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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (King's Bench Division) Decisions >> Atta v HDI Global Specialty SE [2023] EWHC 2028 (KB) (04 April 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/KB/2023/2028.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 2028 (KB) |
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Claim No. F46YM291 |
LIVERPOOL DISTRICT REGISTRY
35 Vernon Street, Liverpool, L2 2BX Start Time: 1203 Finish Time: 1309 |
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B e f o r e :
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FAHAD ATTA |
Claimant/Respondent |
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- and - |
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HDI GLOBAL SPECIALTY SE |
Defendant/Applicant |
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2nd Floor, Quality House, 6-9 Quality Court, Chancery Lane, London WC2A 1HP.
Telephone No: 020 7067 2900. DX 410 LDE
Email: [email protected]
Web: www.martenwalshcherer.com
JAMES MALAM for the Defendant/Applicant
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Crown Copyright ©
MR. JUSTICE JACOBS:
Introduction
The proceedings and judgment below
"[14] Under cross-examination, by Mr Malam, counsel for the First Defendant, Mrs Kausar confirmed that when the Property was purchased a valuation had been obtained presumably for mortgage purposes. She confirmed there were no concerns with damp or mould when they moved into the Property in April 2012, and that the problems only started some months after the CWI had been installed.
[15] She explained that, some five to sixth months after the installation of CWI, mould damage appeared and progressed around the front door, the bay window at the front of the Property, and on the back and side wall of the sitting room at the rear of the Property; there was crumbling plaster and flaking paint in the kitchen, as well as rotten skirting boards which were damp to the touch; and mould damage and damp on the front and side walls of the master bedroom at the front of the Property (with the majority being behind the wardrobe) and on the back and side wall of the second bedroom at the rear; and mould damage and damp in the third bedroom, which first appeared on the back wall, which was the most affected room in the Property; and mould damage to all the blinds in the affected rooms at the Property…
[16] The Claimant's evidence was consistent with his wife's. He did not see any dampness or mould prior to the decoration which followed the purchase of the Property but the first signs of mould only appeared some 5 to 6 months after the CWI installation. He accepted that the damage had worsened over time…"
"…I am satisfied, on the balance of probabilities, that his findings of damp, paint flaking and mould growth were evidence of damp passing across the bridges formed by the voids or the subject of condensation caused by the cold spots where the Technitherm had not reached. I also accept Mr Smitheringale's thesis that the pattern from the thermal imaging on the upper storey is consistent with the absence of Technitherm and confirms that the cavity was not adequately filled."
"Despite the property not being suitable for Technitherm it was, in the event, the poor installation which caused the particular damage to the Property. That produced the state of affairs I have described and the continued unremedied state of voids and cold spots allowing for the progressive damage to the Property over time".
The judge then referred to the claimant's evidence that the damage in the property had progressed significantly.
"I am entirely satisfied that significant in the sense of more than nominal physical damage to the Property did occur during the operational period of the First Defendant's policy and so the Installer's right of indemnity was potentially engaged".
"…even without such evidence I can take notice of the inevitability that the uncontrolled and unremedied state of affairs caused by the Installers' negligence in leaving the Property less resistant to penetrating dampness would have caused some physical damage to have appeared during the operational period of each of the Second Defendant's Policies and for that matter the Third Defendant's Policy. That too is consistent with the general thrust of the evidence of the Claimant and his wife. Such progressive damage that occurred during the operational period of the successive policies, on the basis of my findings, were plainly caused by the negligence of the Installer and not caused or contributed to by other factors."
"To be clear for the purposes of this exercise I draw a distinction between the occurrence of damage and the quantification of loss. Absent any damage occurring during the operational period of the Policy, there would have been no right to an indemnity from the relevant insurer. What distinguishes the present case is that I am satisfied, albeit with very little direct evidence, that some more than negligible progression is likely to have occurred during the period of the Second and Third Defendant's indemnity, which potentially would have resulted in a legitimate call upon the relevant Policy by the Installer."
"The state of affairs which created the progression of physical damage to the Property was created by the negligence of the Installer during the operational period of the First Defendant's Policy".
"I am satisfied that significant, in the sense of more than nominal physical damage occurred during the operational period of the First Defendant's Policy. The damage first became visible to the Claimant and his wife some 5 or 6 months after the installation and it is highly likely that there had been damage to the fabric of the Property. The Claimant therefore had a good cause of action in tort in respect of which the Installer's liability to pay damages for physical damage which arose within the operational period of the First Defendant's Policy."
"…the Claimant has not proved either the extent of any damage occurring during the period of the Second Defendant's Policies or the Third Defendant's Policy or that the extent of the Installer's liability to pay damages increased over time."
"I am satisfied that the current cost of remedial works would have represented the damages which would have been awarded against the Installer even from the perspective of that damage which was manifest prior to the expiry of the First Defendant's Policy. Had the Claimant sued the Installer during the operational period of the First Defendant's Policy, he would have recovered substantially the same remedial costs as he is seeking in this Claim. I have not been informed of any differential in terms of the difference between current and historic costs; or that current costs; as opposed to historic costs and interest would produce any different outcome."
The grounds of appeal
The policy terms
"applies only to such liability as is set out in each insured Section of this insurance, arising in the ordinary course of the Business specified in the Schedule, subject always to the terms and conditions of such Section and of this Insurance as a whole.
There is no dispute in the present case that the relevant liabilities did arise in the ordinary course of the business of Heatwave. However, it is then necessary to look at the terms of the particular sections under which the claim arose.
"The insured is indemnified by this Section in accordance with the Operative Clause for and/or arising out of Injury and/or Damage occurring during the Period of Insurance but not against liability more specifically insured against elsewhere in this Insurance".
"The insured is indemnified by this Section in accordance with the Operative Clause for and/or arising out of Injury and/or Damage occurring during the Period of Insurance but only against liability arising out of or in connection with any Product, but not against any liability more specifically insured elsewhere in this Insurance".
Discussion
"…Had the damages been assessed during the operational period of the First Defendant's Policy, then a court would have awarded to the Claimant the full cost of removing the Technitherm from the cavity. That would have been regarded as both reasonable and necessary since, unless it was removed, further damage would have continued unabated and the Claimant was entitled to have the Property restored to his pre-damaged state."
"4. The First Defendant had sought to argue that the costs of removal of the CWI were not the costs of repairing the damage and were not costs "for and/or arising out of…Damage".
5. In his submissions Mr Malam had referred to Horbury Building Systems Limited v Hampden Insurance NV [2004] EWCA 418 and sought to persuade me that the Claimant's costs of the removal of the CWI which forms his quantification of damages did not arise out of the physical damage caused to the Property, but rather from his anticipation of further damage and that a distinction should be drawn between say repairing plaster which were plainly repair costs and the costs of removal.
6. Horbury concerned a policy which indemnified a sub-contractor against liability for damages "in respect" of amongst other things "damage to property". Physical damage was caused to only part of the cinema multiplex and the insurers did not accept that the policy covered the loss of profits from the closure of the entire complex. The Court of Appeal agreed with deputy judge at first instance, that "in respect of .." were words of limitation and that the cover did not extend to the economic consequences of the physical damage, so that the loss of profits in respect of the closure of all the cinemas (as opposed to the specific one in which the ceiling collapsed) were irrecoverable under the policy. As Keene LJ explained at [26] it was the possible defects in the construction of the other cinemas in the complex which had led to their closure and not their physical damage.
7. I did not find Horbury of assistance to the First Defendant but I acknowledge that I did not specifically refer to the authority in my reasoned judgment. I also accept that I dealt with Mr Malam's submission in a somewhat attenuated form.
8. So for clarity, I will add the following, which should be treated as an addendum to my Judgment.
(1) I have found that physical damage, in the sense of more than nominal damage, was caused to the Property during the operational period of First Defendant's Policy. For the purposes of my Judgment it was not necessary for me to quantify the extent of the damage given that the presence of more than nominal damage was sufficient both to attract liability in tort and to trigger the coverage under the First Defendant's Policy.
(2) The damages which I have assessed in my judgment is to remedy the physical damage which had occurred during the operational period of the First Defendant's Policy and was based on the entire removal of the CWI as the means of reinstating the Property and is not the independent choice of the Claimant. It represents the First Defendant's liability for and/or arising out of … Damage (as defined). Although the removal will also reinstate the damage which progressed further, such costs was a liability which did not increase in quantum from the time of expiry of the First Defendant's Policy.
(3) Such repair costs are neither (a) pure economic loss as had been contended for by the First Defendant or (b) analogous to the loss of profits relating to the undamaged cinemas, with which Horbury was concerned."
"Although the removal will also reinstate the damage which progressed further, such cost was a liability which should not increase in quantum from the time of expiry of the First Defendant's Policy".