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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 >> Waterdance Ltd v Kingston Marine Services Ltd [2014] EWHC 224 (TCC) (07 February 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2014/224.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 224 (TCC) |
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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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Waterdance Limited |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Kingston Marine Services Limited |
Defendant |
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Mr David Hart QC (instructed by Kennedys) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 5th, 6th February 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Stuart-Smith :
i) Whether the Claimant suffered any loss by diminution in value of the Vessel and/or whether the Claimant has avoided and/or mitigated any such losses;
ii) Whether, on the assumption that the vessel was loss-making at the date of the engine damage, the Claimant is as a matter of law entitled to damages for loss of use based upon the capital value of the Vessel.
i) The Claimant suffered an immediate and direct loss on the occurrence of the damage to the Vessel on 10 January 2007. The measure of loss is the reasonable cost of the repairs required to put the Vessel back into the condition in which it was before the damage occurred. The Claimant's loss was not avoided or mitigated by the receipt of the grant payment of £1,119,000 or otherwise;
ii) In the light of my finding on the first issue, I do not deal with the second.
The Background Facts in a Little More Detail
Issue 1: Did the Claimant Suffer Any Loss by Diminution in Value of the Vessel and, if so, Did the Claimant Avoid or Mitigate Such Loss.
"Taking Lord Hobhouse's statement [in Dimond v Lovell] together with statements in other cases: (1) where a chattel is damaged by the negligence of another that loss (the "direct" loss) is suffered as soon as the chattel is damaged. (2) The proper measure of that loss is the diminution in value that the chattel has suffered as a result of the negligence of the defendant. This follows the general principle in awarding damages, i.e. that of restitution. In Lord Hobhouse's phrase, "this can be expressed as a capital account loss". (3) If the chattel can be economically repaired, the claimant is entitled to have it repaired at the cost of the wrongdoer, although the claimant is not obliged to repair the chattel to recover the direct loss suffered. (4) Events occurring after the infliction of the damage are irrelevant to calculating the diminution in value measure of damages. Thus, subsequent destruction of the chattel, or a decision to delay repairs, or an ability to have the repairs done at less than cost or for nothing will not prevent the claimant from recovering the diminution in value of the chattel that has been caused by the negligence of the tortfeasor. (5) Generally, the practical way that the courts have calculated this diminution in value is to ask how much would be the reasonable cost of repair so as to put the chattel back in the state it was in before it was damaged. In general this is a convenient practice which we think the courts should continue to follow. Only if the sum claimed appears to be clearly excessive will the court be justified in investigating whether that sum exceeds the cost that the claimant would have incurred in having the repairs carried out by a reputable repairer."
"Prima facie, the damage occasioned to a vessel is the cost of repairs - the cost of putting the vessel in the same condition as she was in before the collision, and to restore her in the hands of the owners to the same value as she would have had if the damage had never been done; and prima facie, the value of a damaged vessel is less by the cost of repairs than the value it would have if undamaged, though it is true that evidence may establish that the value of the vessel undamaged is exactly the same as her value after she had been damaged. The learned judge decided that if that proposition were going to be established, it was for the owners of the London Corporation to establish it.
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Quite apart from that, however, I agree with the learned judge that in cases of this sort, the prima facie damage is the cost of repair, and circumstances which are peculiar to the plaintiffs - namely, that they have, before the damage has been determined, sold the vessel to be broken up, is an accidental circumstance which ought not to be taken into account in the way of diminution of damages, any more than it is in a case of the sale of goods, where the difference in market price and contract price is always allowed, regardless of the fact that having regard to what the purchaser has done, no such damages are in fact suffered by him. It is desirable that there should be a measure of damage which can be easily and definitely found. In this case, circumstances which are accidental to the plaintiffs of which the defendants have no knowledge, or circumstances applicable to the defendants of which the plaintiffs have no knowledge, need not be taken into account."
"… the correct jurisprudential analysis of a claim for diminution in value, even if it is measured by the reasonable cost of repairs, is that it is a claim for general damages, not one for "special damages". The diminution in value claim should therefore be pleaded as a claim for general damages. Documents such as an invoice for the cost of the repairs undertaken are no more than evidence of the diminution in value suffered by the chattel as a result of the negligence of the wrongdoer which can be used to make good the claim. Strictly speaking, the cost of the repairs is not itself the loss suffered."
Issue 2: On the Assumption that the Vessel was Loss-making at the Date of the Engine Damage, is the Claimant as a Matter of Law Entitled to Damages for Loss of Use Based upon the Capital Value of the Vessel?