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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 >> Stacey (t/a the New Gailey Caravan/Motorhomes Cnentre) v Autosleeper Group Ltd [2014] EWCA Civ 1551 (02 December 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2014/1551.html Cite as: [2014] EWCA Civ 1551 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE STOKE ON TRENT COUNTY COURT
HHJ P.R. MAIN QC
Claim No 21R00842
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE PATTEN
and
LORD JUSTICE FLOYD
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LESTER JOHN STACEY trading as THE NEW GAILEY CARAVAN/MOTORHOMES CNENTRE |
Claimant/ Respondent |
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- and - |
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AUTOSLEEPER GROUP LIMITED |
Defendant/Appellant |
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Simon Clegg (instructed by Beswicks Legal) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 12 November 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Floyd :
"Given how I view the Claimant's managerial skills (like his performance in the witness box, poorly), I am not in the least surprised that the his staff registered a vehicle with the DVLA without checking the facts relating to that vehicle or that the undertaking of the pre-delivery checks missed the fact that the maximum permitted axle weight was non-standard.
I therefore find when the Claimant came to transfer his interest in [the motor home] to Mr Rose, he did not know that it had a non-standard chassis weight tolerance. I also accept [counsel for the Claimant's] submission that however incompetent the Claimant's staff were in failing to detect this non-standard variant chassis for the [the motor home] it cannot affect the strict contractual effect and obligation on the part of the seller."
"had the Claimant acted proactively as I suggest he should have, I doubt the position would have been any different but the end result would have been the same, save (a) Mr Rose would never have had to incur any costs, Paragon's costs would have been substantially lower (as they would have been let out in the summer of 2008 and not following the mediation in March 2010), Mr Cope's would have been substantially lower (it was to be expected he would have been provided with his mobile home by say February/March 2009)."
"I accept that whilst mediation would not have been necessary, Mr Cope would still have required solicitor involvement in thrashing out a compromise with the Claimant and the details of his replacement vehicle, which judging by the time it took to resolve was no easy matter. He would still have incurred his ATE insurance premium and an uplift of those costs. All this in my judgment is recoverable as the Claimant's obligation to pay costs reasonably incurred."
i) Although the legal burden of proof that the breach of contract caused loss rests throughout on the claimant, there is an evidential burden on the defendant if it contends that there was a break in the chain of causation.ii) To break the chain of causation, the intervening conduct of the claimant must be of such impact that it obliterates the wrongdoing of the claimant in the sense that the claimant's conduct must be the true cause of the loss rather than the conduct of the defendant. That is because, where the defendant's conduct remains an effective cause of the loss, at least ordinarily the chain of causation will not be broken.
iii) It is difficult to conceive of anything less than unreasonable conduct on the part of the claimant breaking the chain.
iv) Even unreasonable conduct will not necessarily break the chain, for example where the defendant's conduct remains an effective cause.
v) Reckless conduct ordinarily breaks the chain of causation, although there is no general rule that only reckless conduct will do so.
vi) The claimant's state of knowledge at the time of and following the defendant's breach is likely to be a factor of great significance.
vii) However it does not follow that actual knowledge of the breach is a pre-requisite of breaking the chain.
viii) The question of whether there has been a break in the chain is fact sensitive. In a given case the determination of whether the chain of causation is broken may involve the cumulative effect of a number of factors which have the effect of removing the wrongdoing sued on as a cause.
ix) Whilst the authorities provide guidance they are not to be read as statutes.
"For the chain of causation to be broken, the claimant need not have knowledge of the legal niceties of the breach of contract; nor, as it seems to me, will the chain of causation only be broken if the claimant has actual knowledge that a breach of contract has occurred – otherwise there would be a premium on ignorance."
"After it had become apparent to the farmer that the locking mechanism of the coupling was broken, and consequently that it was no longer in the same state as when it was delivered, the only implied warranty which could justify his failure to take the precaution either to get it mended or at least to find out whether it was safe to continue to use it in that condition, would be a warranty that the coupling could continue to be safely used to tow a trailer on a public highway notwithstanding that it was in an obviously damaged state. My Lords, any implication of a warranty in these terms needs only to be stated, to be rejected…..In the state in which the farmer knew the coupling to be at the time of the accident, there was no longer any warranty by the dealers of its continued safety in use on which the farmer was entitled to rely."
"That County chose to try to satisfy itself of the validity of the indicative commitments of CBS clients, not knowing of Gilbert Eliott's statements, is nothing to the point. There was no requirement under the terms of engagement that they should do so, nor at the time the contract of engagement was made was it contemplated that they would do so. In my view, the fact that they chose to do so and did so negligently could not interrupt the direct relationship between the statements made by Gilbert Eliott and the need to refresh the placees."
"Where a plaintiff does not know of a defendant's breach of contract and where he is entitled to rely upon the defendant having performed his contract, it will only be in the most exceptional circumstances that conduct of the plaintiff suffices to break the causal relationship between the defendant's breach and the plaintiff's loss.
The plaintiffs' conduct was not voluntary in the sense of being undertaken with a knowledge of its significance. Conduct which is undertaken without an appreciation of the existence of the earlier causal factor will normally only suffice to break the causal relationship if the conduct was reckless. It is the character of reckless conduct that it makes the actual state of knowledge of that party immaterial. If the conduct of the plaintiffs had been so exceptional as to take it outside the contemplation of the parties, then it might have made the consequent loss too remote."
Lord Justice Patten
Lord Justice Elias