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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> McCarroll v Statham Gill Davies (a firm) [2003] EWCA Civ 425 (01 April 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2003/425.html Cite as: [2003] EWCA Civ 425, [2003] Lloyd's Rep PN 167, [2003] PNLR 25 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
(MR JUSTICE GRAY)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL | ||
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LATHAM
and
MR JUSTICE MORLAND
____________________
Anthony McCarroll | Appellant | |
- and - | ||
Statham Gill Davies (a firm) | Respondents |
____________________
Andrew Sutcliffe QC and David Turner (instructed by Kennedys) for the Respondents
Hearing date: 21st February 2003
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Pill:
The facts
"… 3. The claim is for damages for negligence on the part of Mr Statham of the defendant firm in his capacity as solicitor acting for the claimant [that is, the appellant]. He was also acting for the other members of the band. In that capacity Mr Statham negotiated the terms of a recording contract between the band and Sony which was signed on 22 October 1993 ("the Sony Agreement"). The essence of the claim is that, whether by his acts or his omissions or both, Mr Statham brought about a conflict of interest between the various members of the band because the Sony Agreement wrongly favoured Noel and Liam Gallagher over the other members of the band including the claimant. It is asserted that Mr Statham acted negligently in failing to ascertain from the members of the band whether or not the agreement properly reflected their position; failed to advise the claimant to seek independent legal advice in relation to the conflict of interest which had arisen and failed to point out that the effect of the Sony Agreement was that the name "Oasis" was owned by the Gallagher brothers and left the claimant vulnerable to instant dismissal without compensation. It is further contended that Mr Statham should have advised the claimant of the need for a partnership agreement to regulate the relationship between the members of the band.
4. Although not relevant for the purposes of the present application, I should record the fact that Mr Statham repudiates the suggestion that he was negligent in the above or any other respects.
5. The nature of the case advanced on behalf of the claimant as to the damage suffered is that, but for the negligence of Mr Statham, he would not have signed the Sony Agreement but would have obtained independent legal advice and secured written terms of partnership which would have protected him from the risk of being summarily expelled from the band without compensation. The terms which the claimant contends would have been agreed with Sony are pleaded in his Response to the Request for Further Information."
Section 2
"In cases in tort the cause of action arises, not when the culpable conduct occurs, but when the plaintiff first sustains damage. Thus the question which has to be addressed is what is meant by 'damage' in the context of claims for loss which is purely financial (or economic, as it is sometimes described)."
The first issue in the present appeal is when the appellant first sustained damage; he contends that it was when he was expelled from the group and the respondents contend that it was when the recording agreement with Sony was made.
In Nykredit, Lord Nicholls expressed agreement with Stephenson LJ who in Forster v Outred & Co [1982] 1 WLR 86 had, at p 98, accepted the submission of Mr Stuart-Smith QC recorded at p 94:
"What is meant by actual damage? Mr Stuart-Smith says that it is any detriment, liability or loss capable of assessment in money terms and it includes liabilities which may arise on a contingency, particularly a contingency over which the plaintiff has no control; things like loss of earning capacity, loss of a chance or bargain, loss of profit, losses incurred from onerous provisions or covenants in leases. They are all illustrations of a kind of loss which is meant by 'actual' damage. It was also suggested in argument … that 'actual' is really used in contrast to 'presumed' or 'assumed.' Whereas damage is presumed in trespass and libel, it is not presumed in negligence and has to be proved. There has to be some actual damage."
"The amount of a plaintiff's loss frequently becomes clearer after court proceedings have been started and while awaiting trial. This is an everyday experience. There is no reason to think that the approach I have spelled out will give rise to any insuperable difficulties in practice. In their practical conduct of litigation courts are well able to ensure that assessments of damages are made in a sensible way. It is not necessary, in order to achieve a sensible and fair result, to go so far as asserting that the plaintiff has no cause of action, and hence may not issue a writ, until the assessment can be made with the degree of precision that accompanies a realisation of the security. Further, within the bounds of sense and reasonableness the policy of the law should be to advance, rather than retard, the accrual of a cause of action."
"Up to and at that date their then outlay, together with either the cost of borrowing or the notional profit that could have been obtained elsewhere, was less than the value of the security put up for the deal. Accordingly, until after March 1984 the plaintiffs could not show a cause of action against the valuers for the assumed breach of duty had not caused them any actual loss or damage."
"If, contrary to the view which we have just expressed, the English decisions properly understood support the proposition that where, as a result of the defendant's negligent misrepresentation, the plaintiff enters into a contract which exposes him or her to a contingent loss or liability, the plaintiff first suffers loss or damage on entry into the contract, we do not agree with them. In our opinion, in such a case, the plaintiff sustains no actual damage until the contingency is fulfilled and the loss becomes actual; until that happens the loss is prospective and may never be incurred."
Wardley was concerned with a cause of action created by statute for the recovery of loss or damage and it was held that the indemnity given by the State generated only a contingent liability. Reference was also made by counsel to the decision of the New Zealand Court of Appeal in Gilbert v Shanahan [1998] 3 NZLR 528 where the Wardley approach was adopted.
"From these authorities it can be seen that the cause of action can accrue and the plaintiff have suffered damage once he has acted upon the relevant advice 'to his detriment' and failed to get that to which he was entitled. He is less well off than he would have been if the defendant had not been negligent. Applying this to the present case, the plaintiffs paid their renewal premium without getting in return a binding contract of indemnity from the insurance company. They had acted to their detriment: they did not get that to which they were entitled. The fact that how serious the consequences of the negligence would be depended upon subsequent events and contingencies does not alter this; such considerations go to the quantification of the plaintiff's loss not to whether or not they have suffered loss. The risk of loss existed from the outset and in the absence of better evidence would have to be evaluated and assessed as a risk and damages awarded accordingly."
"The plaintiffs suffered loss as soon as they received an insurance contract which was not binding upon the insurers. The subsequent events, the question whether or not the insurers would thereafter avoid the policy and with what consequences, went only to the quantification of loss not to the identification of the first moment at which a plaintiff suffered loss and the tort became actionable. …" and at p 187A "Had it been necessary to do so the court could and should have put a monetary value upon that loss at that time [the receipt of a purported cover which was not binding]".
"It seems to me clear beyond argument from the moment of executing each agreement the plaintiffs suffered damage because instead of receiving a potentially valuable chose in action they received one that was valueless."
"In all those cases, however, the court was able to conclude that the transaction then and there caused the claimant loss, on the basis that if the injured party had been put in the position he would have occupied but for the breach of duty, the transaction in question would have provided greater rights, or imposed lesser liabilities or obligations than was the case; and that the difference between these two states of affairs could be quantified in money terms at the date of the transaction."
Conclusions on section 2
Sections 14A and 32
"A right of action arises out of a basic set of essential facts. In the context of the present case these essential facts were (a) a solicitor and client relationship between the plaintiff and the defendants, (b) the giving of advice by the defendants which a skilled and careful solicitor should not have given and, possibly, (c) consequential damage. A right of action may be concealed by hiding one or more of these essential facts from the potential plaintiff. But that did not occur and the plaintiff does not suggest that it did. His complaint is that certain evidence was concealed which, he says, would have supported his right of action. This is something wholly different. Having a right of action and knowing you have it is one thing. Being able to prove it is another. Bridging this gap, when all or an important part of the evidence is or may be in the hands of the defendants, is the function of discovery."
Lord Justice Latham:
Mr Justice Morland: