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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 >> Bridgland & Anor v Earlsmead Estates Ltd [2016] EWHC B9 (TCC) (21 April 2016)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2016/B9.html
Cite as: [2016] EWHC B9 (TCC)

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IN THE COUNTY COURT sitting at BIRMINGHAM Case no B50BM 004

TECHNOLOGY & CONSTRUCTION COURT

 

Before:

His Honour Judge David Grant

 

BETWEEN:

 

ANITA & ANTHONY BRIDGLAND

Claimants

-v-

 

EARLSMEAD ESTATES LIMITED

 

 

Defendant

 

 

 

JUDGEMENT

 

 

Draft made available to the parties on 18.03.16

Judgement handed down on 21.04.16

 

A: Introduction 1 - 4

B: Background History 5 - 8

C: Relevant history re 31 Trafalgar Street, 9 - 34

& the claimants' position

D: Relevant history as regards the Trafalgar works, 35 - 41

& the defendant's position

E: The cause of damp 42 - 55

F: Cause of action in nuisance: a measured duty of care 56 - 61

G: Application of a measured duty of care 62 - 63

to the facts of the present case

H: The allegations of breach of the measured duty of care 64 - 92

I: Conclusions on cause of action in nuisance 93 - 99

J: Limitation 100 - 101

K: Loss and damage 102 - 130

L: Conclusion 131

 

A: Introduction

 

1. This case concerns two adjoining properties in Hanley, in Stoke-on-Trent. The first is number 31 Trafalgar Street, which is an end-of-terrace dwelling-house. The second was the former Trafalgar Works, and now also concerns the site of that property. The two properties in their current state (i.e. with the former Trafalgar Works demolished) are shown in the photographs annexed to Anita Bridgland's witness statement at pages 2/275-277. The former Trafalgar Works is shown in the photographs at pages 3/800-801.

 

2. The general layout is shown in the title plan at page 3/519. Trafalgar Works is the long rectangular building fronting Trafalgar Street; behind it is another larger building, there marked "Works", but generally referred to as "Trafalgar House", which fronts Lower Bryan Street. The inner western face of Trafalgar House is shown in the photograph at page 3/799.

 

3. The area in general is quite hilly; behind Trafalgar House the land rises sharply, and now comprises a public park known as Central Forest Park (4/1158). As can be seen from the various photographs, there is a marked fall or slope along Trafalgar Street, from left to right as one looks across the street towards the two properties in question.

 

4. Both experts were agreed that 31 Trafalgar Street was constructed in or around 1900, and a little before the Trafalgar Works was constructed. As the photographs at page 4/876-877 indicate, the ground floor slab of the former Trafalgar Works and the material underneath that ground floor slab abutted the flank wall of 31 Trafalgar Street, up to a level of some 11 courses of brickwork.

 

B: Background History

 

5. In 1928 William Lindop (who was Anita Bridgland's paternal grandfather) purchased the Trafalgar Works, which then became known as the Britannia Metal Works: see paragraph 11 of Anita Bridgland's witness statement (page 2/271). When William Lindop died, his sons Roy William Lindop and Reginald Stanway Lindop ran a silver plating business from the Trafalgar Works until the Second World War, when it was used to manufacture ammunition. After the war, Roy William Lindop (who was Anita Bridgland's father) continued the silver plating business until about 1970, when he retired (DG/10). The Trafalgar Works was then let to a company called Brush Engineering, which remained in occupation until about 1983, after which the property remained empty. Thereafter Anita Bridgland used it for storage until she [1] sold her interest in the Trafalgar Works to the defendant on 1 August 2007: see paragraph 4 of her first witness statement (2/269), and paragraph 5 of her second witness statement (2/397).

 

6. Anita Bridgland stated (page 2/271) that 31 Trafalgar Street was used as offices for the Trafalgar Works. In that context there were two openings in the flank wall of 31 Trafalgar Street which afforded access between the factory at the Trafalgar Works and the offices at 31 Trafalgar Street. One opening was at first-floor level, from which there was a staircase down to the factory floor; another opening was at ground floor level; there was a short flight of steps from the factory floor down to the ground floor level of 31 Trafalgar Street. The outline of the two openings can be seen in the photograph at page 3/807, and of the lower opening in the photograph at page 4/1034. The bottom of the lower opening, where it was beneath the level of the factory floor, can be seen in the photographs which were taken by Mr Moore on 9 September 2015 in the course of excavation works: see the photograph at page 4/1050, and photographs 12 and 13 of those which Mr Moore took on 9 September 2015.

 

7. The Trafalgar Works did not have a separate flank wall on its south western face i.e. where it abutted 31 Trafalgar Street. Instead horizontal roof purlin timbers were inserted into the flank wall of 31 Trafalgar Street to provide lateral support for the long roof shown in the photographs at pages 3/800-801.

 

8. Anita Bridgland moved away from Stoke-on-Trent in about 1979 when she was about 18 years old, and about to commence training as a nurse. She inherited a half interest in 31 Trafalgar Street from her uncle when he died, and later - in 2004 - she and her husband purchased the remaining share of the freehold of 31 Trafalgar Street from her father: see paragraph 14 of her first witness statement (page 2/271).

 

C: Relevant history re 31 Trafalgar Street, and the claimants' position

 

9. In paragraph 14 of her first witness statement (2/271), Anita Bridgland stated that, after she and her husband purchased her father's share of 31 Trafalgar Street in 2004:

"We renovated it with a new roof, re-plastering and damp proof course. We became members of the Stoke-on-Trent Landlords Association. We rented the house to students from Keele University from September 2004 to 2008. From 2004 to 2007 no damp problems were noted or reported."

 

10. As already indicated, on 1 August 2007 the claimants sold the entire site, which included the Trafalgar Works, to the defendant. On 11 and 12 August 2007 the defendant demolished the Trafalgar Works building on that site. From paragraph 16 of her first witness statement (2/272) Anita Bridgland stated that it was not until visiting 31 Trafalgar Street in August of the following year, 2008, that she and her husband learned that the Trafalgar Works had been demolished. She stated:

" ... we found that the factory unit had been demolished and that our house was very damp. There was mildew all over the inside gable end the wall. The factory unit had covered a large portion of the gable wall that was now exposed to the elements."

 

11. At their visit the following year, which Anita Bridgland stated was in July 2009, she stated in paragraph 12 of her second witness statement as follows (2/398):

" ... there was some mildew damp, but there was also clearly significant brown staining from damp on the shared wall."

 

12. At about this time, the claimants decided to use Homesearch, a property agent, to act for them in connection with renting out 31 Trafalgar Street: see paragraph 14 of Anita Bridgland's second witness statement. When asked by Anita Bridgland when tenants first complained of damp, Gwen Fawcett of Homesearch told Anita Bridgland that (2/401):

"... the damp problem was first reported to you on 12 July 2010 when we inspected the property following the vacation of the first tenant."

 

13. In September 2010 there was the following exchange of e-mails. On 7 September 2010 Anita Bridgland sent an e-mail to Graham Hulse, who was - and continues to be - a chartered surveyor working for Louis Taylor Ltd, a firm of chartered surveyors in Stoke-on-Trent, which managed the property portfolio of the defendant. She wrote (2/305):

"Dear Sir

We are the owners and landlords of number 31 Trafalgar Street, Hanley. Despite having a new roof and damp proof course, we have been unable to let this house due to the damp that has been directly caused by the removal of the adjacent factory. We therefore need access to the yard on the 9 th and 10 th of this month in order to install a French drain parallel to our property. At a later date we will also have to render the end wall of number 31 and will again need access to do this. I trust that you can arrange this for us."

 

14. Anthony Bridgland worked (and still does) as a contracts manager for his brother; he was and remains responsible for ground and outside maintenance of a substantial number of residential properties owned and administered by 4 housing associations (DG/49). In the course of his work he had, on one occasion, been instructed to install a French drain at one of those properties. Sometime before Anita Bridgland sent this e-mail, Anthony Bridgland had spoken with a surveyor who worked for the relevant housing association, and described the problem with damp at 31 Trafalgar Street (DG/57). I therefore infer, and find, that the source of the proposal to install a French drain as set out in this e-mail derived from Anthony Bridgland's prior discussion with such a surveyor, sometime between 2 July and 7 September 2010.

 

15. Graham Hulse replied (2/355) as follows:

"I have asked my client's building surveyor to contact you with regards to your proposed works. Please refrain from carrying out any works on my client's land or that might affect its property until such time as we have established what is required. It is then likely we will need to grant you a licence to carry out the works if appropriate to safeguard both yours and my client's position ..."

 

Jonathan Cornes, the defendant's building surveyor, wrote to Anita Bridgland that evening as follows (2/305):

"Thank you for your e-mail. This has been forwarded to us by the owner's agents ... We are chartered building surveyors and we act for the freehold owner of this property and can confirm that the notice period provided below is not reasonable for us to consider the full extent of the proposed works and how the works are intended to be carried out. We are however prepared to meet with you at your cost on site on the 10th of this month to discuss your proposals so that we can document an agreement between us before proceeding on our client's property. ...

Our fees are £95 per hour plus VAT and I would expect that our initial meeting should not exceed more than one hour to discuss your proposals."

 

16. Thus it was that Anthony Bridgland met Jonathan Cornes on site on 10 September 2010. In paragraph 12 of his witness statement (2/285) Anthony Bridgland stated that:

"... (Mr Cornes) explained that we should have tanking damp proofing works on the inside of our property. I explained that this would significantly affect the inside of the already small hallway and that this would prevent the water pooling against the external wall."

 

He then referred to Mr Cornes' notes of the meeting, and continued in paragraph 14:

"Mr Cornes explained to me that by lifting the concrete, placing down a type of membrane, insulation and shingle before replacing the concrete, that this could also work to prevent the damp. ... He then also explained another method may be internal tanking. I note that there are no references to this other option in his ... note."

 

17. In his oral evidence at trial he stated (DG/57):

"Q: He told you that the problem was because damp was coming through, because of the ground being above the flank wall?

A: Yes

Q: And a French drain was not going to work?

A: What he said was that an internal tanking system would work. ... He told me that we needed to tackle the job from the inside.

Q: And he said that a slurry render or cement system would not do the job?

A: Yes

Q: And he also said that a damp proof course would not do the job?

A: I can't remember about a damp proof course

Q: So Mr Cornes must have been referring to something different to slurry render or cement when he was referring to internal tanking?

A: He referred to plastic internal tanking. I was led to believe H&M that it would work, as it was a tanking system. But H&M did also suggest work be done to the external side wall ...

Q: And his final advice was that while external works might include a French drain, that was not something he could recommend to his client, because of the impact it might have had on its plans?

A: That's what he said ...

 

18. Anthony Bridgland's contemporaneous manuscript note of the meeting is at page 2/290. He headed it "License formal agreement" and then wrote:

"300 ml channel beside number 31. Remove soil, apply bitumen (sic) membrane 2000-3000, then insulation board, then back fill with shingle and replace concrete.

Membrane to go up 150 ml above finished floor level chased into brickwork.

Gable end brickwork to be re-pointed, scaffolding

No materials or waste and no parking of vehicles on site

Insurance of workers timescales"

 

In his cross-examination, while he disagreed that the description in paragraph 1 of that note amounted to a French drain in the technical sense of that word, Mr Cornes accepted (DG/109) that it was an accurate record of what they had discussed, and of what he had recommended to Anthony Bridgland during that meeting. However, as I find below, it is not a complete record of all the matters they discussed during that meeting.

 

19. Mr Cornes' manuscript note of that meeting is at page 2/289. After referring to the meter readings he had taken, he wrote:

"Not rising damp - penetrating damp the g.l. Is lower (approx 1.2m) than the external yard level.

I advised that a chemical dpc will not work, this needs tanking sited externally or internally. I advised against a french drain - if they develop the yard the french drain may get damaged. Also not his land.

I advised that his surveyor/damp man was wrong to suggest a damp proof course or slurry wall. I recommended Peter Cox or Rentokil to give a quote for a tanking system.

Invoice £95 plus VAT."

 

In his evidence at trial Mr Cornes explained (DG/110) that he made this note contemporaneously, and that the date 19/9/13 at the top of the page was one which he incorrectly added at that later date. It is also to be noted that Mr Cornes did not send the claimants any formal written note of his advice following that meeting; instead he simply kept this manuscript note on his file.

 

20. The day after that meeting Anita Bridgland sent Graham Hulse an e-mail (2/308). In her penultimate paragraph she wrote:

"As our primary concern is to get the work done as soon as possible to prevent more damage to our house we suggest that we pay for the wall to be re-pointed as this also includes a section that is not your client's responsibility. As your client's surveyor recommended a membrane along the length of the house and not a french drain, we feel very strongly that the cost of this should be met by your client. As there is visible evidence of water lying adjacent to our house we do not think the above facts can be disputed."

 

On 13 September 2010 Graham Hulse replied, inter alia, as follows (2/308):

"I will speak with my client's building surveyor asap with regards to what he believes is the cause of the problems you have highlighted. Certainly the building that was removed was nothing more than a derelict lean-to. It was built later than your own building. Therefore, nothing has been exposed other than was always originally exposed ... I recall it was totally unusable mainly because it had been poorly maintained; probably for years and in particular the roof was very poor and allowed the elements in. ... I don't believe that its removal has caused the problems you have referred to ...

... Following your meeting with the building surveyor you are now saying that my client has caused damage to your property and you want him to pay to maintain your property. Clearly the goalposts seem to keep moving ... In essence you must have known about these issues for many months yet seem to be saying that it will be my client's problem if you he doesn't allow you immediate access? ... You have made a great deal of assumptions and allegations, some of which may or may not be correct. Unfortunately, in the circumstances we must try to establish the facts before we can allow you access onto my client's land ...

We will of course do our best to expedite our enquiries ..."

 

21. It then appears that Jonathan Cornes sent Graham Hulse a long and detailed e-mail of advice at 17:18 that day (2/366A). It is to be noted that this e-mail was not disclosed until the trial of the action was underway. In it Jonathan Cornes stated inter alia:

"...

The adjoining owners hallway wall below the concrete car park level will have always suffered from penetrating damp despite the removal of the building due to the difference in the floor level, so therefore any weathering at the junction of the floor slab to the adjoining owners wall following the removal of the wall would not have stopped the penetrating damp. This wall requires tanking internally to significantly reduce the penetrating damp. I would also suggest that the damp proof course plastering would reduce the visual effects of the penetrating damp was some time before manifesting itself on the surface of the plaster.

In addition to this, the plaster finish under the staircase is also suffering from penetrating damp, and there is still a building which encloses upon the party wall in this location, therefore confirming that despite the removal of the building there is an area on the same wall ... which is ... suffering from penetrating damp.

With regards to the weathering of the party wall or re-pointing, I would suggest that it is 'adequately' pointed and also considering the age of the building ...

...

I suggest we also make it clear that they have no right to put anything on our land i.e. a French drain, as this will be beyond the face of the boundary wall and will be deemed to be trespass. Practically, if the yard is developed, then we could remove the drain without their knowledge.

We need to clarify to the adjoining owners that the membrane solution proposed is not required if an alternative solution is possible. We do confirm however that a French drain is not acceptable because this will be astride the boundary and will not resolve the problem technically and would easily be removed without our knowledge if/when the site is redeveloped. Please confirm an alternative solution which is in accordance with good building practices and therefore the advice of a chartered building surveyor or a member of the Property Care Associates (PCA) should be obtained."

 

In his oral evidence at trial Jonathan Cornes explained (DG/108) that, in that last sentence, he was endeavouring to set out the information which Graham Hulse should ask the claimants to obtain. Jonathan Cornes accepted that he had not expressed himself at all clearly in that regard, and that might well explain why Graham Hulse did not make this point to Anita Bridgland when he sent her his e-mail later that day.

 

22. That evening Anita Bridgland replied to Graham Hulse (2/362) inter alia as follows:

"I am sorry if my e-mail sounded confrontational ... the confrontation seems to have come via your client's surveyor who is recommending works totally on his terms that could end up costing us a lot more. As he was so precise about the work allowed, and we do feel quite strongly that the damp is a direct result of the removal of the factory, that resulted in exposing the wall to the elements, we felt we were offering the best compromise to split costs and allow your client responsibility for carrying out the insertion of the membrane. Your clients surveyor indicated that he would not allow us vehicles or skips on the land, making it difficult for us to carry out the works."

 

Graham Hulse then replied (2/365):

"I can confirm that my client does not wish to prevent you from carrying out works to your property. I just want to ensure that the works do not cause any problems as a result of the works to my client. I understand that the membrane was a suggestion. It does not have to be done. Allowing your workmen access in itself does not present a problem.

However I have been advised the following by the building surveyor: (and he then set out some of the paragraphs in the e-mail of advice which he had just received from Jonathan Cornes, and then continued)

In essence I will be happy to recommend that you are allowed a licence for access to carry out works to your own building providing such works do not encroach on my client's land (therefore a French drain would not be acceptable). Furthermore, based on the surveyor's comments, I am not inclined to recommend my client contributes to the cost of the works. ..."

 

23. Based on all that evidence, I find at that meeting between Anthony Bridgland and Jonathan Cornes on 10 September 2010 as follows:

 

(1) While Jonathan Cornes indicated that either an external or internal tanking system would be an effective method of dealing with the damp from which 31 Trafalgar Street suffered, his focus and advice was that an internal tanking system was the appropriate and preferred remedial scheme. It is perhaps surprising that Anthony Bridgland did not refer to an internal form of tanking in his contemporaneous manuscript note. Jonathan Cornes did refer to both internal and an external form of tanking in his contemporaneous manuscript note; however, the fact that he did not refer to an external form of tanking in his long e-mail of advice to Graham Hulse is consistent with the fact - as I find - that his focus was throughout on an internal form of tanking.

 

(2) Although they discussed a method of digging a ditch along the bottom of the external face of the flank wall of 31 Trafalgar Street, and then inserting a bitumen membrane and then insulation board on the external face of the flank wall, and then backfilling with shingle, Jonathan Cornes made it clear that his client would not permit the claimants to carry out such works, in short that a French drain would not be permitted. That stance was repeated on 13 September 2010 by Graham Hulse.

 

(3) Jonathan Cornes advised Anthony Bridgland that an internal slurry render or cement system would not work, and that instead a tanking system was required.

 

(4) Jonathan Cornes also advised Anthony Bridgland that a dpc would not be effective to combat the damp from which 31 Trafalgar Street suffered.

 

24. After that meeting the claimants instructed H&M Damp Proofing ("H&M") to carry out internal damp-proofing works at 31 Trafalgar Street. H&M's invoice is dated 1 October 2010 (2/439). Those works included drilling and injecting a chemical damp course to ground floor level, and also to internal floor level; and also applying 'Arctite' tanking mortar to the internal surface of the gable wall, to approximately 4 foot high.

It is to be noted that inserting a dpc was precisely what Jonathan Cornes had advised Anthony Bridgland would not be effective to combat the damp from which 31 Trafalgar Street suffered, and that insofar as 'Arctite' tanking mortar was a form of an internal slurry render or cement system, that also would be ineffective to combat the damp from which 31 Trafalgar Street suffered. When this was put to Anthony Bridgland in cross-examination, he stated (DG/60) that H&M had advised him that the 'Arctite' tanking mortar would work.

 

25. On 27 October 2010 Anita Bridgland sent an e-mail to Graham Hulse (2/369). She wrote:

"Following the advice of your clients surveyor we have had an approved damp course company carry out work to include tanking to our property. However unfortunately the company have advised us that as water is penetrating directly from your clients car park, this work is insufficient to prevent long-term damage to our property and a drain on your clients property is the only solution. We have taken advice and have been advised by our insurance company and solicitor that in accordance with the party wall act it is the responsibility of your client to carry out the necessary work. We're very sorry that this may result in a legal case but we have been left with no option especially is this now affects the future insurance premiums on the property. Please will you let us know if you want our solicitor to deal directly with Louis Taylor or your client directly. We have been advised to allow your client 10 days to reply before we commence legal proceedings."

 

26. Graham Hulse replied later that evening as follows

"...

The first time I became aware of any problem was when a member of my staff asked me if it was in order for you to have the key to my clients premises to carry out works on its land. You stated to my staff that this had been agreed or authorised? As this was not a matter of fact the case (as the only person or company that could have given such authority was either myself or my client) I advised that the key should not be released. I later advised you that under no circumstances should you enter onto my clients land and carry out any works on its land or property. Finally, I arranged my clients building surveyor to meet with you to discuss the issues you had raised at your cost if you wished. I understand that he made various suggestions, but that none affected my clients land ...

I am not in anyway wishing to be awkward but need to establish the facts. In particular, why you believe so strongly that you should have been allowed on my clients land to dig a drain without its explicit consent and why you now believe that in accordance with the party wall act it is my client's responsibility to carry out such works on your behalf?

My client is very reasonable. However as I am sure you will appreciate having started off by saying you had authority to enter onto its land and dig a drain when clearly you did not has not helped the situation. You now appear to be threatening legal proceedings against my client because it would not allow you to enter onto its land to dig a drain that it knew nothing about?

...

Once I fully understand the issues you have I will respond appropriately."

 

It is to be noted that in that e-mail Graham Hulse did not address any of the technical issues raised in Anita Bridgland's e-mail, in particular (a) whether water was "penetrating directly from (his) client's car park"; (b) whether the works which H&M had carried out would be "insufficient to prevent long-term damage" to 31 Trafalgar Street, and (c) whether "a drain on (the defendant's) property was the only solution", but instead directed much of his response to complaining about the way the claimants' had attempted previously to obtain access to the defendant's land.

 

27. There followed an inconclusive exchange of e-mails: Anita Bridgland's of 1 November 2010 (2/371); Graham Hulse's of 2 November 2010 (3/794), and Anita Bridgland's of 1 December 2010 (3/495).

 

28. On 25 February 2011 there was a telephone conversation between Anthony Bridgland and Andrew Wheeldon, the director of the defendant company. In paragraph 26 of his first witness statement Andrew Wheeldon stated (2/325):

"... Mr Bridgland complained that the damp problem is still as bad and stated that he had been told a drain was now needed to cure it for good and asked if I would install one on my land. I said I doubted whether a drain would have any effect. However, as a sign of good faith and to bring the matter to a close, I would arrange for a plastic drainage channel to be installed at the higher ground level along the gable wall of the house."

 

Andrew Wheeldon then asked Jonathan Cornes for his advice:

"Jonathan advised that it may impact on the future development of the site, but the impact could be limited if a small section of the concrete slab was cut out and a 4 inch or 6 inch plastic channel put in on the surface to remove any water which may have prompted by the gable wall."

 

Andrew Wheeldon then employed a builder, Karl Sharratt, to install such a drainage channel "at my cost". That work was carried out on 16 March 2011. That channel can be seen in photographs 5 and 7 in appendix C to Mr Moore's first report dated 28 January 2015, those photographs having been taken on 28 May 2013 (4/878 & 880).

 

29. Later in March 2011 the claimants had a survey carried out, by Mr J Sercombe, a chartered engineer and builder working with the "Housing Survey Co" of Telford. Mr Sercombe noted that the purpose of his report was "to inspect and report on the structural integrity of the gable wall" (4/811), although it is to be noted that the structural integrity of the gable wall was not the subject of complaint by the claimants to the defendant at the time, nor has it been in these proceedings. In paragraph 2.3 of his report Mr Sercombe stated:

"There are issues with damp penetration through the gable wall which have been addressed by the installation of a low level chemical DPC and rendering of the inner wall up to 1.0 m above floor level."

 

That would appear to be a reference to the works which had been carried out by H&M the previous October. In paragraph 4.3 of his report Mr Sercombe opined that:

"The difference in floor levels between the original workshop and the house has been overcome by the installation of a gutter."

 

That would appear to be a reference to the work which had been carried out by Karl Sharratt a little earlier in March 2011. Mr Sercombe was not called as a witness at the trial; in any event the evidence in the case, including the expert opinion of both and/or either Mr Moore and Mr Cornes, indicates that the damp from which number 31 Trafalgar Street suffered was certainly not "overcome by the installation of (this) gutter". Then in paragraph 4.4 of his report Mr Sercombe opined:

"To improve any dampness we would recommend the gable wall be rendered, probably 20mm of sand/cement render, and the wall insulated internally using concrete insulation blocks or insulation boarding. There are many systems available, particularly the different types of boarding."

 

30. In July 2011 Anthony Bridgland obtained a quotation from Stephen Kelly of Dynamic Property Care Ltd ("Dynamic") to carry out various external works to the flank wall of 31 Trafalgar Street, including at item 4 "Coat all of the gable wall in industrial silicone" (3/506). Although he did not refer to this work in his witness statement, it appears that Anthony Bridgland got Dynamic to carry out this work in or about July 2011. It is to be noted that this work did not include the provision of any internal insulation, whether by concrete insulation blocks or insulation boarding.

 

31. There then appears to have been a lull in activity: in paragraph 29 of his first witness statement Andrew Wheeldon records that (2/325) on 28 May 2012 Graham Hulse had received a complaint from a Mr Clive Trevor, who was a friend of the claimants, that the channel had become blocked. Clive Trevor suggested that a larger AKO drain with a perforated cover be installed, but Jonathan Cornes advised against that being done. Andrew Wheeldon instructed his maintenance contractor to clear out the drain, and thereafter carry out monthly checks.

 

32. During 2012 the tenants (then Francesca Haynes and Calum Parker) complained about damp to Mr Tom Abbott, the Housing Standards Officer of Stoke-on-Trent. Mr Abbott inspected 31 Trafalgar Street on 3 December 2012. His report is at page 2/454. As regards the location of the hallway, under the heading "Defect" he recorded "Evidence of penetrating damp along the exposed side elevation", and under the heading "Remedy" he requested the claimants as landlords to carry out the following by 7 January 2013:

"Investigate cause of the damp and remediate, remove all affected plasterwork back to bare brick, ensure the wall structure adequately dries. Re-plaster the wall ensuring a finish suitable for decorative finish."

 

33. Anita Bridgland then wrote a letter dated 17 December 2012 to the defendant, which she sent by e-mail attachment to Graham Hulse (2/393) in which she referred to various works which the claimants had carried out at 31 Trafalgar Street and continued:

"Unfortunately none of this has been sufficient; the damp problem has become so bad that the council housing standards officer has become involved. We have been unable to find a damp proof specialist prepared to carry out and guarantee work, as they feel the ground levels are a major problem and they advise a French drain on your land. An independent surveyor also advised a second skin is needed on the gable end in the form of cladding. The housing standards officer agrees that these are necessary works.

We hope you will agree to meet the major part of this cost as we feel you have created this problem by removing the adjacent building."

 

Her reference to the opinion of a damp proof specialist would appear to be a reference to the advice which H&M had given to the claimants back in 2010, to which Anita Bridgland had referred in her e-mail to Graham Hulse of 27 October 2010 (2/369): see paragraph 24 of her third witness statement (2/407). Her reference to the opinion of an independent surveyor would appear to be a reference to the advice which Mr Sercombe had given in his report dated 27 March 2011 (4/810).

 

34. Not having received reply to the letter of 17 December 2012, Anita Bridgland sent Graham Hulse a chaser by e-mail on 27 December 2012 (2/395); he did not reply to that: see paragraph 12 of his witness statement (2/352). The claimants' solicitors then sent a letter before action dated 15 February 2013 (5/1272); correspondence between the parties' solicitors ensued, and finally proceedings were issued on 18 November 2013.

 

 

 

 

D: Relevant history as regards the Trafalgar Works, and the defendant's position

 

35. Andrew Wheeldon described the defendant as a "property investment company" in paragraph 2 of his first witness statement, and explained in his evidence at trial that the defendant's method of business was to purchase sites, identify schemes or proposals for development, including obtaining relevant planning permissions, but not itself to carry out such development; instead it would sell the relevant site with such planning permission to a developer. In 2007 the defendant owned some 22 properties, with a capital value of approximately £8 million; this value declined to about £6 million in 2010. In 2013/14 the defendant owned properties of a similar value.

 

36. The site, including the Trafalgar Works, was first marketed for sale in December 2006. Andrew Wheeldon viewed the site briefly in March 2007; that visit was cursory, lasting only about five minutes and when it was getting dark (DG/72). His intention, as at that first visit, was to repair the Trafalgar Works as necessary, and then rent them out (DG/73). As already indicated, the defendant purchased the entire site, including the Trafalgar Works, on 1 August 2007.

 

37. In paragraph 11 of his first witness statement Andrew Wheeldon stated that he then (2/322):

"... immediately instructed Trevor Millward, a building contractor I had employed on many occasions over the previous four years, to check that the buildings were secure, to change locks where necessary, and to give his opinion on their condition, making recommendations where necessary."

 

It is to be noted that Trevor Millward was not a building surveyor, or any other type of professional person professionally qualified to give an opinion on the state or condition of a property. Trevor Millward inspected the site, and then wrote to Andrew Wheeldon by letter dated 6 August 2007 (2/332) as follows:

"As requested I have been to inspect all buildings on the Lower Bryan Street site while you were away. All buildings are watertight and secure except for the single-storey building at the rear that abuts the terraced properties.

It appears that some time ago the lead flashings and some of the "Staffordshire blue" tiles have been removed probably stolen. As a result over time the roofing timbers have rotted and some brickwork dislodged. The building is therefore unsafe and needs to be demolished as soon as possible.

The demolition is straightforward, extra care obviously taken where the building abuts the terraced house, and should take no more than a couple of days by hand and machinery.

If you can let me know by tomorrow I can arrange for the demolition to be done this weekend, remedial works will be carried out within the next 2 to 3 weeks."

 

In his evidence at trial Andrew Wheeldon explained that Trevor Millward would not do such demolition work himself; instead he worked as a "facilities manager" who would get appropriate subcontractors to do the various jobs which were required. Trevor Millward also sent the defendant an estimate (2/333) for the demolition works in the sum of £5,500, and for the following "Additional works post demolition" for the further sum of £2,000:

"1. Tidy and make presentable exterior of rear of Lower Bryan Street

2. Point, make good brickwork and render gable of terraced property to which building was abutted

3. Re-paint gable wall with white masonry paint to match existing

4. Infill steps with concrete to match existing

5. Lay coping stones to front wall."

 

Andrew Wheeldon accepted Trevor Millward's estimate, and the Trafalgar Works were demolished by subcontractors instructed by Trevor Millward on 11 and 12 August 2017.

 

38. In his oral evidence at trial, while he initially stated that, because he had to demolish and secure the Trafalgar Works quickly, it was not incumbent on him to instruct appropriate professionals in connection with his decision to demolish the Trafalgar Works, Andrew Wheeldon also accepted that, absent the need for acting quickly, it would have been reasonable for the defendant to instruct such professionals (DG/77). Although Trevor Millward referred to "Structural engineers services for Lower Bryan Street" in his invoice dated 30 September 2007 (2/335), Andrew Wheeldon accepted that he never saw or considered any such advice from such a structural engineer. Neither Trevor Millward nor any such structural engineer gave evidence at the trial.

 

39. In his oral evidence at trial, Andrew Wheeldon stated (DG/79) that he did not give Graham Hulse, his managing agent, any specific instruction that the owner of the adjoining property should be notified of the intended demolition of the Trafalgar Works. He did say that "for all we know Trevor Millward knocked on the door ...", but accepted that he did not give Trevor Millward any specific instruction to do so. He summarised his position as follows:

"While I would not myself have contacted the adjoining owner, I would have expected professionals or contractors acting on behalf of the defendant to do so."

 

I find that the Trafalgar Works were demolished without any notification being given to the owner of the adjoining property, 31 Trafalgar Street. I also find that Andrew Wheeldon gave no instruction, either to Graham Hulse his managing agent, or to his "facilities manager" Trevor Millward, to contact and/or notify the adjoining owner. In my judgement, that was at least discourteous behaviour towards the adjoining owner, and could answer the description of "high-handed" behaviour.

 

40. Between August 2007 and September 2010 nothing material occurred as regards either the Trafalgar Works or 31 Trafalgar Street so far as the defendant was concerned. When Anita Bridgland sent her e-mail to Graham Hulse on 7 September 2010, Graham Hulse contacted Andrew Wheeldon, who instructed him to refer that e-mail to Jonathan Cornes "to look into and deal with": see paragraph 18 of Andrew Wheeldon's witness statement; he put it in similar terms in his oral evidence in cross-examination at trial (DG/83):

"I told Graham Hulse to ask Jonathan Cornes to contact the claimant, make an appointment, and go and see what the problem was."

 

That was somewhat in contrast with the way Andrew Wheeldon had put it in his earlier evidence in chief at trial, when he said (DG/67):

"Graham Hulse told me of the e-mail he had received, so I asked him to contact Jonathan Cornes to see if he would be interested in going to the property, to help them with their damp problem at their cost."

 

In my judgement Andrew Wheeldon's explanation as stated in his witness statement and in cross-examination of the nature of the instruction which he gave to Graham Hulse is the more persuasive, and I find that - through the medium of Graham Hulse - he instructed Jonathan Cornes to attend 31 Trafalgar Street on behalf of the defendant, with the additional instruction that the claimants should pay for the cost of Jonathan Cornes attendance on that occasion.

 

41. In his evidence at trial (DG/107) Jonathan Cornes sought to justify his charging the claimants on this occasion on the basis that the reason for his attendance primarily related to issues concerning access to the defendant's land, rather than to investigating a complaint of damp being caused to 31 Trafalgar Street by reason of the defendant's actions in demolishing the Trafalgar Works. I found that explanation somewhat strained or artificial. In my judgement at all material times, including when he attended 31 Trafalgar Street on 10 September 2010, Jonathan Cornes was acting for and on behalf of the defendant; the fact that shortly after that meeting he sent Graham Hulse a long e-mail of advice (2/366A) is consistent with such a finding.

 

E: The cause of damp

 

42. Mr Moore was called as an expert witness on behalf of the claimants; Mr Cornes on behalf of the defendant. In their joint statement dated 28 October 2015 Mr Moore's opinion on the cause of damp was summarised as follows (4/1247):

"TM is of the opinion that the damp ingress and damage to the claimants' wall below the level of the defendant's yard area is caused by damp penetrating through the gable wall travelling vertically down and then horizontally through. In addition, concurrent with this, would also have been surface water percolating through the defendant's yard area and adding to the damp penetration through the gable wall."

 

Those two mechanisms were referred to a trial as "mechanism 1" and "mechanism 2" respectively.

 

43. In section 1 of his third (and final) report dated 15 September 2015, Mr Moore summarised his opinion as follows (4/980):

"My conclusions regarding the cause of the damp to the property together with damage to the wall of the hallway is that this is as a result of removal of the defendant's building, thus exposing the external wall to the elements."

 

He then listed the various matters which he had considered in coming to that conclusion. He repeated that opinion in more detail in section 8 of that report, where he set out a number of factors and then stated at page 4/1006:

"All of the above factors ... lead me to conclude that the removal of the defendant's property, Trafalgar Works, has exposed the gable wall of the claimant's property to weather conditions that were likely to give rise to penetrating damp and damage occurring thereof."

 

Then, having referred to a paper published by Elisabeth Laycock and Christopher Wood of Sheffield Hallam University on 'Understanding and controlling the ingress of driven rain through exposed solid wall masonry structures '(pages 4/1075 - 1121), he continued:

"(That paper) indicates that once rainwater has landed on the exterior surface of the building it will be induced towards the ground due to the force of gravity, as water will always follow the route that uses the least energy etc.

The paper indicates that there will be cycles of alternate penetration and evaporation of any water or moisture driven to the face of the gable wall.

This is ... one of the reasons why the penetration is more prevalent and has caused more damage to the lower section of the claimant's wall, in that it would not have been possible for it to have evaporated and then re-penetrated on a cyclical basis.

Once water had penetrated down in the vertical plane below the defendant's floor level it could not evaporate to the atmosphere, and therefore it follows could only have accumulated in the lower wall section over a period of time, to the point whereby it caused such physical damage to the inner face of the claimant's gable wall as was visually apparent."

 

44. In paragraph 6 (b) of his closing written submissions, Mr Taylor makes the point that in his third and final report, Mr Moore identified only mechanism 1 as the cause of damp to 31 Trafalgar Street, and made no reference to mechanism 2.

 

45. Mr Cornes's opinion on the cause of damp was summarised in the joint statement as follows (4/1248):

"JC's opinion is that the primary cause of the damp to the wall is from ground moisture built up against the underground wall since the wall was historically backfilled during a change in the floor construction of the factory. The wall in dispute was backfilled without incorporating a suitable vertical waterproof membrane between the varying floor levels, leaving this wall unprotected to ground moisture before the demolition of the factory.

While it is agreed that the water table was at the foot of the foundations during the joint inspection, in JC's opinion the extent and degree of ground moisture will fluctuate because of it being situated on a sloping side, seasonal changes affecting the water table, weather conditions and surrounding topography ...

In addition, JC provides further clarification that the excavation trench during the remedial works was damp to touch throughout, but was not saturated from above ..."

 

46. Mr Cornes expressed the same opinion in paragraph 9.1.1.6 of his second and final report dated September 2015 (page 4/1132):

"In summary the primary cause of the damp is lateral ground moisture which is affecting (sic) the underground wall on the left hand side flank wall. This wall in my opinion has always suffered from damp from the ground, albeit the severity and visual impact of that damage internally will be dependent on ground conditions, water table and time of year as well as the correct design, performance of the material and workmanship of the product applied to the underground wall. If the correct underground tanking specification had been installed at the time of original conversion there would be in my opinion no alleged damage."

 

47. While the experts considered a number of subsidiary matters, the central issue between them is the difference in their respective opinions on the cause of damp summarised above.

 

48. Having introduced 'mechanism 2' as a likely or probable cause of damp for the first time in the course of his discussions with Mr Cornes, which led to it being recorded in their joint statement, Mr Moore was asked in cross-examination which of the two causes he propounded was the more significant. He stated (DG/130) as follows:

""A: It is very difficult to give an accurate answer to that question, given more damp penetration is at the lower level.. But I think it would be the second mechanism ... I can't back that up with a technical explanation or scientific proof ..."

 

49. In paragraph 9 of his written closing submissions, Mr Taylor posed the question whether it was likely that water was "percolating downwards, through the concrete surface of the yard area, to any significant degree", and submitted that it was not for the following reasons:

"(a) the experts agree that the concrete was in good condition ...

(b) the experts agree the concrete is reasonably, although not totally, impervious to damp ...

(c) the experts agree that the concrete is laid to falls, which are laid away from the property

(d) Mr Cornes' evidence shows that, even following a heavy shower, these falls meant that no significant water accumulated on the concrete ...

(e) the experts agree that at the time of their joint visit in September 2015 (i) there was no evidence of any damage to any part of the concrete which was consistent with degradation ...; and (ii) the fill material beneath the concrete was moist to touch, but not saturated and in particular (per Mr Cornes) was not particularly wet immediately beneath the concrete."

 

In my judgement there is force in all of those points. Further, in addition to the experts agreeing that the concrete was in good condition, Mr Moore himself accepted that the concrete was protected by a layer of screed, which had not been degraded (DG/129).

 

50. I therefore reject Mr Moore's alternative opinion that 'mechanism 2' was a material or realistic cause of damp to the flank wall of 31 Trafalgar Street.

 

51. As between Mr Moore's 'mechanism 1' and Mr Cornes' opinion that penetration from long-standing lateral ground moisture was the cause of damp, I prefer Mr Cornes' opinion for the following reasons:

 

(1) Photograph 3/800 of the front elevation of the former Trafalgar Works shows a distinct area of dark staining, broadly triangular in shape, right across the lower portion of the brickwork, and widening in area as it progresses towards 31 Trafalgar Street. Such dark staining is also to be seen in the photographs which Mr Moore took on 28 May 2013 of the front elevation of 31 Trafalgar Street where it abuts the site of the former Trafalgar Works: see for example photographs 3 & 4 (4/1032-3), although the area of dark staining apparent in the front elevation of 31 Trafalgar Street (to the left-hand side of the front door) is at a lower level (i.e. approximately the bottom 4 courses of brickwork) than the area of dark staining apparent in the front retaining wall which now runs along the front boundary of the former Trafalgar Works (above which the new metal fence has been erected). That difference may well be accounted for by the insertion of the chemical damp proof course in about 2004. I accept Mr Cornes's opinion that such damp staining is evidence of "there being a volume of water or moisture within or underneath the ground floor slab of the former Trafalgar Works" (DG/120). I accept that evidence and find that, at all material times, there has been a volume or bulk of relatively moist or damp soil or other material underneath the ground floor slab abutting the lower portion of the flank wall of 31 Trafalgar Street. Further, until the recent remedial works were carried out, the lower portion of that flank wall had never been protected against lateral damp penetration.

 

(2) When Mr Cornes inspected 31 Trafalgar Street in September 2010 he took moisture readings. In paragraph 9.1.1.1 of his second report he stated (4/1131):

"Although there were moderate moisture readings to the left-hand side flank wall above the underground wall, no visible water penetrating damp was evident. The area of the wall which is underground to the hallway, under stairs and kitchen did record high moisture readings and showed visible damp, including hygroscopic salt contaminants, confirming the cause being from lateral penetrating damp from ground moisture or rising damp from within the wall rather than surface water."

 

He further explained the point in the joint statement (4/1250):

"... the underground wall has evidently suffered from hygroscopic salts which only occur in groundwater contamination ... surface water could contribute to this defect, but in this scenario it is not ... the primary cause ..."

 

I accept that opinion, and find that to a significant and/or material extent, the damp to the lower part of the flank wall was caused by penetration of lateral ground moisture coming from the soil or material underneath the ground floor slab of the former Trafalgar Works, rather than by "surface water" i.e. rain water penetrating the upper parts of the flank wall, and then percolating down inside the flank wall in the way which Mr Moore described as his 'mechanism 1'. I thus find that the hygroscopic salts which Mr Cornes observed inside 31 Trafalgar Street could only have been caused as a result of the mechanism for which he propounds, rather than as a result of 'mechanism 1' for which Mr Moore propounds.

 

52. In paragraphs 18 and 19 of his written closing submissions Mr Hackett drew a distinction between the professional independence of Mr Moore on the one hand, and the fact that on the other hand Mr Cornes has acted for the defendant and/or its managing agent Louis Taylor for a number of years, and submitted that as a result his evidence is "tainted by commercial loyalties". I accept that, by reason of such a professional or commercial relationship, Mr Cornes is less independent than an expert witness would be who had no such relationship with one of the parties. However, that disadvantage does not affect the assessment of technical matters which I have set out above, which is based upon facts derived from objectively identified evidence, and which is thus empirical in nature. I therefore do not find that the fact of any commercial loyalty on the part of Mr Cornes to the defendant detracts from my assessment of technical matters as set out above.

 

53. In paragraph 22 (i) of his written closing submissions Mr Hackett submits that Mr Cornes's theory is "incompatible with the first (sic) claimant's evidence that the damp occurred suddenly within the space of less than a year between August 2008 and July 2009". In paragraph 11 of his written closing submissions Mr Taylor counters that by identifying three matters which could explain how and/or why the claimants did not experience problems (i.e. damp being apparent on the internal surface of the flank wall) until the former Trafalgar Works were demolished. In my judgement the fact that 31 Trafalgar Street was for a considerable period used as offices rather than as a residential dwelling, and thereafter - after carrying out renovation works in 2004 - the claimants let the property as student accommodation, and as a result only visited the property on the occasion of their annual visits, could explain why damp may not have been apparent to the claimants before the former Trafalgar Works were demolished in August 2007. In addition, it may well be that the works which the claimants carried out in 2004 did have a material effect in masking damp penetration until sometime after the former Trafalgar Works were demolished.

 

54. In paragraph 22 (iii) of his written closing submissions Mr Hackett drew attention to the fact that the various damp meter readings were higher in the hall than they were in the kitchen. But the force of that point is diminished by the fact that the level of soil abutting the flank wall is higher towards the front of 31 Trafalgar Street, i.e. where it lies underneath the ground floor slab of the former Trafalgar Works, than it is towards the rear of the property, where the kitchen is situated.

 

55. In summary, I do not find that these points detract from the overall conclusion which I have reached, namely that the cause, or the material cause, of damp was penetration of the flank wall by long-standing lateral ground moisture coming from the soil or material underneath the ground floor slab of the former Trafalgar Works, as Mr Cornes propounds.

 

F: Cause of action in nuisance: a measured duty of care

 

56. The parties are agreed that, in the particular circumstances which obtained in the present case, the defendant owed the claimants a "measured duty of care". I will consider below the precise nature of such a duty. However, from the various authorities to which both Mr Hackett Mr Taylor referred, it is clear that such a cause of action arises essentially in nuisance: see Lord Wright's speech in Sedleigh-Denfield v O'Callaghan [1940] AC 880.

 

57. The way in which such a cause of action arises was described by Rowlatt J in Noble v Harrison [1926] 2 KB 332 as follows:

" ... a person is liable for a nuisance constituted by the state of his property (1) if he causes it; (2) if by the neglect of some duty he allowed it to arise; and (3) if, when it has arisen without his own act or default, he omits to remedy it within a reasonable time after he did ought to have become aware of it." ...

 

That decision was cited with approval by Megaw LJ in the Court of Appeal in Leakey v National Trust [1980] 1 QB 485: see his judgement at page 516 D-G. It follows that the first stage or element of such a cause of action arises out of, or involves, the state or condition of the property in question.

 

58. Then, as Lord Wilberforce explained in Goldman v Hargrave [1966] 1 AC 645, in some classes of nuisance, the concept of negligence is engaged: see his speech in the Privy Council at page 656F - 657B, and later in his speech where he coined the expression "a measured duty of care", here in the context of a duty being owed by occupiers to remove or reduce hazards to their neighbours. Thus the second stage or element of such a cause of action involves the application of such a measured duty of care.

 

59. Such a duty is, however, not strict or absolute; instead it depends on what is foreseeable: see the speech of Lord Wright in Sedleigh-Denfield (also cited by Megaw LJ in Leakey at pages 517G-518 D, where he held:

"The liability for a nuisance is not, at least in modern law, a strict or absolute liability. If the defendant by himself or those for whom he is responsible has created what constitutes a nuisance and if it causes damage, the difficulty now being considered does not arise. But he may have taken over the nuisance, ready-made as it were, when he acquired the property, or the nuisance may be due to a latent defect, or to the act of the trespasser or stranger. Then he is not liable unless he continued or adopted the nuisance or, more accurately, did not without undue delay remedy it when he became aware of it, or with ordinary and reasonable care should have become aware of it."

 

60. It is against that background that Lord Wilberforce's explanation of what constitutes a measured duty of care is to be understood: see his speech at pages 661G-662G.

 

61. In Rees v Skerrett [2001] 1 WLR 1541 the Court of Appeal had to consider the application of such a measured duty of care in a case where the defendant had demolished a terraced house, thereby exposing the common wall between the two properties in question. Having referred to various authorities, Lloyd J (as he then was) concluded that "there is no absolute duty to provide weatherproofing": see the first sentence of paragraph 35 of his judgement, when he went on to summarise the nature of the duty which arose in such circumstances:

"The liability which (the claimant) seeks to establish is dependent on showing first that the ... defendant knew or ought to have known of the risk of damage likely to result from his demolition works, if not accompanied by weatherproofing, and secondly that the damage suffered would have been prevented by work which it would have been reasonable in all the circumstances for him to carry out."

 

As the head note makes clear, such a duty (to take reasonable steps to provide weatherproofing) arises both at the time of demolition, and thereafter i.e. "consequential upon the act of demolition".

 

G: Application of a measured duty of care to the facts of the present case

 

62. The first substantial problem for the claimants in this case is that the matters which they identified at the outset, and which Mr Moore subsequently also identified, as being causative of the damage from which 31 Trafalgar Street suffered, were not in fact the cause of the damp ingress at 31 Trafalgar Street. At all material times, the demolition of the former Trafalgar Works did not lead to, or cause, damp penetration to the flank wall; that was caused by long-standing damp penetration from lateral ground moisture.

 

63. Nevertheless, the fact that there was a substantial amount or volume of damp or moist soil underneath the ground floor slab adjacent to and abutting the flank wall of 31 Trafalgar Street meant that the state or condition of the defendant's property (i.e. the site of the former Trafalgar Works) was such that it caused damage to the claimant's property. That is enough to establish the first element of a cause of action in nuisance. But, as the analysis of the authorities shows, it is then necessary to consider whether the second element of a cause of action in this type of nuisance has been established. That depends on the claimants establishing that the defendant was in breach of a measured duty of care in the particular circumstances of the case. I therefore turn to consider the allegations advanced by the claimants in that regard.

 

H: The allegations of breach of the measured duty of care

 

64. The amended particulars of claim did not state what duty the claimants contended the defendant was under and/or what the defendant should have done, when and why. Accordingly, during the trial I gave Mr Hackett permission to file and serve a document headed 'Additions to pleading', which is in effect a re-re-amended particulars of claim, in which the claimants set out their case on duty, breach, foreseeability of damage, and causation in respect of two periods: first at the time of demolition of the former Trafalgar Works; and second during the period following demolition, which is in effect when the claimants complained to the defendant of damp being caused to 31 Trafalgar Street.

 

65. The claimants' case as regards the duty which arose in both periods is predicated on the proposition or supposition that the cause of damp was the demolition of the former Trafalgar Works, leading to water penetration of the flank wall, all of which is reflected in Mr Moore's 'mechanism 1'. That is stated expressly in the claimants' statement of the duty which is alleged in respect of the first period:

"The defendant owed the claimants a duty to do what was reasonable in all the circumstances to reduce or alleviate any reasonably foreseeable risk that the demolition of the Trafalgar Works might increase water ingress into the gable wall or the wall below ground."

 

It is also to be implied from the references to the various e-mails and communications made by the claimants (in particular to Anita Bridgland's first e-mail of 7 September 2010) in their allegation of breach of duty in respect of the second period.

 

66. That leads to the second substantial problem for the claimants in this case, which is that the whole focus of what was the defendant's duty, what was foreseeable, and what were the defendant's breaches of such duty, are all based on or derive from the proposition or supposition that the cause of damp to 31 Trafalgar Street was the demolition of the former Trafalgar Works, which it was not. It will be necessary to consider this point further below. However, with that by way of reservation, it is now convenient to turn to consider the various allegations set out in the "additions to pleading" document. The first four allegations relate to the position at the time of demolition of the former Trafalgar Works in 2007; the remaining allegations relate to the position in 2010 and thereafter.

 

67. The allegation in paragraph 2 (i) is that the defendant failed to:

"... consult (sic) a surveyor, architect structural engineer or other professional as to the steps needed to protect the property against the ingress of damp. It would have been reasonable for the defendant to take this step rather than entrust the damp proofing to his contractors, since his contractors lacked specialist expertise."

 

The defendant's case is that it was reasonable for Mr Wheeldon simply to instruct a contractor, Mr Millward (who in turn instructed a demolition subcontractor) and not to instruct a professional, whether a structural engineer or otherwise. In his evidence Mr Wheeldon accepted that, but for his perceived need for speed, it would have been reasonable for him to instruct a professional (see paragraph 38 above). In my judgement it would always have been appropriate or reasonable for a person in Mr Wheeldon's position to take appropriate professional advice before demolishing a structure such as the former Trafalgar Works, in particular when such a structure joins or abuts another property owned by another party. The reasons for speed advanced by Mr Wheeldon were not sufficient, in my judgement, to alter that position.

 

68. However, that begs the question: what would such a professional have advised, had he been consulted by Mr Wheeldon before demolition? The defendant's case is that Mr Cornes would not have advised the defendant to do any other works than those which the defendant in fact carried out when demolishing the Trafalgar Works; in other words that any breach of this duty would not have caused the loss of which the claimants now complain.

 

69. Mr Wheeldon stated clearly that he foresaw the risk of an increased amount of rain coming into contact with the newly exposed gable wall. However, if Mr Cornes had been consulted at the time of demolition, I find that he would have given the same advice in 2007 as he did in 2010, namely that the cause of damp penetration was from long-standing lateral ground moisture. But I also find that Mr Cornes would not have advised his client, the defendant, that it was necessary for his client to carry out remedial works at its expense. Mr Cornes' whole approach in 2010 was that it was for the claimants to carry out any necessary remedial work, and at their expense. In my judgement that was something of a mis-calculation or mis-assessment on the part of Mr Cornes, but that is the advice which Mr Wheeldon would have received.

 

70. In those circumstances, while the defendant was in breach in failing to consult a surveyor or other professional, such a surveyor (here Mr Cornes) would not have advised the defendant that it needed to take steps to protect 31 Trafalgar Street from damp ingress, and thus this breach did not cause the damage of which the claimants complain. For those reasons, this head of claim is not established.

 

71. The allegation in paragraph 2 (ii) is that the defendant failed to:

"... discuss (sic) the proposed demolition of the Trafalgar Works with the claimants with a view to reaching a mutually satisfactory means to protect the property against damp. Initiating dialogue so as to reach an accommodation can be reasonably expected in circumstances where a party wishes to demolish a structure adjoining property belonging to another."

 

The defendant first construes that allegation by reference to the earlier allegations relating to a failure to serve a notice under the Party Wall Act, and submits that "the claimants cannot prove that any such notice ... would have come to their attention", and "... that if they had received a notice, (there was no evidence that) they would be likely to instruct a surveyor": see paragraphs 42 (a) and (b) of Mr Taylor's written closing submissions. Mr Taylor further submitted in paragraph 42 (c) that "there is no reason to suppose that the claimants would ... have identified a risk of ingress beneath the slab", observing that they did not identify such a risk when they first learned of the demolition.

 

72. In my judgement there is a further and immediate difficulty with this allegation, namely its inherent imprecision. It is difficult - perhaps impossibly so - for the claimants to prove what probably would have occurred had such discussions taken place. As a result, this head of claim is not established.

 

73. The allegation in paragraph 2 (iii) is that the defendant failed to:

" ... install (sic) an external tanking system together with a French drain to prevent the permeation of damp into the property. These works were reasonable works to undertake as they are an effective and proportionate way of addressing the damp issues created by the demolition of the Trafalgar Works and can be achieved without an imposition on the property."

 

Mr Wheeldon's evidence (DG/77) was that he foresaw there would be an increased amount of rainfall on the newly exposed gable wall following demolition. The defendant's case is that this allegation cannot be established on the evidence because, as at 2007, the defendant neither foresaw, nor was it reasonable for the defendant to foresee, that damp penetration was caused by long-standing lateral ground moisture. While I accept that submission insofar as what the defendant actually foresaw, I do not accept that submission insofar as what the defendant ought to have foreseen because, had the defendant taken advice in 2007 it would have been advised that the cause of damp penetration was long-standing lateral ground moisture from the ground beneath the floor slab. However, as I have already found, Mr Cornes would not have advised the defendant that it should install an external tanking system, because he would have regarded that as being inimical to the interests of his client; instead he would have advised in 2007 what he advised in 2010, namely that the better or preferred option was that of an internal tanking system, which the claimants could carry out their expense. Nor would Mr Cornes have advised that it was appropriate for the defendant to install a French drain on its property

 

74. Furthermore, the claimants have not established on the evidence that external tanking, in conjunction with a French drain, constituted a remedial scheme which the defendant should have installed, and/or that a French drain was in fact a necessary part of any such remedial scheme. Mr Cornes' initial advice was, and opinion (which I accept) remains, that while either external tanking or internal tanking would be effective, and indeed the installation of both would provide the best prospect of success: see paragraph 3 (b) (2) of the joint statement (4/1251), an internal tanking system of itself would nevertheless provide an effective remedial scheme. In those circumstances, this head of claim is also not established.

 

75. The allegation in paragraph 2 (iv) is that the defendant failed to:

"... facilitate (sic) alternative damp protection measures i.e. internal tanking ... by paying for such measures. Merely re-pointing exposed brickwork and filling in the stairs with concrete was not reasonable as the sole method of preventing the ingress of damp into brickwork and/or the concrete hard standing that has been exposed to the elements for the first time in decades ..."

Again, that allegation is based on the premise that the cause of damp was Mr Moore's 'mechanism 1' i.e. rain water penetrating the upper parts of the flank wall, and then percolating down inside the flank wall and accumulating towards the base. What the defendant foresaw or ought to have foreseen is to be considered in the light of the advice which the defendant received, or would have received at the time. As stated above, the advice which the defendant would have received from Mr Cornes was that the better or preferred option was that of an internal tanking system. But as also stated above, I find that Mr Cornes would not have advised the defendant that it should pay for the installation of such an internal tanking system at 31 Trafalgar Street.

 

76. However, that begs the next question, in effect whether the defendant should have simply accepted such advice (notionally given in 2007) that it should not pay for the installation of an internal tanking system when it had been (notionally) advised in 2007 that (a) that the state or condition of its property was causing damage to the adjoining property; and (b) that there was at least one reasonable remedial scheme (internal tanking) which could be carried out. As explained in paragraph 94 (2) below, it is likely that a person in the position of the defendant in 2007, having (notionally) received such advice about the cause of damp and the necessary remedial works, would have foreseen that the state or condition of its property was such that it would cause damage to the claimant's property, and in such circumstances have come to the conclusion that it should pay for such remedial works.

 

77. Therefore, subject to the problems identified in paragraphs 62 and 66 above, and discussed further in section I of this judgement, and to considerations of limitation, it would be possible for the claimants to establish this head of claim.

 

78. I now turn to consider the allegations of breach of duty etc which arose after demolition. The first three allegations in paragraphs 6 (i), (ii) and (iii) of the 'Additions to pleading' document all concern the defendant's refusal to install a French drain on its land; (i) after receiving Anita Bridgland's e-mail of 7 September 2010 and again when refusing access for such purpose on 13 September 2010; (ii) after receiving her e-mail of 27 October 2010; and (iii) after receiving her e-mail of 1 November 2010.

 

79. The defendant's response to the e-mail of 7 September 2010 was that it was first necessary to establish the facts: see Jonathan Cornes' e-mail of 7 September 2010 as set out in paragraph 15 above. At this stage the defendant had not been advised, and thus did not know, whether a French drain would remedy the problem of which the claimants complained. In my judgement this was a reasonable refusal. Following the meeting, on 13 September 2010 Graham Hulse wrote to say that a "French drain is not acceptable": see his e-mail set out at paragraph 22 above. In the context of the advice which Jonathan Cornes had recently given the defendant, in my judgement that was a reasonable refusal.

 

80. The defendant's response to the second request was contained in Graham Hulse's e-mail of 27 October 2010, set out in paragraph 26 above. As already observed, he largely avoided the technical issues in that response, and instead directed much of his focus to complaining about the way the claimants had attempted previously to obtain access to the defendant's land. He did however reiterate the "need to establish the facts" and asked " why you now believe that in accordance with the party wall act it is my client's responsibility to carry out such works on your behalf"; he concluded with the statement "Once I fully understand the issues you have I will respond appropriately".

 

81. In paragraph 55 of his written closing submissions Mr Taylor submitted:

"Given what the claimants already knew (based on Mr Cornes' advice) there was (a) no reason for the claimant to change its view that a French drain would not help the problem, but would impact on the defendant's land; and (b) there was no reason for the defendant to volunteer to pay for works, because Mr Cornes had advised that the damp was not caused by the demolition works."

 

While I accept the first of those submissions, I reject the second: there was good reason for the defendant to volunteer to pay for appropriate or reasonable remedial works, though not necessarily the installation of a French drain, because - as a result of the advice it had received from Jonathan Cornes - the defendant knew (a) that the volume of moist or damp soil underneath the ground floor slab abutting the flank wall of 31 Trafalgar Street was causing damp penetration and thus damage to the flank wall; and (b) at least an internal tanking system was an appropriate remedial scheme. Accordingly, I do not find Graham Hulse's response was reasonable or sufficient in the circumstances which by then obtained.

 

82. Anita Bridgland's e-mail of 1 November 2010 (2/371) was relatively short. She stated:

" ... since your client removed the attached building to our property we have had water laying against our wall that has caused a damp problem. We followed the advice of your client's surveyor and had a damp proof company carry out tanking to the inside. They have advised us that water is coming in from your client's car park that will cause long-term damage to our property and a land drain is needed. We no longer wish to go on to your client's land as we believe it is down to your client to put in the land drain in accordance with the party wall act."

 

That indicates the claimants still believed the cause of the damp was the demolition of the former Trafalgar Works; and the type of tanking they had carried out was that which Mr Cornes had advised would be inappropriate. But nevertheless, the underlying complaint remained, namely that something about the state or condition of the defendant's property was causing damage to 31 Trafalgar Street. As with her e-mail of 27 October 2010, this e-mail shows a change of tack on the part of the claimants: whereas they were initially asking permission to go onto the defendant's land to install a French drain, now they were asking the defendant to do that work itself. In my judgement the content of this e-mail adds little to what had already passed, and as a consequence the allegation in paragraph 6 (iii) adds little or nothing to those in paragraphs 6 (i) and/or (ii).

 

83. It is also necessary to consider the issue of causation in respect of each of these three allegations. As stated in paragraph 74 above, the claimants have not established on the evidence that external tanking, in conjunction with a French drain, constituted a remedial scheme which the defendant should have installed, and/or that a French drain was in fact a necessary part of any such remedial scheme. In those circumstances, I do not find that these allegations are established.

 

84. The allegation in paragraph 6 (iv) is that the defendant failed to:

"offer (sic) to bear the cost of any proposed internal tanking arrangement at the property."

 

85. In paragraph 60 of his written closing submissions, Mr Taylor submitted that this was "an extraordinary allegation", continuing:

"Mr Cornes had recommended internal tanking. The claimants had flatly refused to do it, claiming that it would be too disruptive and that it would result in narrowing their hall. Throughout these proceedings and before they have insisted that only an external tanking system coupled with a French drain will do. Had the claimants obtained any formal professional advice in connection with an internal tanking system, or had they obtained any quotes and/or invited the defendant to contribute to the cost of an internal tanking system, they might be better placed to this allegation ...".

 

86. As regards the submission that the claimants had refused to carry out internal tanking: in her email of 1 November 2010, Anita Bridgland had informed Graham Hulse that the claimants had carried out internal tanking, albeit - as I find - not of the type which Mr Cornes had advised. However, in my judgement the real point in issue here is whether the defendant should have offered to carry out appropriate remedial work at its cost. This allegation (in connection with the position post demolition) reflects the allegation in paragraph 6 (iv) in connection with the position in 2007. As set out in paragraph 76 above, in circumstances where the defendant had been advised that (a) that the state or condition of its property was causing damage to the adjoining property; and (b) that there was at least one reasonable remedial scheme (internal tanking) which could be carried out, then the defendant acting reasonably would have concluded (c) that it should pay for such remedial works. Thus, again subject to the problems identified in paragraphs 62 and 66 above, and discussed further in section I of this judgement, and to considerations of limitation, it would be possible for the claimants to establish this head of claim.

 

87. The allegation in paragraph 6 (v) is that the defendant refused to:

"... allow the claimants access to the site of the Trafalgar Works to install a French drain following the first claimant's request on 27 December 2012."

 

I read that as a reference to Anita Bridgland's letter of 17 December 2012 (2/397). As stated in that letter, the context at that time was that of the involvement of the Stoke-on-Trent housing standards officer: see paragraphs 32 and 33 above.

 

88. In paragraph 61 of his written closing submissions Mr Taylor identifies a number of circumstances, all of which leads him to submit in paragraph 63 that "there was no reason for the defendant to change its previous position". He then submitted that the defendant "had obtained an expert's view, which was clear". Indeed, Mr Cornes' opinion was clear: he had advised the defendant that the state or condition of its property, namely the volume of moist or damp soil underneath the ground floor slab of the former Trafalgar Works, was causing damage to the flank wall of 31 Trafalgar Street. In my judgement, none of the points which Mr Taylor identifies in this section of his written closing submissions contradicts the position, as I find it to be, that the defendant knew and/or should have foreseen that the state or condition of its property was causing damage to the adjoining property, and that there was at least one reasonable remedial scheme (internal tanking) which it could carry out at its cost to remedy that damage. But the complaint here is centred on the alleged need to install a French drain, and the claimants have not established on the evidence that installing a French drain, whether in conjunction with external tanking or otherwise, constituted a remedial scheme which the defendant should have installed. Accordingly, this allegation is not established.

 

89. The allegation in paragraph 6 (vi) is that the defendant refused to:

".. allow the claimants permission to access the site of the Trafalgar Works to carry out remedial works including a French drain following correspondence between the parties' solicitors on or around 21 November 2014."

 

The context here is that proceedings had begun on 18 November 2013, and by then solicitors were engaged by the parties; furthermore, the defendant's plans to sell the site including the former Trafalgar Works were well advanced.

 

90. In paragraphs 65 - 67 of his written closing submissions Mr Taylor submitted that the following factors explain or justify the defendant in refusing the claimant's request: in summary they were the fact that the defendant was actively engaged in negotiating a sale of the site, and any works "would inevitably take place after exchange, and would amount to a derogation from grant"; the fact that the defendants duty to act reasonably towards the claimants "did not require it to ignore its own financial interests": and the fact that any such works "might impede development of the defendant's land".

 

91. I reject the submission that the matters which Mr Taylor identifies in paragraphs 65 - 67 entitled the defendant to avoid responsibility, and thus liability, in respect of the circumstances which then obtained. The fact that a defendant is about to sell a property, the state or condition of which has already caused damage to an adjoining property, does not entitle that defendant to avoid its responsibility to remedy the damage which has already been caused and/or to pay for the cost of such remedy. Further, if it were the case that the only reasonable or appropriate remedial scheme would "impede development of such a defendant's land", then that would not be justification for such a defendant to avoid such responsibility.

 

92. However, the complaint here is that the defendant refused the claimants access "to carry out remedial works including a French drain". As already stated, the claimants have not established on the evidence that external tanking, whether in conjunction with a French drain or on its own, constituted a remedial scheme which the defendant should have installed, and/or that a French drain was in fact a necessary part of any such external remedial scheme. Accordingly, this allegation is not established.

 

I: Conclusions on cause of action in nuisance

 

93. It is apparent that there is a mismatch between (a) the way the claimants advance their case on foreseeability and causation, and consequently also on breach; and (b) the content, and thus impact, of the evidence which was adduced at trial. This is all because the claimants' case on causation was that damage was caused by damp penetration through the gable wall, and water then travelling down inside and then laterally through the gable wall; whereas the defendant's case on causation is the damage to the gable wall was in fact caused by damp penetration from lateral ground moisture coming from the soil or material underneath the ground floor slab of the former Trafalgar Works. I have found that the cause was the latter i.e. as the defendant contended.

 

94. I therefore turn to consider the constituent elements of the cause of action in nuisance, and find as follows:

 

(1) The nature of the duty is agreed, or largely agreed, between the parties. It is that of a measured duty of care to take reasonable steps to resolve or reduce hazards on the defendant's land, which the defendant either foresaw, or which the defendant ought reasonably to have foreseen. That such a liability is to be assessed by reference not only to what the defendant actually foresaw, but to what the defendant ought reasonably to have foreseen, is apparent from paragraph 35 of Lloyd J's judgement in Rees v Skerrett.

 

(2) Given the advice which Jonathan Cornes gave the defendant in his long and detailed e-mail of 13 September 2010 (set out in paragraph 21 above), in my judgement it is likely that the defendant either did foresee, or ought reasonably to have foreseen (a) that the state or condition of its property was causing damage to the adjoining property; and (b) that there was at least one reasonable remedial scheme (internal tanking) which it could carry out at its cost to remedy that damage (see paragraphs 81 & 86 above). However, it remains the case that damage by long-standing lateral ground moisture was not pleaded by the claimants, and thus the issue of what was, or should have been, foreseen in those circumstances was not considered at trial. Instead, the whole focus of the claimants' case was on what was foreseeable in the context of the demolition of the former Trafalgar Works. It is thus difficult, if not impossible, to know what issues on foreseeability might have arisen had the claimants pleaded an alternative case on causation, and consequentially on foreseeability

 

(3) As regards causation: I have found that the material cause of the damp to the lower part of the flank wall was penetration of the flank wall by lateral ground moisture coming from the soil or material underneath the ground floor slab of the former Trafalgar Works, rather than by "surface water" i.e. rain water penetrating the upper parts of the flank wall, and then percolating down inside the flank wall in the way which Mr Moore described as his 'mechanism 1' (see paragraph 51 above).

 

(4) As regards breach: I find that the defendant did not take steps to implement and/or pay for the remedial scheme which Jonathan Cornes had identified (internal tanking) which in my judgement was a reasonable remedial scheme for the defendant to have implemented in all the circumstances of the case.

 

95. Elements (2) of foreseeability and (3) of causation - as I have found them to be - self evidently were not pleaded by the claimants; albeit that element (3) of causation reflects the defendant's pleaded case. The element of causation has been established on the evidence which was adduced at trial. The element of breach - in so far as it related to a failure to implement and/or pay for a remedial scheme comprising internal tanking - was pleaded by the claimants; and that element has been established on the evidence adduced at trial.

 

96. There are thus two positions to be considered:

 

(1) Given the findings made above, the claimants might feel a sense of injustice if the defendant was able to avoid liability because the claimants had failed to identify in their statements of case the correct cause of the damage to 31 Trafalgar Street, i.e. that it had always been caused by the state or condition of the defendant's property, viz by penetration of long-standing lateral ground moisture coming from the soil or material underneath the ground floor slab of the former Trafalgar Works, rather than by "surface water" i.e. rain water penetrating the upper parts of the flank wall, and then percolating down inside the flank wall in the way which Mr Moore described as his 'mechanism 1'.

.

(2) On the other side of the coin: given the way in which the claimants advanced their case through the medium of their statements of case, in particular the re-amended particulars of claim, the defendant might feel a sense of injustice if it was unable to submit that it had successfully defended the case on primary liability (in particular the elements of foreseeability and causation) which the claimants advanced at trial.

 

97. It is to be borne in mind that the purpose and function of statements of case is to define the ambit of the dispute: see ' Bullen & Leake & Jacobs: Precedents of Pleadings': 18 th edition at paragraph 1-15. In that context, CPR rule 16.4 (1) (a) provides that:

"Particulars of claim must include ... a concise statement of the facts on which the claimant relies;"

 

The purpose of function of a claimant's statement of case is not only for a claimant to state the material facts upon which it relies, but also to enable a defendant to know the case which it has to meet: see ' Halsbury's Laws of England' volume 11 on Civil Procedure, paragraph 345 note 2, citing Pantelli Associates Ltd v Corporate City Developments (No 2) Ltd [2010] EWHC 3189 (TCC) as authority for that proposition.

 

98. It is also to be borne in mind that this was the trial of an action which has been going on since November 2013, and which related to events which occurred at various times between 2007 and 2012. There is considerable interest in there being finality in the proceedings. It is also to be recalled that the claimants were given permission during the course of the trial to re-re-amend their case on breach and foreseeability. Even at that late stage, the claimants did not plead an alternative case on causation and consequentially on foreseeability. It could well be said that, in such circumstances, "enough is enough".

 

99. Thus, as a consequence of the way in which the parties conducted their respective cases at trial, fashioned as they were by their respective statements of case, the defendant is entitled to apply for judgement to be entered in its favour. I shall nevertheless go on to consider albeit briefly the issue of limitation, and in rather more detail the various issues of loss and damage which are to be determined.

 

J: Limitation

 

100. In paragraph 3 of the amended defence (2/78) the defendant stated that it had a complete or partial limitation defence to the claim. However, at trial Mr Taylor accepted that the claimants' claims arising out of matters which occurred in 2010 were not statute barred, and thus limitation was only relevant to the allegations of breach which were alleged to have occurred at the time of demolition, namely in August 2007: see paragraph 70 of his written closing submissions.

 

101. The allegations in paragraph 2 (i) - (iv) of the 'Additions to pleading' document all relate to breaches which are alleged to have occurred at or about the time of demolition. On the basis that the cause of action is complete when damage is sustained, although the point was not the subject of any particular attention at trial, I shall assume for present purposes - having regard to the nature of the breaches alleged - that actionable damage occurred at or shortly after the time of the alleged breaches. The proceedings were issued on 18 November 2013, and on the basis that actionable damage occurred by 18 November 2007 (i.e. within some four months of the date of demolition) the claims in paragraph 2 (i) - (iv) would all be statute barred. Certainly the claimant adduced no evidence to establish that actionable damage arising out of such alleged breaches occurred, or would have occurred, after 18 November 2007.

 

K: Loss and damage

 

102. The claims fall under three heads: (1) the cost of remedial works; (2) loss of rent; and (3) miscellaneous items. At trial I directed that the claimants were to prepare a schedule setting out the various heads of loss claimed, with cross references to the relevant documents in the trial bundle.

 

103. As regards the cost of remedial works: the position is that last autumn, after the defendant's sale of the site including the former Trafalgar Works to new owners, with the consent of those new owners the claimants carried out substantial remedial works comprising both internal tanking and external tanking together with the installation of a French drain. This afforded the experts the opportunity to inspect the excavation for such external tanking and a French drain: see Mr Moore's photographs taken on 9 September 2015.

 

104. Bar Preservation's quotation (2/475-6) is dated 11 May 2015 and amounted to £10,100 plus VAT for both internal and external tanking. Following Mr Moore's inspection on 9 September 2015, he advised that additional works to deal with irregularities on the face of the external brickwork should be carried out before the external vertical damp proof membrane was applied. Bar Preservation quoted an additional sum of £1,200 plus VAT for this work; hence its final invoice dated 15 October 2015 for the total sum of £11,300 plus VAT, total £13,560 (2/493q).

 

105. As regards the work which Bar Preservation carried out, I am satisfied that those works were reasonable in content, and were carried out at reasonable cost. Mr Moore's estimate of the cost of remedial works was £10,956.19 inclusive of VAT, but as he stated in his report dated 15 September 2015, that estimate was based upon Laxton's Buildings Price Book (4/981). I do not regard the difference between Mr Moore's estimated cost and Bar Preservation's actual costs as being outside the range of reasonable difference which often occurs between estimated and actual costs for such work. Notwithstanding Mr Hackett's indication that the claimants would be content to recover only Mr Moore's estimated cost, in my judgement the starting point for assessment of the proper measure of damage would be the actual costs which the claimants incurred in respect of remedial works.

 

106. However, in paragraph 84 of his written closing submissions Mr Taylor makes two points. The first point is that internal tanking alone would have sufficed. However, in light of the experts' opinion in their joint statement that "both experts acknowledge that the combined internal and external system would give more reliable results" (2/1251) in my judgement it is reasonable for the claimants to recover the cost of such a combined system. The second point is that Bar Preservation's work included some internal tanking to the walls of the kitchen, "... which had nothing to do with the defendant" i.e. was not caused by damp penetration to the flank wall caused by long standing lateral ground moisture emanating from the soil and/or other material situated underneath the ground floor slab of the former Trafalgar Works. I accept that point in principle, and by reference to the dimensions of the flank wall of 31 Trafalgar Street as shown in appendix C to Mr Cornes's report dated 11 February 2015 (4/939) would abate the cost of internal tanking by 25%. The quotation for internal tanking was £4,850 plus VAT, so that price is to be abated by £1,212.50 plus VAT i.e. by £1,455. Had the claimants succeeded in establishing liability, the total recoverable cost for remedial works would thus have been proven in the sum of £12,105.

 

107. As regards the loss of rent: the claimants' schedule of loss of rent is annexed to the re-amended particulars of claim (1/98). It identifies a total loss of £10,500 by reference to 5 periods of time. Anita Bridgland dealt with this topic in her third witness statement (2/402-413).

 

108. The first period of alleged loss is May to July 2009 in the sum of £1,050. However, in paragraph 8 of her third witness statement Anita Bridgland stated:

"I originally believed the property had been vacant for the period May to July 2009 but upon review of the statements I believe it had been vacant whilst being refurbished from July 2009 to August 2009."

 

In those circumstances, given the asserted reason for the property being vacant was that it was being refurbished, and not that it was in a condition unfit for letting, the claimants do not establish that they suffered a loss of rent during the three months from May to July 2009, or during the two months of July and August 2009.

 

109. The second period of alleged loss is September to October 2010 in the sum of £700. In paragraph 13 of her third witness statement Anita Bridgland stated that the property was let to Mr Asimolowo from 10 August 2009 to 10 July 2010. This letting was arranged for the claimants by Homesearch, a firm of property agents in Stoke-on-Trent. Anita Bridgland stated (DG/14) that the pattern was essentially that of annual lettings coinciding with the academic year, so finishing in the summer, when she and her husband would visit the property and carry out all necessary cleaning and redecoration, with a view to re-letting the property at the beginning of the next academic year.

 

110. The next letting was from 7 October 2010 to 6 April 2011, to Sarah Whitehead and Amar Lall: see paragraph 25 of Anita Bridgland's third witness statement. The property was thus vacant for a period of almost exactly 3 months i.e. from 10 July to 7 October 2010. The rent was £395 p.c.m., which after payment of Homesearch's management fees produced a net rental of £353.23 p.c.m. (2/445). In my judgement a reasonable period for cleaning and redecoration between annual lettings was of the order of one month, so this claim relates to the remaining two months, during which period the claimants had damp-proofing works carried out by H&M (2/439). I find that the claimants have established they suffered a loss of rent during this period in the sum of £706.46.

 

111. The third period of alleged loss is a period of seven months from June to December 2013 in the sum of £2,450. In paragraph 34 of her third witness statement Anita Bridgland stated that the property was let to Francesca Haynes and Calum Parker from 20 April 2012 to 19 May 2013. Thereafter Anita Bridgland stated that the property was vacant: see paragraph 39 of her third witness statement.

 

112. The claimants did not adduce any evidence from either Homesearch or Mr Moore to the effect that the property was not in a state or condition whereby it could be let for student accommodation during this period. However, in paragraph 17 of his first witness statement, Anthony Bridgland, who works for his brother as a ground and outside maintenance manager for four housing associations which manage some 30,000 properties, (DG/49), stated:

"We had periods of time when we could not let the property out as we had to do works to try and repair the damage caused by the damp, but by 2012 it was apparent that it was becoming so bad as to be no longer fit for tenants."

 

113. In November or December 2012 the then tenants complained to the local housing standards officer about damp in the property. As a result, Tom Amblin, a housing standards officer with Stoke-on-Trent, wrote to the claimants (in fact Homesearch) on 3 December 2012 (2/454) identifying as a defect "evidence of penetrating damp along the expose side elevation" of the hallway, and requiring the claimant's to carry out the following remedial works by 7 January 2013:

"Investigate cause of the damp and remediate, remove all affected plasterwork back to bare brick, ensure the wall structure adequately dries. Re-plaster the wall ensuring a finish suitable for decorative finish."

 

Tom Amblin then met Anita Bridgland at the property, and wrote a further letter dated 14 January 2013 in which he stated:

"I am satisfied that you have demonstrated that you have taken a number of steps to remedy the damp issue on the gable wall and that you are pursuing other ways to remedy it. So, at this point, the council would not be pursuing its enforcement powers with regard to this matter.

However, the remaining works on the schedule ... will need to be completed by the end of January ..."

 

As regards the date for remedial works to be carried out in the hallway this was now described as being "ongoing"; and as regards the date for remedial works to be carried out in the kitchen, the original completion date of 7 January 2013 was replaced by a new completion date of 31 January 2013. There is in fact of manuscript note stating "to be done 28 January 2013", which I assume is in Anita Bridgland's handwriting.

 

114. I find Tom Amblin's description of the defects in the property in those letters to be consistent with Anthony Bridgland's assessment that, until and unless such remedial works were carried out, the property was not "fit for tenants". In fact the claimants did not carry out remedial works of internal tanking and external taking until September 2015. In paragraph 32 of its re-amended defence (1/107) the defendant asserts that "The claimants (sic) could and should have sought the defendant's (sic) permission to undertake works at the Trafalgar works involving installation of an external tanking system (which permission would have been granted) ..." However, in neither of his witness statements does Andrew Wheeldon state that the defendant would have given permission for the claimants to go onto the defendant's land to install external tanking. In paragraph 22 of his first witness statement he states:

"Mrs Bridgland asked Graham Hulse for permission to enter onto the land to install a French drain to assist with the damp problems. I instructed Graham to respond and say that I would be happy for her to go onto my property to do works providing ... they did not encroach on the land and that it would not cause any problems for future development or sale of the property. After consultation with Jonathan Cornes, I understand the Graham wrote to Mr and Mrs Bridgland to explain that the installation of a French drain was not acceptable because it would restrict future commercial development at the property as it would not be possible to build over the top of it."

 

That passage focuses on whether the claimants could install a French drain, which the defendant would not permit. In his second witness statement Andrew Wheeldon goes into considerable detail to explain the reasoning behind the defendant's refusal to permit the installation of a French drain on its land. In my judgement the whole tenor of the advice which both Jonathan Cornes and Graham Hulse gave Andrew Wheeldon was that the defendant should not give permission for work which would affect the defendant's use of its property. In those circumstances, neither advised Andrew Wheeldon that he should nevertheless permit the claimants to enter the defendant's land to install external tanking along the flank wall of 31 Trafalgar Street. Furthermore, I find that Andrew Wheeldon was not someone who would be naturally inclined or disposed to entertain such an overture, or to give permission for such work to be carried out. Such an inclination or disposition is consistent with his earlier failure (as I find) to notify the claimants of his original intention to demolish the former Trafalgar works. In those circumstances I reject the defendant's submission in the re-amended defence that it would have given permission for the installation of external tanking.

 

115. The defendant makes a further and alternative point in paragraph 32 of the re-amended defence, namely that the claimants "should have undertaken works within the property to install an internal tanking system". However, the claimants had already carried out some works of internal tanking (albeit not the type advised by Jonathan Cornes) when they had the works carried out by H&M in October 2010, and by now - in 2013 - were about to engage on litigation; the letter before action was written on 15 February 2013 (5/1272-7). In those circumstances, in my judgement it was understandable, and thus reasonable, for the claimants not to have embarked upon works of internal tanking during this time, and indeed until the position became clearer when the defendant sold the site in January 2015.

 

116. I therefore find that the claimants have established they suffered a loss of rent during this period. They would however have had to spend one month carrying out cleaning and redecoration in the normal course of events; as a result the period of loss established is six months, and the amount of loss thus £2,119.38.

 

117. The fourth period of alleged loss is a period of 12 months from January to December 2014 in the sum of £4,200.00. The same points which applied to the third period of claim also apply to this period. In my judgement therefore the period of loss established is thus 11 months, and the amount of loss is thus £3,885.53.

 

118. The fifth period of alleged loss is a period of 6 months from January to June 2015 in the sum of £2,100. In paragraph 31 (c) of the re-amended defence, the defendant alleges that it disposed of its interest in the Trafalgar Works on 19 January 2015, and denies that it is liable for losses incurred after that date. In paragraph 86 of his written closing submissions, Mr Taylor submitted is that the defendant "cannot be liable in respect of lost rental income in respect of the period after it parted with the site", and submits is that "the relevant date is exchange of contracts rather than completion". I accept those submissions. The period of loss established is thus of three weeks; and the amount of loss is thus £264.19.

 

119. Had the claimants succeeded in establishing liability, the total loss of rent would thus have been proven in the sum of £6,976.29.

 

120. As regards the miscellaneous items claimed: these are set out at items (ii) - (ix) of the particulars of loss (1/96) together with the documents now cross-referenced in the claimants' schedule.

 

121. Item (ii) is for redecoration in 2009 in the sum of £300. The receipts from B&Q at pages 2/415-425 in fact total £635.44, but they are for a wide range of materials, many of which do not answer the description of "redecoration". In his cross-examination Anthony Bridgland stated (DG/54) that when they visited the property in 2009:

"Where the DPC was, there was a crack at about 900/1000mm. it went from the door to the staircase. And there was a mark where the old doorway came through. A lump of skirting had come off. These costs were incurred trying to remedy these problems. I had to fill the hole in, replace the skirting, and deal with the cracking all the way along: putting filler in etc."

 

Anthony Bridgland then estimated of the material costs involved in such work at about £40, and stated that he incurred other costs e.g. sand-papering and the use of his tools. I accept his evidence, and find that material costs incurred were of the order of £50.

 

122. Item (iii) is for "out-of-pocket expenses in 2009 - 2010" in the sum of £740. In fact, some time after 19 November 2012, Anthony Bridgland prepared a manuscript schedule of losses (3/617). In that schedule he claims (a) loss of earnings for five days at £80 per day between May and July 2009: £400; together with three lots of travel costs at £65 per day: £195; and (b) loss of earnings for one day on 10 September 2010 when he met Jonathan Cornes at the property; and one lot of travel costs at £65. Those costs come to a total of £740. This item is therefore in fact a claim for loss of earnings and associated travel costs in 2009 and 2010.

 

123. In his cross-examination Anthony Bridgland accepted (DG/55) that he had to come up to Stoke on Trent to look at other properties in any event. I therefore assess the time it took Anthony Bridgland to deal with the problems of damp which he encountered in 2009 at three days, the other two days being days which the claimants would have had to spend at the property dealing with cleaning and redecoration in the normal course of events. Although Anthony Bridgland used the figure of £80 for a days loss of earnings when he prepared his manuscript schedule, by reference to his wage slip for the week ending 8 April 2013 (2/427) his daily net wage was, in round terms, £69, and that is the figure I shall bring into account. The claimants therefore establish three days loss of earnings in 2009: £207, together with one lot of travel costs at £65; and one day loss of earnings of £69, plus the cost of travel on 10 September 2010: £134; the total thus amounting to £406.

 

124. Item (iv) is for "the cost of new damp proof course in 2010" in the sum of £680. It relates to the cost of the work which H&M carried out in about September 2010 (see the invoice at 2/439). However, it relates to work, in particular the installation of a chemical DPC, and the use of mortar as internal tanking, which Jonathan Cornes had specifically advised would not work at the property: see paragraphs 19 and 24 above. In those circumstances, I do not find that this amounted to reasonable expenditure by the claimants in mitigation of loss, and the sum is therefore not recoverable.

 

125. Item (v) is for "Mr Cornes' professional fees the defendant required the claimants to bear" in the sum of £111.63. As this was indeed a cost which the defendant imposed upon the claimants, in my judgement the claimants accordingly would be entitled to recover this item as a head of loss.

 

126. Item (vi) is for "Professional fees of J Sercombe, a surveyor engaged by the claimants to assess the damp problem in 2011" in the sum of £250. Even though the subject of the report is stated in rather wider terms to be "to inspect and report on the structural integrity of the gable wall" (page 4/811), in my judgement this is an expense which the claimants reasonably incurred as a result of the state or condition of the property which the defendant had caused or permitted to come about and/or to continue, and accordingly the claimants would be entitled to recover this item as a head of loss.

 

127. Item (vii) is for "repair works to the gable wall and silicon treatment in 2012" in the sum of £770. It relates to the cost of the work which Dynamic Property Care Ltd carried out in July 2011 (see the estimate at 2/506 and the invoice at 2/448). The schedule of work in the estimate provides as follows:

"1. Remove all water from gable wall above the original demolished building roofline

2. Re-point all joints with waterproof mortar and allow to cure for 24 hours

3. Fill gap in-between step with waterproof mortar and allow to cure

4. Coat all of the gable wall in industrial silicon

5. Make good and tidy up."

 

In his cross-examination Anthony Bridgland accepted (DG/53) that the area of re-pointing and subsequent coating with silicon was all above that part of the gable wall originally enclosed by the triangular shaped roof of the Trafalgar Works. I have found that the cause of damp to the gable wall at 31 Trafalgar Street did not involve or implicate the upper section of the gable wall, and accordingly this was not work reasonably and/or necessarily carried out to deal with the state or condition of the property which the defendant had caused or permitted to come about and/or to continue. Accordingly the claimants would not be entitled to recover this item as a head of loss.

 

128. Item (viii) is for "drainage clearance working 2012" in the sum of £80. The claimants were not able to provide a cross reference in their schedule to a relevant document in respect of this item. However, in the manuscript schedule which Anthony Bridgland prepared previously (4/617) he noted alongside the date 28 May 2012:

"Clive Trevor -- drain clearance and view property re damp. Visit 31 Trafalgar Street following concerns from Homesearch re damp. £80"

 

This therefore appears to be a claim for one day's loss of earnings on the part of Anthony Bridgland when attending the property on this occasion for that purpose. In paragraph 36 of her third witness statement Anita Bridgland stated (2/410):

"In May 2012, due to the drainage gutter installed by the defendant upon Mr Jonathan Cornes's advice being blocked, we instructed and paid for clearance work to be carried out by Mr Clive Trevor, which we did not get or have not retained a receipt for."

 

Neither Anita nor Anthony Bridgland stated what sum they paid Clive Trevor. Given the claimants confine their claim in respect of this item to £80, I find that either by reference to Anthony Bridgland's loss of earnings, or to a sum which they in fact paid to Clive Trevor, or to a combination of the two, they would be entitled to recover the sum of £80 in respect of this item.

 

129. Item (ix) is for "out of pocket expenses in 2012" in the sum of £160. The claimants referred to Anthony Bridgland's wage slip for the week ending 8 April 2013 (2/427) and to his manuscript schedule (3/617) in support of this item. In his manuscript schedule Anthony Bridgland noted alongside the date 19 November 2012:

"Trip to Hanley -- to meet with tradesmen per estimates re - new damp proofing £80, and loss of wages £80."

 

In his oral evidence (DG/60) Anthony Bridgland referred to the fact that it had proved difficult to get to agree to attend the property, and when they did attend, proved reluctant to carry out work. I accept that evidence. This thus appears to be a claim for two days loss of earnings which Anthony Bridgland suffered when he travelled to Stoke-on-Trent in November 2012. I find that such constituted a reasonable expense, or loss, incurred by the claimants in taking reasonable steps to deal with the state or condition of the property which the defendant had caused or permitted to come about and/or to continue. Accordingly the claimants would be entitled to recover two days net loss of earnings in the sum of £138 in respect of this item.

 

130. Had the claimants succeeded in establishing liability, the total of the sums which the claimants would be entitled to recover in respect of these miscellaneous items would have been proven in the sum of £1,035.63.

 

L: Conclusion

 

131. Had the claimants succeeded in establishing liability, they would have proved losses in the total sum of £20,116.92, together with interest as appropriate. But instead the defendant has successfully defended the case that was advanced against it at trial, and accordingly is entitled to judgement.

 

DG

21.04.16



[1] It would appear from the proprietorship register (3/520) that her husband was joint owner, and thus would also have been party to the sale.


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