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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions >> Thomas & Anor v Taylor Wimpey Developments Ltd & Ors [2019] EWHC 1134 (TCC) (09 May 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2019/1134.html Cite as: [2019] EWHC 1134 (TCC) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS IN WALES
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT (QBD)
2 Park Street, Cardiff, CF10 1ET |
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B e f o r e :
sitting as a Judge of the High Court
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(1) SIMON THOMAS (2) SIAN THOMAS |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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(1) TAYLOR WIMPEY DEVELOPMENTS LIMITED (2) NATIONAL HOUSE BUILDING COUNCIL (3) GORDON A. BATTRICK & CO. SOLICITORS |
Defendants |
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Tom Coulson (instructed by Gowling WLG (UK) LLP) for the First Defendant
Samuel Townend (instructed by National House Building Council in-house legal department) for the Second Defendant
Hearing dates: 18 April 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
JUDGE KEYSER QC:
Introduction
The cases against TW and NHBC
The claim against TW
"By way of correspondence in or about December 2005 / January 2006, TW's conveyancing solicitors, Cameron McKenna ('CMS'), represented to the claimants that the Properties (and in particular the Walls) had been properly constructed and were in any event covered by TW's own warranty and/or NHBC's warranty. Furthermore, TW failed to excavate properly the lower section of the garden at the Properties and replace with clean stone as they agreed to do and as documented in a letter to GB from CMS dated 16 January 2006. In reliance on and induced by these representations, the claimants purchased the Properties."
The falsity of the alleged representation that the Walls had been properly constructed is set out in detailed particulars of negligence in paragraph 21. The falsity of the alleged representations that the Walls were covered by TW's own warranty and by NHBC's warranty is set out, albeit rather indirectly, in paragraph 30.
"17. As the party responsible for construction of the Properties, TW owed a duty of care to the claimants, arising both at common law and pursuant to the Defective Premises Act 1972 ('the 1972 Act').
18. TW's statutory duty, pursuant to section 1 of the 1972 Act, was to see that its work was done in a workmanlike and professional manner, with proper materials[,] so that the dwellings would be fit for habitation when completed.
19. TW's common law duty of care was to take all reasonable skill and care in the construction of the Properties and to ensure that the Properties, when constructed, were fit for purpose.
20. Further or alternatively, TW owed the claimants a duty of care to exercise all due skill and care in the performance of its services. As such it was the duty of TW at all material times to act with all due care, skill, competence and diligence to be expected of a builder/developer constructing a new build property."
Paragraph 21 alleges breach of those duties of care; eight particulars of defective construction are set out. Paragraph 23 alleges that it was reasonably foreseeable that a failure to construct the Walls properly would result in loss and damage to the claimants.
"30. In the premises and by reason of TW, its respective servants or agents acting in breach of the aforesaid duty or being negligent and/or misrepresenting that the Walls had been properly constructed and were covered by warranty or warranties, the claimants have suffered loss and damage.
31. The aim of damages will be to put the claimants in the position they would have occupied but for TW's negligence. The cost of remedying the Walls is estimated to be £200,000.
32. Alternatively, the appropriate measure of loss is the diminution in the value of the Properties. It is estimated that such diminution also equates to about £200,000."
The claim against NHBC
"Paragraphs 43 to 46 are denied:
(a) There is no entitlement under Section 3 of the Warranty because the alleged Defect is not in any parts of the house listed in part A of Section 3. The log retaining walls are not necessary for the structural stability of the houses or the garages.
(b) There is no entitlement under Section 4 of the Warranty because there is no present or imminent danger to the physical health and safety of the occupants of the Home.
(c) No non-compliance with the requirements of the Building Regulations is alleged and the pleading of the claim under Section 4 of the Warranty is, therefore, incomplete and cannot succeed.
(d) Further, or in the alternative, there is no entitlement under Section 4 of the Warranty as there is no non-compliance with the requirements of the Building Regulations. The log retaining walls did not fall within the definition of 'building work' under Regulation 3(1) of the Building Regulations 2000 and, therefore, are not controlled under the Building Regulations."
The preliminary issues
Issue 1: On the assumption that the facts stated in the claimants' statements of case are true, did TW owe the claimants a duty of care in the tort of negligence not to cause the claimants the loss and damage asserted at paragraphs 30 to 32 of the particulars of claim?
Issue 2: On the assumption that the facts stated in the claimants' statements of case are true, are the claimants' pleaded claims against TW in misrepresentation and/or pursuant to the Defective Premises Act 1972 statute-barred by reason of the expiry of the relevant periods of limitation prior to the commencement of proceedings?
Issue 3: Are the log retaining walls necessary for the structural stability of the houses or garages?
Issue 4: Is any non-compliance with the requirements of the Building Regulations that applied to the work at the time of construction pleaded by the claimants?
Issue 5: Were the log retaining walls controlled under the Building Regulations that applied to the work at the time of construction?
Issue 1: did TW owe the pleaded duty of care?
"[T]he claim in negligence is a claim for pure economic loss in circumstances in which it is settled law that a party in TW's position does not owe any such duty to the purchaser of a property."
The claimants responded to that contention in paragraph 4 of their reply to TW's defence:
"4. Paragraph 4 is denied:
4.1 It is denied that the claim is for pure economic loss.
4.2 Further or alternatively, if, which is denied, the claim is for pure economic loss, then in the circumstances of the case [TW] owes the duty claimed.
4.3 Further or alternatively, the defect to the Walls is such that it is a potential source of injury to persons or property on neighbouring land."
"If a builder erects a structure containing a latent defect which renders it dangerous to persons or property, he will be liable in tort for injury to persons or damage to property resulting from that dangerous defect. But if the defect becomes apparent before any injury or damage has been caused, the loss sustained by the building owner is purely economic. If the defect can be repaired at economic cost, that is the measure of the loss. If the building cannot be repaired, it may have to be abandoned as unfit for occupation and therefore valueless. These economic losses are recoverable if they flow from breach of a relevant contractual duty, but, there again, in the absence of a special relationship of proximity they are not recoverable in tort."
"The only qualification I would make to this is that, if a building stands so close to the boundary of the building owner's land that after discovery of the dangerous defect it remains a potential source of injury to persons or property on neighbouring land or on the highway, the building owner ought, in principle, to be entitled to recover in tort from the negligent builder the cost of obviating the danger, whether by repair or by demolition, so far as that cost is necessarily incurred in order to protect himself from potential liability to third parties."
"… I cannot distinguish on fact or otherwise from the qualification of Lord Bridge. I cannot see any reason that qualification constitutes an erroneous view of the law or amounts to obvious mistake and in such circumstances it is proper for this Court to accept and adopt the qualification of Lord Bridge."
Morse thus represents the direct acceptance and application of Lord Bridge's qualification. With respect, however, I cannot say that I find the reasoning in Morse to be very satisfactory. Undue weight seems to have been attached to the dictum of only one member of the Appellate Committee of the House in Murphy on a point that did not arise for decision there. The lack of comment by other members of the Committee cannot be taken to amount to endorsement of the dictum. Judge O'Donoghue did not say anything at all about the legal basis of Lord Bridge's qualification or how it cohered with the general principle established in Murphy.
"89. The only other of the seven law lords who heard Murphy to comment on that point was Lord Oliver, who reserved his opinion, adding: 'although I am not at the moment convinced of the basis for making such a distinction' (page 489C). As Lord Bridge himself recognised this was a 'qualification' of the otherwise general principle which he was propounding. The other reasoned speeches all proceed on the basis of that general principle without qualification. That it is anomalous to award damages for a realised injury but not for the (usually lesser) cost of averting it was explicitly the ground of the decision in Dutton v Bognor Regis Urban District Council [1978] 1 QB 373, and in overruling Dutton the House of Lords in Murphy equally explicitly rejected the claim of that argument to prevail. It is difficult to see why it should linger on where the danger averted is that of liability to a neighbour or passer-by rather than of injury to the plaintiff himself, damage to his property or liability to his employees, customers or visitors. In my understanding the passage quoted is properly to be regarded as a minority obiter dictum, contrary to the ratio of the decision of the House. I therefore respectfully disagree with His Honour Judge O'Donoghue, who in Morse v Barratt (Leeds) Ltd (1992) 9 Const LJ 158 adopted and applied Lord Bridge's 'qualification' as a statement of the law."
Accordingly, Judge Hicks QC expressly considered the relationship between Lord Bridge's qualification and the ratio decidendi of Murphy and had due regard to the limited weight to be given to a single dictum in that earlier case. On the other hand, his own comments were obiter dicta, as he had allowed the claim on different grounds.
"In the case of a building, it is right to accept that a careless builder is liable, on the principle of Donoghue v Stevenson, where a latent defect results in physical injury to anyone, whether owner, occupier, visitor or passer-by, or to the property of any such person. but that principle is not apt to bring home liability towards an occupier who knows the full extent of the defect yet continues to occupy the building."
(See also 465E-G.) The same point appears from 470H-471B:
"Liability under the Anns decision is postulated upon the existence of a present or imminent danger to health or safety. But considering that the loss involved in incurring expenditure to avert the danger is pure economic loss, there would seem to be no logic in confining the remedy to cases where such danger exists. There is likewise no logic in confining it to cases where some damage (perhaps comparatively slight) has been caused to the building, but refusing it where the existence of the danger has come to light in some other way, for example through a structural survey which happens to have been carried out, or where the danger inherent in some particular component or material has been revealed through failure in some other building. Then there is the question whether the remedy is available where the defect is rectified, not in order to avert danger to an inhabitant occupier himself, but in order to enable an occupier, who may be a corporation, to continue to occupy the building through its employees without putting those employees at risk."
"The injury which the plaintiff suffers in such a case is that his consciousness of the possible injury to his own health or safety or that of others puts him in a position in which, in order to enable him either to go on living in the property or to exploit its financial potentiality without that risk, whether substantial or insubstantial, he has to expend money in making good the defects which have now become patent."
That Lord Oliver's focus was on the risk of injury to occupiers appears also at 487H-488B and from his remark at 489C, already mentioned, concerning Lord Bridge's qualification:
"Whether, as suggested in the speech of my noble and learned friend, Lord Bridge of Harwich, [the builder] could be held responsible for the cost necessarily incurred by a building owner in protecting himself from potential liability to third parties is a question upon which I prefer to reserve my opinion until the case arises, although I am not at the moment convinced of the basis for making such a distinction."
"67. Having reviewed the two streams of authority set out in Part 5 above, my conclusion is that the relationship between (a) the manufacturer of a product or the builder of a building and (b) the immediate client is primarily governed by the contract between those two parties. Long established principles of freedom of contract enable those parties to allocate risk between themselves as they see fit. In the case of consumer contracts, of course, those principles yield to the requirements of the 1977 Act. However, even in the case of a consumer, the contract (as modified by the 1977 Act) is the primary determinant of each party's obligations and remedies.
68. Absent any assumption of responsibility, there do not spring up between the parties duties of care co-extensive with their contractual obligations. The law of tort imposes a different and more limited duty upon the manufacturer or builder. That more limited duty is to take reasonable care to protect the client against suffering personal injury or damage to other property. The law of tort imposes this duty, not only towards the first person to acquire the chattel or the building, but also towards others who foreseeably own or use it."
"82. If the matter were free from authority, I would incline to the view that the only tortious obligations imposed by law in the context of a building contract are those referred to in para 68 above. I accept, however, that such an approach is too restrictive. It is also necessary to look at the relationship and the dealings between the parties, in order to ascertain whether the contractor or subcontractor 'assumed responsibility' to its counter-parties, so as to give rise to Hedley Byrne duties."
"92. In my judgment, it must now be regarded as settled law that the builder/vendor of a building does not by reason of his contract to construct or to complete the building assume any liability in the tort of negligence in relation to defects in the building giving rise to purely economic loss. The same applies to a builder who is not the vendor, and to the seller or manufacturer of a chattel. The decision of the House of Lords in Anns v Merton London Borough Council [1978] AC 728 , like its earlier decision in Junior Books Ltd v Veitchi Co Ltd [1983] 1 AC 520 , must now be regarded as aberrant, indeed as heretical. The law is as stated by Lord Bridge of Harwich in D & F Estates Ltd v Church Comrs for England [1989] AC 177 , 206:
'If the hidden defect in the chattel is the cause of personal injury or of damage to property other than the chattel itself, the manufacturer is liable. But if the hidden defect is discovered before any such damage is caused, there is no longer any room for the application of the Donoghue v Stevenson principle. The chattel is now defective in quality, but is no longer dangerous. It may be valueless or it may be capable of economic repair … If the same principle applies in the field of real property to the liability of the builder of a permanent structure which is dangerously defective, that liability can only arise if the defect remains hidden until the defective structure causes personal injury or damage to property other than the structure itself. If the defect is discovered before any damage is done, the loss sustained by the owner of the structure, who has to repair or demolish it to avoid a potential source of danger to third parties, would seem to be purely economic."
1) It was propounded in a single obiter dictum in Murphy.
2) It is unsupported by authority, other than the first-instance decision in Morse, where reliance on Lord Bridge's dictum was not supported by any persuasive analysis.
3) While not in direct contradiction to the ratio decidendi of Murphy, it is not supported by that ratio or by the reasoning of the other Law Lords. Indeed, it is not supported by any specific reasoning on the part of Lord Bridge.
4) Inasmuch as it would create a non-contractual common law basis for tortious liability for economic loss on grounds other than assumption of responsibility it is contrary to the analysis in Robinson.
5) The argument that recovery ought to be permitted because expenditure would be required to obviate the risk to third parties would, logically, imply that, where the risk of injury was only to persons on the premises, the owner ought to be able to recover the cost of moving from the premises. However, such recovery does not appear to be permitted on the current state of the law and in accordance with the analysis in Murphy and in Robinson.
6) Builders have potential liability under contract and by virtue of existing duties under the Defective Premises Act 1972 and the tort of negligence concerning injury to persons and property. In the absence of an articulated principle for liability, there is no compelling policy justification for recognising the existence of Lord Bridge's qualification (cf. the remarks of Lord Jauncey in Murphy at 498E).
7) Accordingly, I would decline to follow the decision in Morse, which of course predated the Court of Appeal's decision in Robinson.
Issue 2: limitation
"3. Each of the causes of action asserted by the claimants are (sic) statute barred under the Limitation Act 1980.
3.1 Any cause of action in negligence and any cause of action in misrepresentation had accrued by 8 February 2006 when the claimants entered into the contracts of sale by which they agreed to purchase the Properties.
3.2 Any cause of action under the 1972 Act had accrued by February 2006 when the relevant dwellings were completed."
The claimants' rather oblique response to the plea of limitation is contained in paragraph 3 of their reply to TW's defence:
"In relation to paragraph 3, the claimants first became aware of the collapse of the wall at No. 9 Church Bell Sound when they were alerted to the fact by their then tenants of No. 10 Church Bell Sound … In the statement attached hereto at R1, [those tenants] state that they told the claimants of the collapse of the wall at No. 9 on … 27 January 2015."
The purpose of that response is to rely on the special time-limit for claims for damages for negligence provided by section 14A of the Limitation Act 1980.
"An action founded on tort shall not be brought after the expiration of six years from the date on which the cause of action accrued."
Section 9 of the Limitation Act 1980 provides:
"An action to recover any sum recoverable by virtue of any enactment shall not be brought after the expiration of six years from the date on which the cause of action accrued."
"In the premises and by reason of TW, its respective servants or agents acting in breach of the aforesaid duty or being negligent and/or misrepresenting that the Walls had been properly constructed and were covered by warranty or warranties, the claimants have suffered loss and damage."
However, when read according to its plain meaning and in the context of paragraphs 15 to 32 as a whole, paragraph 32 plainly does not allege that the misrepresentations were made negligently. It simply alleges that the loss and damage resulted from either or both of two things: first, TW's negligence or breach of duty; second, the misrepresentations. The only negligence alleged against TW in the particulars of claim concerns the construction of the Walls, not the making of the representations.
Issue 3: are the retaining walls necessary for structural stability?
"The contract should be given the meaning it would convey to a reasonable person having all the background knowledge which is reasonably available to the person or class of persons to whom the document is addressed."
What this means has been discussed in detail in many subsequent cases. I refer in particular to Rainy Sky S.A. v Kookmin Bank [2011] UKSC 50, [2011] 1 WLR 2900; Arnold v Britton [2015] UKSC 36, [2015] AC 1619, esp. per Lord Neuberger PSC at [15]-[22]; and Wood v Capita Insurance Services Limited [2017] UKSC 24, [2017] AC 1173, where Lord Hodge said at [10]-[13]:
"10. The court's task is to ascertain the objective meaning of the language which the parties have chosen to express their agreement. It has long been accepted that this is not a literalist exercise focused solely on a parsing of the wording of the particular clause but that the court must consider the contract as a whole and, depending on the nature, formality and quality of drafting of the contract, give more or less weight to elements of the wider context in reaching its view as to that objective meaning. In Prenn v Simmonds [1971] 1 WLR 1381 (1383H-1385D) and in Reardon Smith Line Ltd v Yngvar Hansen-Tangen [1976] 1 WLR 989 (997), Lord Wilberforce affirmed the potential relevance to the task of interpreting the parties' contract of the factual background known to the parties at or before the date of the contract, excluding evidence of the prior negotiations. …
11. Lord Clarke elegantly summarised the approach to construction in Rainy Sky at para 21f. In Arnold all of the judgments confirmed the approach in Rainy Sky (Lord Neuberger paras 13-14; Lord Hodge para 76; and Lord Carnwath para 108). Interpretation is, as Lord Clarke stated in Rainy Sky (para 21), a unitary exercise; where there are rival meanings, the court can give weight to the implications of rival constructions by reaching a view as to which construction is more consistent with business common sense. But, in striking a balance between the indications given by the language and the implications of the competing constructions the court must consider the quality of drafting of the clause (Rainy Sky para 26, citing Mance LJ in Gan Insurance Co Ltd v Tai Ping Insurance Co Ltd (No 2) [2001] 2 All ER (Comm) 299 paras 13 and 16); and it must also be alive to the possibility that one side may have agreed to something which with hindsight did not serve his interest: Arnold (paras 20 and 77). Similarly, the court must not lose sight of the possibility that a provision may be a negotiated compromise or that the negotiators were not able to agree more precise terms.
12. This unitary exercise involves an iterative process by which each suggested interpretation is checked against the provisions of the contract and its commercial consequences are investigated: Arnold para 77 citing In re Sigma Finance Corpn [2010] 1 All ER 571, para 10 per Lord Mance. To my mind once one has read the language in dispute and the relevant parts of the contract that provide its context, it does not matter whether the more detailed analysis commences with the factual background and the implications of rival constructions or a close examination of the relevant language in the contract, so long as the court balances the indications given by each.
13. Textualism and contextualism are not conflicting paradigms in a battle for exclusive occupation of the field of contractual interpretation. Rather, the lawyer and the judge, when interpreting any contract, can use them as tools to ascertain the objective meaning of the language which the parties have chosen to express their agreement. The extent to which each tool will assist the court in its task will vary according to the circumstances of the particular agreement or agreements. Some agreements may be successfully interpreted principally by textual analysis, for example because of their sophistication and complexity and because they have been negotiated and prepared with the assistance of skilled professionals. The correct interpretation of other contracts may be achieved by a greater emphasis on the factual matrix, for example because of their informality, brevity or the absence of skilled professional assistance. But negotiators of complex formal contracts may often not achieve a logical and coherent text because of, for example, the conflicting aims of the parties, failures of communication, differing drafting practices, or deadlines which require the parties to compromise in order to reach agreement. There may often therefore be provisions in a detailed professionally drawn contract which lack clarity and the lawyer or judge in interpreting such provisions may be particularly helped by considering the factual matrix and the purpose of similar provisions in contracts of the same type. The iterative process, of which Lord Mance spoke in Sigma Finance Corpn (above), assists the lawyer or judge to ascertain the objective meaning of disputed provisions."
"The full Cost, if it is more than £1000 Indexed, of putting right any actual physical Damage caused by a Defect in any of the following parts of the house, bungalow, maisonette or flat and its garage or other permanent outbuilding or its Common Parts:
- Foundations
- Load-bearing walls
- Non load-bearing partition walls
- Wet-applied wall plaster
- External render and external vertical tile hanging
- Load-bearing parts of the roof
- Tile and slate coverings to pitched roofs
- Ceilings
- Load-bearing parts of the floors
- Staircases and internal floor decking and screeds where these fail to support normal loads
- Retaining walls necessary for the structural stability of the house, bungalow, flat or maisonette, its garage or other permanent outbuilding
- Double or triple glazing panes to external windows and doors
- Below-ground drainage for which you are responsible".
"Damage" is defined as "Physical damage to the Home caused by a Defect." "Defect" is defined as "A breach of any mandatory NHBC Requirement by the Builder or anyone employed by him or acting for him." It is unnecessary for present purposes to set out further parts of the definitions.
"[T]he retaining walls are not an integral part of the structure of the individual houses or garages and hence are not necessary for the structural stability of the houses or garages directly if the houses and garages are located on flat and level sites."
On this point, Mr Varma's evidence was to substantially the same effect.
"[T]he retaining walls are required to retain the embankment which forms the rear gardens of the houses. Failure of the retaining walls would allow mobilisation of the retained soils onto the roof of the garage of No. 10 and against the rear walls of the houses of Nos. 9 & 10. The soils would exert earth pressures and forces on the rear walls of the houses and the roof of the garage for which the house and garage structures were not designed and could probably not withstand. Hence the retaining walls are necessary for the structural stability of the houses and garages indirectly."
Mr Hyatt explained that the retained soil in the bank appeared to be firm dry clay, which in the time since construction had mobilised hardly at all and kept virtually its original shape. However, he considered it probable that in the course of time weathering of the soil, primarily on account of rainfall, would cause it to become more of a slurry of liquified clay with an angle of repose tending towards zero. In that event, the bank would be liable to collapse. Mr Hyatt had not calculated how much soil might collapse; he suggested that it was impossible to do so, because the movement of soil at other properties on the development could not be estimated. He was also unable to say what forces the side walls of the buildings could withstand; however, in re-examination he said that a normal cavity wall could probably withstand pressure from about 450mm of soil and that, depending on the extent of weathering of the soil, the amount of soil that might collapse against the rear walls of the buildings might be much greater. Mr Hyatt also said that it would take only a relatively small amount of soil on the roof of the garage at No. 10 to cause a collapse of the roof.
"Therefore, in response to the specific question posed in the letter of instruction, the log retaining walls are NOT considered structurally necessary for the stability of the house, bungalow, flat or maisonette, its garage or other permanent outbuilding in the strictest sense albeit garden access would have been severely restricted."
In his oral evidence, Mr Varma said that chemical weathering of the soil, whether by oxidation, carbonation or hydration or hydrolysis, (and it was the effects of water that, he agreed, were primarily in question here), would result at most in localised mobilisation of the soil, namely erosion, but not full mobilisation, namely a slip of the bank. He did not consider that it was plausible to suppose that rainfall would have the effect of turning the soil—which according to his observation was clay—to slurry. The critical angle of repose for such soil was between 40° and 50°, which could have been achieved without the use of any retaining structures, albeit with the loss of some garden access.
1) The evidence is insufficiently rigorous to show that there is any significant likelihood of slippage of the bank, never mind of consequent damage threatening the structural stability of the buildings. For all his expression of opinion, Mr Hyatt was unable to back up his conclusions with the geotechnical, topographical or structural data that were necessary to establish them. Further, while Mr Hyatt's evidence was given intelligently and his experience commands respect, the level of analysis in his report was not overly impressive. I was especially perplexed by his lack of awareness of a retaining structure adjacent to one corner of the garage at No. 10.
2) There is no reason to overlook the inherent implausibility in supposing that, if the stability of the terraced bank were "necessary to the structural stability" of the houses or garages, it would be secured by means of the wooden pole retaining wall system. Such a system is fairly obviously intended to provide localised support for the terraces, not to ensure that the bank does not collapse and knock down the walls of the buildings. It seems to me that a heavy burden lies on a party seeking to establish that the wooden pole retaining system was necessary for a purpose for which it had clearly not been designed.
3) The claimants' case on this issue turns on the supposition that, over time, water from rainfall is likely to saturate the soil (probably clay, so far as the evidence goes) and turn it to what Mr Hyatt called "more of a slurry", causing it to collapse against or onto the buildings. There seem to me to be a number of difficulties with this supposition. For one thing, there is no evidence that any such thing has happened either at the Properties or elsewhere on the larger development. The faces of the terraced bank at the Properties have not collapsed. Mr Hyatt insisted that these things take time. However, the bank is not a recent creation; the evidence gives no reason to believe that it has not existed since time immemorial. It is a mistake to think that the bank has only been subjected to rainfall and the effects of water since the development was carried out. It is true that the terraces were, presumably, cut only in the period around 2006. But none of the evidence has sought to explain why the cutting of terraces should cause clay to liquify (or at least become much more unstable by reason of the decrease of its angle of internal friction) that has remained firm at all previous times. One can, of course, see that the cutting might result in a risk of erosion at the faces. But that is the scenario rightly envisaged by Mr Varma; it is a far cry from the landslip envisaged by Mr Hyatt. I cannot see why it should be supposed that chemical weathering of the soil should be materially different in the future from how it has been in the past. In this connection, Mr Newington-Bridges suggested that the Walls contained inadequate provision for drainage, with the result that the bank was liable to become saturated. However, I accept Mr Varma's opinion that the wooden pole system operated in the same way as a masonry wall with weep-holes, and I reject the suggestion that the risk of landslip is increased by lack of drainage.
4) In connection with the foregoing observations, it is necessary to remember that Mr Hyatt's argument for the necessity of the Walls for the structural stability of the buildings rests on the notion that the bank is liable to a catastrophic collapse in the course of time. The simple slide of occasional amounts of soil from the erosion of the cut faces of the terraces cannot reasonably be thought to threaten the buildings, though it might be a nuisance to the amenity of the Properties.
Issue 4: do the claimants plead non-compliance with the Building Regulations?
"repairs needed where there is a present or imminent danger to the physical health and safety of the occupants of the Home because the Home does not comply with the requirements of the Building Regulations that applied to the work at the time of construction …"
The words "the Home" are defined to include retaining walls and the garden. Therefore, insofar as the claimants rely on section 4, they must plead and prove (among other things) that the construction of the Walls did not comply with the requirements of the Building Regulations that applied to the work of construction of the Walls at the time when they were constructed.
"7.3 There are three main Codes of Practice / NHBC Standards to which the Walls should conform:
…
7.3.3 NHBC Standards – Standard 1.1 …
…
7.6.1 Standard 1.1 – R3 states that the structure of a home should have a life of at least 60 years. R5 states that the structural design shall be carried out by suitably qualified persons and take account of durability."
"Statutory requirements
Work shall comply with all relevant Building Regulations and other statutory requirements relating to the completed construction work."
However, neither the particulars of claim nor the reply makes any reference to R1; the only requirements referred to are R3 and R5. Further, the claimants' statements of case do not identify any requirement of the Building Regulations with which there is said to be non-compliance; obviously, therefore, they do not allege that any such non-compliance was causative of the defects complained of in the Walls or of loss and damage to the claimants.
Issue 5: did the Building Regulations apply to the log retaining walls?
Conclusion
1) No.
2) Yes.
3) No.
4) No.
5) No.