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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 >> John Grimes Partnership Ltd v Gubbins [2013] EWCA Civ 37 (05 February 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2013/37.html Cite as: [2013] EWCA Civ 37 |
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ON APPEAL FROM EXETER COUNTY COURT
TECHNOLOGY & CONSTRUCTION COURT
HHJ Cotter QC
8PL03589
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE TOMLINSON
and
SIR DAVID KEENE
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John Grimes Partnership Limited |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Gubbins |
Respondent |
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WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Adrian Palmer QC and Hugh Sims (instructed by Brains) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 6th December 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Sir David Keene :
Introduction
The Facts
The Trial and Judgment
"It is clear that Mr. Swainson well knew at the time of entering into the contract that delay brought with it the risk that the property market might move considerably including to the significant disadvantage of Mr.Gubbins. In this regard he had actual knowledge and it was not in any sense loss of a type that he did not reasonably foresee, should significant delay occur. He knew exactly what Mr. Gubbins intended to do and when he intended to start. He knew that a delay could mean as "with all these things up and down". In short it would clearly have been within his contemplation, had he chosen to consider the issue, as an obvious potential effect of delay or a "real danger" if delay occurred. There was no idiosyncratic or unusual element to this relatively modest development, its funding or sale in this regard."
"It seems to me that, as a first principle, the Hadley-v-Baxendale approach remains the one to be taken. In my judgment Lord Hoffmann was setting out in The Achilleas that only if on consideration of the commercial background to the contract, the standard approach would not reflect the expectation or intention reasonably to be imputed to the parties would losses not be recoverable. In the present case I have considered the commercial background to this particular contract and see no reason to limit liability as Mr Land submits I should.
In my judgment in this specific contract the Claimant is responsible for loss flowing from the property market decline."
That loss was to be assessed.
The Submissions
Discussion
"must first decide whether the loss for which compensation is sought is of a "kind" or "type" for which the contract-breaker ought fairly to be taken to have accepted responsibility."
As he said,
"It must in principle be wrong to hold someone liable for risks for which the people entering into such a contract in their particular market would not reasonably be considered to have undertaken": paragraph 12 (emphasis added).
"the question of whether a given type of loss is one for which a party assumed contractual responsibility involves the interpretation of the contract as a whole against its commercial background, and this, like all questions of interpretation, is a question of law."
It seems to me quite clear that Lord Hoffmann was not seeking to depart wholesale from the "reasonably foreseeable" test of remoteness, but rather to stress that what was reasonably foreseeable might sometime not prevail as the test if there were particular circumstances demonstrating that the parties could not have contracted on the basis that the defendant was to bear the liability of a particular kind of loss, even though reasonably foreseeable as a "not unlikely" consequence of breach. Thus at paragraph 11 he said:
11. I agree that cases of departure from the ordinary foreseeability rule based on individual circumstances will be unusual, but limitations on the extent of liability in particular types of contract arising out of general expectations in certain markets, such as banking and shipping, are likely to be more common."
"Hadley-v-Baxendale remains a standard rule but it has been rationalised on the basis that it reflects the expectation to be imputed to the parties in the ordinary case, i.e. that a contract breaker should ordinarily be liable to the other party for damage resulting from his breach if, but only if, at the time of making the contract a reasonable person in his shoes would have had damage of that kind in mind as not unlikely to result from a breach. However, South Australia and Transfield Shipping are authority that there may be cases where the court, on examining the contract and the commercial background, decides that the standard approach would not reflect the expectation or intention reasonably to be imputed to the parties."
The appeal failed.
"entitled to the difference between what the property would have fetched if sold soon after its completion with the guaranteed lease and what it eventually fetched two years later."
There is no suggestion in Lord Hoffmann's speech that that was other than a proper conclusion.
Lord Justice Tomlinson :
Lord Justice Laws :