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England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Horbury Building Systems Ltd. v Hampden Insurance NV [2003] EWHC 2110 (Comm) (09 September 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2003/2110.html Cite as: [2003] EWHC 2110 (Comm) |
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QUEENS BENCH DIVISIONCOMMERCIAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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HORBURY BUILDING SYSTEMS LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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HAMPDEN INSURANCE NV |
Defendant |
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Graham Charkham (instructed by Davies Arnold Cooper) for the Defendant
Hearing date : 3 July 2003
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Crown Copyright ©
Deputy Judge Glick QC :
Introduction
Facts
"5. The suspension system [for the ceilings] also provided the support for metal ductwork passing between two layers of ceiling. The ductwork was to contain cabling not in the lower-risk categories mentioned in Regulation 22(5)(b) of The Cinematographic (Safety) Regulations 1955 (as amended), and also heating/ventilation ductwork for air circulation. All ductwork suspended from the hangers was intended to be rigid. It was intended to be and was supplied and installed by parties other than Horbury.
6. The cinema premises obtained from Manchester City Council a licence under the Cinemas Act 1985. The licensing system allowed the Council time to evaluate the premises before deciding whether to grant the licence. At all material times the practice of the Council was to obtain reports from the City Architects, the Building Control Department, the Environmental Health Department, and the Police and Fire authorities, before deciding whether to grant the licence.
7. The licence contained the following (among other) provisions:
"1. The licensed premises shall not be open for the purposes for which this Licence is granted on any occasion when the Licensing Authority may signify their desire in writing to the occupier or other person having at the time the care and management of such premises that the same should not be open.
33. All parts of the premises and fittings and apparatus therein, including the seating, door fastenings and notices, and the lighting, electrical heating, ventilating, mechanical and other installations, shall be maintained at all times in good order and condition."
8. The licence was subject to the proviso that
"… subject to the provisions of the said regulations", [The Cinematographic (Safety) Regulations 1955 (as amended)] "made by the Secretary of State, such licence shall be liable to be suspended by the said Council in the event of any failure on the part of the licensee to carry out the said Regulations, or of the building becoming otherwise, unsafe, or of any material alteration being made in the building or enclosure without the consent of the said Council."
…
11. Some of Horbury's work had been carried out unskilfully and not in conformity with contract, in that:
11.1 in the following locations the wrong washers had been used throughout or effectively throughout Horbury's work:
Auditorium 6
Auditorium 10
Auditorium 12
Auditorium 15
11.2 in Auditorium 4 approximately half the hangers had the wrong washers and half had the correct ones.
…
16. AMC's closure of the complex was a voluntary decision. AMC provided assurances to Manchester City Council that the complex would not be re-opened until such time as the problem had been fully investigated and a programme of remedial works implemented, satisfactory to Manchester City Council.
17. All interested parties were notified or became aware, among them Manchester City Council, Horbury, and via insurance brokers, Horbury's insurers, Hampden, who appointed as loss adjusters Ashworth Mairs.
18. The City Council's officers considered the situation so dangerous that they would not allow Council staff onto the premises until satisfied with temporary protective measures.
19. The cause of the collapse of the ceiling of auditorium 6 was identified as being and was the use of the wrong washers. [I note here that, although it is not mentioned in the Statement of Assumed Facts, the collapse was being attributed to "incorrect fittings" used by Horbury by 24 December 2001.]
20. The effect of the use of the wrong washers was that individual hangers disconnected. Each disconnection (1) removed or significantly reduced the support which that hanger had provided to the suspended ceilings (2) increased the load on adjacent hangers and (3) removed or significantly reduced the support which that hanger had provided for the ductwork.
21. All other auditoria were checked. Of these, 11 were discovered to be virtually free from defect. However, it was discovered that the wrong washers had been used almost throughout auditorium 10, 12 and 15, and in about half of auditorium 4. In each of these auditoria some individual hangers had disconnected.
22. Had remedial measures not been taken it is probable that some or all of the ceilings in auditoria 4, 10, 12 and 15 would have collapsed in due course either in part or in the same way as that of auditorium 6.
23. Alternative A
No damage had occurred to any part of auditoria 4, 10, 12 and 15 (as distinct from damage to the complex as a whole).
Alternative B
One or more or all of those auditoria were damaged in whole or in part in that the electrical ductwork and therefore the wiring which it contained was no longer securely fixed in position within the meaning of regulation 22(2) of the Cinematographic (Safety) Regulations 1955. The fixing was insecure because of the loss of support from some hangers and the risk of disconnection of others.
24. Auditorium 6 was cleared, reconstructed and refurbished.
25. The suspension systems in auditoria 4, 10, 12 and 15 were reconnected.
26. When but only when satisfied that the
licensing officer were themselves satisfied with the state of affairs did AMC re-open the complex to the public."
The policy
"The following expressions shall have the specified meanings given to them wherever they may appear in this Policy.
…
3. Contract
3.1 Contract shall mean any Contract or agreement for the performance of work in connection with the Business.
…
7. Products
7.1 Any goods or products (including containers labelling instructions or advice provided therewith) sold supplied erected repaired altered treated or installed or work carried out by or on behalf of the Insured in the course of the Business from or in Great Britain Northern Ireland the Channel Islands and the Isle of Man.
8. Property
8.1 Material property."
"4. Insurance Cover
4.1 Indemnity
The Company will indemnify the Insured against liability at law for damages and claimants costs and expenses in respect of Injury to any person and loss of or damage to Property occurring within the Territorial Limits during the period of Insurance and caused by any Products after they have ceased to be in the custody or under the control of the Insured.
…..
Exceptions to Part B
5 The Company will not indemnify the Insured against liability in respect of
….
5.3 Contractual Liability
Injury loss of or damage to Property which is assumed by the Insured by agreement (other than liability arising out of a condition or warranty of goods implied by law) unless such liability would have attached in the absence of such agreement.
5.4 Damage to Products Serviced or Treated
The cost of recalling removing replacing repairing reapplying rectifying or refunding payment for anything sold supplied constructed erected installed repaired serviced or treated by the Insured caused by any defect therein or the unsuitability thereof for its intended purpose."
The dispute
"(1) the liability of [Hampden] in respect of the claim to indemnity by Horbury includes liability to indemnify in respect of any liability of [Horbury] to others for the costs of remedying the damage to auditorium 6 other than the costs of repairing the ceiling installation (including in this expression ductwork);
(2) the liability of [Hampden] in respect of the claim to indemnity by Horbury includes liability to indemnify in respect of any liability of Horbury to others for the costs of remedying the damage to the ductwork above auditorium 6;
(3) ……
(4) the liability of [Hampden] in respect of the claim to indemnity by Horbury includes liability to indemnify in respect of any liability of [Horbury] to Galliford and/or AMC for the costs of remedying the damage (if any had occurred before inspection) to the ductwork above auditoria 4, 10, 12 and 15;
(5) the liability of [Hampden] beyond that is not restricted to liability to indemnify in respect of any liability of [Horbury] to others for loss of profits which would have been earned from auditorium 6;
(6) if [Horbury] are liable to third party claimants in terms which include liability for loss of profits calculated by reference to the closure of the cinema complex as a whole from 21 December 2001 to 25 January 2002, then the liability of [Hampden] to indemnify extends to include [Horbury's] liability for such loss of profits."
Of these, the most important is proposed declaration (6). (Proposed declaration (3) was not pursued.)
The parties' cases
Horbury's case
Hampden's case
The authorities
"The indemnity is in respect of sums which the insured shall become legally liable to pay. There is no problem about that because the declaration asked for assumes that there will be such a legal liability. If there is no such legal liability then of course there is no liability to indemnify. It goes on. "Legally liable to pay" has to be "in respect of" - I stress the words "in respect of" - "death, bodily injury, illness, loss or damage happening anywhere in the World (excluding the United States of America and Canada) during the period of insurance". The liability to pay has to be in respect of what, in its context, is clearly some physical event. It is something which can be said to have happened somewhere. It is an event which is happening during the period of the insurance. The event can be death, bodily injury, illness or loss or damage. The words "loss or damage" must, in my judgment, be construed in context as something that relates to a physical event. It goes on: "And caused by goods (including containers) … supplied … or created in the course of the Business" of the insured. There is no difficulty about that last step provided it is understood what it relates to.
The plaintiffs in the present case did treat and/or supply printed material. They treated it for LMG or supplied it to them. That supply of those goods has caused further events. It has caused the contamination of the package itself and it has caused the contamination of the Maltesers. So the plaintiffs are able to progress from the third element to the second element, namely they can show the goods which they treated have caused damage - which is a physical event occurring somewhere and occurring during the period of insurance - to the packaging and to the Maltesers. That is the limit of what they can prove as a matter of physical causation.
One then asks whether the legal liability to pay is in respect of that loss or damage. It is at this point that, in my judgment, the train of reasoning upon which the plaintiff's argument has to be based breaks down.
They have to progress from legal liability in respect of the damage to the packaging and damage to the Maltesers to a loss of goodwill by LMG and loss of profits over a period in the future. The loss of profit in 1990, 1991 and 1992 are not events which are either directly or indirectly covered by this policy. They cannot be correctly described as loss or damage which has happened somewhere; nor have they happened at least partially during the period of insurance.
The conclusion at which I arrive is similar to that of the judge: the relevant head of loss is not caused by any defects in the packaging but is caused by Mars choosing not to place further orders with LMG. The same point can be demonstrated by appreciating that causation is, in the context of this cover, a physical concept: the loss or damage has to happen physically during the period of insurance. It is not possible to treat a liability to pay compensation in respect of an economic loss which arises from a loss of goodwill as being in respect of physical loss or damage physically caused. Loss of goodwill is not covered by this policy. The plaintiffs have failed to bring themselves within the relevant part of the cover. The declaration made by the judge was correct."
"In my judgment on the facts found by the Official Referee, Judge Kershaw was right to include as a consequence of that Occurrence the damage that was caused to the commodity itself, that is to say the caking of the powder which was caused by the hygroscopic effect of the staining of the cartons which had been caused by a defect in the commodity. But I do not consider that Judge Kershaw was right to construe the clause as if an Occurrence could include mere damage caused by the commodity to itself. Such a construction fails to give effect to the natural meaning of the language which clearly contemplates that the commodity will cause physical damage to something else. Further, that view would contemplate that, without more, the products liability policy could cover deterioration in the commodity supplied. In my judgment the correct analysis is that that there was an Occurrence - the staining of the cartons - of which a consequence was the damage to the commodity - the caking of the powder. Thus in considering what liability on the part of Rodan has arisen from the Occurrence one also has to take account of that physical consequence of the Occurrence.
The next step in the analysis is to consider which, if any, of the Items of damage are referable to a legal liability of Rodan to pay compensation "in respect of" the Occurrence. It is hard to see what effect Judge Kershaw was giving to the words "in respect of". He seems to have treated them as equivalent to "arising out of the same cause of action as gave rise to the assured's liability for the Occurrence". He does not seem to have asked himself whether the relevant Item represented a liability to pay compensation in respect of the Occurrence. This is most clearly illustrated by his conclusion that Rodan were entitled to an indemnity in respect of their liability for future loss of profits and expenditure thrown away on the purchase of cartons to be used for further powder that it was intended should be supplied by Rodan to Newbrite but never was. These future losses of Newbrite related not to the supply of the 80 tons but to the non-supply or the non-acceptance of further powder. They certainly do not relate to any physical consequence of the damage to the cartons in which the 80 tons were packed by Newbrite's packers. The phrase "in respect of" carries with it a requirement that the liability relate to the identified Occurrence. It is not sufficient that it should simply have had some connection with the Occurrence.
The effect of the decision of the judge to treat the words "in respect of the Occurrence" as meaning no more than "in connection with the same causes of action as gave rise to the liability for the Occurrence" transforms this cover from a products liability cover to a policy covering general contractual liabilities. A products liability policy in which the cover provided is defined in words such as those used in the present policy is confined to liability for physical consequences caused by the commodity or article supplied. The liability of the assured in damages will have to be expressed in terms of money but that liability must be in respect of the consequences of the physical loss or damage to physical property (or some personal - "bodily" - injury).
Provided that the commodity or article supplied has caused the physical consequence, the compensation payable by the assured to the third party will include, and the liability of the insurer to indemnify the assured, will extend to the totality of the loss which the third party is entitled to recover from the assured by way of damages in respect of that physical consequence. Thus, if a defective article supplied by the assured causes bodily injury to the third party disabling him or, for example, causes his premises to be destroyed by fire, the third party will be entitled to recover from the assured the full value of what he has lost which will, in the two examples I have given, include compensation for future loss of earnings. They are part of what the third party has lost as a consequence of the physical loss or injury and they are accordingly part of the liability of the assured in respect of that physical consequence.
Items 3 and 4 in the claim of Newbrite were not of such a character. They relate to the future non-performance of obligations of Rodan towards Newbrite. They do not relate to any quantification of the loss which Newbrite suffered as a result of the relevant physical Occurrence, the staining of the cartons in which Newbrite packed the first 80 tons delivered. In my judgment the judge's decision in favour of Rodan on Items 3 and 4 was clearly wrong and cannot stand."
Discussion
"…against liability at law for damages … in respect of … loss of or damage to Property [that is, material property] occurring within the Territorial Limits during the Period of Insurance and caused by any Products [that is, any goods or products supplied, erected or installed or work carried out by the Insured in the course of the Business] after they have ceased to be … under the control of the Insured."
"A products liability policy in which the cover provided is defined in words such as those used in the present policy is confined to liability for physical consequences caused by the commodity or article supplied."
The closure of the rest of the complex was not such a consequence. Thus it does not seem to me that lost profits relating to the rest of the complex are any more covered by the policy when the ceiling in cinema 6 has actually collapsed than when the faults have been detected in time to forestall such a collapse.
Conclusions