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England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions >> Monavon Construction Ltd v Davenport & Anor [2006] EWHC 1094 (TCC) (22 May 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2006/1094.html Cite as: [2006] EWHC 1094 (TCC), 108 Con LR 15 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Monavon Construction Limited |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) Mr Simon Davenport (2) Mrs Angelika Davenport |
Defendants |
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Mr Paul Letman (instructed by Palmers, Solicitors, 19 Town Square, Basildon, Essex, SS14 1BD, DX 53002 Basildon, Ref: APS/CC/Davenport) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 14 and 15 March 2006 followed by written submissions
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Crown Copyright ©
HH Judge Thornton QC:
Introduction
Monavon's Claims
Claim Issue 1 – Terms of the contract
Claim Issue 2 – Alleged 9 August 2004 agreement
Claim Issue 3 – Mr McGowan's charges
Claim Issue 4 – Small tools charges
Claim Issue 5 – Scope of Monavon's work
The Davenports' Cross-claims
Item 1 – Electrical defects
Item 3 – Underfloor heating
Items 41 – 46 - Dampness in the basement
"[I confirm] the damp-proofing and plastering works to the walls in the basement (apart from limited internal areas) were carried out by TL Construction and not by Monavon. I did not instruct TL Construction to hack off all the plasterwork. I was, however, concerned about the edge detail at the wall/floor junction … The only hacking off works that I instructed were in this area as TL Construction had plastered the walls right down to the floor and I was concerned that this might cause a bridge between the floor (which might be potentially damp) and the walls, enabling water to travel upwards by capillary attraction."
(1) TL installed a two-coat plasterwork coating on the relevant basement walls without having first installed any, or any sufficient damp proof membrane and certainly without having arranged for a specialist to provide an injected damp proof membrane. As with so much else of TL's work, this plasterwork was, and looked, of poor quality.
(2) Mr Jones inspected TL's work and concluded that it was of poor quality, particularly where it bridged or potentially bridged the floor screed and where there remained areas unplastered. He gave instructions for a thin strip of plasterwork to be grinded away and that the uncovered strip should be covered over with a skirting board without being further plastered.
(3) TL partially complied with Mr Jones' first instruction but the plasterwork hacked away was far more extensive in area than an area with a width of only 2 – 3 inches. TL then left site.
(4) Monavon accepted the responsibility of completing TL's plasterwork since it did hack away small additional areas of plasterwork and also did replaster about 20 square metres of plaster.
(1) The completed plasterwork left an unacceptably wide gap between the floor screed and the plasterwork through which damp could penetrate. There is a fine line between the need for an integral system and for avoiding bridging between screed and plasterwork. The gap actually left by Monavon between the plaster and the screed did not succeed in achieving that difficult required finish.
(2) The replacement plasterwork did not satisfactorily marry up with the TL plasterwork since large but irregular areas of TL plasterwork had been hacked away, the hacking away process had been poorly executed, the remaining TL plasterwork did not provide a good join with the new plasterwork and the new plasterwork was unevenly applied.
(3) The consistence of the mix of plasterwork left by TL was poor and not capable of adequately resisting rising damp coming up from the inadequate plaster/membrane barrier beneath.
Items 40, 7 and 24 – Dampness and boiler defects in the sub-pavement area
Item 15(a) - Master bedroom, poor paint finish to the wardrobe
Item 15(b) - Damage to window frame
Item 16(b) - Doors in master bedroom
Item 17(b) - Grout to marble floor in entrance hall
Item 19 - Kitchen balcony door
Item 20 - Stained chair and carpets
Item 22 - Kitchen side panel
Item 26 - O & M manuals
Item 34 - Cracking tile joints
Item 35 - Fire doors
Item 37 - Broken sash cord
Item 39 - Kitchen floor
Item 47 - Shrinkage cracks
Item 48 – Loose sash fasteners
Item 51 - Poor lead detail
Item 52 – Exterior decorations
Item 53 & 55 – Wet rot to French doors
Item 54 – Cracked pane of glass
Item 58 – Store shed roof
Item 59 – Manhole covers
Item 60 – Access to timber decking
Item 61 – Head of French doors
Conclusion – Cross claim for defects
Overall Conclusion
HH Judge Thornton QC
Technology and Construction Court