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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 >> Great Lakes Reinsurance (UK) SE v Western Trading Ltd [2016] EWCA Civ 1003 (11 October 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2016/1003.html Cite as: [2016] EWCA Civ 1003 |
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ON APPEAL FROM HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
LONDON MERCANTILE COURT
His Honour Judge Mackie QC
2013-936
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LEWISON
and
LORD JUSTICE CHRISTOPHER CLARKE
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GREAT LAKES REINSURANCE (UK) SE (Formerly GREAT LAKES REINSURANCE (UK) PLC) |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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WESTERN TRADING LIMITED |
Respondent |
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Mr Ben Elkington QC (instructed by Edwin Coe LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 21 & 22 June 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Christopher Clarke:
The insurance
"Subject to the General Conditions and Exclusions of this Certificate, and the conditions and exclusions contained in this Section, we the Underwriters agree to the extent and in the manner provided herein to indemnify the Assured against loss of or damage to the property specified in the Schedule (hereinafter referred to as 'the Property') caused by or arising from the Perils shown as operative in the Schedule, occurring during the period of this insurance.
"Underwriters shall not be liable for more than the Sum Insured stated in the Specification or in the Certificate in respect of each loss or series of losses arising out of one event at each location as stated in the Schedule."
"4) Reinstatement
It is hereby agreed that in the event of the property insured under item 1 of this Section of the Certificate being lost, destroyed or damaged by any peril insured hereunder the basis upon which the amount payable under each of the said Items of the Certificate is to be calculated shall be the reinstatement of the property lost, destroyed or damaged subject to the following special provisions and subject also to the terms and conditions of the Certificate except in so far as the same may be varied. For the purpose of the insurance under this Memorandum 'reinstatement' shall mean:
a) the carrying out of the following work, namely,
i) Where property is lost or destroyed, the rebuilding of the property, if a building … in a condition equal to but not better or more extensive than its condition when new.
5) Special Provisions
a) The work of reinstatement (which may be carried out upon another site and in any manner suitable to the requirements of the Assured subject to the liability of the Underwriters not being thereby increased) must be carried out with reasonable despatch otherwise no payment beyond the amount which would have been payable under the Policy if this Memorandum had not been incorporated therein shall be made;
…
c) No payment beyond the amount which would have been payable under the Policy if this Memorandum has not been incorporated herein shall be made until the cost of reinstatement shall have been actually incurred."
i) Western Trading had the right to sub-let the properties and to receive and enjoy the rent received from the sub-tenants;ii) In return Western Trading was responsible and paid for the upkeep and maintenance of the buildings, for arranging insurance for the properties, and for the outgoings on the properties. This arrangement applied to the Boak building for which Western Trading paid all the outgoings and which it had a responsibility to replace in the event of fire.
iii) Western Trading paid Mr Singh rent. The amount was not calculated by reference to the total rents collected by Western Trading but reflected what Mr Singh thought was a reasonable charge and what Western Trading could afford to pay.
iv) The rent paid was recorded in the accounts and financial statements of Western Trading and was declared in Mr Singh's personal accounts and in his tax returns.
"the Claimant is entitled to be indemnified by the Defendant under the terms of Policy No. P01957/2012/PO in respect of the losses it has suffered (and is continuing to suffer) as a result of the fire on 24th July 2012, up to the limits of indemnity within the Policy".
Intention to reinstate – what did the judge decide?
"I refer below to how I see the Claimant's expressed intention to reinstate but do so briefly because, if a Declaration is granted, the issue does not matter. Similarly, there is late but extensive evidence about the Claimant's experience of development by itself, or the lack of it, and, for the same reason I find it unnecessary to make a finding on the issue. Either the Claimant can or will reinstate or it will not".
Later on, however, he said the following:
"123 A practical as opposed to conceptual reason why market value of the site might be irrelevant is that the Property was, and is, not for sale. The Claimant proposes to develop it into flats, perhaps for renting out. The experts did not have a full opportunity to evaluate that proposed development although Mr Clarke made some helpful and objective comments.
124. The Boak building is intended by the Claimant to be the focal point of development of Station Street both on the Property and on other land Mr Singh owns. The value of the Boak Building to the Claimant is said to go beyond the value of the Property".
And later:
"159 The only circumstances in which the Defendant would not have to pay the full cost would be if there were no reinstatement (a risk which the Declaration will protect it against). I have accepted Mr Singh's evidence that he wishes to reinstate. Why else would his preferred remedy depend on reinstatement"? The other evidence suggests that his previous scheme was uneconomic and that what he had in mind until the fire may well have been development of the site by others. There is however no reason to doubt the Claimant's sincerity in the situation following the fire where he already owns the site and sees value in a scheme of reinstatement which will produce income and which, unlike some quite different project, will to a degree be paid for by insurers. Mr Singh is a very successful property investor and has no doubt often seen opportunities which others have failed to detect."
"The wish to reinstate must be genuine. The test of that is what the Claimant does if and when it has the benefit of a declaration".
"I confirm that, prior to the fire on 24 July 2012, it was the Claimant's intention that it would perform any reinstatement works in the event that the building was destroyed. That remained the case after the fire, and the reinstatement works which are now planned will be undertaken by the Claimant".
Cross examination of Mr Singh
"Q… We are talking about what you now intend to do and you have told us that because of your feelings for the building you aspire to put back what was there.
A No I didn't say that, you're saying that.
Q Well.
A I've again told you a number of time I can't put back what's there, but I'm saying any new structure of residential type the similar sort of format of development is the most common-sense approach to it."
A little earlier Mr Singh had, in an obscure passage, said that the building:
"…. does lend itself for a very good residential or office or any type of use the way the building is laid out. It's laid out in a C-section with the windows absolutely on both elevations, which gives a very nice residential layout. I can't think of – if we were to rebuild a new shell being in a much different format
Q Well the trouble about that….
A That would accommodate this type of use inside the building."
"…Of course, I would have reinstated this by now had I been paid out and I will still do something if I receive the funds
Q I am sure you will…
A Even if it's on the basis – this is on the basis I do develop it, I will develop that site. I don't know what the local authority will in the end allow me. Obviously this is part of the same consultation I had for several years on a previous planning permission."
"If I'm honest with you, my view as a developer is the site and the adjoining dilapidated buildings, which are beyond economical repair and use, need to be cleared and the site tidied up, all rubble took away, ground study done, and a fresh approach put to it and I will try my best to attract some good quality covenants to redevelop the site which will I'm sure will [sic] have a domino effect to other parts of the adjoining roads. Unfortunately, the Boak previously anchored the development and that is not possible now. There is no other plans I can formally give you now for the site as it is market driven. But one thing is clear it will be near impossible to market the site off-plan with any buildings on it. The market has changed. It needs a clean tidy site, fresh approach, fresh marketing, and I am confident we can attract some form of design and build but I'm sure you will agree we need to take it one step at a time. I welcome your thoughts on this, but we must be relatively quick as my father is rapidly losing interest."
"Q It is the nub of the case is it not Mr Janes? As long as there is a Boak building on the site it does not have any value, but if you get rid of the Boak it does. It is as simple as that.
A Assuming you get planning permission for something else – which, if that came out of (Mr Bird's evidence) last week is the case."
Measure of indemnity - the authorities
Castellain v Preston
"I have no doubt the insurance offices seldom take the trouble to look to the exact interest of the tenant who insures, or perhaps of the landlord who insures, and for the best of all reasons because it is generally intended that the insurance shall be made, not merely to cover the limited interest of the tenant, but also to cover the interest of all concerned. In most cases, the covenants as to repair throw liability on one side or the other, and in a large class of leases the liability to repair is by the provisions of the lease thrown upon the tenant. Therefore, in these cases no question ever can arise between the insurance office and the tenant from year to year, or the tenant for years, as to the amount which the insurance office ought to pay."
Reynolds v Phoenix Assurance Co Ltd
"...if the property insured ... or any part of such property be destroyed or damaged by fire the Insurers will pay to the insured the value of the property at the time of the happening of the destruction or the amount of such damage or the insurers at their option will reinstate or replace such property or any part thereof."
"There must be many circumstances in which an assured should be entitled to say that he does not wish to go elsewhere and hence that his indemnity is not complete unless he is paid the reasonable cost of rebuilding the premises in situ. At the same time the cost of reinstatement could not be taken as inevitably the proper measure of indemnity. There must be cases where no one in his right mind would contemplate rebuilding if he could re-establish himself elsewhere. The question of the proper measure of indemnity thus becomes a matter of fact and degree to be decided on the circumstances of each case."
Leppard v Excess Insurance
McClean Enterprises Ltd v Ecclesiastical Insurance
Lonsdale & Thompson Ltd v Black Arrow Group
"If the assured has only a limited interest in the property, being, for example, a tenant or reversioner, a trustee, a mortgagee or a bailee, the value of his own interest may have diminished by much less than the value of the property or the cost of its reinstatement. But it does not necessarily follow that if the assured recovers the whole diminution in the value of the property or the whole cost of reinstatement he will be getting more than an indemnity. That must depend on what his legal obligations are as to the use of the insurance proceeds when he has got them. If he is accountable for the proceeds to the owners of the other interests, then he will not be receiving more than an indemnity if the insurer pays the full amount for which the property was insured. This will be so, whether the assured is accountable to the owners of the other interests as a trustee of the proceeds of the insurance or simply on the basis that he owes them a contractual obligation to pay those proceeds over to them or to employ them in reinstatement. None of this means that a party with a limited interest who insures the entire interest in the property is insuring on behalf of the others as well as for himself. All that it means is that his obligations as to the use of the insurance moneys once they have been paid are relevant in determining whether he will recover more than an indemnity by getting the measure of loss provided for in that policy."
Measure of indemnity: the insurers' case
Measure of indemnity - conclusion
Conditions
"The work of reinstatement...must be commenced and carried out with reasonable despatch otherwise no payment beyond the amount which would have been payable under the Policy if this Memorandum had not been incorporated therein shall be made"
Clause 5 (c) provides that
"No payment beyond the amount which would have been payable under the Policy if this Memorandum haD not been incorporated herein shall be made until the cost of reinstatement shall have been actually incurred".
Indemnity under the Insuring Clause alone.
Superfluity
Ground 2 of the appeal
"[I]t is rather hard that an insured, who needs the money with which to repair his property, should be expected to incur the cost of reinstatement from his own funds. This is particularly so if the insurers in breach of contract deny liability under the policy or assert that the insured should be compensated on a basis other than reinstatement. It is therefore submitted that the requirement that the insured should commence and carry out the work of reinstatement with reasonable dispatch should only operate if the insurers, in accordance with their contractual obligations, accept that reinstatement is the appropriate measure of indemnity."
Failure to determine whether there was any drop in value
The alternative claim for damages
Discussion
(a) that the judge did not properly consider or decide:(i) what reinstatement meant in the context of the Memorandum and(ii) what exactly Mr Singh meant by reinstatement and(b) that it was unclear whether or not Western Trading intended or would in fact carry out that which that concept demanded. The judge should have reached a decision on whether it genuinely intended to reinstate the Boak. Only if he found such an intention should any declaration have been made.
What relief should Western Trading be granted?
Declaration
"It is declared that (i) the Claimant had an insurable interest in the subject matter of Policy No P01957/2012/PO; (ii) the Defendant was not entitled to avoid Policy No P01957/2012/PO; (iii) the Claimant was not in breach of warranty; and (iv) if the Claimant carries out reinstatement of the property lost then it will be entitled to be indemnified by the Defendant for the cost of so doing, up to the limit of indemnity of £ 2,121,800".
Damages
Costs
Lord Justice Lewison:
Lord Justice Laws: