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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Midland Mainline Ltd & Ors v Eagle Star Insurance Company Ltd [2004] EWCA Civ 1042 (28 July 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2004/1042.html Cite as: [2004] EWCA Civ 1042, [2004] 2 Lloyd's Rep 604 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
MR JUSTICE DAVID STEEL
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
Vice-President of the Court of Appeal (Civil Division)
LORD JUSTICE JACOB
and
SIR MARTIN NOURSE
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(1) MIDLAND MAINLINE LIMITED (2) CENTRAL TRAINS LIMITED (3) GATWICK EXPRESS RAILWAY COMPANY LIMITED (4) SCOTRAIL RAILWAYS LIMITED (5) SILVERLINK TRAIN SERVICES LIMITED |
Claimants/ Respondents |
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- and - |
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EAGLE STAR INSURANCE COMPANY LIMITED |
Defendants/ Appellants |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Julian Flaux QC and Timothy Kenefick (instructed by Barlow, Lyde and Gilbert) for the Respondents
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Crown Copyright ©
Sir Martin Nourse :
"The Claimants are each entitled in principle to indemnities from each of the Defendants, each for its respective proportion under the Policy, in respect of any loss of revenue and/or additional increases in the costs of working which the claimants have incurred or which they may incur as a result of any emergency speed restrictions or line closures imposed by Railtrack (following the Hatfield derailment, in the light of the existence or apprehension of RCF) in the period between 12.23 pm on 17th October 2000 and midnight on 31st October 2000….."
"This policy does not cover
1 DAMAGE or CONSEQUENTIAL LOSS caused by or consisting of:
1.1 inherent vice, latent defect, gradual deterioration, wear and tear, frost, change in water table level, its own faulty or defective design or materials."
The judge held (paras 105 to 109) that RCF, though it was "a paradigm example" of wear and tear, was not a proximate or (which is the same thing) an effective cause of the claimants' losses. The primary question we have to decide is whether that holding was correct.
"The wear and tear exclusion would only be operative if the excluded peril was the proximate cause of the loss. But I agree with the claimants that wear and tear was not the proximate cause of the losses in the present claim. The proximate or effective cause of the claimants' losses was the imposition of the various ESRs. The issue is sometimes put forward as essentially one of common sense. What brought about the loss? RCF was a known feature of the network (albeit the scale of it was not). It was formerly dealt with as part of routine maintenance with little, if any, disruption to the timetabled services. The losses are brought about by the myriad of ESRs imposed to try and bring the network back to a safe shape as soon as possible. The gradual development of cracks in numerous RCF sites was no more that the underlying state of affairs providing the occasion for action. It was not the event that triggered the cover."
Accordingly, he concluded that the general exclusion did not provide a defence to the claim.
"Since the Leyland case it has been settled in insurance law that the 'cause' of the loss is that which is the effective or dominant cause of the occurrence, or as it sometimes put, that which is in substance the cause, even though it is more remote in point of time such cause to be determined by common sense: see Gray v Barr [1971] QB 554, 567.
So I would approach this case by asking which of the two causes was the effective or dominant cause? I should have thought that it was the first cause, the dangerous nature of the installation, and thus within the exception. So that the defendants were not liable under this policy. "
At p 74 Roskill LJ said:
"But in the present case I think this apparatus was so defective that what happened thereafter, though aggravating the defects and precipitating the ultimate result, never prevented the defective nature of the apparatus from being the effective cause of this loss…… So, like Lord Denning MR, I take the view that the proximate cause of this loss falls within the exception…..
But even if I am wrong in this view, there seems to me, as it does to Lord Denning MR, to be a further difficulty in the plaintiffs' way. I find it impossible in any event to say that the sole proximate cause of this disaster was the switching on and leaving unattended of the heating tape. This being so, even if I am wrong in saying that the defective nature and condition of the apparatus was the sole proximate cause of the disaster, there were at best for the plaintiffs two effective proximate causes."
"But for my part I do not consider that the court should strain to find a dominant cause if, as here, there are two causes both of which can be properly described as effective causes of the loss. Mr LeQuesne recognised that if there are two causes which are approximately equal in effectiveness, then it is impossible to call one rather than the other the dominant cause. I should prefer to say that unless one cause is clearly more decisive than the other, it should be accepted that there are two causes of the loss and no attempt should be made to give one of them the quality of dominance."
"Subject otherwise to the terms conditions and exclusions of the Policy including the Specifications and Clauses."
The denial of access extension provides:
"The insurance by this Section shall subject to all the terms and conditions and provisions of the Policy extend to include loss resulting from interruption of or interference with the Business carried on by the Insured in consequence of the following occurrences and such occurrences being deemed a Incident subject to the liability under this extension in respect of any occurrence shall not exceed……
The Insured being prevented from or hindered in the use of or access to any station depot or track or other part of the rail network owned or operated by British Rail Board Railtrack Group plc and other CAHA parties and caused by
(a) the action of the Insured or other competent authority for reasons of public safety other than disease hygiene or sanitation…."
It is common ground that each ESR was an action of Railtrack as a "competent authority for reasons of public safety" within paragraph (a) of the extension.
"102. The threshold issue here is whether the general exclusion of damage caused by wear and tear is applicable to the denial of access provision at all. The claimants placed particular reliance upon the definition CONSEQUENTIAL LOSS:
'Loss resulting from interruption of or interference with the business carried on by the insured at the premises in consequence of accidental loss or destruction of or damage to property used by the insured at the premises for the purposes of the business.'
103. It was accordingly submitted by the claimants that, since cover under the extension was triggered by a deemed incident or damage rather than by actual damage or loss, it followed that by definition there could be no CONSEQUENTIAL LOSS caused by or consisting of wear and tear.
104. I reject this submission primarily on the grounds that the denial of access clause expressly states that the extension is to be 'subject to all the terms and conditions and provisions of the policy.' Furthermore, it is common ground that the philosophy of the extension to the basic cover was to substitute a different specified event as a deemed incident. It follows, in my judgment, that losses which are consequent upon the prevention of access are incorporated into the definition of CONSEQUENTIAL LOSS."
Under a respondent's notice Mr Flaux argued that the judge was wrong in both his grounds. He repeated the submissions he had made below.
"The insurance by this Section shall subject to all the terms and conditions and provisions of the Policy extend….." (emphasis added)
Moreover, the basic business interruption cover (see again para 15 above) was expressed to be subject otherwise to the terms conditions and exclusions of the policy. Again, the Premises Extension (see [2004] 1 Lloyd's IR Rep 38) provides that the liability under the following clauses (of which the Denial of Access extension is one) shall be subject to "the application of all other terms conditions and provisions of the policy". I agree with Mr Harvey that these provisions taken together show that the primary ground of the judge's decision was a powerful and compelling one. On normal principles of construction they cannot be brushed aside. Their effect is plain. Moreover, it seems consistent with the exclusion of wear and tear from the basic cover provided by the policy that the exclusion should apply to extensions of cover as well.
Lord Justice Jacob:
Lord Justice Brooke: