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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 >> Glenluce Fishing Company Ltd v Watermota Ltd [2016] EWHC 1807 (TCC) (21 July 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2016/1807.html Cite as: [2016] 5 Costs LR 1021, [2016] EWHC 1807 (TCC), [2016] TCLR 9 |
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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 :
(Sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge)
____________________
Glenluce Fishing Company Limited |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Watermota Limited |
Defendant |
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Mr Jay Jagasia (instructed by Kitsons LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 8th July 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Roger ter Haar QC :
Introduction
The Facts
The injectors have been changed 12 times in 8820 hours since this second engine was installed in 2010.
As for time lost it has varied from 2-3 days to 2 weeks depending on availability of Injectors and engineers.
The boat has been tied up since 5/8/2013 at a loss of £2000 to £3000 per day as this is our lucrative fishing season June to Sept.
The financial loss to Glenluce Fishing Co has been considerable ranging from re-engining in 2010 for 10 weeks to the boat being tied up at present, the loss of fishing time and the cost of repairs. Also we have devaluation of Stardust in her present condition.
Taking everything into consideration this could be several hundred thousand pounds.
A more detailed costing will follow after consideration with our auditors, KPMG.
26. By September 2013:
26.1 The reason for the repeated premature failures of the fuel injectors had still not been identified or corrected.
26.2 The Claimant was no longer confident that it was safe to go to sea in Stardust.
26.3 Stardust's mechanical problems had become well-known within the fishing community. It was no longer realistically possible to secure crew for the vessel. Stardust had no sale value as a reliable and functioning vessel.
27. Consequently Stardust was sold for scrap.
28. It is likely that the repeated premature failure of the fuel injectors was caused by excess pressure in the fuel return line when the engine was working at sea.
16. Finally, we note that the Defendant has complained of delays in progressing this matter and also of breaches of the pre-action protocol. The relevance of this to the present application is unclear but we thought it prudent to briefly refer to the chronology in this matter by reference to the correspondence usefully included in exhibit KS2.
17. As the court will note from the correspondence at KS 2 the majority of the delays in progressing this matter are attributable to the Defendant's delay in disclosing key technical documentation which it was necessary for the Claimant's expert to review before advising on the cause of the failures.
18. These delays can clearly be seen from the correspondence exhibited to Ms. Sandel's statement:
a) Between 2010, when the defective engine was installed, and toward the end of 2013 the parties had been in ongoing discussions and co-operated in multiple attempts to identify the causes of the failures and remedy the same.
b) It became clear towards the end of 2013 that these attempts to resolve the ongoing issues had failed and the Claimant instructed solicitors to pursue the Defendant in respect of losses they had suffered.
c) In light of the potential jurisdiction issues (the Claimant being based in Northern Ireland, the Defendant in England and the engine having been installed in Scotland) the Claimant received advice from solicitors in Northern Ireland, Scotland and England.
d) On 6 November 2013 the Claimant requested copies of "all reports records findings communications with all third parties (including Doosan) pertaining to the complete engine installation process and all remedial steps taken to date".
e) On 9 December 2013 the Defendant's solicitors confirmed they would provide the documents requested.
f) A number of chasers were sent for these documents in January 2014, August 2014, September 2014 and I reasserted this request when I assumed conduct of the matter in October 2015.
g) There was a period between September 2014 and October 2015 where this firm were not sending repeated requests to the Defendant for disclosure (as appears to be the Defendant's complaint) as the lawyer with conduct of the matter was dealing with a similar matter involving failures of another Doosan engine which was thought to have been connected (albeit no connection is now thought likely).
h) A number of technical documents which had been requested (and which had been promised in December 2013) were finally provided in November 2015, almost 2 years after they had been promised.
19. Once the above documents were provided, which included test results and technical reports, our client instructed an engineering expert to advise on the cause of the failures, which is clearly crucial to liability in this matter.
20. Our client instructed an expert and that expert provided their initial comments in early 2016. The expert took some time to provide their comments due to the extensive history of the matter which meant our client had to take some time to consolidate and organise the documents they had in relation to the matter. That expert report is not yet in a disclosable format but the Claimant continues to liaise with their expert with a view to disclosing a copy of that report as soon as possible.
21. Once the documents were disclosed our client had only 4 months to finalise their liability investigations before preparations had to be made to issue proceedings, in order to ensure their claim did not become time barred.
Brief details of claim
The Claimant's claim is for damages for breach of a vessel repair contract made in writing between the parties in March 2010 arising out of or in connection with the replacement of a marine engine in the MFV "STARDUST", together with interest to be assessed pursuant to Section 35A of the Senior Courts Act 1981.
Value
The value of the claimant's claim (including interest in the sum of £17,694.06 calculated at 5% annually accrued) is approximately £69,694.06 but is likely to increase once the claimant has finally quantified their loss of use claim.
(1) The value of the engines: £37,000.
(2) The cost of repeatedly replacing the fuel injectors: £15,000.
(3) Interest at 5%: £17,694.06.
30. As a result of the Defendant's breach of contract the Claimant has suffered loss and damage as follows.
31. The value of the Second Engine: the Second Engine was installed as a replacement for the First Engine; as such the Claimant adopts the cost of the First Engine as the measure of this loss.
£22,409.13 claimed.
32. The cost of installation of the Second Engine: this was in fact paid by the Claimant, but should have been paid by the Defendant.
£2,308.65 claimed.
33. The value of Stardust: had the original re-power of stardust been successful the vessel would have been worth about £210,000 - £220,000. The fishing licence was worth about £50,000 and was not exclusive to Stardust, so the value of the vessel itself would have been about £160,000 - £170,000. The Claimant adopts the midpoint of that range, £165,000, but reserves the right to obtain expert evidence on this point in due course. The scrap value of Stardust was only £12,000. £165,000 less £12,000, less £22,409.13 (the cost of the First Engine) is £130,590.87.
£130,590.87 claimed.
34. Extra maintenance and wasted expenditure: making allowance for work unrelated to the maintenance of the Second Engine, the Claimant spent £6,823.41 keeping Stardust fishing between the installation of the Second Engine and Stardust's scrapping.
£6,823.41 claimed.
35. Total: £162,132.06.
36. Further, as a result of the unreliability of the Second Engine Stardust's ability to go to sea was significantly curtailed, causing loss of profit to the Claimant. This will be the subject of accounting evidence in due course.
You will note from the attached that the value of the claim has increased since the claim form was issued. It is our client's intention to apply to the court to amend the claim form to increase the value of the claim (and pay the appropriate fee once permission is granted).
I would be grateful if you could please confirm your client's consent in principle to that application.
I have taken my client's instructions upon your Application. My client is not prepared to consent to the same. This is principally on the basis that any element of your client's claim that is sought to be included after March 2016 is potentially out of time by virtue of the Limitation Act, and my client cannot consent to the inclusion of losses in such circumstances.
Discussion
17.1
(1) A party may amend his statement of case at any time before it has been served on any other party;
(2) If his statement of case has been served, a party may amend it only -
(a) with the written consent of all other parties; or
(b) with the permission of the court….
17.4
(1) This rule applies where –
(a) a party applies to amend his statement of case in one of the ways mentioned in this rule and –
(b) a period of limitation has expired under
(i) the Limitation Act 1980;
….
(2) The court may allow an amendment whose effect will be to add or substitute a new claim, but only if the new claim arises out of the same facts or substantially the same facts as a claim in respect of which the party applying for permission has already claimed a remedy in the proceedings.
22. I approach the issue of the exercise of the discretion on the following factual basis, which arose from the earlier part of this judgment: 1) no new facts were relied upon by the claimant; 2) there was no evidence of express prejudice put forward by the defendants. They only point to that type of prejudice which would ordinarily follow from a claim being investigated a few months later than would have been the case had the claimants put forward the alternative claims within the limitation period, which for these purposes I must assume to have expired in May 2004; 3) no reasons were advanced by the claimants to explain why the new case has not been pleaded originally.
23. I approach the exercise of the discretion on this factual basis; this was not a case where there was any real prejudice put forward. It is not therefore a case where the court has to balance the prejudice to the claimant against the reasons why the claimant had not advanced the alternative cases earlier. As it is not such a case, to refuse to exercise the discretion in favour of the claimants would be to penalise the claimants for not putting their case at the outset on every alternative basis that might have been available on those facts. However obvious it might appear now that it could have been put on those alternative bases, it is well known in the experience of many that, even if late in the day it may be seen how obvious things were, it is not always obvious to the person at the time; it would not be right to adopt an approach to this case which would in effect penalise the pleader.
It would be indeed surprising and harsh if a party who had done all that was required of him, should find himself unable to obtain the assistance of the court because the court itself had failed in some matter of procedure. Furthermore, when the rules lay down a time limit which has to be observed by a party to the litigation, their aim is to achieve whatever particular purpose is in mind by controlling the action of the party, and where on the reading of the appropriate rule that seems to me to be its intention it would be quite ridiculous, as I see it, to make the party responsible for anything that has subsequently to be done by the court.
…. Consequently, one can only treat the words "apply to the Court" as meaning doing all that is in your power to do to set the wheels of justice in motion according to the procedure that is laid down for the pursuit of the relief which you are seeking….
16. …The time at which a claimant "brings" his claim form to the court with a request that it be issued is something he has to do; the time at which his request is complied with is not because it is done by the court and is something over which he has no real control. Put another way one act is unilateral and the other is transactional. Looked at in this way I do not agree with the judge or Mr. Norman that in this context the verb "to bring" has the same meaning as the verb "to start". The 1980 Act can perfectly properly be construed so that in the context of the CPR a claim is brought when the claimant's request for the issue of a claim form (together with the court fee) is delivered to the court office." (Emphasis added)
38. If, therefore, the claimants establish that the claim form was delivered in due time to the court office, accompanied by a request to issue and the appropriate fee, the action would not, in my judgment, be statute barred ….
56. It is, in a way, concerning that the fate of a claim should depend upon the miscalculation by such a relatively small amount of a court fee. I have considered whether it is so de minimis that the court should not take it into account, or make some exception or allowance.
57. However, as I read Lewison LJ's judgment in the Court of Appeal, the rationale of treating the receipt by the court of the required documents as sufficient and as transferring to the court the risk of loss or delay thereafter … is that it is unfair to visit such risk on a Claimant after he has done all that he reasonably could do to bring the matter before the court for its process to follow. Lewison L.J. expressly described what had to be established by the Claimants: that the claim form was (a) delivered in due time in the court office, accompanied by (b) a request to issue and (c) the appropriate fee. In my judgment, the failure to offer the appropriate fee meant that the Claimants had not done all that was required of them; and they had left it too late to correct the error, which was a risk they unilaterally undertook.
….I consider that what the claimants did was to use the ordinary court process for a purpose or in a way which was significantly different from the ordinary and proper use of that process. The ordinary and proper use of that process would be that the claimants would state at the outset the amount at which they genuinely valued their claims and would also state what they genuinely expected to recover and would pay the necessary court fees accordingly.
57. Next, Mr. Evans [counsel for the claimants] argued that there could be a spectrum of cases where claims and fees might be limited, with the spectrum ranging from acceptable conduct to unacceptable conduct. This case, he said, was at the acceptable conduct end of the spectrum.
58. I agree that, as Mr. Evans argued, there could be a spectrum of cases where claims and fees might be limited and where a lesser fee was paid at the outset and where conduct might be acceptable. So, at one end of the spectrum might be an example like that given by Mr. Evans in oral argument of, say, a financially strapped litigant who knows that he will soon receive a substantial legacy, who informs the defendant of his parlous financial position and of the imminent legacy, who seeks the defendant's agreement to his paying the fees in the way in which Robinson Murphy [the claimants' solicitors] paid them and who also informs the court of what he is doing. In other words, there would be complete transparency in what was done and the agreement of both the defendant and the court would be sought. It may well be that, in that sort of case, there would be no abuse of process.
99. For the purposes of this application, it is common ground between the parties that the claim form was delivered in due time to the court office, accompanied by a request to issue. The only question which I have to determine on this application is whether the claim form and the request were accompanied by the "appropriate fee". In determining that question, bearing in mind what the Court of Appeal said in Page v Hewetts was the policy underpinning Barnes v St. Helens Metropolitan Borough Council, and also bearing in mind what the Court of Appeal said in Aly v Aly, I have to consider whether, in this case, the claimants did all that was in their power to do to set the wheels of justice in motion according to the procedure that was laid down for the pursuit of the relief which they were seeking. And, as per Hildyard J. in Page v Hewetts, I must also have in mind the underlying rationale, which is whether the claimants had done all that they reasonably could do to bring the matter before the court for its process to follow, in order for the claimants' risk to cease.
These authorities appear to identify a clear principle by which the court is to determine whether a claim has been "brought" for the purposes of stopping the limitation [period] from running, the principle being that a claim is only brought for those purposes when the party concerned has done all that is in his power .. to set the wheels of justice in motion. If he has done that, then the risk of any failing on the part of the court is cast upon the court and the opposite party. Doing all that is in one's power often, and perhaps ordinarily, involves proffering the correct fee to the court at the same time as presenting the claim form and the applicable particulars of claim. In Page and Lewis, a failure to do that led to the failure of the claim. It is however possible in principle that a failing on the part of the court at that stage of the process might lead to the claim being brought for limitation purpose, even though the correct fee was not paid. If, for instance, the court assumed the burden of calculating the appropriate fee and made an error, for which the claimant was in no way to blame it might, in appropriate circumstances, be said that the claimant had done all that was in his power or, to adopt the words of Mr. Male Q.C., all that he reasonably could to bring the matter before the court in the appropriate way.
(1) The claim form stipulated a value of the claim, namely £69,694.06;
(2) The appropriate fee for a claim of that size was paid;
(3) The claim is now valued at £162,132.06;
(4) Had the claim been valued at that figure in the Claim Form a significantly higher Court Fee would have been paid;
(5) With due diligence, the Claimant could and should have identified at the time that the Claim Form was issued that the amount claimed was understated;
(6) The Limitation Period has now expired;
(7) Therefore, applying the authorities to which I have referred, the application to amend to increase the claim should be refused.
Conclusion