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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Lane v O'Brien Homes [2004] EWHC 303 (QB) (05 February 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2004/303.html Cite as: [2004] EWHC 303 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand London WCA 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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LANE | ||
CLAIMANT/RESPONDENT | ||
-v- | ||
O'BRIEN HOMES | ||
DEFENDANT/APPELLANT |
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190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Telephone 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR N AGNIHOTRI (for Mr W Webster) appeared on behalf of the DEFENDANT/APPELLANT.
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Crown Copyright ©
"Following our meeting yesterday between Joan and you and me, I write to confirm the basic terms of our agreement as follows.
1. Joan will sell and your company will purchase the whole of the property known as Orchard End and the land that forms part of it, but excepting the property known as Raffles Place, which is included in a separate title.
2. The purchase price is £950,000, to be paid as follows."
Certain terms for payment are set out.
"3. You will build not more than three new houses on the land, pursuant to the existing planning permission, which was implemented when Raffles Place was built in 1997. These terms are, I believe, agreed, and I understand you will confirm them in writing. In the meantime, I am writing to our solicitors to put them in the picture."
"Dear Kenneth,
Further to your most recent letter, I write to confirm that your proposals are acceptable to me."
The letter then went on to deal with the purchase price arrangements and added:
"I hope this confirms our agreement. I look forward to executing the paperwork."
"What the claimant has really suffered is loss of the contractual effect of the prohibition against building a fourth home, i.e. the value and bargaining terms of that prohibition, or the value of releasing Mr O'Brien from it. As indicated, I do not believe that if anyone had thought of the possibility of a fourth house prior to the sale, either side would have valued the prospect of that highly. Nor, however, do I accept that Mrs Lane would have refused to negotiate or to sell on the basis that Mr O'Brien had said he might try for a fourth house. She could have refused to sell, but I do not believe she would have. She could have put it into the contract of sale. I do not believe that she would have preferred to go back to Berkley House."
I interpose that that is a reference to Berkley Homes, who had also been bidding with her to buy the property for development. The judgment continues:
"Had the possibility been seriously raised, she would have had to choose whether to refuse to sell (which I really do not believe was her state of mind at that date), or to have considered putting the prohibition onto the land itself by a suitable covenant, so as to make it a condition binding upon successors of the defendants.
What she has lost therefore in truth is the value of that bargaining position, which I believe is the true measure of her loss. Had the land been sold with permission, either in planning or contractual terms for four more houses, I have considered the lengthy evidence of Mr Hampton. I regret I do not see this as a case of a covenant removable by the Lands Tribunal, but simply as one for valuation of a site with four houses, bearing in mind that in negotiation the agreement would have had to be conditional upon obtaining such permission, for Mr O'Brien wanted to buy – it was his kind of development, I have no doubt – and Mrs Lane wanted to sell. Even if she was uncertain about leaving, Canary Wharf was imminent."
I interpose that that is a reference to the then plans of the claimant and Mr Hilbourne to buy a London flat. Reading on:
"That does not mean, however, that the true measure of her loss in contract is the equivalent of a difference in value. Nor, in my judgment, does it mean any assessment of diminution of value in the land, Orchard House and Raffles Place, that she retained. If it were, I should say that was minimal, for the reasons I have already given, in the sense of amenity.
On the balance of probabilities, with the possibility of four houses being mooted, I have no doubt Mr O'Brien would have offered more; not the full site price, as defined by Mr Hampton, but a proportion of it, based on the conditional option of seeking a fourth permission if he chose to. But neither side would have taken the chance of such an application succeeding highly, as Mr Harris confirmed. I repeat, however, I think the probable outcome or the likelihood of Mr O'Brien losing the transaction altogether would have been minimal. Even less likely that he would have lost it to Berkley Homes, and indeed, had Berkeley Homes been considering the possibility of a fourth house, I believe they would have continued to be as difficult to deal with in comparison to Mr O'Brien as they already had.
Broadly, since I regarded Mr O'Brien as a very competent and well-organised developer, I believe he would have made calculations of his profit on a fourth house not too far removed from those of Mr Hampton. A builder's profit of at least £280,000 would have been in his mind should he obtain permission, and had Mrs Lane thought of it, he would have offered a good slice of it to her, to ensure keeping the deal. In my view, it is that chance that I believe is the true measure of Mrs Lane's loss, and I value it at £150,000."
"In the present case I am faced with the problem what damages ought to be awarded to the plaintiffs in the place of mandatory injunctions which would have restored the plaintiffs' rights. If the plaintiffs are merely given a nominal sum, or no sum, in substitution for injunctions, it seems to me that justice will manifestly not have been done.
As I have said, the general rule would be to measure damages by reference to that sum which would place the plaintiffs in the same position as if the covenant had not been broken. Parkside and the individual purchasers could have avoided breaking the covenant in two ways. One course would have been not to develop the allotment site. The other course would have been for Parkside to have sought from the plaintiffs a relaxation of the covenant. On the facts of this particular case the plaintiffs, rightly conscious of their obligations towards existing resident, would clearly not have granted any relaxation, but for present purposes I must assume that it could have been induced to do so. In my judgment a just substitute for a mandatory injunction would be such a sum of money as might reasonably have been demanded by the plaintiffs from Parkside as a quid pro quo for relaxing the covenant."
"(n) As important as any of the above factors is this. In any negotiation science and rationality gets one only so far. At the end of the day the deal has to feel right. Some of the numbers that have been suggested by Amec in the course of this litigation, while perhaps intellectually justifiable, seem to me to be way over the top of what Jury would be prepared to pay, when set in the context of the rest of the cost of this hotel."
The Deputy Judge went on to his conclusion and said this:
"As was pointed out by Nourse LJ in Gafford v Graham [1999] 3 EGLR 75 at p 80L, the sort of damages questions involved in cases like the present are matters of judgment which are incapable of strict rational and logical exposition from beginning to end. I have sought to set out the principal factors that have operated in my mind and which would have operated in the minds of the parties to the hypothetical negotiation."
That illustrates well the task that a judge in this sort of case has to perform.
"A builder's profit of at least £280,000 would have been in his mind should he obtain permission, and had Mrs Lane thought of it he would have offered a good slice of it to her to ensure keeping the deal."