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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 >> Bacciottini & Anor v Gotelee and Goldsmith (A Firm) [2016] EWCA Civ 170 (18 March 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2016/170.html Cite as: [2016] EWCA Civ 170, [2016] WLR(D) 152, [2016] PNLR 22, [2016] 4 WLR 98 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION
HH JUDGE SIMON BARKER QC
HC 2013 000094
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LLOYD JONES
and
LORD JUSTICE UNDERHILL
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BACCIOTTINI & ANR |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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GOTELEE AND GOLDSMITH (A FIRM) |
Respondent |
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Ian Gatt QC and Graeme Robertson (instructed by Herbert Smith Freehills LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 19 & 20 January 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Davis:
Introduction
Background facts
"102. Had I obtained this information prior to purchase, regarding the Restriction, I would have been aware of the risks and the Second Claimant and I would have taken appropriate steps to protect our interests. I would have regarded the mortgage valuation as defective, the Second Claimant and I certainly would not have purchased The Granary at the price of £600,000.00. Only if I renegotiated the purchase price to reflect its negative planning history would I have been prepared to consider completing the purchase at the revised price. Even then, the Second Claimant and I might well have decided that the project was too risky for a first attempt at a joint development project.
. . . .
123. Had I been notified of the Restriction before exchange, I would not have paid £600,000 pounds for The Granary. I would never have purchased The Granary without the results of local searches. I relied upon Mr Mathers to carry out the searches, as he said he had done, and to advise us clearly on what they revealed."
The course of the proceedings below
"If the transaction had to be completed with the restriction in place a negotiated discount on the Granary building alone might have been settled on in the region of £75,000 to £100,000 but even then the vendors might insist upon a mechanism to recover the money especially with the strong likelihood that the restriction could be lifted."
The judgment of the trial Judge
"57. So, as to the valuation as at 30th May 2007, subject to the 1974 condition, Mr Fletcher opines that the diminution in value would have been some £100,000 to £110,000 if there was a very high probability that an application to lift the condition would be successful; and further, that an additional diminution in value of £50,000 to £60,000 should be taken into account if the prospects were no better than 50/50, which was Mr Hancock's view.
58. On the evidence before me, I accept Mr Fletcher's opinion as to the diminution in value on the basis of a very high likelihood that an application to lift the 1974 condition would be successful. Accordingly, the actual value of the property at the material times in 2007 was some £450,000, and the overpayment some £100,000."
"60. I do not agree that the choices were that straightforward. In particular, I am not persuaded that there were only two possible outcomes. On the contrary, I think that Mr Fletcher's observations and evidence of alternative outcomes, which would involve one or other of the parties applying for the 1974 condition to be lifted, is a more likely outcome than Mr Bacciottini and Ms Cook simply purchasing at £450,000 or walking away."
"84. The plain fact is that Mr Bacciottini and Ms Cook had no realistic option other than to make an application for the condition to be lifted. That is the course that any sensible owner and occupier, circumstanced as they were, would have taken. It is a direct consequence of, and is directly caused by, the lack of information resulting from the negligence of Gotelee. "
85. My conclusion on the facts of this case is that Mr Bacciottini and Ms Cook's application to have the 1974 condition lifted was made pursuant to their duty to mitigate their losses.
86. The decision to make the application was not independent of Gotelee's negligence and did not arise independently as part and parcel of Mr Bacciottini and Ms Cook's series of planning applications.
. . . .
88. It follows from this that the loss claimed, the overpayment, if, contrary to my judgment, that is the correct measure of loss, was eradicated by mitigation. It also follows that the special damages claim fails."
The authorities
"….that sum of money which will put the party who has been injured, or who has suffered, in the same position as he would have been if he had not sustained the wrong for which he is now getting his compensation or reparation."
"The general principle of English law is that damages must be assessed at the date when the damage occurred, which is usually the same day as the cause of action arises…….."
"the damages are to be assessed in the real world. Compensation is a reward for real, not hypothetical, loss. It is not to be made an occasion for recovery in respect of a loss which might have been, but has not been, suffered."
The court thus declined, on the facts, to apply the diminution in value rule: on the footing that no loss had, in the event, been suffered. Ward LJ referred (at p. 418) to the "dictates of fairness and justice".
"having regard to intervening events and to the long interval of time, the repairs executed in 1990 were not part of a continuous transaction of which the purchase of the lease as a result of [the surveyors] negligence was the inception. Furthermore, these repairs undertaken by [the landlords] at the plaintiff's insistence were res inter alios acta and therefore collateral to [the surveyor's] negligence."
Pill LJ (at p.415) took a similar view of the facts. He concluded that "the facts relied upon as affecting the measure of damages are too remote to be taken into consideration…."
"The law does not permit the plaintiff to recover more than is seen to be his actual loss and the rules of mitigation may deprive the plaintiff of all or part of the damages for loss which otherwise he might have recovered."
He noted the principles established in British Westinghouse Electric & Manufacturing Co. Ltd. v Underground Electric Railways Co. of London Ltd. [1912] AC 673. He stated that if a plaintiff in fact avoids or mitigates his loss he could not recover for the loss thereby avoided even if the steps taken were more than could reasonably be required under the duty to mitigate. He said this at p.508, after reviewing various authorities:
"Whilst Philips v Ward establishes that the measure of damages is the price paid less the market value of the property at the date of the breach, even though the cost of repairing the property may be greater or smaller than that, it does not follow that the rules of mitigation can never apply to such a case. That would be contrary to the British Westinghouse principle. Indeed as Mustill LJ pointed out in Hussey v Eels [1990] 2 QB 227, 233, any generalisation that where a loss has crystallised in terms of there being a conventional measure of damages at the date of breach, there can be no mitigation as shown by the Pagnan case [1970] 1 WLR 1306 to be unsound. For my part I cannot see why the advantage accruing from the action of the plaintiff in that case to mitigate his loss, viz. the elimination of the risk to the house by the felling of the poplars, should be left out of account in arriving at the award of damages and there is nothing in Philips v Ward [1956] 1 WLR 471 to compel such a result…"
Peter Gibson LJ, having described Hussey v Eels as "an exceptional case turning on its own facts", went on to say this at p.511:
"The common sense of the situation in the present case is that once the Plaintiffs were aware that they had purchased a structurally defective property of less value than the price they had paid as a result of the Defendants' negligence, they sensibly and promptly took steps to eliminate their loss by procuring the remedying by the freeholder of the defect. That seems to me plainly an act of mitigation resulting in a benefit to the Plaintiffs which eliminated their loss. I repeat what the Judge said, that they have a rectified property worth the equivalent of what they had paid for it without any extra cost to them. The significant point is that this occurred as a result of the pressure applied to the freeholder by the Plaintiffs. To take an example suggested by Mr. Brunner, if the Plaintiffs had sued both the freeholder under the Defective Premises Act 1972 and the Defendants in negligence in the same action they could not expect to recover damages in full from the freeholder as well as damages in full from the Defendants. Once the property had been put in repair at no cost to the Plaintiffs, in my judgment they cannot be allowed to obtain double recovery by an award of damages against the Defendants. To adapt the words of Salmon L.J. in R. Pagnan & Fratelli v Corbisa Industrial Agropacuria Limitada [1970] 1 WLR 1306, 1316, to allow the plaintiffs' claim would be contrary to justice, common sense and the British Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Co. Ltd v Underground Electric Railways Co. of London Ltd. [1912] AC 673 principle."
"(a) The defect was ultimately removed by redemption at the expense not …. of the Gregorys but of the company. I would not award the capital sum of £44,500 referred to in paragraph 38 above. No loss of that amount had been crystallised by a sale. The defect and, therefore, the theoretical loss was avoided by the belated performance of the contract of sale by the company. Such performance was a part of the continuous transaction of which the purchase of the apartment was the inception. Such transaction involved the company, the Gregorys and Shepherds. I do not think that the decision of the court in Gardner v Marsh & Parsons [1997] 1 WLR 489 requires this court to overlook the economic realities of the case and impose on Shepherds liability for a loss which in the event the Gregorys did not sustain.
(b) I agree with the judge that the appropriate measure for compensation for a removable defect which has been removed should be compensation for its existence from the time when it should have been removed to the time it was in fact removed…."
"The question really is whether, in all the circumstances of the case, the normal measure properly reflects the overriding compensatory rule...."
He went on to say this at paragraph 36:
"In a case where the normal measure is applicable, the normal measure will not be reduced because particular losses have in fact been avoided, nor will it be increased because the transaction has turned out worse for the claimant than it might have, due to some subsequent misfortune: But that is because the court will have already decided, in the words of Lord Browne-Wilkinson in Smith New Court, that the normal measure gives a "fair result", or, in the words of Lord Steyn in the same case, that the normal measure "give(s) effect to the overriding compensatory rule"."
"The important principle which emerges from these citations is that, if a claimant adopts by way of mitigation a measure which arises out of the consequences of the breach and is in the ordinary course of business and such measure benefits the claimant, that benefit is normally to be brought into account in assessing the claimant's loss unless the measure is wholly independent of the relationship of the claimant and the defendant. That should be a principle sufficient to guide the decision of the fact-finder in any particular case."
At paragraph 47 of his judgment, Christopher Clarke LJ said:
"The issue of mitigation arises when the breach has had harmful consequences which the injured party has taken steps to ameliorate."
Arguments
Disposition
"The plain fact is that Mr Bacciottini and Ms Cook had no realistic option other than to make an application for the condition to be lifted. That is the course that any sensible owner and occupier, circumstanced as they were, would have taken. It is a direct consequence of, and is directly caused by, the lack of information resulting from the negligence of Gotelee:"
Other points
Conclusion
Lord Justice Lloyd Jones:
Lord Justice Underhill: