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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 >> Forsyth-Grant v Allen & Anor [2008] EWCA Civ 505 (08 April 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2008/505.html Cite as: [2008] 15 EG 172, [2008] Env LR 41, [2008] EWCA Civ 505, [2008] 27 EG 118, [2008] 2 EGLR 16 |
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B2/2007/0834(Z) B2/2007/0834 |
COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM SOUTHAMPTON COUNTY COURT
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE HARVEY-CLARK QC)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE TOULSON
and
MR JUSTICE PATTEN
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FORSYTH-GRANT |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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ALLEN & ANOTHER |
Respondent |
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Mr J Burns (instructed by Careless & Kemp) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Patten:
"Recently there has been a move towards applying the label of restitution to awards of this character: see, for instance, Ministry of Defence v. Ashman [1993] 2 E.G.L.R. 102, 105, and Ministry of Defence v. Thompson [1993] 2 E.G.L.R. 107. However that may be, these awards cannot be regarded as conforming to the strictly compensatory measure of damage for the injured person's loss unless loss is given a strained and artificial meaning. The reality is that the injured person's rights were invaded but, in financial terms, he suffered no loss. Nevertheless the common law has found a means to award him a sensibly calculated amount of money. Such awards are probably best regarded as an exception to the general rule."
"It is characteristic of the development of common law that the invention and increasingly extended application of the user principle should appear to have come about by accident rather than by design. Thus it seems from the interlocutory observations of members of this court in Whitwham's case [1896] 2 Chancery 538 that they were initially resistant to the principle of the wayleave cases. But they saw in it a basis for the just decision of that case, and once it had been so decided the application of the principle to analogous states of affairs, for example the wrongful detention of chattels, seems to have been a perfectly natural development. However, in a process of development it is sometimes necessary to stand back from the authorities and whilst not simply where they have come to, but where, if a further extension is made, they may go next.
Although I would accept that there may be a logical difficulty in making a distinction between the present case and the wayleave cases, I think that if the user principle were to be applied here there would be an equal difficulty in distinguishing other cases of more common occurrence, particularly in nuisance. Suppose a case where a right to light or a right of way had been obstructed to the profit of the servient owner but at no loss to the dominant owner. It would be difficult, in the application of the user principle, to make a logical distinction between such an obstruction and the infringement of a right to hold a market. And yet the application of that principle to such cases would not only give a right to substantial damages where no loss had been suffered but would revolutionise the tort of nuisance by making it unnecessary to prove loss. Moreover, if the principle were to be applied in nuisance, why not in other torts where the defendant's wrong can work to his own profit, for example in defamation? As progenitors of the rule of trespass and some other areas, the wayleave cases have done good service. But just as their genus is peculiar, so ought their procreative powers to be exhausted."
"1) [The overall principle is that] the court should seek a 'fair' result of a hypothetical negotiation between the parties;
2. the context including the nature and seriousness of the breach must be kept in mind;
3. the right to prevent a development (or part) gives the owner of the right a significant bargaining position;
4. this owner will normally be expected to receive part of the likely profit from the development (or a relevant part);
5. if there is no evidence of the likely size of the profit, the court can do its best by awarding a suitable multiple of the damages for loss of amenity;
6. if there is the court should normally award a sum that takes into account a fair percentage of that profit;
7. the size of the award should not be so large that the development (or relevant part) would not have taken place if such a sum has been payable; and
8. after arriving at a figure that takes into consideration of all the above and any other relevant
factors, the court needs to consider whether 'the deal feels right'."
"My conclusion is that there seems to be no reason, in principle, why the court must in all circumstances rule out an account of profits as a remedy for breach of contract. I prefer to avoid the unhappy expression 'restitutionary damages'. Remedies are the law's response to a wrong (or, more precisely, to a course of action). When, exceptionally, a just response to a breach of contract so requires, the court should be able to grant the discretionary remedy of requiring a defendant to account to the plaintiff for the benefits he has received from his breach of contract. In the same way as a plaintiff's interest in performance of a contract may render it just and equitable for the court to make an order for specific performance or grant an injunction so the plaintiff's interest performance may make it just and equitable that the defendant should retain no benefit from his breach of contract."
On behalf of the defendant, Mr Burns submitted to the judge that this was not an exceptional case such as to justify an order for an account of profits, and that the judge should be guided by the decisions in Carr-Saunders v Dick McNeil Associates [1986] 2 EGLR 181 and Tamares (Vincent Square; where as mentioned earlier the court awarded a sum representing its assessment of what the developer would have agreed to pay in order to avoid an injunction to restrain the nuisance. The judge accepted this as the correct approach, but indicated that, as a check, he would also make an assessment of what the profit earned by the infringement of the rights of light would be. However, having rejected an account of profits as inappropriate, the judge then went on to accept a further submission from Mr Burns that, in order to award damages on a Wrotham Park basis, he had first to be satisfied that an injunction would have been granted. The judge accepted that if no injunction would have been granted in any event, then the damages should be assessed on the basis of the loss actually suffered by the claimant, which would amount to the capitalised diminution of the letting value of the rooms whose light was affected by the development of Sunrise. After considering the evidence of both experts on this basis of calculation, the judge preferred the evidence of Mr Ney and held that the financial loss to the claimant for the infringement was £1,848.63. There is no challenge to that assessment, assuming that an account of profits is inappropriate.
"A notable example, he said, is the wrong of conversion. A person whose goods were wrongfully converted by another had a choice of two remedies against the wrong doer: he could recover damages in respect of the loss he had sustained by the conversion or he could recover the proceeds of the conversion obtained by the defendants (see United Australia Ltd v Barclays Bank Ltd [1941] AC 1). Historically, the latter alternative was achieved by recourse to an element of legal fiction whereby the innocent party 'waived the tort'. The innocent party could suppose that the wrongful sale had been made with its consent and bring an action for the money 'had and received to his use' (see Lamine v Dorrell (1705) 2 Ld) Raym 1216, 1217. Holt CJ observed that these actions had 'crept in by degrees'."
"The steps must stay in position, and the Claimant will be in contempt of court if she seeks to damage them in any way,"
he did not make any injunction against her, and there is therefore no order to appeal against. Doubtless if the claimant does in the future attempt to remove any part of the steps, she will be faced with proceedings for an injunction based on the judge's findings in this case. But the defendant has established a right to maintain the steps in their current position on the principles of proprietary estoppel. There is no challenge as such to the judge's finding of estoppel. What is said is that he had no jurisdiction to grant an injunction.
Lord Justice Toulson:
"Although jurists have sought to justify restitutionary claims on a number of grounds, no English court has sought to weave any sophisticated golden thread to unite the cases on so called 'waiver of tort'. Nor shall I seek to do so."
Lord Justice Mummery:
Order: Application refused; appeal dismissed