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England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions >> Khan & Anor v Harrow Council & Anor [2013] EWHC 2687 (TCC) (03 September 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2013/2687.html Cite as: [2013] EWHC 2687 (TCC) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Saqib Khan Shazia Khan |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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Harrow Council Helen Sheila Kane |
Defendants |
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James Bowling (instructed by Keoghs LLP) for the Second Defendant
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Ramsey:
Introduction
Background
(1) Location 1 was on the front elevation to the right of the porch at the rainwater pipe at high level;
(2) Location 2 was on the front elevation to the right of the porch at the rainwater pipe at low level;
(3) Location 8 was external at the bottom corner of the landing window;
(4) Location 9 was external on the front elevation at the top right corner of the landing window;
(5) Location 10 was in the Lounge at the top corner of the Study door;
(6) Location 11 was in the Lounge at the bottom right hand corner of the front window.
"It is reasonably foreseeable, and was so foreseeable in the period leading up to the Summer of 2006, to a person who owned and/or controlled and/or maintained and/or was responsible for a number of trees that there was a risk that the trees and/or their roots could cause damage to property."
The Issues
(1) Was the damage to Mr and Mrs Khan's property from the Second Defendant's Oak Tree T1 and the Lawson Cypresses HI reasonably foreseeable?
(2) Did the Lawson Cypresses H1 materially contribute to the damage to Area B of Mr and Mrs Khan's property?
(3) Did the Second Defendant act reasonably to prevent the damage?
(4) Were Mr and Mrs Khan contributorily negligent as pleaded in sub-paragraph 15(2) of the Defence of the Second Defendant?
(5) If so, what percentage of the damage is attributable to Mr and Mrs Khan's contributory negligence?
(6) Did Mr and Mrs Khan fail to mitigate their loss as pleaded in sub-paragraph 15(1) of the Defence of the Second Defendant?
(7) If so, what is the amount of damage caused by their failure to mitigate?
(8) What is the quantum of Mr and Mrs Khan's claim?
(9) Are the fees for the abortive underpinning scheme (£3,196) recoverable?
The evidence
Cause of the damage
Foreseeability
"if he does not take steps to eliminate a risk which he knows or ought to know is a real risk and not a mere possibility which would never influence the mind of a reasonable man. What that decision did was to recognise and give effect to the qualification that it is justifiable not to take steps to eliminate a real risk if it is small and if the circumstances are such that a reasonable man, careful of the safety of his neighbour, would think it right to neglect it."
"If a real risk is one which would occur to the mind of a reasonable man in the position of the defendant's servant and which he would not brush aside as far-fetched, and if the criterion is to be what that reasonable man would have done in the circumstances, then surely he would not neglect a risk if action to eliminate it presented no difficulty, involved no disadvantage, and required no expense."
"In both the second Wagon Mound case and Goldman v Hargrave the judgments, which repay full rereading, are directed to what a reasonable person in the shoes of the defendant would have done. The label nuisance or negligence is treated as of no real significance. In this field, I think, the concern of the common law lies in working out the fair and just content and incidents of a neighbour's duty rather than affixing a label and inferring the extent of the duty from it."
"It is well known that shrinkage subsidence may occur where trees extract moisture from the soil causing it to shrink – clay based soils are particularly prone to moisture-related shrinkage."
"I see the force of Mr Makey's submission, which commended themselves understandably to the judge, that you cannot say that simply because here is a mature plane tree, in London, on London clay, whose height is greater than its distance from a neighbouring property, therefore you are on notice that there is a risk that the roots may have encroached upon the foundations of the neighbouring property and you are therefore liable in nuisance. That would be arguably an argument that is far too wide and would, as the judge said, amount almost to strict liability. But it seems to me that the judge has not dealt, and indeed has not attempted to deal, with the particular facts relied on by the claimants for putting the defendants on, as it were, constructive notice of the risk, in particular the March 1998 letter. "
"Having regard to the proximity of the plane tree to Delaware Mansions, a real risk of damage to the land and the foundations was foreseeable on the part of Westminster, as in effect the judge found."
Did Mrs Kane act reasonably to prevent damage?
"Without prejudice to any other exemptions for which provision may be made by a tree preservation order, no such order shall apply—…
to the cutting down, uprooting, topping or lopping of any trees in compliance with any obligations imposed by or under an Act of Parliament or so far as may be necessary for the prevention or abatement of a nuisance."
"In so far as the nuisance cannot be abated or prevented by cutting roots or branches on B's land or (by agreement with A) by operations to the tree on A's land, B's remedies (under the general law) are (i) to seek an injunction requiring A to abate or prevent the nuisance by something done on A's land (which might be the cutting down, uprooting, topping or lopping of the tree), (ii) to seek an order for damages against A in respect of the damage suffered (including the prospective cost of remedial works) or (iii) to carry out remedial or preventative works on his own land and seek to recover the costs of those works from A: see the Delaware Mansions case. Absent the ability to rely on section 198(6)(b) of the 1990 Act, the existence of a tree preservation order may restrict what A can do to the tree on his own land; and so may restrict B's ability to obtain an injunction. But there is nothing in section 198, as it seems to me, which alters B's remedies under heads (ii) or (iii). There is no substance in the argument that, unless section 198(6)(b) of the 1990 Act is interpreted in such a way that it is simple for B to decide whether he can cut down a protected tree, B will be deprived of an effective remedy."
"It must be kept in mind, first, that—in making the application for consent—the applicant must be taken to have accepted that it was not necessary to fell the tree in order to prevent or abate the nuisance. If it were necessary to fell the tree for the prevention or abatement of the nuisance the 1974 order would have no application: section 198(6)(b)."
Notice
Contributory Negligence
Mitigation of damage
Damages
Summary and conclusions