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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 >> Lyons v Gardner [2007] EWCA Civ 259 (21 February 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2007/259.html Cite as: [2007] EWCA Civ 259 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM READING COUNTY COURT
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE CHARLES HARRIS)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
and
LORD JUSTICE GAGE
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LYONS |
Claimant/ Appellant |
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- and - |
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GARDNER |
Defendant/ Respondent |
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MR D KILKOYNE (instructed by Messrs Reynolds Parry Jones) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Rix:
"The only evidence there is about whether and to what extent there is any difference in the accumulation of water [I interpose as between before 1995 and 1995 that is the difference the judge had in mind] came from the claimant and defendant. Their evidence does not agree it is therefore necessary to record my views about these witnesses having heard and seen both of them."
"When the defendant relaid the driveway it was relaid with an incline towards my property and was finished off with shingle; as result whenever there' a reasonable downpour of rain this runs down the driveway and accumulates against the rear external wall of my property, causing damage."
"… that before 1995 heavy rain would occasionally cause puddling but always in the middle of the courtyard and not up against the wall of Tile House. However, in evidence he conceded that before 1995 water sometimes got within a foot or so of his wall".
The judge commented:
"It is not clear what would have held it there."
"14. I found the defendant a much more credible and attractive witness than the claimant. The latter often appeared disconcerted, angry and aggressive, and sometimes contradicted himself. For example when asked about litigation involving a company of his called ECL Entertainments, he said 'I was not a party, I had sold the shares' however a moment or two later he said 'I was involved in the litigation, I was a party'. He had been going to build a £150,000 extension and a garage but for some reason was able to commence this litigation on legal aid. His protestations about regular cleaning out of the gutter were unconvincing. He made at one stage a claim for a very expensive replacement kitchen, but has now largely abandoned that. His fundamental assertion that before 1995 there had been no damp problems at all was rather undermined by the fact that during the works in September 1995 he wrote to the defendant:
'I would also like to know how you intend to deal with the rainwater that runs into the joint drains alongside our house … as you know, we still suffer from dampness along that side of the house due to your rainwater being trapped after a heavy fall.'
"This was, it seems to me a clear indication of earlier problems, notwithstanding an unconvincing attempt to explain it as a reference to 'some algae caused by water a foot from my wall.' The claimant's own surveyor, Mr Bailey, concedes that it is probable there had always been minor moisture problems at the foot of the north wall of the Tile House as a result of a combination of factors including the general state of the site and the relative internal and external levels. He said,
'I believe these were recognised and controlled in the traditional manner by the insertion of the external vertical slate damp proof course and the use of internal plastic skirting in place of timber.'
"It was also the case of the horizontal damp proof course, assuming that there was one was bridged by render. Furthermore a survey of 1988 had reported siphon tubes having been fitted in the walls of the utility area 'in an attempt to reduce dampness and ventilate the room" and recorded the need to reduce ground level "to increase the chances of success of the existing damp proof course'. The claimant, it should also be recorded took an extremely long time to get his solicitor to make his complaints, the first letter not being sent until June 1999, nearly four years after the deterioration complained of."
The judge then continued at paragraph 15:
"15. The defendant on the other hand impressed me as a quiet, measured, precise, careful and seemingly truthful witness, who had not enjoyed his years as a neighbour to the claimant, whom he felt to be litigious, and against whom he said he had in the past had to defend himself. I accept his evidence about there being no change for the worse in the condition of the yard, and reject that of the claimant that there has been.
"16. On the case as pleaded I therefore find that the claimant has failed to establish his basic factual premise. The position in the yard is no worse than it was in 1995 and in particular it is not established that anything the defendant has done on his land has made it any worse. The claimant therefore fails to establish the fundamental allegation in his pleading."
"It should be stated in fairness to the claimant's case that there are evidently some aspects in which the design or construction of the bore hole was less than wholly satisfactory, and the fall of the pipe work leading to it from the wall side of the yard is not as steep as it should be. The bore hole was in fact redrilled in 2005. But I do not find that these imperfections, unsatisfactory though they may be, have led to any more water puddling against the walls of the claimant's house than it did before. A test carried out by pouring water directly out of a bowser into the top of the bore hole drain which provoked an overflow was not, in my judgment, realistic."
"It is to be noted in particular a) that the internal floor level appears to be below the external ground level, sketches by Mr Harrington illustrate this; b) There has been no comprehensive investigation of the dpc [that is the damp proof course] and it is likely that any horizontal dpc is bridged by the external render; c) The paved part of the yard nearest to the junction of the two properties was quite clearly not altered; d) There is evidence to suggest that the areas apparently most affected by puddling do not coincide very precisely with the areas of internal dampness; e) It is likely that for many years water had tended to run, drain or percolate down the gradient towards the north side of the claimant's house."
Lord Justice Gage:
Order: Appeal dismissed.