only arises because there is none…
5. The law of negligence is generally fault-based. Generally speaking, a defendant is personally liable only for doing negligently that which he does at all, or for omissions which are in reality a negligent way of doing that which he does at all. The law does not in the ordinary course impose personal (as opposed to vicarious) liability for what others do or fail to do…The expression 'non-delegable duty' has become the conventional way of describing those cases in which the ordinary principle is displaced and the duty extends beyond being careful, to procuring the careful performance of work delegated to others." (My emphasis)
"73…Much in life is "inherently dangerous", even crossing the road, unless precautions are taken. That is particularly true of work on a construction site. What principled basis is there, therefore, for distinguishing between operations that are not inherently dangerous and those that are?...
75. As we have seen, Ramsey J himself was troubled by the distinction he was required to make. Professor Atiyah, in his seminal work Vicarious Liability in the Law of Torts (1967), p 371, said of the decisions imposing vicarious liability on a person who employs an independent contractor to do work that is inherently dangerous that they "have produced some quite preposterous distinctions arising out of the difficulty of saying what is an inherently dangerous operation." We respectfully agree…
78. As Mr Allen accepts, this court is not free to make as robust a decision as that of the High Court of Australia, but in our judgment the doctrine enunciated in Honeywill is so unsatisfactory that its application should be kept as narrow as possible. It should be applied only to activities that are exceptionally dangerous whatever precautions are taken."
"Contributory negligence is constituted by the claimant's failure to take reasonable care to look after himself and that is a different concept from the negligence in the first part which is negligence giving rise to a liability in tort."
4. LATENESS
5. CONCLUSIONS