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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 >> Palmer v Nightingale (t/a Andover Pest Control) [2016] EWHC 2800 (TCC) (09 November 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2016/2800.html Cite as: [2016] EWHC 2800 (TCC), 170 Con LR 19 |
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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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MR SIMON PRIOR PALMER |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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MR ROBERT NIGHTINGALE trading as ANDOVER PEST CONTROL |
Defendant |
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Alex Gunning QC (instructed by Kennedys) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 31 October; 1, 2, and 3 November 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Coulson:
A: INTRODUCTION
B: THE FACTS
"Above the plasterboard ceilings of the rooms on the second floor was a layer of reflective-type insulation. The insulation comprised several layers of paper, foam sheets and foils. There was no other insulation in the roof space. The wiring for the ceiling lights was routed through the roof space but I found no evidence of any other cables or electrical items within the roof space. Within the roof space, close to the light fittings I found remains of the rodent poison blocks used by Mr Nightingale. All of the blocks were situated in close proximity to the edge of the hole into which the halogen downlighter was recessed…
I found charring to one of the rodent blocks in an undamaged section of the roof space and therefore it is clear that the charring was caused by heat from the halogen bulb as opposed to the fire. I do not know whether the heat from the bulbs would be sufficient to ignite the blocks or only to char them but testing might enable me to establish this."
"I consider the most likely cause of the fire to be associated with the halogen light fittings; either an incendive electrical fault or nearby combustible materials (such as rodents, fly, insulation, timber or the rodent blocks) being ignited by radiant and/or conducted heat from the halogen bulbs. Given that Mr Nightingale was the last person to work in the roof space and there had been no reported problems before his visit it is possible that the cause of the fire was associated with his actions (such as placing one of the rodent poison blocks on top of one of the light fittings or moving insulation). …I will arrange to carry out tests with the halogen light fittings, insulation and poison blocks in an attempt to establish whether heat from the halogen bulb would be sufficient to ignite the poison blocks and/or insulation."
i) In June 2013, on behalf of the Defendant, tests were carried out during which a flame was applied to the bait blocks. This demonstrated that, contrary to the manufacturers' data sheets, the bait blocks were both flammable and ignitable.ii) In September 2013 there was the first round of joint testing by the experts in which attempts were made to ignite bait blocks retrieved from site by placing them on top of or very close to halogen bulbs. A number of different tests were carried out but at no point did any of the bait blocks ignite. Some charring/smouldering was achieved.
iii) In January 2014, the Defendant's experts again carried out some unilateral testing at Edinburgh University. A total of twelve different tests were carried out in which the bait blocks were placed on or close to halogen lamps. No ignition was achieved, although there was again some evidence of charring/smouldering.
iv) In February 2014 there was a second round of joint testing. Again, however, the halogen lamps did not ignite the bait blocks, which on this occasion had been bought specially for testing purposes.
Accordingly, the tests which Mrs Gosling said in her first report she thought were important (paragraphs 19 and 20 above) were carried out over a period of 8 months, and showed that the hot lamps were not sufficient to cause ignition of the bait blocks but, as she put it in that report, "only to char them".
C: ISSUE 1 – HOW MANY OCCASIONS AND WHEN DID THE DEFENDANT VISIT MEAD HOUSE?
D: ISSUE 2 – WHAT TYPE OF BAIT BLOCK WAS USED?
E: ISSUE 3 – HOW FAR FROM THE LAMPS DID THE DEFENDANT PLACE THE BAIT BLOCKS?
i) that accessing the loft void via the light fitting was a reasonable method for applying bait to an otherwise inaccessible void;ii) that applying the bait through the light fitting was an acceptable, cost-effective route into sealed areas;
iii) that placing bait through the light fittings provided easy access into the roof void and it would be a fair assumption that non-target species would not be negatively affected;
iv) that if the blocks were inserted through the hole left by the light bulb then blocks would have been the only control option.
Accordingly, there was no issue between the parties as to the reasonableness of the methodology adopted by the Defendant in this case. By the end of the trial, the only live issue was whether he had carried out that methodology negligently, because he had put the bait blocks so close to the lights that they touched, or almost touched, the lamps.
F: ISSUE 4 – WAS THE DEFENDANT NEGLIGENT/IN BREACH OF CONTRACT?
F1: Proximity of Blocks to Bulbs
F2: Other Matters
F3: Conclusions on Liability
G: ISSUE 5 – WHERE DID THE FIRE ORIGINATE?
H: ISSUE 6 – DID THE DEFENDANT'S NEGLIGENCE CAUSE THE FIRE?
H1: The Relevant Legal Principles
"4. …In the vast majority of cases where the judge has before him the issue of causation of a particular event, the parties will put before the judges two or more competing explanations as to how the event occurred, which though they may be uncommon, are not improbable. In such cases, it is, as was accepted before us by the appellants, a permissible and logical train of reasoning for a judge, having eliminated all of the causes of the loss but one, to ask himself whether, on the balance of probabilities, that one cause was the cause of the event. What is impermissible is for a judge to conclude in the case of a series of improbable causes that the least improbable or least unlikely is nonetheless the cause of the event; such cases are those where there may be very real uncertainty about the relevant factual background (as where a vessel was at the bottom of the sea) or the evidence might be highly unsatisfactory. In that type of case the process of elimination can result in arriving at the least improbable cause and not the probable cause.
…
As a matter of common sense it will usually be safe for a judge to conclude, where there are two competing theories before him neither of which is improbable, that having rejected one it is logical to accept the other as being the cause on the balance of probabilities. It was accepted in the course of argument on behalf of the appellant that, as a matter of principle, if there were only three possible causes of an event, then it was permissible for a judge to approach the matter by analysing each of those causes. If he ranked those causes in terms of probability and concluded that one was more probable than the others, then, provided those were the only three possible causes, he was entitled to conclude that the one he considered most probable, was the probable cause of the event provided it was not improbable."
This passage was recently approved by the Court of Appeal in Graves v Brouwer [2015] EWCA Civ 595 at paragraph 24.
"34. … Consideration of such a case necessarily involves looking at the whole picture, including what gaps there are in the evidence, whether the individual factors relied upon are in themselves properly established, what factors may point away from the suggested explanation and what other explanation might fit the circumstances. As Lord Mance observed in Datec Electronics Holdings Limited v UPS limited [2007] 1 WLR 1325, at 48 and 50, there is an inherent risk that a systematic consideration of the possibilities could become a process of elimination 'leading to no more than a conclusion regarding the least unlikely cause of loss', which was the fault identified in The Popi M. So at the end of any such systematic analysis, the court has to stand back and ask itself the ultimate question whether it is satisfied that the suggested explanation is more likely than not to be true. The elimination of other possibilities as more implausible may well lead to that conclusion, but that will be a conclusion of fact: there is no rule of law that it must do so."
"114. It is therefore common ground between the parties in principle that in a competing theories case:
a) The court is entitled to engage in a systematic analysis of competing theories and eliminate one in favour of the other;
b) That, in itself, may lead to the conclusion that the preferred theory is more likely than not to be true; but
c) The court must always then stand back and ask itself the ultimate question as to whether or not the preferred explanation is more likely than not to be true."
That is the approach I adopt in this case.
H2: The Probable Cause of the Fire
H2.1: The Halogen Bulbs/Downlighters
H2.2: Combustible Materials/General
H2.3: Insulation
H2.4: Other Detritus
H2.5: Roof Timbers
H2.6: Bait Blocks
H2.7: Summary on Combustible Materials
H3: Other Causes
H4: Summary on Causation
I: CONCLUSIONS
Note 1 The Claimant has continued to engage the Defendant from time to time, describing him (with not a little condescension) as “a perfectly competent rodent killer”. [Back] Note 2 The other is referred to in paragraph 70 below. [Back] Note 3 One of the types of insulation in the void, and the most prevalent according to the evidence. [Back]