[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
Supreme Court of Ireland Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Supreme Court of Ireland Decisions >> Ward v. McMaster [1988] IESC 3 (10th May, 1988) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IESC/1988/3.html Cite as: [1988] IESC 3 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
1. I
have read in draft the judgments which have been prepared by Henchy J. and
McCarthy J. and I agree with them.
3. Louth
County Council (‘the Council’) are a housing authority for the
purposes of the Housing Act, 1966. By virtue of s. 39 of that Act they were
empowered, subject to regulations made under the Act, to make a loan for the
acquisition of a house. The first plaintiff (‘the plaintiff’)
having agreed to buy a house on the outskirts of Dundalk, Co. Louth, for
£24,000, applied to the Council for a loan of £12,000. Under the
relevant regulations made under the Act, and under the terms of the written
scheme prepared and issued by the Council for the making of such a loan, the
Council were bound, before making any advance, to satisfy themselves, by means
of a report by their valuer, as to the actual value of the house and that the
house provided adequate security for the loan.
4. For
the purpose of satisfying those requirements the Council sent out a local
auctioneer and valuer to make a report on the house in question. His report
consisted of the replies he gave to a series of questions set out in a typed
form furnished to him by the Council. Amongst the replies given by him was one
saying that in his opinion the house was a reasonable risk for a loan over 30
years and one giving his valuation of the house as approximately £25,000.
5. It
turned out that those opinions were wildly incorrect. The house was not a
reasonable security for the loan and it was grossly overvalued at £25,000.
Although, as events proved, it was not a good security for the loan of
£12,000 applied for, the loan was granted. With the aid of the loan the
plaintiff bought the house from the man who a few years earlier had built it,
but when the plaintiff and his wife went into occupation they found that it was
riddled with defects, most of them concealed structural defects. So fundamental
and widespread were those defects that the plaintiff and his wife had to
abandon the house. They moved into rented premises. Apparently the house still
remains unoccupied. It seems to have been written off as a habitable
dwellinghouse.
6. In
the proceedings which the plaintiff and his wife brought in the High Court,
Costello J. found in favour of the plaintiff in his claim in negligence against
the first defendant (the vendor); and also against the Council, based on an
allegation that they were negligent in not having a proper valuation carried
out, so that, to his detriment, he was induced to rely on the adequacy of their
valuation. The issue in this appeal by the Council is (apart from the question
of the amount of the damages awarded) whether that finding of negligence should
be upheld.
7. It
was held by Costello J. in the High Court that the auctioneer who carried out
the valuation for the Council was not negligent, and there is no appeal against
that finding. The auctioneer was absolved on the ground that he was only an
auctioneer and estate agent and, as such, is not to he blamed for not having
the skill and competence necessary for the discovery of the hidden defects in
the house. That unappealed finding must be accepted in this appeal as being
correct.
8. As
to the Council, the allegation of negligence against them does not necessarily
fail because the valuer engaged by them was acquitted of negligence. What is
relied on as negligence on their part is their failure to engage as a valuer a
person who was competent to value the house in the light of (amongst other
things) its structural condition. This, it is said, could have been done by
engaging a person who was both an auctioneer and a surveyor, or, alternatively,
by engaging as well as an auctioneer or valuer a person qualified to
investigate the structural condition of the house. As I understand the
submissions made in this Court on behalf of the Council, they do not deny that
they were wanting in care in employing as a valuer a person who was lacking in
the skill necessary to appraise the structural condition of the house. In
effect they concede a want of due care on their part, but they say that the
care in which they were wanting arose, not out of any duty of care owed to the
plaintiff but as part of the duty of care owed by them to the public, or more
specifically, to that section of the public who by paying rates or taxes funded
the Council as a housing authority.
9. For
my part I gratefully acknowledge the assistance given by counsel on both sides
in presenting an extensive array of decided cases relevant to the liability of
public authorities in circumstances similar to those in this case. I do not
propose to analyse or assess the different and not always reconcilable
approaches adopted in those cases, because I consider that the salient features
of this case are sufficiently clear and distinctive to enable the point at
issue to be decided on well-established principles.
10. The
Council were plainly in breach of their public duty, imposed by the Regulations
made under s. 39 of the Act, to ensure by a proper valuation that the house was
worth £24,000 and that it was a good security for a loan of £l2,000
repayable over a period of 30 years. However, the breach of such a public duty
would not in itself give a cause of action in negligence to the plaintiff: see
Siney
v. Corporation of Dublin
[1980] I.R. 400. It is necessary for him to show that the relationship between
him and the Council was one of proximity or neighbourhood which cast a duty on
the Council to ensure that, regardless of anything left undone by the
plaintiff, he would not end up as the mortgagor of a house which was not a good
security for the amount of the loan. A paternalist or protective duty of that
kind would not normally be imposed on a mortgagee in favour of a mortgagor, but
the plaintiff was in a special position.
11. It
has to be remembered that one of the primary duties imposed on the Council by
the Act was the elimination of all uninhabitable dwellings in their area. It
follows that they should have realised that it would be in breach of their
statutory functions if they granted a loan for the purchase of a house which
turned out to be uninhabitable. The consequences to the plaintiff of a failure
on their part to value the house properly should have been anticipated by the
Council in view of factors such as that, in order to qualify for the loan, the
plaintiff had to show that he was unable to obtain the loan from a commercial
agency such as a bank or a building society and that his circumstances were
such that he would otherwise need to be re-housed by the Council. A borrower of
that degree of indigency could not have been reasonably expected to incur the
further expense of getting a structural survey of the house done. The
plaintiff, like the Council, relied on the opinion of a man who was only an
auctioneer. He considered that the Council would have the house approved by a
surveyor and that it would be superfluous for him to engage a surveyor. That
was an understandable attitude and one that ought to have been foreseen by the
Council, particularly when regard is had to the fact that one of the
preconditions of the loan required the plaintiff to insure the house against
fire for at least its full value. The Council must be taken to have impliedly
assured the plaintiff that the house would be a good security for the loan.
12. In
the light of the special relations between the plaintiff and the Council I
consider that, apart from their public duty in the matter, the Council owed a
duty to the plaintiff to ensure by a proper valuation that the house would be a
good security for the loan. It would be unconscionable and unfair if they were
to be allowed to escape liability in negligence on the ground that the
plaintiff himself should have taken the necessary steps to ascertain that the
house was sound. In the light of the statutory rights and duties of the Council
it must, in my view, be held that they owed a duty to the plaintiff to observe
due care in the valuation of the house and that they failed to carry out that
duty. If they wished to avoid the incidence of that duty they could have so
provided in one of the pre-conditions of the loan.
13. I
would dismiss this appeal by the Council against the finding of liability in
negligence made against them.
15. The
County Council appeals against so much of the order of the High Court (Costello
J.) as held it liable to compensate the first plaintiff, the husband of the
second plaintiff, for damage suffered because of the breach by the Council of
its common law duty of care to the husband who was the purchaser for
£24,000 of part of the lands described in folio 3708 County Louth being
site 13 on a map attached to the contract and situated at Faughart, Dundalk,
Co. Louth. He sought and obtained from the County Council a loan of
£12,000 to enable him to purchase “a dwellinghouse at Lower
Faughart, Dundalk.” The house turned out to be unfit for human
habitation, although, before the loan was sanctioned, the County Council had
obtained a “valuer’s certificate” that the house was in good
sanitary condition and repair, and if necessary, readily saleable. The
plaintiffs left their home and sued the vendor, who was also the builder and,
clearly, at the time no mark for damages, the County Council and the firm
engaged by the County Council as “valuer”. The vendor/builder had
no answer, was decreed and has not appealed; the “valuer” was held
by the trial judge not to have fallen short of the standard of care required of
him; the County Council was decreed with a right of contribution of 90 per cent
from the vendor/builder (a right which is worthless) and it appeals against the
award made to the first plaintiff. The second plaintiff succeeded against the
vendor/builder and no appeal has been pursued in that respect. In my judgment,
the appeal by the County Council fails.
17. Louth
County Council, in carrying out its statutory duty, published a scheme for the
making of loans by the Council under s. 39 of the Act of 1966 and the
Regulations of 1972, as amended. I quote the following:-
18. As
part of the scheme the Council further published an application form, which
contained the following provision:-
19. The
first plaintiff duly applied for a loan of £12,000; the County Council
retained the third defendant acting through Pascal McLoughlin, who had 25 years
experience of this kind of work, to prepare a valuer’s certificate. Mr.
McLoughlin did so in the form (dated 12th August, 1980) appended to this
judgment, valuing the house at approximately £25,000. On foot of that
valuer’s certificate, the Council allocated a loan of £12,000 to the
first plaintiff and by letter of the 29th August, 1980, duly notified him with
the requirement that the house should be insured against fire for the sum of
£26,000 at least.
20. The
plaintiffs, who lived in Newry, were moving to Dundalk in 1980 and had asked
Mr. Matthews, an auctioneer, to be on the look out for a house, resulting in
the house at Lower Faughart. They visited the house with Mr. Matthews in the
summer of 1980 and could see nothing wrong with it; Mr. Matthews told them that
it was a good buy. The first plaintiff applied for the loan and paid what he
described as “a surveyor’s fee” thinking that “if the
surveyor passed the house then the house was okay, the County Council would not
have given me the loan if the house was not alright.” When asked that
maybe he should have got an engineer or surveyor on his own behalf he replied:-
23. Depending
his view on s. 39 of the Act of 1966, the learned trial judge held that there
was a private law duty of care in favour of the first plaintiff it being
“just and reasonable” that the Court should so hold.
24. Mr.
O’Flaherty S.C., on behalf of the second defendant, has rested his appeal
upon three main propositions:-
25. It
is convenient first to deal with the third proposition. The monetary argument
does not bear critical examination. The County Council would not require to
have an engineering inspection in any case in which the relevant house is newly
built since procedures for grants involve inspections at the material times
with regard to such things as foundations etc., whilst the house is being
built. Likewise, houses of significant age would not require such inspections
to deal with defects arising from subsidence; visual inspection by a relatively
unqualified person would be quite adequate to disclose such defects. In any
event, I see no bar to the County Council expressly excluding any
representation to be inferred from the fact that it sanctions a particular loan.
26. Since
preparing the draft of this judgment my attention has been drawn to the
decision of the Court of Appeal in England in
Harris
v. Wyre Forest D.C.
[1988]
1 All E.R.
691
where, in a somewhat analogous case, a local authority was relieved of
liability in negligence because of such an exclusion clause.
27. Having
regard to this conclusion, it is not necessary for me to express an opinion as
to whether or not what so-called policy considerations are, in that context,
free from review in the courts in an action of this kind. The argument
traversed a wide field of authority all but four of which were cited to
Costello J.
Curran
v. Northern Ireland Co-Ownership Housing Association Ltd.
(1985)
8 N.I.L.R. Bulletin 22 was decided by Carswell J. in the Northern Ireland High
Court after the High Court hearing in the instant appeal although before
judgment was delivered. With the able assistance of counsel, we have travelled
well charted legal seas seeking, for my part, to find a well marked haven,
whether it be in Australia, Canada, Northern Ireland or England. Certainly, the
judicial complements manning the several ports are not marked by unanimity. The
Canadian Supreme Court divided three to two, the High Court of Australia
similarly, and whilst the House of Lords in
Curran
[1987] A.C. 718 was unanimous it did not deal with a case like to the present
one, the point in which it was dealt with in the Court of Appeal in Northern
Ireland (1986) N.I.L.R. Bulletin 1 was not the subject of an appeal itself.
Much judicial eloquence and invention has been spent on examining and analysing
the observations of Lord Atkin in
Donoghue
v. Stevenson
[1932] AC 562.
Anns
v. Merton London Borough
[1978] AC 728 was described by Lord Bridge in
Curran
as
being the high water mark of the application of
Donoghue
with
particular reference to the words of Lord Wilberforce identifying two stages of
establishing liability for breach of duty to take care. The elaborate analysis
of Brennan J. in the High Court of Australia in
Sutherland
Shire Council v. Heyman
(1985)
59 A.L.J.R. 564 led to the verbally attractive proposition of incremental
growth in this branch of the law; such a proposition, however, suffers from a
temporal defect – that rights should be determined by the accident of
birth. Albeit that
Anns
v. Merton London Borough
[1978] AC 728 is the high-water mark, I would not seek to dilute the words of
Lord Wilberforce at pp. 751 and 752
:-
28. In
the Court of Appeal in Northern Ireland (1986) 8 N.LL.R. Bulletin 1, Gibson
L.J. delivering the judgment of the Court, carried out a like exercise in the
review of authority, identifying s. 30 of the Building Society Act (Northern
Ireland), 1967, and s. 30 of the English Building Society Act, 1962, as
creating a statutory warranty by a Building Society to a member that the
purchase price is reasonable in the event of it making an advance to the member
to defray the purchase price. Again, the conclusion (p. 17) was that:
29. The
latter quotation identifies a circumstance that did not help the resolution of
the difficult legal issue in
Curran
that
the case was tried and disposed of without evidence upon issues raised by what
were clearly defective pleadings.
30. Insofar
as it is used to support the appellant’s case, I find the reasoning
lacking in force. Whilst Costello J.
essentially
rested his conclusion on the “fair and reasonable” test, I prefer
to express the duty as arising from the proximity of the parties, the
foreseeability of the damage, and the absence of any compelling exemption based
upon public policy. I do not, in any fashion, seek to exclude the latter
consideration, although I confess that such a consideration must be a very
powerful one if it is to be used to deny an injured party his right to redress
at the expense of the person or body that injured him.
33. Henchy
J., having referred to the Act of 1966, said at p.419:-
36. The
proximity of the parties is clear: They were intended mortgagors and mortgagee.
This proximity had its origin in the Housing Act, 1966, and the consequent loan
scheme. This Act imposed a statutory duty upon the County Council and it was in
the carrying out of that statutory duty that the alleged negligence took place.
It is a simple application of the principle in
Donoghue
v. Stevenson
[1932] AC 562 confirmed in
Anns
v. Merton London Borough
[1978] AC 728 and implicit in
Siney
v. Corporation of Dublin
[1980] I.R. 400 that the relationship between the first plaintiff and the
County Council created a duty to take reasonable care arising from the public
duty of the County Council under the statute. The statute did not create a
private duty but such arose from the relationship between the parties.
37. In
my view, it does not require much imagination for the officers of the Housing
Authority to contemplate that a purchaser under the scheme will both lack the
personal means of having an expert examination and may well think, as the first
plaintiff thought, that the very circumstances of the housing authority
investing its money in the house was a badge of quality.
38. These
two considerations are both involved in the first leg of the
Anns
principle.
I do not understand it to be argued that there are considerations which ought
to negative or to reduce or limit the scope of duty or the class of person to
whom it is owed or the damages to which a breach of it may give rise, within
the second leg of the observations of Lord Wilberforce. It follows, in my view,
without entering into the question of whether or not it is “just and
reasonable” to impose the duty, that the duty arose from the proximity of
the parties, the injury caused was reasonably foreseeable, the breach was
established, and the first plaintiff was entitled to succeed.