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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Gueterbock & Anor v MacPhail & Anor [2023] EWHC 1035 (Ch) (04 May 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2023/1035.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 1035 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
APPEALS (ChD)
Appeal from the Order of His Honour Judge Parfitt dated 13 July 2022
County Court at Central London
F10CL4279
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
(1) THOMAS FITZHARDINGE GUETERBOCK (2) HELEN RUTH GUETERBOCK |
Claimants below |
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- and - |
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(1) ALEXANDER DUGALD GREGORY MACPHAIL (2) HELEN ELIZABETH MACPHAIL |
Defendants below |
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- and - |
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HENDERSON COURT LIMITED |
Third Party below |
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- and - |
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ALLIANZ INSURANCE PLC |
Fourth Party below |
____________________
Mr Nigel Tozzi, KC (instructed by DAC Beachcroft Claims Ltd) appeared on behalf of the Respondent, the Fourth Party below
Hearing date: 27 March 2023
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Marcus Smith:
A. THE JUDGMENT OF HIS HONOUR JUDGE PARFITT
B. THE FACTS
(1) The proposed development
The intention is to repair the damage caused by the bomb by re-creating three houses on the site which are in keeping with other houses in the road, incorporating the original facades and architectural details…
The proposal suits the character and scale of the surrounding houses and is appropriate for the size of the site, with fairly large gardens. The footprint of the proposed houses and the facades are similar to that of neighbouring houses. Gaps of 90cm between each pair of semi-detached houses will be the same as that between other pairs of houses on the same side of the road, with a shared side path.
(2) The development
The dispute arises because of works which included building a new house on Mr McPhail's property at 30 Henderson Road…The house is semi-detached, with a basement. The Gueterbocks owned and occupied [Number 28], which is next door to [Number 30], with the two houses being separated at ground floor level by a passageway of about 90cm across. The basement of the new house extended below the 90cm pathway to the line of the flank wall of [Number 28]. The Gueterbocks brought these proceedings alleging trespass and nuisance.
(3) The Policy
A. The Insurer [i.e., Allianz] will indemnify the Insured [i.e., Henderson Court] against legal liability to pay compensation and claimants' costs and expenses in respect of accidental
a. injury to any person
b. loss of or damage to material property
c. nuisance, trespass, obstruction or interference with any right of way, light, air or water occurring within the Territorial Limits during the Period of Insurance in connection with the Business.
(4) The dispute
In relevant summary, the 29 April 2021 settlement involved Mr MacPhail carrying out limited works and making payment to the Gueterbocks of £100,000 and costs, subsequently agreed at £137,286.73. Mr MacPhail seeks to recover those losses and his own costs of that earlier litigation from [Henderson Court] and [Allianz].
(1) First, whether the disputed boundary ran down the centre of the shared side path between Number 28 and Number 30.[12] The Judge concluded that "the boundary between [Number 28] and [Number 30] ran down the centre of the original passageway".[13] That finding is not appealed. Inevitably, this means that Mr MacPhail was wise to settle with the Gueterbocks as he did, for their claim in trespass and nuisance would have succeeded at trial.
(2) Second and third, whether Henderson Court owed a contractual duty to build Number 30 with reasonable skill and care;[14] and, if so, whether that duty was breached by the way in which the basement was built.[15] The Judge concluded that there was such a duty,[16] and that that duty was breached in the manner in which the basement was built, in building a basement which extended to the flank wall of Number 28.[17]
9. By reason of the fact that [Henderson Court's] trespass on [Mr and Mrs Gueterbock's] property was not accidental within the meaning of Clause A of the [Policy]:
a. [Allianz] is not liable under the terms of the Policy to indemnify [Henderson Court] against any liability of [Henderson Court] arising out of [Henderson Court's] Claim;
b. [Allianz] is not liable under the terms of the Policy to indemnify [Mr MacPhail] against any liability of [Mr MacPhail] arising out of [Mr and Mrs Gueterbock's] claims.
The Judge's finding on the question of "accidental" was thus critical. It was this finding that Mr MacPhail sought to challenge on appeal.
C. THE APPEAL
The Judge was wrong in law to conclude that the trespass by [Henderson Court] onto [Mr and Mrs Gueterbock's] property at No 28 Henderson Road was not "accidental" within the meaning of Clause A of the [Policy] , so that [Allianz] was not liable to indemnify [Henderson Court] and/or [Mr MacPhail] pursuant to the Policy.
(1) First, that the Judge, in the Judgment, had simply misstated the established legal test as to what constituted an "accidental" loss under the Policy.
(2) Secondly, and more subtly, that the Judge had misapplied the law (even if he had stated it correctly) to the facts, such that the conclusion he reached was not one properly open to him on the facts as he had found them. Counsel for Mr MacPhail (Mr Kokelaar, to whom I am indebted for his clear and cogent submissions) rightly recognised that this was a difficult point to make good, for two related reasons:
(i) The Judge found the facts, and I am in no position to look behind those found facts. In the first place, I have not (as the Judge did) had the benefit of hearing the witness evidence. Secondly, to the extent the evidence was documentary, the Judge is nonetheless the primary finder of fact, and it would be a usurpation of his function, and an abuse of mine, to revisit questions of fact as if I were the trial judge.
(ii) The Judge is entitled to a degree of latitude when applying the law to the facts. It is only if I conclude that the facts as found by the Judge cannot bear the legal conclusion that he reached that I can properly set aside his decision on this point.
D. THE FIRST LIMB – THE LAW: WHAT IS AN "ACCIDENT"?
(1) The terms of the Judgment
155. Both parties referred me to the discussion about "accident" in Colinvaux and Merkin's Insurance Contact Law (2022):[19]
It is settled law than an accident, for the purposes of an insurance policy, is from the assured's point of view an act, intentional or otherwise, which has unintended consequences. However, if the consequences were intended by the assured, or if the consequences while unintended were inevitable so that the assured can be regarded as having acted with reckless disregard for them, then it is clear from the authorities that there is no accident and the assured is precluded from recovery by the terms of the policy itself as well as on the grounds of public policy. The principle is that, by embarking upon a course of conduct that is obviously hazardous the assured intends to run the risk involved…
156. Mr Kokelaar [Counsel for Mr MacPhail, here and below] emphasised that the degree of recklessness required has been described in the authorities as "courting" the risk, which suggests a deliberate choice. A similar emphasis can be seen in the extract quoted above, which refers to consequences which "while unintended were inevitable" and "a course of conduct which is obviously hazardous".
157. I agree with Mr Kokelaar that the correct starting point is not the act of extending the basement to the flank wall of [Number 28], which must have been intentional. The relevant subject matter of the accident is the trespass because that is the relevant risk under the policy. Was the trespass accidental?
158. I was not taken to authorities on attribution but it is clear that the relevant intention regarding risk will be that of Mr Harris. It was he who was in control of the works and he was a director of [Henderson Court] throughout the material time. There is no difficulty in attributing his approach to the risk of trespass to [Henderson Court] for the purpose of determining whether [Henderson Court's] loss was within cover or not.
159. None of the parties has been able to provide direct evidence about how the basement came to be extended but Mr Andrews' evidence about what Mr Harris said to him regarding Mr McPhail being told about the plan to enlarge the basement at least is some evidence of Mr Harris recognising that it was a decision which he made. This placing of the responsibility with Mr Harris is also consistent with the general evidence of Mr MacPhail and Mr Andrews, the gist of which was that Mr Harris was the man in charge or the controlling mind or effective managing director so far as the Development was concerned.
160. So the question is whether Mr Harris decided to extend the basement out to [Number 28] knowing it would be a trespass or willingly taking that risk (in my formulation). I say "willingly" because it seems to me that a more up to date version of "courting the risk" is a person aware of the risk but whose attitude might be summed up by "yes, there's a risk, but let's do it".
(2) Analysis
(1) The Judge's approach to attribution of knowledge to Henderson Court through Mr Harris (at paragraph 158 of the Judgment) was not criticised on appeal, and I do not see how it sensibly could be.
(2) Equally, the Judge properly framed the true question before him, in paragraph 157 of the Judgment. Obviously, the construction of the basement in Number 30 to the flank wall of Number 28 was intentional. It is difficult to see how that could possibly be an accident. The key question – as the Judge rightly identified – was the level of risk in the mind of Henderson Court that this intentional act ran the risk of trespass (or nuisance).
(3) The key question is what level of risk, accepted by Henderson Court, rendered the claim that Mr and Mrs Gueterbock successfully brought non-accidental. That is exactly the question that the Judge asked, and I find his approach to have been impeccable.
(4) One criticism that was made by Mr Kokelaar was that the Judge's substitution of the word "willingly" for "courting the risk" (paragraph 160 of the Judgment) represented a heterodox approach, whereby the Judge varied and lowered the test as to what was or was not an "accident", and so made an error of law. I do not accept this criticism:
(i) It seems to me that the Judge's formulation is actually quite a good one, provided one does not lose sight of the fact that it is the borderline between reckless and non-reckless conduct that one is focussing on. That borderline really concerns a person's "appetite for risk" (if I can introduce my own attempt at re-phrasing), with intentional conduct unequivocally on the non-accidental side of the line, and a state of mind consciously and reasonably not even anticipating the risk on the accidental side of the line.
(ii) That borderline is one that the Judge had well in mind. The Judge considered, and rejected, the suggestion that Henderson Court had acted intentionally, and that the trespass could not be accidental for that reason:[20]
I agree with Mr Kokelaar that there is no basis on which I could find that the trespass was deliberate, i.e., that Mr Harris knew the boundary was approximately down the centre of the pathway but chose to build beyond that line by some 45cm up to the flank wall of [Number 28]. So this issue is all about recklessness and risk towards the chance that (a) the Gueterbocks would assert the boundary was not along their flank wall but some 45cm nearer to [Number 30] and (b) the Gueterbocks would be right. It seems to me both those aspects are necessary parts of the relevant risk that Mr Harris will have had to have been reckless toward, if cover is to be denied [Henderson Court].
If I may respectfully say so, this not only shows that the Judge clearly had in mind the correct legal test, but that he articulated the application of that test on the facts of this case with impressive clarity.[21]
(iii) Instead of an intention, the Judge found a "high level of recklessness" on the part of Henderson Court, which (of course) rendered the act of trespass (and nuisance) non-accidental within the terms of the policy.[22]
The question of whether the Judge was entitled, on the facts he found, to reach this conclusion is one I consider in Section E below. But there can be no question that the Judge's direction to himself as to the law was unimpeachable.
(5) There was some debate before me as to whether the Judge had attempted to "cure" defects in his Judgment in his refusal of permission to appeal. The refusal of permission materially states:
Permission was sought because the wrong test for "recklessness" was applied to the issue of whether the act of trespass by [Henderson Court] was accidental. This was based on paragraph 160 of the Judgment, where the agreed test of "courting the risk" was summarised as being "willing" to take the risk or "there's a risk, let's do it". This was not intended to lessen the test set out at paragraph 155 by quotation from Colinvaux and Merkin, and agreed between the parties.
Had the Judge erred in framing the legal test in his Judgment (which he did not), then he could not have cured that error by asserting, in a refusal to give permission to appeal, that he had not "intended" to lessen the true legal test. But this passage does no more than state, correctly, that the Judge had well in mind the proper test in the Judgment itself, and that he was simply putting a phrase that is a little archaic into more modern language.
E. THE SECOND LIMB – A CONCLUSION ON THE FACTS NOT OPEN TO THE JUDGE
(1) Introduction
A person acts recklessly within the meaning of section 1 of the Criminal Damage Act 1971 with respect to – (i) a circumstance when he is aware of a risk that it exists or will exist; (ii) a result when he is aware of a risk that it will occur; and it is, in the circumstances known to him, unreasonable to take the risk.
(2) Findings of the Judge
(1) The Judge found that there was a certain ambiguity about the extent to which any basement could extend beyond the curtilage of the building above; and still more uncertainty about whether a basement could go beyond the middle line of the shared side path between Number 28 and Number 30, and extend up to Number 28's flank wall.[25] The pre-construction title plan showed the boundary down the middle line.[26]
(2) In terms of explaining the position to Mr and Mrs Gueterbock, Henderson Court was less than frank. The Judge recorded:[27]
I have been taken to a number of email exchanges between Mr Connor and/or Mr Harris and Gueterbocks which are said to throw some light on the intentions of [Henderson Court] regarding the risk of trespass. The last in time is dated 10 December 2015. In that email Mr Harris seeks the Gueterbocks' consent to the underpinning of their flank wall saying that "the new wall [i.e., the underpinning to Number 28] will be entirely on your side of the boundary…the new property next door [i.e., Number 30] will have its own new walls, entirely independent from your new wall (including the new underpinning wall)"…
(3) The Judgment records the following evidence from Mr Andrews:[28]
Mr Andrews gave evidence that Mr Harris had told him, once the litigation had blown up, in about November 2019, that Mr Harris had a conversation with Mr MacPhail about the basement extension before the works had begun during which Mr Harris said we can extend the basement under the passageway which would increase its size but these changes would only be made at Mr MacPhail's risk as Mr MacPhail was the sole beneficiary of the changes. Mr MacPhail said he had no recollection of any such conversation. Mr Andrews in cross-examination said Mr Harris may well have been making further mischief and Mr Harris' account of his conversation with Mr MacPhail may well not be true.
(4) Paragraph 164 of the Judgment refers to an email dated 26 October 2021, which concerned the draft of an explanation to interested parties as to what the Development entailed. Although the Judge set out the gist in paragraph 164, it is worth stating precisely the evidence that the Judge had in mind. The email states:[29]
Tom and Helen [Gueterbock] have also raised concerns about the side path. I have said to them it is not entirely clear where the boundary lies – some Land Registry documents show the side path solely belongs to [Henderson Court]. The planning application documents don't seem to me to be determinative of boundaries, so I'm not sure if we should get too hung up on the precise location of a red line on the plan. I am absolutely committed to ensuring [Number 28] retains the access they currently use down this path to get to their side door and have tried to reassure them about this.
The most generous possible interpretation of where the boundary lies from [Number 28's] perspective is halfway across the original width of the side path – not halfway across the current width of the path. To restore the original footprint of the house, and ensure consistent proportions in this conservation area, it is proposed that the new house next to [Number 28] is built in such a way to leave a 90cm gap between the houses – the same spacing as other existing houses on this side of Henderson Road. There is absolutely no way that the construction of the house in this position could be interpreted as being on land owned by [Number 28].
(5) In the next paragraph, paragraph 165 of the Judgment, the Judge references another email, dated 9 August 2014. Again, I set out the text that the Judge summarised:[30]
Both of us I guess. He's fine. His wife might be a little tricky. She got irate about the red boundary line not being dead straight on the plans with the planning application. It just mapped the existing kinks in the fence. Turned out it was them in the wrong as their rear extension encroaches slightly onto our land! All fine in the end. She did say what a nightmare it was with noise when the house on the other side of them was having their basement done. I emphasised that house joins on to them – the new one won't – although that may not be the strongest argument if we do want to go up to near the boundary underground?? I think that while they won't like the noise/disruption they'll accept it for the sake of getting nice houses next door – just need to emphasise how disruption will be minimised and risk of their house subsiding will be met.
Remember we may possibly want to run the drain pipe down under the alley between 28 and the new 30. Need to give some thought to re-routing options.
I have not set out all of the narrative contained in the Judgment, nor each and every finding of the Judge. The foregoing is sufficient to enable me to consider the conclusions drawn by the Judge.
(3) Conclusions of fact drawn by the Judge
But that only goes so far. The key question is what was [Henderson Court's] attitude to the risk that this was wrong and that the true boundary lay down the centre of the pathway?
In my view, the reason for these misleading documents in November and December 2015 was that Mr Harris was aware and took account of the fact that, if the Gueterbocks knew that [Henderson Court] was intending to build to the [Number 28] flank wall, then they would have objected on the basis that such works would have crossed the boundary between the two properties. Mr Harris would have known that the proposed underpinning to [Number 28] required the consent of the Gueterbocks. In my view, Mr Harris took steps to hide from the Gueterbocks that the basement was going to extend to the [Number 28] flank wall to stop them from objecting. Any such objection would have included the Gueterbocks asserting their view of the boundary. At best, this would have caused further delay and expense to the works.
On a balance of probabilities the motivation for hiding the truth about the works from the Gueterbocks included minimising the risk the Gueterbocks would raise the boundary issue. The point was to keep the Gueterbocks believing the position was as explained to the planners in 2012 – no need to worry about the boundary because the two buildings will be independent. If the Gueterbocks knew in late 2015 what was intended, there was a strong likelihood the boundary issue would have been raised. Mr Harris was misleading the Gueterbocks because he had decided to take the risk on the boundary and build to [Henderson Court's] version of the boundary underground. If Mr Harris thought this was without serious risk, he would not have needed to mislead the Gueterbocks to obtain their consent.
F. DISPOSITION
Note 1 Mr MacPhail was not the insured under the contract of insurance the subject of this appeal. The facts are complicated, and will be set out in the course of this judgment. [Back] Note 2 Paragraph 2.0 of the Application. [Back] Note 3 Paragraph 3.0 of the Application. [Back] Note 5 Which is the term the Judge used: see paragraph 4 of the Judgment. [Back] Note 6 Paragraph 4 of the Judgment. [Back] Note 7 For reasons that do not matter, Mrs MacPhail drops out of the picture, and I shall, hereon, refer only to Mr MacPhail. See, further, paragraph 1 of the Judgment. [Back] Note 9 I.e., the sidewall of Number 28. [Back] Note 10 Emphasis added. [Back] Note 11 To quote from paragraph 7 of the Judgment. [Back] Note 12 See the Judgment at paragraph 11(A). [Back] Note 13 Paragraph 67 of the Judgment. [Back] Note 14 See the Judgment at paragraph 1(B). [Back] Note 15 See the Judgment at paragraph 1(C). [Back] Note 16 Paragraph 97 of the Judgment. This was actually a point of some factual controversy before the Judge, but his finding is not appealed, and I need only state his conclusion. [Back] Note 17 Paragraphs 105 and 106 of the Judgment. [Back] Note 18 Paragraph 200 of the Judgment. [Back] Note 19 The quotation derives from paragraph B-0496. Footnotes have been omitted, as they were by the Judge. [Back] Note 20 Paragraph 161 of the Judgment. [Back] Note 21 See also paragraph 178 of the Judgment, where the Judge again shows a clear awareness of the correct legal test. [Back] Note 22 See paragraph 199 of the Judgment, and (more generally) paragraphs 163 to 198. [Back] Note 23 Cited with approved by Lord Bingham inR v. G, [2003] UKHL 50 at [41]. [Back] Note 24 Thus, for example, the hearsay evidence of Mr Connor (paragraph 17 of the Judgment); the question of Mr Andrews’ evidence of something said by Mr Harris (paragraph 59 of the Judgment); the absence of direct evidence about how the basement came to be extended (paragraph 159 of the Judgment); the absence of evidence from Mr Harris (paragraph 162 of the Judgment, and also (particularly) paragraph 188 to 189 of the Judgment); the issue of why Mr Harris was not called (paragraphs 180 and 182 of the Judgment). [Back] Note 25 Paragraphs 45 and 46 of the Judgment, concerning the party wall notices served under the Party Wall, etc Act 1996. [Back] Note 26 Paragraph 163 of the Judgment. [Back] Note 27 Paragraph 47 of the Judgment. [Back] Note 28 Paragraph 59 of the Judgment. [Back] Note 29 Emphasis added. [Back] Note 30 Emphasis added. [Back] Note 31 Paragraph 188 of the Judgment. [Back] Note 32 Paragraph 195 of the Judgment. [Back] Note 33 The point is made, and accepted, by the Judge at paragraph 177 of the Judgment. [Back] Note 34 Paragraph 161 of the Judgment, quoted at paragraph 26(4)(ii) above. [Back]