![]() |
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | |
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 >> Freemans Plc v Park Street Properties (Lincoln) Ltd. & Ors [2002] EWHC 477 (TCC) (26 March 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2002/477.html Cite as: [2002] EWHC 477 (TCC) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
QUEENS BENCH DIVISION
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
133-137, Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1HD | ||
B e f o r e :
____________________
FREEMANS PLC | Claimant | |
- and - | ||
(1) PARK STREET PROPERTIES (LINCOLN) LIMITED (2) JAYCHEM (BOURNE) LIMITED (3) RAILTRACK PLC | Defendants |
____________________
Kirk Reynolds Q.C. and Richard Stead (instructed by Beachcroft Wansbroughs for the Third Defendant)
The First and Second Defendants did not appear and were not represented.
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
H.H. Judge Richard Seymour Q. C. :
Introduction
The potential liability of Railtrack for deficiencies in the Culvert
“…This Act shall apply to every railway which shall by any Act which shall hereafter be passed be authorized to be constructed, and this Act shall be incorporated with such Act; and all the clauses and provisions of this Act, save so far as they shall be expressly varied or excepted by any such Act, shall apply to the undertaking authorized thereby, so far as the same shall be applicable to such undertaking, and shall, as well as the clauses and provisions of every Act which shall be incorporated with such Act, form part of such Act, and be construed together therewith as forming one Act.”
“The company shall make and at all times thereafter maintain the following works for the accommodation of the owners and occupiers of lands adjoining the railway; (that is to say,)
Such and so many convenient gates, bridges, arches, culverts, and passages, over, under, or by the sides of or leading to or from the railway, as shall be necessary for the purpose of making good any interruptions caused by the railway to the use of the lands through which the railway shall be made; and such works shall be made forthwith after the part of the railway passing over such lands shall have been laid out or formed, or during the formation thereof;…
Also all necessary arches, tunnels, culverts, drains, or other passages, either over or under or by the sides of the railway, of such dimensions as will be sufficient at all times to convey the water as clearly from the lands lying near or affected by the railway as before the making of the railway, or as nearly as may be; and such works shall be made from time to time as the railway works proceed;…
The terms “the company” and “ the railway” were defined in s.3 of the 1845 Act as meaning, respectively:-Provided always, that the company shall not be required ...to make any accommodation works with respect to which the owners and occupiers of the lands shall have agreed to receive and shall have been paid compensation instead of making them.”
“ “the company” The expression “the company” shall mean the company or party which shall be authorized by the special Act to construct the railway;
It would seem that the rights created by s.68 of the 1845 Act to use accommodation works are in the nature of an easement created by statute – see Midland Railway Company v. Gribble [1895] 2 Ch 129; South Eastern Railway Company v. Cooper [1924] 1 Ch 211 – with the difference that the section required that the provider of the accommodation works maintain them after they had been created.“the railway” The expression “the railway” shall mean the railway and works by the special Act authorized to be constructed.”
“The company shall not be compelled to make any further or additional accommodation works for the use of owners and occupiers of land adjoining the railway after the expiration of the prescribed period, or, if no period be prescribed, after five years from the completion of the works, and the opening of the railway for public use.”
“THE Corporation HEREBY RELEASE the Board from all obligations (if any) as to the maintenance of the said culvert and indemnify the Board from their liability (if any) in respect thereof.”
“WESTWOOD INDUSTRIAL ESTATE: RAILWAY CULVERT.
Referring to Mr. Smallman’s letter of the 27th October, I put his views to the Board’s Solicitor, and following the advice given, the Chief Civil Engineer has re-drawn the terms and conditions upon which a connection to the railway culvert can be agreed. These conditions are as follows:-
1. All work to be carried out and completed to the satisfaction of the Board’s Chief Civil Engineer.
2. The Board’s fences, drains and other services where disturbed to be restored to a condition not inferior to that in which they are found before the works are commenced.
3. The roadway surfaces and embankment slopes, where disturbed, to be restored to a condition not inferior to that in which they are found before the works are commenced.
4. The Board to be indemnified and held harmless against any losses, costs, damages, expenses, claims, or liabilities, which they may incur, sustain, or be put to by reason or in consequence of the works.
5. All costs occasioned by reason of the construction, alteration or use of the works, including the costs of safeguarding all running lines, to be borne by the Corporation.
6. The Board not to be held responsible for any damage or injury which may be caused to the works by subsidence or any other reason.
7. After commencement, the Corporation to ensure that the work affecting the Board’s interest is carried out and completed without delay.
8. Fourteen days’ notice of intention to commence work to be given to the Divisional Civil Engineer, King’s Cross Station, London N.1. quoting reference T.7010/60.
In the previous correspondence, we have been dealing with a request to dispose of storm water from a particular area of the Freeman development. In agreeing to this request, it is felt that it would not be unreasonable for the Board to have an undertaking to the effect that the drainage area will be restricted to that shown coloured purple on the City Engineer’s Drawing No. 5140, which was sent to me on the 21st July,1967, under reference RNM/JB/290/B. In addition, the Board would like a further undertaking that should the eventual flow from the area concerned prove to be beyond the capacity of the culvert, the responsibility for the necessary additional and/or alternative works would rest entirely with the Corporation.
I shall be pleased to receive formal acknowledgement of the Engineering Conditions and the undertakings referred to in the previous paragraph.”
“Further to my letter of 28th December, I have now been able to clarify the position with the City Engineer and I write formally to confirm that the conditions set out numbers 1 to 8 in your letter of 22nd December are acceptable and give undertakings in respect of the matters specified in the penultimate paragraph of that letter.
The City Engineer will be in touch with you again on any technical matters arising and for my part I would just like to thank you for your assistance in disposing of the issue in such an amicable way.”
He also submitted, on the authority of the decision of Kelly CB in Colley v. The London and North Western Railway Company (1880) 5 Ex D 277, that the effect of s. 73 of the 1845 Act is that no action lies after the expiry of the five year period for which that section provides in respect of the alleged insufficiency of accommodation works. However, it appears from the decision of the Court of Appeal in Dixon v. Great Western Railway Company [1897] 1 QB 300, to which Mr. Coulson referred me, that s.73 is only of effect if some accommodation works have been carried out. If none have been done, the effect of s.68 is that the obligation for which that section provides falls to be performed in perpetuity unless and until it has in fact been performed. Mr. Coulson relied upon the decision in the case to which he referred me as authority for the proposition that, in the circumstances of the present case, the obligation of Railtrack to maintain the Culvert was perpetual. Mr. Reynolds and Mr. Coulson agreed that, if Railtrack owed to Freemans an obligation to maintain the Culvert by virtue of s. 68 of the 1845 Act, Railtrack was strictly liable in respect of any failure to perform that duty.“The accommodation works which the company may be required to make are such accommodation works as are required at the time the land was taken, having regard to its then use, and not accommodation works which may be required when the character of the land, and perhaps the nature of the neighbourhood, is entirely altered years afterwards.”
However, he did not seek to make good the contention that, by some means upon which he did not elaborate, Freemans became bound to accept, as against Railtrack, responsibility for the maintenance of the Culvert. What he did submit was that, on proper construction of the BRB Agreement, by virtue of the giving on the part of the Corporation of the indemnity to which I have referred, and the agreement on the part of the Corporation to pay the costs identified in paragraph 5 of Mr. Beaney’s letter dated 22 December 1967, the Corporation had contracted out of the ability to make any claim in respect of nuisance arising from a failure on the part of BRB to maintain the Culvert. In other words, his submission was that those two provisions amounted to an exclusion clause. He submitted that Freemans was bound by the consequences of such exclusion clause. I do not consider that submission to be well-founded. It is no doubt correct that, if Mr. Reynolds’s submission as to the proper construction of that for which the BRB Agreement provided were correct, it would not be open to the Corporation to make any claim against BRB or Railtrack in respect of nuisance caused by a failure on the part of BRB or Railtrack to maintain the Culvert because of circuity of action. However, I do not accept his submission as to the proper construction of that for which the BRB Agreement provided. Even if I did, it would not follow from that that anyone deriving an interest in the Premises, or more particularly the area of the Store, through the Corporation would be in the same position. The seeking and giving of the indemnity rather suggest the contrary, if Mr. Reynolds’s submission as to the construction of the indemnity were correct. Unless it was contemplated that there were circumstances in which someone deriving an interest in the Premises through the Corporation could have a claim against BRB it is difficult to see what reason there could be for stipulating for an indemnity rather than, for example, a simple provision that the Corporation should not have any claim against BRB arising out of the exercise of the right of drainage for which the BRB Agreement provided.“28. D3 [that is, Railtrack] submits that this correspondence [namely that which constituted the BRB Agreement], read as a whole and in context, allocates all responsibility for the maintenance of the Culvert to the Corporation (and thus to the Corporation’s lessee, C).”
As I have remarked, Mr. Reynolds did not seek to expound upon the assertion that whatever the Corporation had agreed with BRB was somehow binding on Freemans.“33. D3 submits that any claim based on nuisance can only operate subject to the express terms of the agreement entered into in 1967-8. As already stated, that agreement contains an indemnity by the Corporation (which is binding on the Corporation’s lessee, C) which gives D3 a defence to any claim based on nuisance which might otherwise have existed at common law.”
“…The Defendant’s duty is to do that which it is reasonable for him to do. The criteria of reasonableness include, in respect of a duty of this nature, the factor of what the particular man – not the average man – can be expected to do, having regard, amongst other things, where a serious expenditure of money is required to eliminate or reduce the danger, to his means. Just as, where physical effort is required to avert an immediate danger, the defendant’s age and physical condition may be relevant in deciding what is reasonable, so also logic and good sense require that, where the expenditure of money is required, the defendant’s capacity to find the money is relevant. But this can only be in the way of a broad, and not a detailed assessment; and, in arriving at a judgment on reasonableness, a similar broad assessment may be relevant in some cases as to the neighbour’s capacity to protect himself from damage, whether by way of some barrier on his own land or by way of providing funds for expenditure on agreed works on the land of the defendant ”
“34. Even if a claim based on nuisance is available, it is an important ingredient of the principle to be found in the cases relied upon that liability arises only when the landowner, D3, has knowledge or the means of knowledge, of the existence of the state of affairs likely to lead to damage. In the present case D3 (and, the Court will be asked to accept, even in the absence of detailed records, its predecessors) had established a system of regular visual or detailed inspections of the many culverts under its control, including the Culvert. In the absence of any complaint from C in the years immediately preceding the 1997 flood, or even as an immediate result of the 1997 flood, and in view of the great dangers and difficulties in inspecting that part of the Culvert where (as C now claims) the relevant state of affairs may have existed, it is submitted that D3 did not have the requisite knowledge to found liability. In any event, when and if D3 did acquire the requisite degree of knowledge, it thereafter attempted to deal with whatever problem might exist, through further inspections and tests, and remedial works and thereby discharged any duty which it may have had to C to deal with the state of affairs.
35. It is also relevant to consider D3’s means, not in any detailed sense, but as being broadly relevant to the consideration of what D3 should have done. D3 does not, of course plead poverty but points to the very large number of structures (including many culverts) for which it has responsibility under statute or at common law. It must decide how to devote its resources in relation to those responsibilities and prioritise expenditure. It is submitted that in devising and implementing the inspection regime D3 was taking sufficient steps to fulfil the “high obligation” referred to in the cases, especially before any complaint was received indicating that the state of the Culvert might be such as to cause flooding.
I shall return to the question of “the inspection regime” mentioned in paragraph 35 of Mr. Reynolds’s written opening. However, before one can address any question of what knowledge Railtrack had at any given point in time, or of what Railtrack at any given time had means of knowledge, it is necessary to consider of what it would have been possible to have had knowledge which is relevant to the matters which I have to decide. In other words, at what point in time, on the evidence, did a blockage form in the Culvert?36. Further, the cases relied upon by C are to be distinguished on the ground that there is no existence [sic – probably evidence was meant] in the present case that damage was caused by water coming from D3’s land, as opposed to water already on C’s land backing up.”
The Blockages
Mr. Lawrence drew a sketch of what he had found and on it he made notes, of which those relevant for present purposes were:-“Bwk [that is, brickwork] @ top of upside m[an]hole has now collapsed making the bore inaccessible.”
“WL [Water level] The water within the MH [manhole] is 60-70mm deep and is very clear and clean. The bwk [brickwork] under water is good but the base of the MH is not visible because it is covered in hard compacted fine aggregates…
A note on an attached sheet read:-B [a point marked on the sketch] is the supposed flow route from E-W which is now totally blocked by [word illegible] C [ marked on the sketch]which is new ballast and earth which has already spilled into the manhole (approximately 0.5m2)…”
“SILT:- Not visible @ the upside MH but see Item C regarding ballast spilling on the upside MH sketch.
The blockage seems to have been removed and the manhole rebuilt in about April 1998.In the downside MH & East of the downside MH the first 8-10 m of the bore has 15-20% loss of nominal bore due to fine compacted aggregates over the invert.”
The Bridgeway Report identified two blockages, one just short of Manhole 1A as one came from Manhole 1, and the other at Manhole 1A. About the first of these blockages the Bridgeway Report said:-“Manhole is covered completely and access was only possible to within 2 m of the manhole from the downstream side. The manhole appears to have partly collapsed and there is a timber sleeper, lodged vertically in the chamber causing a major blockage. It is possible that this is not a proper manhole but a break-in to the top of the culvert. There are loose bricks lying in the culvert.”
Concerning the blockage at Manhole 1A the Bridgeway Report recorded:-“Culvert is blocked by brick debris that increases in size up to manhole 1A. The brickwork appears to have fallen from the collapsed culvert/manhole at 37.3m [that is, Manhole 1A]. The general condition of the culvert at this location is fair.”
“The manhole appears to be located under the Construction depot sidings. The exact location has been measured underground, but due to the presence of the ballast heap, the manhole could not be located above ground by direct measurement.
It is not certain whether the location refer [sic] as “Manhole 1A” is, in fact a purpose-built manhole, a deliberate break-in to the top of the culvert for drainage purposes or an accidental break-in or collapse. If the latter, it may have occurred during track alterations to accommodate the construction depot. What is clear is that the culvert is substantially blocked at this point by timber sleepers and brick rubble.”
“8. We dug the culvert out clearing all the debris that was found in the culvert. There was some brickwork from the manhole itself and pieces of flat stone that had probably formed part of the lid of the manhole. There was [sic] also some bricks that had fallen from the crown of the culvert. There was also a pile of silt that had built up against this debris but the real obstruction to the flow was caused by a number of blue, Freemans’ bags, one being very large, which had caught on the debris. There was also a piece of timber that was approximately 12” by 8” that was also in the base of the culvert. The debris including the bags and the timber was obstructing a good two-thirds of the bore of the culvert.
Mr. Easton told me in cross-examination, and I accept, that he did not find any railway sleepers in the Culvert.9. The silt in the culvert was cream in colour and had come from the material on the roof of the Freemans warehouse. The warehouse has a flat tar roof which is made up of a grainy limestone grit which is covered by a cohesive material. The rain washes this cohesive material into the drainage system. This silt has a considerable effect in blocking any openings around larger material that has collected in the culvert.”
“1) Flat piece of timber measuring 470 x 285 x 40 mm thick which had a quantity of nails protruding through one side.
2) Three sections of brickwork measuring 355 x 230 x 200 mm, 230 x 160 x 100 mm and 255 x 200 x 230 mm respectively.
3) Three sections of irregular shaped stone slab of maximum dimensions of 610 x 330 x 90 thick, 280 x 200 x 60 mm thick and 355 x 230 x 60 mm thick respectively.
4) One length of polythene film
At paragraph 58 of his witness statement Mr. Barber said that he was shown three sections of brickwork which were removed from the second blockage which measured, respectively, 255 x 230 x 230 millimetres, 255 x 230 x 75 millimetres and 200 x 115 x 65 millimetres. Mr. Graham Marshall of Freemans told me, and I accept, that the logo on each of the three Freemans’ plastic bags found in the principal blockage was one which had not been used since 1988.5) Three empty blue plastic bags with printed Freemans logo measuring 430 x 405, 560 x 460 mm and 1120 x 660 mm respectively.”
“The rainfall event on 8 July 1997 which resulted in flooding of the warehouse was a significant event likely to have been in excess of the design standard of the warehouse drainage system.”
“4. The rainfall events of 23 October 1998 and 9 August 1999 which also resulted in flooding of the warehouse were of less intensity and likely to have been less than the design standard of the warehouse drainage system.
5. Flooding in the Freeman’s warehouse on these latter events was caused from a blockage in the drainage system or from a blockage in the railway culvert or from a combination of both.
No evidence has been put before me which indicates that there was any blockage in the Freemans’ drainage system on 23 October 1998 or on 9 August 1999. The fact that the system and the unblocked Culvert was able to cope with the rainfall on 21 October 2001 seems to me to point fairly clearly to a blockage or blockages in the Culvert being the cause of the floods on 23 October 1998 and 9 August 1999, notwithstanding the results of the fire hose test on 16 November 1998.6. A rainfall event recorded on 21/10/01 exceeded the intensity of both the October 1998 and August 1999 events and did not result in flooding being experienced within the warehouse.”
The knowledge and means of knowledge of Railtrack
“Access only available at one end. Size and water depth allow examination by specialist access contractor. Detailed examination of culvert within RT boundary required…
A “specialist access contractor” is, it seems, a diver. “RT” is Railtrack. On the findings which I have set out above as to what there was to be found within the Culvert, and specifically within that part of it called by Railtrack ECM1 188A, had the detailed examination for which Mr. Waters was asking in the letter been carried out, the blockages in the Culvert removed by Mr. Easton in May 2000 would have been discovered and removed. While those blockages would not, in 1996, have been as significant as they, or at any rate that at Manhole 1A, later became after further accumulation of silt and the trapping of the plastic Freemans bags, if the bricks, stone and timber had been removed there would have been nothing against which an accumulation of silt could have formed or which would have prevented the plastic bags being carried along in the water flow to the end of the Culvert. For reasons which Mr. Waters was unable to explain, nothing was done after his letter either to carry out the works which he had requested or to chase up those who should have been doing them. The result was that it was not until the inspection carried out by Bridgeway over four years later that a detailed inspection of ECM1 188A was undertaken.Assuming that all the planned examinations shown are undertaken the only outstanding non compliant examination is of ECM1/77.1023 [that is, ECM1 188A]. Will you please consider the above and confirm that you are in agreement, arranging for the examination of the culvert to be undertaken. ”
“None of the 2’-0” ( bore can be located east of the upside M.H. No further access points found anywhere on or near RTP [that is, Railtrack property].”
What was required of Railtrack if it was to act reasonably
The causes of the floods
Did the floods cause damage and, if so, to what extent?
“4.4.1 Freemans claims against Wrights are in contract and in tort and against Railtrack they are in tort and under statute. Even if (which is denied) Wrights are not liable to Freemans in tort because the sums claimed amount to pure economic loss, this has no impact on the proper findings of causation which the Court is invited to make. Even if Freemans are permitted to maintain only a contractual cause of action against Wrights for the losses which it claims, both Defendants have caused Freemans’ loss and damage and both are therefore separately liable for the whole sum claimed.
4.4.2 Provided that the Court is satisfied that both Defendants caused or materially contributed to Freemans’ loss, the issue becomes one of apportionment or contribution. Even if one cause is regarded as less important than the other both Defendants are still liable since their negligent act materially contributed to Freemans’ loss and damage.
4.4.3 This principle was identified and applied in the well-known House of Lords case, IBA v EMI and BICC (1980) BLR 1 at 37, where an aerial television mast collapsed from two separate causes operating at the same time. The less important of the causes was negligent design by sub-contractors, but they were held liable on the basis that their negligence materially contributed to the collapse notwithstanding that Lord Fraser of Tullybelton considered that the other cause was “by far the more important” (at 37).
4.4.4 The issue of causation in circumstances where only contractual causes of action against two Defendants are available has also been expressly considered by the Courts. Again, the Court may make a finding in favour of the Claimant in respect of the whole sum against one or other or both of such Defendants. Moreover, that is right whether or not the causes are strictly of equal efficacy. For example, Lord Maugham in Imperial Bank of Canada v Begley [1936] 2 All ER 367 at 375 expressly states that the Claimant could sue both or either of such Defendants subject to not recovering more than the total sum due. The same point was made in the judgment of His Honour Judge Fay Q.C. in Hutchinson v Harris (1978) 10 BLR 19 (quoted in the commentary to the Court of Appeal decision in the same case at page 22 and approved in the Judgment). In that case the Employer had a contractual cause of action against the contractor for poor workmanship and a contractual cause of action against the architect for failing to supervise the contractor. His Honour Judge Fay QC regarded this as a case of concurrent breaches of contract producing the same damage:
“…In my judgment the plaintiff has an action against both, although she cannot obtain damages twice over”.
4.4.5 In the light of these authorities “cause or material contribution” is the appropriate test of legal causation where the contractual cause of action against the Defendant mirrors the tortious cause of action in circumstances where, but for the possibility of Wrights’ success on the pure economic loss argument, the Court would hold that both tortfeasors caused the loss and damage and would hold either or both liable.
4.4.6 Taking contractual causes of action alone the test is sometimes described as being whether the act or omission was “an effective cause” of the damage. The contract-breaker is liable so long as his breach was “an” effective cause of his loss: the Court need not choose which cause was the most effective. In County Ltd. and another v Girozentrale Securities [1996] 3 All ER 834 a Claimant Bank (County) was engaged to underwrite a share placement scheme. The Bank engaged the Defendant brokers (Gilbert Elliott) to make the placement. The brokers made representations to potential placees (purchasers of the shares) that fell outside the terms of their engagement letter. On the basis of these representations the placees were subsequently able to withdraw from the share placement resulting in losses to the Bank. The Court at first instance found that there were various causes of the Bank’s loss and since the broker’s breach was not of equal efficacy with the Bank’s own failings in managing the placement transaction it was not the effective cause and the claim was dismissed. On appeal the Court of Appeal reversed the trial judge’s decision finding that the fact that another cause also contributed to the occurrence of the loss did not require the Judge to choose which cause was the more effective; it was sufficient that the brokers’ breach was an effective cause. In the words of Beldam LJ:
“For my part I would not agree that the conduct of County could be regarded as of greater efficacy but, even if it could, it certainly did not displace the efficacy of Gilbert Elliott’s breach. Accordingly, I would hold that Gilbert Elliott was in breach of the terms of its engagement as brokers and that its breach caused County the loss claimed.”
4.4.7 In summary, if the Court is satisfied that either or both Wrights or Railtrack caused or materially contributed to or was an effective cause of the damage, Freemans succeed on causation against both Wrights and Railtrack.”
“39. D3 can only be liable for the damage which it caused. Furthermore, it can only be liable for the damage which it caused consequent on any breach of duty/nuisance by it. The floor was defective by the time of the flood on 8.7.97. The flooding merely brought to light the existing defects. At most the flood exacerbated the pre-existing damage to a limited and indefinable degree. This is not a case of concurrent torts/causes of damage. The causes of the damage are sequential. It is, therefore, necessary for the Court to identify the damage caused by D3 which is additional to that caused by D1/D2.
40. The Claimant contends (para.4.5 of the Claimant’s opening) that D3 is liable in full for all the damage to the floor, and that questions of apportionment only relate to the contribution proceedings between the Defendants. This analysis is rejected by D3. The cases of IBA v EMI and BICC (1980) 14 BLR 1, Imperial Bank of Canada v Begley [1936] 2 All ER 367 and Hutchinson v Harris (1978) 10 BLR 19, upon which the Claimant relies, are not relevant since they are all cases of concurrent torts/ causes of damage. In IBA at p. 37 Lord Fraser said that:
“This accident was the result of two separate causes operating at the same time.”
In Hutchinson v Harris at p. 22 His Honour Judge Fay QC stated that:
“It is a case of concurrent breaches of contract producing the same damage.”
County Ltd v Girozentrale Securities [1996] 3 All ER 834 concerned the question of whether a breach of contract remained an effective cause of loss despite the claimant’s own conduct…
41. The relevant cases are Holtby v. Brigham & Cowan (Hull) Ltd [2000] 3 All ER 421 and Rahman v. Arearose Ltd [2001] QB 351 which deal with instances of sequential torts/causes of damage. The former case concerned a claimant suffering from asbestosis which was contributed to by a number of previous employers. The claimant contended that each was liable for the whole of his damage. The Court of Appeal rejected that contention. Stuart-Smith LJ said at 428j that:
“He will be entitled to succeed if he can prove that the defendant’s tortious conduct made a material contribution to his disability. But strictly speaking the defendant is liable only to the extent of that contribution…. The question should be whether at the end of the day and on consideration of all the evidence, the claimant has proved that the defendants are responsible for the whole or a quantifiable part of his disability. The question of quantification may be difficult and the court only has to do the best it can using its common sense.”
43. The case of Rahman v. Arearose Ltd was decided at the same time as, and without reference to, Holtby. Nevertheless, the Court of Appeal reached the same conclusion in the case of a claimant who suffered one injury as the result of an assault and a second injury as the result of negligent surgery in the attempt to treat the claimant following the assault. Both cases follow on from the decision in Performance Cars Ltd v. Abraham [1962] 1 QB 33…”
In the present case, submitted Mr. Coulson, it was foreseeable that, if left with a defective floor, Freemans would seek expert advice as to what to do about such defects. Freemans consulted Mr. Ballard. Mr. Ballard advised that Freemans should undertake the filling of the voids with grout. Consequently, the costs of undertaking the works which Mr. Ballard recommended, and which were in fact undertaken, are recoverable without more. He also submitted that I should hold that Mr. Ballard’s advice was correct in any event.“…can only recover as damages the costs which the defendant ought reasonably to have foreseen that he would incur and that the defendant would not have foreseen unreasonable expenditure. Reasonable costs do not, however, mean the minimum amount which, with hindsight, it could be held would have sufficed. When the nature of the repairs is such that the plaintiff can only make them with the assistance of an expert’s advice, the defendant should have foreseen that he would take such advice and be influenced by it.”
Conclusion