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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Knowles Food Services Ltd v CGU Insurance Plc [2008] ScotCS CSIH_20 (29 February 2008)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2008/CSIH_20.html
Cite as: [2008] ScotCS CSIH_20, [2008] CSIH 20

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EXTRA DIVISION, INNER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION

 

Lord Johnston

Lord Wheatley

Sir David Edward, Q.C.

 

 

 

 

 

 

[2008] CSIH 20

XA6/07

 

OPINION OF THE COURT

 

delivered by LORD JOHNSTON

 

in

 

APPEAL FROM THE SHERIFFDOM OF GRAMPIAN, HIGHLANDS AND ISLANDS AT ABERDEEN

 

by

 

KNOWLES FOOD SERVICES LIMITED

 

Pursuers and Appellants;

 

against

 

CGU INSURANCE PLC

 

Defenders and Respondents:

 

_______

 

 

 

Act: Johnston, Q.C., Gardiner; Simpson & Marwick, W.S. (Pursuers and Appellants)

Alt: Murphy, Q.C.; HBM Sayers (Defenders and Respondents)

 

 

29 February 2008

[1] This is an appeal from the sheriff at Aberdeen in relation to the construction of an insurance policy offering cover to the reclaimers in respect of premises they owned in Aberdeen. The pursuers' claims were dismissed by the sheriff. The relevant damage upon the averments was cracking to a supporting beam caused by vibration emanating from building operations nearby and in particular the movement of skips. The pursuers' claim was purely for the cost of remedial work to the beam.

[2] The sheriff sets out the relevant parts of the insurance policy, which were not in dispute, in his Note as follows:

"[6] The insurance policy entered into between the pursuers and the Norwich Union ... was an all risks policy with exceptions. The insured contingency ... was 'Accidental loss, destruction of, or damage (hereinafter termed Damage) to the Property Insured described in the Schedule.' The policy immediately continues to list certain exceptions to the general contingency. The fifth is in the following terms:- 'E. Damage in respect of a building or structure caused by its own collapse or cracking unless resulting from a Defined Contingency and not otherwise excluded.' Page 15 of the policy contains the definitions of certain terms, the first of which is 'Defined Contingency'. The definition is in the following terms:- '"Defined Contingency" shall mean damage caused by fire, lightning, explosion, aircraft and other aerial devices or articles dropped therefrom, riot, civil commotion, strikers, locked out workers, persons taking part in labour disturbances, malicious persons other than thieves, earthquakes, storm, flood, escape of water from any tank, apparatus or pipe, impact by any road vehicle or animal.'"

[3] The Sheriff interpreted the policy in the following way:

"[32] The insurer's obligation is contained in page 3 of the policy which, reading short, is to the effect:- 'the corporation [i.e. the defenders] will by payment ... indemnify the insured to the extent hereafter described in respect of loss, destruction, damage, accident or injury occurring during the period of insurance subject to the terms, exceptions and conditions contained herein or endorsed hereon'.

[33] The basic cover or contingency in respect of which the insurance is given appears in section A2 on page 13 and is 'Accidental loss, destruction of or damage (hereinafter termed Damage) to the Property Insured described in the Schedule'. The basic cover statement immediately proceeds to provide for exceptions to the basic cover, stating 'Exceptions to section A2 This section does not cover A ... P' Only one of these, E, is relevant. Substituting the extended definition of 'Defined Contingency' narrated in paragraph 6 above Exception E reads as follows:- 'Accidental loss, destruction of, or damage in respect of a building or structure caused by its own collapse or cracking unless resulting from fire, lightening, explosion, aircraft ... impact by any road vehicle or animal".

[4] Thereafter the sheriff goes on to determine the dispute between the parties which centred upon whether cover extended to this particular damage in the following way:

"[34] There can be no question of the damage having to be in someway spontaneous or intrinsic. Firstly it would not make sense to have spontaneous cracking or collapse which was caused by, for example, the building being hit by an aircraft. The collapse can not be both spontaneous and have an external cause. Secondly that is not what the contract says. Rather the contract itself provides an extensive and exclusive list of factors which could cause the 'own collapse or cracking' and which would be insured. Vibration is not one of them. Each of the defined contingencies could be seen as events which were the proximate cause of the ultimate loss suffered by a property owner when the event caused cracking or collapse. There could be other events (vibration is one example) which were the proximate cause of such cracking and of such loss. Insurance cover exists under this policy in respect of loss caused by cracking caused by the defined contingencies not because the defined contingency wins a competition to determine the proximate cause, it exists because the parties have agreed that it should exist. Conversely cover is denied by the policy in respect of loss caused by cracking caused by an event other than a defined contingency not because the event is not the proximate cause, but because the parties have agreed to exclude cover for loss caused by cracking caused by any event other than a defined contingency.

[35] I consider that the phrase 'own collapse or cracking' simply means collapse or cracking of the building itself. I note from the policy that many of the exceptions to the all risks cover deal with what might be considered to a greater or lesser extent 'spontaneous' collapse or cracking. For example exception A excludes damage caused by inter alia inherent vice, latent defect and faulty materials. Exception B excludes corrosion, rot, loss of weight, dampness or dryness, exception C pollution and exception D subsidence or settlement. Each of those exceptions except D, and other exceptions in the policy, is disapplied if resulting from a Defined Contingency. This shows a clear structure for the policy as a whole which I think supports the interpretation. I have set out in paragraph 34."

[5] The submissions for the appellants were concise and to the point.

[6] In the first place it was submitted that this was an all risks policy relating to damage to the "Property Insured", which it was not disputed included the premises in question. It was further not disputed that such damage was damage "in respect of a building or structure" which had occurred by reason of the cracking. Accordingly, there was no need to proceed even to the exceptions since they were concerned with consequences of cracking rather than the cracking itself. The sheriff had misconstrued the exception by interpreting the words "own collapse or cracking" as meaning collapse or cracking of the building itself, thus, on his interpretation, excluding cover under Exception E. A fortiori one did therefore not have to proceed to the defined contingencies which modified the exceptions in exception E which has been quoted.

[7] The approach of counsel for the respondents was equally short and to the point.

[8] He submitted that the sheriff had reached the right conclusion by reason of the fact that the policy's terms had to be looked at as a whole. The proper construction, which admittedly covered all risks extending to the damage in question, excluded in quite general terms, under Exception E, cracking of the building itself and thereafter extended cover only if the circumstances of the particular claim fell within the defined contingencies.

[9] There was some discussion between the parties on the general insurance law relating to proximate or dominant causes in respect of a claim for loss or damage, but we do not consider it necessary to embark on that discussion since that is only relevant to an issue which is governed by two possible causes or two actual causes when it becomes necessary to determine which of them is the dominant one. In this case there is no question but the cause of the cracking to the beam was vibration. How the vibration was caused is nothing to the point unless related to a defined contingency.

[10] In our opinion the construction that was favoured by the sheriff and put forward by Mr Murphy is to be accepted. It is necessary to read all relevant clauses of the policy together. It is an all risks policy and accordingly, prima facie, covers damage to the building however caused. That being so, it is thereafter necessary in our opinion to examine the exceptions and we have no hesitation in construing exception E as extending to the cracking of the building itself or any part of it. That being so, it is thereafter necessary, as urged upon us by counsel, to look at the defined contingencies where there is no reference to vibration and thus, in our opinion, this claim is excluded. For a claim to be included once it falls within one of the exceptions, it must fall within the defined contingencies. In our opinion, therefore, the simple answer to this case is that vibration damage, however caused, is not a risk covered unless it can be linked to any of the defined contingencies which it clearly, in this case, cannot.

[11] In these circumstances we consider the decision of the sheriff to dismiss the action was correct and we will dismiss the appeal.


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