![]() |
[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 >> Lazari v London & Newcastle (Camden) Ltd [2013] EWHC 812 (TCC) (15 April 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2013/812.html Cite as: [2013] EWHC 812 (TCC) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
ANDRIE LAZARI |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
LONDON & NEWCASTLE (CAMDEN) LIMITED |
Defendant |
____________________
Fiona Parkin QC (instructed by Fladgate LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 22 March 2013
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Akenhead:
"2. The Defendant, London & Newcastle (Camden) Ltd ("L&N") was and is the long leaseholder of a site at 30 Oval Road, London NW1. It seems to be a special purpose vehicle and part of the larger London & Newcastle property development group. L&N engaged consultants and contractors, Ardmore, to design and construct a substantial number of luxury flats and social housing at this site. By an agreement in writing dated 22 September 2010 made between L&N and Andrie Lazari, the Claimant, L&N agreed to complete the construction of Flat 42 ("the Flat") and to sell it to her on a long lease, the purchase price being £1.45 million. The Lease was dated 15 December 2010. Ms Lazari has not yet moved into the Flat as a result, as she asserts, of a continuing defect or problem which is or at least has been excessive overheating of her flat. Initially, L&N did not consider that there was any problem at all or at least which was its responsibility. Eventually, and upon receipt of a report by BRE, commissioned by her in late 2011, which identified a significant overheating problem, L&N initiated remedial works in or about mid-2012; the main problem appears to have been other hot heating pipes which run immediately under Flat 42 which cause overheating within the Flat. It seems that initially these were unsuccessful or at least not as successful as hoped for. Further work including commissioning and re-commissioning work was done in about September and early October 2012. However, that did not resolve the overheating problem and Ms Lazari, who has a medical condition which has resulted in her walking with crutches and with various access needs, was unable to move in following treatment which she had in mid-September 2012, she says as a result of the continuing and serious overheating problems.
3. She issued proceedings on 16 October 2012 following essentially what she regarded as the breakdown in the co-operation which she and her expert required from L&N and its consultant, Mr Dougan of Hoare Lea. Following a contested hearing on 24 October 2012 before Mr Justice Edwards-Stuart, he granted injunctions against L&N in effect requiring them to cooperate by providing access for Ms Lazari's expert (Mr Swainson) to inspect the remedial works in various parts of the mechanical installations and to carry out various tests and to provide relevant documents, plans and data germane to the original and remedial works. He ordered L&N to pay her costs of the application."
"In my view, on the available information, a payment into court by L&N of £30,000 will encourage the parties to start serious settlement discussions and to concentrate minds about economic, timely and effective compliance with all the outstanding orders between now and trial in June 2013. This is a minimum figure which is currently justified on the available evidence:
(a) It is highly likely that the expert costs identified will be substantially justified; they are relatively modest as they now stand (at some £6,400); they are also continuing.
(b) The evidence that the wooden flooring has warped as a result of the sustained overheating is, currently, compelling and is unchallenged on the evidence (albeit it is not admitted in the Defence). Similarly there is no such challenge to the need for and costs of redecoration. The two sums claimed come to some £23,400.
(c) Ms Lazari will probably be entitled to some general damages.
(d) It is likely on the available evidence that, either through general damages or by way of substantive damages, she will recover something for loss of the use of the Flat, although the precise time period for that is subject to challenge. At the very least, I can see a strong argument that some months of loss of use may well fall to be compensated to reflect at least the fact that remedial works have taken at least some 15 months to set up and effect."
(a) Because, as it was asserted, the remedial work done to date did not achieve the specified 20 air changes per hour, there was a lack of air being drawn through the ceiling void beneath her flat; investigative openings should be made to allow a remote camera into the void and any major gaps in the integrity of the ceiling void should be made good; this would cost about £10,000. A further £10,000 ("by no means a preferred option") would be to "force ventilate the ceiling void" beneath her flat. A permanent solution would be to remove the pipes sitting in the ceiling void beneath her flat at a cost of "at least £150,000 and quite possibly very significantly more"
(b) She claims her contribution towards the costs of the mortgage of the relatives with whom she has had to live pending the resolution of the heat problem. She asserts that she has paid some £40,000 towards this mortgage but she seeks only the amount that this exceeded the sum she paid on the mortgage in respect of her own flat. In her earlier Schedule of Loss, mortgage payments on her own flat were about £25,000. It is not immediately clear why she gives credit for the mortgage payment on her own flat.
(c) She claims a "sum in relation to the blight value "of her flat based on a report from a valuer attached. The value in perfect condition is said to be £1.35m to £1.4m whilst the value if defects are known but fully remedied is said to be £1.18m and £1.2m; if the defects are known but it was known that the defects may potentially not have been cured, the value is £900,000 and the value if £150,000 remains to be spent relocating the pipes to ensure that there were no ongoing issues with the heat in the property would be £1m. The net sums claimed against these three options therefore are said to be £150,000-£220,000, £450,000-£500,000 and £350,000-£400,000 respectively.
(d) Further particulars are given of the loss of amenity, inconvenience and distress for which she claims general damages. This is supported by a witness statement describing the "state of limbo" in which she has lived for over two years, the stress which has affected her general health, suffering as she does from auto-immune disease, the practical difficulties of not having her own flat following radioactive iodine treatment and the drain of energy which she has suffered.
Discussion
Decision