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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 >> Watkins & Anor v Jones Maidment Wilson (A Firm) [2008] EWCA Civ 134 (04 March 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2008/134.html Cite as: [2008] PNLR 23, [2008] 10 EG 166, [2008] 1 EGLR 149, [2008] EWCA Civ 134, 118 Con LR 1 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
MERCANTILE COURT
LEEDS DISTRICT REGISTRY
FROM HIS HONOUR JUDGE BEHRENS
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LONGMORE
and
LORD JUSTICE THOMAS
____________________
(1) DR STEPHEN JOHN WATKINS (2) MRS ELIZABETH WATKINS |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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JONES MAIDMENT WILSON (A FIRM) |
Respondents |
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Mr Derek Holwill (instructed by Messrs Weightmans LLP) for the Respondents
Hearing date : 2 November 2007
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Crown Copyright ©
Lady Justice Arden :
"Insolvency of Builder/failure to complete the works
In the event of
i. the insolvency of the Builder and /or
ii. the failure of the Builder to complete the works by [31 August 1998]
then in either such case the Watkins may at their option pay to the builder an amount equal to the value of the works to that date completed (to be fixed in default of agreement by an independent chartered surveyor the identity of such surveyor either to be agreed between the parties or in default of such agreement the surveyor to be nominated by the President for the time being of the RICS who shall act as an expert and whose decision shall be binding) (but minus an allowance to be fixed by the said independent surveyor in favour of the Watkins to compensate them for the inconvenience of them having to complete the works) leaving the Watkins to complete the works thereafter. In the event of the Builder having been paid more than the amount due to him as becomes apparent after the independent surveyor's valuation, then the excess shall be repaid immediately to the Watkins."
"Completion date
We confirm our verbal agreement waiving the August 31 completion date insofar as it relates to work covered by provisional sums or work held up consequentially to those delays."
"On the plaintiffs' case, which for the purposes of this issue may be assumed to be wholly correct, the covenants against competition were intended, and said by the defendants, to be effective but were in truth wholly ineffective. It seems to me clear beyond argument that from the moment of executing each agreement the plaintiffs suffered damage because instead of receiving a potentially valuable chose in action they received one that was valueless."
"in a transaction in which there are benefits (covenant for repayment and security) as well as burdens (payment of the loan) and the measure of damages is the extent to which the lender is worse off than he would have been if he had not entered into the transaction, the lender suffers loss and damage only when it is possible to say that he is on balance worse off."
"are readily explicable as cases in which the damage was the difference between the plaintiff's position as it was and as it would have been if the defendant had performed his duty and in which it was possible to infer that the plaintiff's failure to get what he should have got from a bilateral transaction was quantifiable damage, even though further damage which might result from the flaw in the transaction was still contingent. The plaintiff had paid money, transferred property, incurred liabilities or suffered diminution in the value of an asset and in return obtained less than he should have got." [22]
"30. In my opinion, therefore, the question must be decided on principle. A contingent liability is not as such damage until the contingency occurs. The existence of a contingent liability may depress the value of other property, as in Forster v Outred & Co [1982] 1 WLR 86, or it may mean that a party to a bilateral transaction has received less than he should have done, or is worse off than if he had not entered into the transaction (according to which is the appropriate measure of damage in the circumstances). But, standing alone as in this case, the contingency is not damage."
"48. In all these cases the claimant has as a result of professional negligence suffered a diminution (sometimes immediately quantifiable, often not yet quantifiable) in the value of an existing asset of his, or has been disappointed (as against what he was entitled to expect) in an asset which he acquires, whether it is a house, a business arrangement, an insurance policy, or a claim for damages."
"A monetary value could have been put upon the loss at that time though the extent of the loss would have depended on subsequent events and an accurate quantification of loss would have been likely to become clearer with the passage of time."
"77. It may be that if the facts had been known contemporaneously, some statistical or experience-based assessment could have been made of the likelihood of a claim or claims emerging, and of the fund having eventually to make payments, as a result of Mr Payne being able to continue his scheme of fraud. A similar assessment might be made of the risk of future loss of a physical asset (deeds or valuables) of which a solicitor was failing to take reasonable care, but which had not yet been lost or stolen. But I do not consider that the law should treat purely contingent loss assessed on so remote a basis as sufficiently measurable, in the absence of any change in the claimant's legal position and any diminution in value of any particular asset. Even where negligence brings about a specific transaction and a change in the claimant's legal position, Lord Nicholls observed in the Nykredit (No 2) case [1997] 1 WLR 1627, 1631C-D in the passage cited in para 73 above, that the mere entry into a transaction under which "Financial loss is possible but not certain" is not sufficient detriment."
Lord Justice Longmore:
Lord Justice Thomas:
Notes: The date of 26 August 1998 is relevant because the present proceedings were issued on 26 August 2004. Cl 21(ii) of the building agreement conferred an allegedly valuable right on the Watkins to terminate that agreement and to obtain an expert valuation of the costs of the completed works. The building agreement was dated 3 April 1998 and made between the Watkins and Fleming.
Is the pre-agreement claim statute- barred on the following assumed facts?
The assumed facts are
(i) that JMW was, on or before 3 April 1998, in breach of its duties to the Watkins in relation to the contractual documentation executed by the Watkins on 3 April 1998, as alleged in the amended particulars of claim;
(ii) that as a result of such breaches of duty:
a. the Watkins entered into agreements under which they did not obtain contractual rights which accorded with their instructions to JMW (although it is not certain whether such rights could have been obtained); and
b. the Watkins lost a real chance of securing more favourable contractual terms from Fleming;
(iii) that the benefits which the Watkins actually obtained under the contracts with Fleming, executed on 3 April 1998, exceeded, at all material times prior to 26 August 1998, the burdens imposed upon the Watkins under those contracts.
B. The Watkins' claim ("the post-agreement claim") in respect of the alleged breaches of duty leading to the alleged loss of their rights under cl 21(ii) of the building agreement
Note: Questions 2 to 4 are directed to ascertaining whether the cause of action in respect of this claim accrued upon or after the time on which it is alleged that the Watkins entered into a further transaction (referred to below as "the later transaction") whereby the Watkins agreed to forego the benefit of cl 21(ii) of the building agreement or took steps which resulted in the loss of the right to use cl 21(ii). The date of the later transaction is disputed but for the purposes of the preliminary issues is assumed to occur before 26 August 1998. The Watkins contend that the cause of action accrued on a date after 26 August 1998. That date ("the deferred start date") is not ascertainable in advance of trial but is the date on which:
"the detriment to the Watkins consequent upon entering into the [later transaction], or taking the said steps, outweighed the benefits to the Watkins of entering into that [later transaction] or taking the said steps (such that, in the event that the detriment to the Watkins did not prior to 26 August 1998 outweigh the benefits, the Watkins' claim is not statute-barred)."
Questions 2 to 4 each seek a determination, on assumed facts, of the following question:
Could the post-agreement claim accrue prior to the deferred start date on the assumed facts?
The following are the assumed facts for each of Questions 2 to 4:
(i) that JMW was in breach of its duty of care to the Watkins as alleged in the amended particulars of claim;
(ii) that these breaches caused the Watkins to enter into the later transaction;
(iii) that the later transaction occurred prior to 26 August 1998;
(iv) that the later transaction also produced benefits for the Watkins;
(v) that, but for the breaches of duty alleged in the amended particulars of claim, the Watkins would not have entered into the later transaction.
The following further facts are to be assumed in respect of each question respectively:
(vi) that, instead of entering into the agreement or taking the steps mentioned above, the Watkins have procured the benefits referred to in (iv) above, whilst preserving the right safely to use Cl 21 (ii).
(vi) that, instead of entering into the agreement or taking the steps mentioned above, the Watkins have foregone the benefits referred to in (iv) above, whilst preserving the right safely to use cl 21(ii).
(vi) that, instead of entering into the agreement or taking the steps mentioned above, the Watkins would have pursued further negotiations with Fleming in an attempt to procure the benefits referred to in (iv) above, whilst preserving the right safely to use cl 21(ii), and would have had a real (as opposed to fanciful) chance of procuring, in those negotiations, the benefits referred to in (iv) above, whilst preserving the right safely to use cl 21 (ii).