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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Technotrade Ltd v Larkstore Ltd [2006] EWCA Civ 1079 (27 July 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2006/1079.html Cite as: [2006] WLR 2926, [2006] EWCA Civ 1079, [2006] 1 WLR 2926 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
HHJ DAVID WILCOX
CLAIM NO HT-05-109
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE RIX
and
MR JUSTICE PETER SMITH
____________________
TECHNOTRADE LTD |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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LARKSTORE LTD |
Respondent |
____________________
MR CHRISTOPHER THOMAS QC & MS GAYNOR CHAMBERS (instructed by Warners) for the Respondent
Hearing dates : 23rd June 2006
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Mummery:
The issue
" …whether .. a contract-breaker can avoid an otherwise inescapable liability in damages as a result of the accident of the transfer of the property and assignment of the benefit of the relevant …contract to a third party, either by arguing that the original contracting party or assignor, having parted with the property at full value, has suffered no loss and that the assignee cannot be in a better position, or conversely that an assignee, in a case where he alone can sue, has paid a reduced price, equally suffering no loss. In other words, does the accident of transfer and assignment create a "legal black hole" into which the right to damages disappears, leaving the contract-breaker with an uncovenanted immunity?"
General background
" i) Starglade with full title guarantee assigns to Larkstore the Report together with all the benefit and interest and rights of Starglade in and under the Report and the right to enforce the same TO HOLD to Larkstore absolutely.
"ii) For the avoidance of doubt the assignment effectively hereby includes the right to sue in respect of breaches of Technotrade of its duties and obligations and to bring all such claims against Technotrade as are available at law."
" …In consideration of you making the assignment of even date, we undertake to pay you one half of the net monies received from Technotrade Limited.
"Net monies" means all sums received from Technotrade Limited, whether by Court order or judgment or by compromise or otherwise and whether in respect of the cause of action assigned by you to us or otherwise, but after deduction of our costs of pursuing Technotrade Limited and deduction of any costs we may be ordered to pay Technotrade Limited.
We agree to hold all monies received from Technotrade Limited on trust for division in accordance with the foregoing…"
Legal proceedings
Preliminary issues
Assignment: Issue 1
i. This is the main point on the appeal. The issue is whether Larkstore is able, by virtue of the assignment from Starglade, to recover the loss, or any part of the loss, allegedly suffered by it. (The point was argued on an assumption that, for the purposes of deciding the assignment point, there had been a breach of contract by Technotrade in respect of the soil inspection report). On the assignment point the judge said "yes" in respect of loss arising from breach of contract only. He held that the assignment was valid and not champertous. His ruling on the validity of the assignment is not appealed by Technotrade. He also held that Larkstore, as assignee of the cause of action for breach of contract, would be entitled to recover substantial damages from Technotrade, even though Starglade had not suffered substantial damage while it was entitled to the benefit of the contract with Technotrade and when the cause of action arose and even though the landslip causing the damage occurred before the assignment to Larkstore. The assignment did not, however, enable Larkstore to make a claim in tort against Technotrade, as the cause of action in tort did not arise until the damage had occurred and damage was an ingredient of the cause of action in tort. That was after the transfer of the site by Starglade. There was, therefore, no cause of action in tort for Starglade to assign at the date of the assignment.
Duty of care of Technotrade to Claimants: Issue 2
ii.The judge's ruling on this issue is not appealed. The issue is whether Technotrade owed a duty of care to the Claimants in the main proceedings whose properties had suffered physical damage. The judge said "yes" on this issue. The judge also held that Larkstore was entitled to claim against Technotrade for contribution in respect of the liability for physical damage suffered by the Claimants in respect of which they both owed a duty of care to the Claimants.
Duty of care of Technotrade to Larkstore: Issue 3
iii. There is an application by Technotrade for permission to appeal this point, so far as it relates to a duty in respect of physical damage. There is also a respondent's notice by Larkstore relating to the judge's classification as economic loss the damage which was suffered as a result of Larkstore having to carry out stabilisation works on the Site. The issue is whether Technotrade owed Larkstore a duty of care as alleged, to which the judge said "yes" in relation to ensuring that the development of the Site would not cause physical damage to adjoining property owners. He answered "no" as to the economic loss suffered by Larkstore, as the required degree of proximity between Technotrade and Larkstore to give rise to a duty of care not to cause economic loss was absent and it was not fair, just or reasonable to impose such a duty. The £800,000 spent by Larkstore on remedial stabilisation of the Site was economic loss and was not recoverable from Technotrade.
The appeal
Assignment point: judgment of HHJ Wilcox
"51. In my judgment, Larkstore under the assignment acquired Starglade's right to sue Technotrade in contract, the cause of action having accrued at the time of the alleged breach of the contract of retainer. The measure of damages would not be nominal. The actual cost of repair and stabilisation of the site by Larkstore would be evidentially relevant to what would be recoverable, as would be the cost of reasonable repair to the neighbouring properties. Since the damage to the site occurred after the assignment, and damage is an essential ingredient in tort it follows in my judgment that under the assignment there was no cause of action in tort capable of being assigned by Starglade."
[Note: The judge must have meant the transfer of the site. The damage occurred after that transfer, not after the assignment of the cause of action].
Assignment point: general principles
1) The time of the breach of contract by Technotrade. The contractual cause of action against Technotrade arose when Starglade was the owner of the Site. Starglade was only entitled to recover nominal damages at that time. No substantial damage could be established until the occurrence of the landslip in October 2001
2) The time of the landslip. Larkstore was the owner of the Site at the time when the landslip occurred and substantial damage was suffered. Starglade was still entitled to the chose in action, but it was not entitled to recover substantial damages, as it had ceased to own the Site. Larkstore owned the Site and suffered substantial damage, but was not entitled to recover damages form Technotrade for breach of contract, because it had no contract with Technotrade and, at that time, had no assignment from Starglade of the benefit of its contract, rights of action and remedies for breach of contract.
3) The time of the assignment. Starglade could not, it was submitted, assign to Larkstore more than it had. It did not have a claim for substantial damages against Technotrade in contract, as it had ceased to own the Site before the assignment and before the landslip.
" (i) The well established principle that an assignee of a chose in action (here Larkstore) cannot recover more than the assignor (here Starglade) has lost, is applicable on the particular facts of this claim, which it is averred does not fit within any of the exceptions to the said principle. Starglade has suffered no loss and Larkstore is not entitled to put itself in any better position than the principal to the contract which it has purported to assign."
"19-073 Assignee cannot recover more than assignor. A further aspect of the idea that an assignee takes an assignment "subject to equities" is the principle that an assignee cannot recover more from the debtor than the assignor could have done had there been no assignment. For example, in Dawson v. Great Northern & City Railway Co the assignment of a statutory claim for compensation for damage to land did not entitle the assignee to recover extra loss suffered by reason of a trade carried on by him, but not the assignor, that the assignor would not have suffered.
19-074 The application of this principle has given rise to particular difficulty in relation to building contracts or tort claims for damage to buildings. Say, for example, a building is sold at full value along with an assignment to the purchaser of claims in contract or tort in relation to the building. The building turns out to need repairs as a result of a breach of the builder's contract with the assignor (whether that breach is prior, or subsequent, to the sale to the assignee) or of a tort (damaging the building prior to the sale). The assignee pays for the repairs. It might be argued that the assignor in that situation has suffered no loss so that, applying the governing principle that the assignee cannot recover more than the assignor, the assignee has no substantial claim. If correct, " …the claim to damages would disappear …into some legal black hole, so that the wrong-doer escaped scot-free." Acceptance of the argument would also nullify the purpose of the governing principle which is to avoid prejudice to the debtor and not to allow the debtor to escape liability.
19-075 Perhaps not surprisingly, therefore, that argument was rejected by the House of Lords in a Scottish delict case. And the problem has been circumvented in England by the courts' recognition that, where a third party is, or will become, owner of a defective or damaged property, there is an exception to the general rule that a contracting party can recover damages for its own loss and not for the loss of a third party. Where the exception applies, the contracting party (the assignor) is entitled to substantial damages for the loss suffered by the third party (the assignee): by the same token, an award of substantial damages to the assignee does not infringe the principle that the assignee cannot recover more than the assignor."
Application of principles
The authorities
" …. the basic question at issue is whether in this action the Pursuers are really seeking to pursue against the Defenders a claim or claims which the [assignor] could have pursued at the date of the [assignment] ….. the only relevant loss which by virtue of the [assignment] the Pursuers could claim title to recover is loss suffered by the [assignor] for which the [assignor] could at the date of the [assignment] have sought reparation."
"That brings me to the last point to be considered in connection with assignment of choses in action. Where the assignment is of a cause of action for damages, the assignee must of course have a sufficient proprietary right, or a genuine commercial interest, if the assignment is not to be invalid. It is no longer in issue in these appeals that the assignees had such a right in each case; we heard no argument to the contrary from the contractors. But it is said that in such a case he assignee can recover no more as damages than the assignor could have recovered.
That proposition seems to me well founded. It stems from the principle already discussed, that the debtor is not to be put in any worse position by reason of the assignment. And it is established by Dawson v. Great Northern & City Railway Co [1905] 1 KB 260; see also GUS Property Management Ltd v. Littlewoods Mail Order Stores Ltd [1982] SLT 533 by Lord Keith of Kinkel at page 538, cited later in this judgment [pp 89-90]. But in a case such as the present one must elucidate the proposition slightly: the assignee can recover no more damages than the assignor could have recovered if there had been no assignment, and if the building had not been transferred to the assignee."
Duty of care points
"88. …a duty of care lies in respect of the physical damage suffered by the owners of the neighbouring upslope property and such loss would be recoverable from Technotrade. To that extent therefore the damage is the same damage as that for which Larkstore is liable albeit through separate and different causes of action."
" protect Larkstore from damage or the threat of damage to people or property other than that which comprised the works and in particular to take into account the risk of instability of the land and any neighbouring land and buildings."
"Technotrade's application for permission to appeal (in relation to items 2, 3 and 4 of its Grounds of Appeal) and Larkstore's application for permission to appeal dated 7 March 2006 be refused on the basis that:
1) The conclusions of the judge at paragraphs 52 to 58 of the judgment do not amount to findings as to how heads of loss should be categorised (as is conceded at paragraph 11 of Technotrade's Supplementary Skeleton dated 14 June 2006), not being issues which were before the judge.
2) Issues as to causation, remoteness, categories of loss and the measure of damages remain open.
3) The issues which remain open include the question of intermediate examination as raised in paragraph 10 of Technotrade's Supplementary Skeleton dated 14 June 2006."
Conclusion
Lord Justice Rix :
"where a third party is, or will become, owner of a defective or damaged property, there is an exception to the general rule that a contracting party can recover damages for its own loss and not for the loss of a third party. Where the exception applies, the contracting party (the assignor) is entitled to substantial damages for the loss suffered by the third party (the assignee): by the same token, an award of substantial damages to the assignee does not infringe the principle that the assignee cannot recover more than the assignor."
"It is immaterial that Linden Gardens Trust subsequently incurred the expense of remedial work and suffered loss of rent while it was carried out, although the cost and loss may assist them in establishing the damages which would, but for the assignment have been recoverable by Stock Conversion…in my opinion there was an existing right of action for breach of contract."
"But it is said that in such a case the assignee can recover no more as damages than the assignor could have recovered.
That proposition seems to me to be well founded. It stems from the principle already discussed, that the debtor is not to be put in any worse position by reason of the assignment. And it is established by Dawson v Great Northern & City Railway Co [1905] 1 KB 260; see also GUS Property Management Ltd v Littlewoods Mail Order Stores Ltd [1982] SLT 533 by Lord Keith of Kinkel at page 538, cited later in this judgment. But in a case such as the present one must elucidate the proposition slightly: the assignee can recover no more damages than the assignor could have recovered if there had been no assignment, and if the building had not been transferred to the assignee."
"The next point is then that an assignee can recover damages from the debtor to the same extent as his assignor could have done, but he cannot enforce any new claims, let alone under new heads of damage, which would not have been available to the assignor. However, his right to damages, limited to that extent, is enforceable by him even though he is not accountable to his assignor…Both [the £22,000 and the £236,000 losses] are claims for damages which had vested in Stock Conversion and which were validly assigned to Linden Gardens. The fact that, at the time of the assignment, Stock Conversion were aware [sc unaware] of the full extent of the breaches, and therefore of the extent of their claims for damages does not appear to me to make any difference to the validity and effect of the assignment to Linden Gardens. The only limitation upon Linden Gardens' right of recovery is the extent to which the defendants may be able to show that Linden Gardens' claims exceed what would have been recoverable by Stock Conversion if there had been no assignment. But that is merely a question which goes to quantum, like the discussion in the speech of Lord Keith in GUS as to what would be the appropriate measure of damages in the circumstances."
"In my judgment the present case falls within the rationale of the exceptions to the general rule that a plaintiff can only recover damages for his own loss. The contract was for a large development of property which, to the knowledge of both Corporation and McAlpine, was going to be occupied, and possibly purchased, by third parties and not by the Corporation itself. Therefore it could be foreseen that damage caused by the breach would cause loss to a later owner and not merely to the original contracting party, Corporation. As in contracts for the carriage of goods by land, there would be no automatic vesting in the occupier or owners of the property for the time being who sustained the loss of any right of suit against McAlpine. On the contrary, McAlpine had specifically contracted that the rights of action under the building contract could not without McAlpine's consent be transferred to third parties who became owners or occupiers and might suffer loss. In such a case, it seems to me proper, as in the case of carriage of goods by land, to treat the parties as having entered into the contract on the footing that Corporation would be entitled to enforce contractual rights for the benefit of those who suffered from defective performance but who, under the terms of the contract, could not acquire any right to hold McAlpine liable for breach. It is truly a case in which the rule provides "a remedy where no other would be available to a person sustaining loss which under a rational legal system ought to be compensated by the person who has caused it"."
Mr Justice Peter Smith: