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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Balogun v Boyes Sutton & Perry (A Firm) (Rev 1) [2015] EWHC 275 (QB) (28 January 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2015/275.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 275 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(SITTING AS A DEPUTY HIGH COURT JUDGE)
____________________
ABIMBOLA BALOGUN |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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BOYES SUTTON & PERRY (A FIRM) |
Defendant |
____________________
Oliver Radley-Gardner (instructed by Reynolds Porter Chamberlain) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 20-22 October 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Michael Bowes QC :
Introduction
The issues
i) At the meeting on 8 April the Defendant correctly advised the Claimant that the Underlease carried with it the right to vent through the ventilation shaft.
ii) The Claimant did not inform the Defendant about the need for ducting work in the ventilation shaft during the meeting on 8 April or otherwise and so no duty to advise on or secure relevant rights and consents in relation to ducting ever arose.
iii) The Claimant informed the Defendant during the 8 April meeting that there was already a ventilation shaft in place which was "good to go" and the Defendant's duty to the Claimant did not require him to enquire into the correctness of this factual instruction.
iv) L&Q only took objection to external works in the form of a proposed chimney to be attached to the top of the ventilation shaft and the Claimant accepted in cross-examination that he had never told the Defendant of the need for a chimney of any kind.
v) The alternative basis advanced in the Claimant's skeleton argument, namely that the form of the Underlease created an unusual risk for the Claimant over his right to vent, is flawed and is based on a mis-reading of the Headlease and the Underlease. The Claimant does have a right to vent (as the Defendant advised him) and no-one has argued to the contrary. L&Q's objection has been to the attachment of a chimney and not to the right to connect into and use the ventilation shaft. Further, objection is taken to this being an unpleaded basis of claim in which the Claimant has never identified a clear "risk factor".
vi) In respect of the alleged failure to advise adequately on Condition 4 in the local authority's planning consent, there was no duty to make any specific enquiries of the local authority as the Claimant had assured the Defendant that the ventilation shaft was "good to go". Further, the Claimant said he had made further enquiries himself of the local authority which did not require any further consent. Objection is also taken to this being an unpleaded allegation raised for the first time in the cross-examination of Mr Davies. The Claimant has not advanced any case on what the Defendant should have done over and above the Local Land Charges search which he carried out or on what any such additional searches would have revealed to the Defendant.
vii) In respect of the alleged inadequacy of the plans submitted to Anacar, they were only prepared for the purpose of obtaining a Licence from Anacar. In the event, Anacar did not press for more detailed plans and it was not within the scope of the Defendant's duty to require the Claimant to provide more detail than was required by Anacar. Objection is also taken to this being an unpleaded allegation raised for the first time in the cross-examination of Mr Davies, with the consequence that Mr Davies was unprepared to deal with the point.
viii) The Defendant's case is that there was no duty to advise on any of the issues which form the Claimant's case. In the alternative, the Defendant contends that there was no breach of a relevant duty and that causation cannot be established. The Defendant also contends that there was contributory negligence on the part of the Claimant.
ix) In respect of the Outdoor Seating Area, it is denied that the Defendant was negligent or in breach of contract and in any event the Claimant was copied into correspondence relating to, and did not object to, the Outdoor Seating Area being dealt with as a matter of title guarantee. The parties are agreed that no loss was occasioned by any breach of duty.
Relevant principles of law
"The behaviour of the reasonable man is not established by the evidence of witnesses, but by the application of a legal standard by the court. The court may require to be informed by evidence of circumstances which bear on its application of the standard of the reasonable man in any case, but it is then for the court to determine the outcome, in those circumstances, of applying that impersonal standard."
The primary issue: did the Claimant give the Defendant express instructions to advise in relation to ducting work in the ventilation shaft?
"The main factual issue for the Court is whether the Claimant explained to the Defendant at the meeting on 8 April 2011 that ducting would need to be installed in the ventilation shaft."
Background
The Claimant
Mr Davies
The Underlease transaction
Events before the 8 April meeting
"Kindly liaise with their solicitors so that we can proceed to an early conclusion on the basis that the site is ready."
"Official entries for the Freehold Title – the freehold is in the process of being transferred to L&Q Housing Association, the residential leasehold owners, pursuant to a pre-existing agreement".
"All fumes from cooking processes associated with the A3 uses shall be extracted via a flue. Details of ventilation and filtration equipment, including details of all external plant equipment and trunking, shall be submitted to and approved in writing by the Local Planning Authority prior to the commencement of each A3 use hereby permitted. All flues, ducting and other equipment shall be installed in accordance with the details subsequently approved prior to either of the A3 uses commencing and shall be retained for the duration of the use".
"Please find attached with this email as promised, the plans for the proposed restaurant. I am as yet undecided which one I would use but like I said earlier, it is merely cosmetic and involves no structural alterations. Either of these or both can be forwarded to the Landlord's solicitors. PS: See you at 11.00 tomorrow, as discussed."
The 8 April meeting
The Claimant's version
i) About a week before the meeting, the Claimant told Mr Davies in a telephone conversation that he had a purpose built ventilation shaft in which he could install his duct work for the extraction of fumes and that the duct work would run from the premises to the top of the building.
ii) During the meeting the Claimant told Mr Davies that the ventilation shaft went from the premises to the roof and and this where he would install the duct work from his kitchen extractor. He said he had inspected each floor of the building through which the ventilation shaft passed and that he did not see any problems in installing the duct work. He drew a rough diagram of the ventilation shaft and duct work for Mr Davies on a piece of paper and Mr Davies told him that was fine. He showed Mr Davies where the ventilation shaft was on one of the Space Plans, where it had been marked with an "x" by the designer (II/358).
iii) Mr Davies did not advise him that the ventilation shaft went through property belonging to a third party and that he would need the consent of that third party to run ducting up the ventilation shaft.
iv) At no time prior to completion was the lease between L&Q and Anacar brought to his attention and Mr Davies did not make him aware that the upper parts of the building were owned by L&Q.
v) In cross-examination, the Claimant said he had been aware from the outset of the need for a chimney. He accepted there was no mention of the need for a chimney in his witness statement. He accepted there was no mention of a chimney or other protuberance in any of the documents and that he had not mentioned it orally to Mr Davies either at the 8 April meeting or at any other time. In relation to the plans (II/358-9) he accepted that there was nothing on them to indicate anything going above the ceiling.
The Defendant's version
i) Mr Davies did not make a formal attendance note of the meeting but jotted down outstanding points on a copy of an email from Mirkwood Vincent (II/360). The note included the words "ventilation shaft". It was a long meeting (probably a couple of hours) during which Mr Davies went through the terms of the lease with the Claimant item by item.
ii) The Claimant became a little impatient at this, because he felt he already had some experience in relation to commercial leases. Mr Davies told him that the consent of the superior landlord would be required for external alterations.
iii) The Claimant told him that the premises were purpose built and had a pre-existing ventilation shaft in place for use in the kitchens. Mr Davies had considered the headlease and was aware that it granted Anacar the right to connect into the conduits for the supply of services to the premises (as set out in the First Schedule). "Conduit" was defined to include "duct" in the definitions section. He formed the view that this gave Anacar the right to use the ventilation shaft.
iv) Nothing the Claimant said in relation to his intentions regarding the ventilation shaft gave him any indication that any additional work was required before the shaft could be used. He was satisfied on the Claimant's assurance that there was no structural work requiring L&Q's consent and that Anacar had sufficient rights under the headlease to demise the same to the Claimant.
v) Mr Davies told the Claimant that, in his view, the plans he had supplied were inadequate and it would be usual to supply a full schedule of works when obtaining a landlord's licence for alterations. He explained this would normally be professionally prepared. The Claimant's concern was to keep costs to a minimum and he was not inclined to incur the expense of having such a schedule prepared. He stressed the urgency to proceed without further delay and without a full schedule of works.
vi) At no stage prior to completion did the Claimant instruct Mr Davies that he intended to do anything other than simply connect to the ventilation shaft. If that was his intention, in Mr Davies' professional opinion there was no need for permission, as the property had the right to use "Conduits" exclusively servicing the property. The Claimant did say he intended to fit an extractor unit to the shaft within the property and Mr Davies did consider this would require approval from Anacar, but not from L&Q.
vii) There was nothing on the plans or in any instructions from the Claimant to suggest there was anything to be fitted inside the ventilation shaft, any ducting required, or that a chimney was required on the roof. If such works were anticipated, Mr Davies would have expected the Claimant to explain the scope of the works in detail to him in response to his enquiries and to provide elevation plans of the building and a schedule of works. No such diagrams or instructions were ever provided to him prior to completion of the lease.
viii) In cross examination Mr Davies said he had brought the headlease to the Claimant's attention. He reiterated that the Claimant had never led him to believe there was any work needing to be done on the ventilation shaft. He was not told any work was needed in relation to ducting or a chimney. If he had been told that, he would have raised those points with Mirkwood Vincent as he was concerned to obtain consent for all work needing to be done.
ix) Mr Davies said that generally the Claimant's "policy was to get on and complete, and sort out any difficulties afterwards." He told Mr Davies that he "hadn't lost a court case yet."
Events after the 8 April meeting
"Plans for the works will need to be annexed with more detail in relation to the air-conditioning/ compressor units/ extractor units and the exact position of the existing ducting/ shafts to be used".
"Is there anything else which is still of concern to you or can I ask Corinne to go ahead and prepare the engrossments for signature? Please confirm that the letter/licence for the works is OK. I think they are after more than just the plans. They require more detail in relation to the air-conditioning/ compressor units/ extractor units and the exact position of the existing ducting/ shafts to be used."
"Chris, nothing else is of concern to me. As discussed at our last meeting, there is already an existing extractor shaft within the premises and that is the one which will be used."
"Of course, the difficulty is whether the works now proposed are more extensive than those for which consent was given and I am certainly not qualified to advise in this respect".
"We do however accept that the tenant has a right to connect into the Conduits."
Discussion and decision on the primary issue
i) The Claimant was unaware of L&Q's ownership of the upper floors.
ii) The Claimant had visited the property on a number of occasions prior to the meeting on 8 April and had inspected the ventilation shaft on each floor. Consequently, he knew that ducting was required. In particular, he relies on the email dated 9 December 2010 which refers to confirming the existence of an extractor vent and an email dated 4 May 2011, in which he states that his "extractor guy needs access to the shafts on each floor".
iii) Mr Davies' jottings about the 8 April meeting record that "ventilation shaft" and "extractor fan" were mentioned at the meeting. In connection with the plans, these must be references to the "T" shape shown on the plans. Mr Davies' evidence that his impression was that the Claimant would only be installing an extractor fan does not accord with the T shape or common sense; even a domestic kitchen extractor fan requires ducting.
iv) The absence of any request by Mr Davies for sight of local authority planning consents point towards him being under the impression that the Claimant would be installing ducting.
v) The absence of any reference to ducting in the email sent by Mr Davies to the Claimant on 8April very shortly after the meeting does not necessarily mean that ducting was not mentioned at the meeting.
vi) It is improbable that Mr Davies would not have questioned the Claimant about the detail of the ventilation unit, if he did not understand what it comprised. Further, it is improbable that the Claimant would keep this detail from him.
vii) The evidence establishes on the balance of probabilities that the Claimant did tell Mr Davies he would be installing ducting work and in those circumstances he should have been advised as to what rights he had to install ducting in the ventilation shaft. Mr Davies' failure so to advise him was negligent.
i) The Claimant's emails dated 5 April 2011 and 7 April 2011 refer specifically to the intended works being "merely cosmetic". This is reflected in the Space Plans which do not show any works above the ceiling of Unit 1.
ii) The Claimant never knew that a roof level chimney was required, which is why this never formed part of his instructions to Mr Davies.
iii) The Claimant did not raise anything about the need for ducting in his instructions to Mr Davies, either at the 8 April meeting or at any other time prior to completion.
iv) The Claimant did not know what other works might be required in relation to the ventilation shaft, because he had not sought the necessary professional assistance to find out what was necessary.
v) The Claimant knew he was obtaining an Underlease and knew that his landlords were L&Q.
vi) Mr Davies' instructions are reflected in his email dated 8 April 2011 seeking consent from Anacar and stating specifically that the "ventilation shaft provided" would be used.
vii) The Claimaint's response to a request from Anacar for further information in relation to the Space Plans and in respect of which Mr Davies sought specific instructions was "Chris, nothing else is of concern to me. As discussed with you at our last meeting, there is already and (sic) existing extractor shaft within the premises and that is the one that will be used" (14 April 2011).
viii) The scheme of works in relation to the ventilation shaft only emerged very gradually after completion on 26 April 2011.
ix) Overall the Claimant's attitude was that that matters should be deal with quickly and at minimal cost and that any problems should be dealt with after completion.
The Outdoor Seating Area
Decision
The Claimant's secondary case
i) The drafting of the Underlease created a "risk" in relation to which advice and drafting were required ("the Underlease risk ground");
ii) Mr Davies failed to advise the Claimant adequately or at all in respect of Condition 4 of the local authority's planning permission ("the Condition 4 ground"); and
iii) Mr Davies failed to advise the Claimant adequately that he was submitting inadequate plans to Anacar in support of the grant of a licence from Anacar ("the inadequate plans ground").
The Underlease risk ground
i) Clause 3.9 of the Underlease provides:
"Except as mentioned in this clause 3, neither the grant of this lease nor anything in it confers a right over the Common Parts or any neighbouring property nor is to be taken to show that the Tenant may have any right over the Common Parts or any neighbouring property and s.62 of the Law of Property does not apply to this lease."
ii) It is common ground that the ventilation shaft falls outside of the Claimant's demise and falls within L & Q's neighbouring property. The only rights that C has therefore over the shaft are the rights conferred by Clause 3.1(d) of the Underlease. This provides with added emphasis provides [p.153]
"3.1 The Landlord grants the Tenant the following rights (the Rights);
...
(d) the right to use and to connect into any Service Media at the Building that belong to the Landlord and serve [but do not form part of] the Property which are in existence at the date of this lease or are installed during the perpetuity period;
..."
iii) The Headlease defines Anacar's demise as including "conduits and plant to the extent that they are within and exclusively serve the commercial units (but no other Conduits or Plant) (see p.93 & )
It specifically excludes "all airspace above the Premises [varied by the Deed of Variation to "Commercial Premises"] and any part of the Building above the bottom of the floor slab separating the basement ground floor and upper ground floor from the upper parts of theBuilding [p.93 & p.124].
iv) Even if the court accepts that the Defendant's argument that the Underlease gave the Claimant a right to vent, L&Q does not share that view and the Defendant should have advised the Claimant as to the legal difficulties that might arise over the right to use the ventilation shaft.
v) Reliance is placed on the following cases: Herrmann v Withers LLP [2012] EWHC 1492 (Ch) [2012] PNLR 28 and Queen Elizabeth's Grammar School Blackburn Ltd v Banks Wilson [2001] EWCA Civ 1360; [2002] PNLR 14. The latter case is authority for the proposition that even if the court is satisfied that an interpretation is legally correct, if there is real scope for dispute it is negligent not to give advice to this effect.
vi) In cross-examination Mr Davies said he did not consider the "belonging to the landlord" qualification in clause 3.1(d) at the time (see items 159,161 & 206 of cross examination note) and that when pressed he accepted that in light of that wording he should have considered whether it belonged to Anacar (see items 161-163) and that if he had done so he would have advised and sought an amendment to the Underlease to make sure that there was a specific right to use the ventilation shaft (see items 207-210 of cross examination note).
i) Objection is taken to the Claimant advancing an unpleaded point which first emerged in the Claimant's skeleton argument dated 13 October 2014 and developed further in a supplemental skeleton argument dated 15 October 2014.
ii) The cases which the Claimant identified at the Supplemental Skeleton Argument stage are all cases in which the "risk" resulted from some peculiar and identified feature of the facts. It is clear that the cases which the Claimant adduced at a late stage are highly fact-sensitive, even on their own terms:
iii) (a) In Queen Elizabeth's Grammar School Blackburn Ltd v Banks Wilson (A Firm) [2001] EWCA Civ 1360 the Court of Appeal was faced with a restrictive covenant which was ambiguous. The covenant was drafted against the background knowledge that the vendor of the site was intending to object to works which were intended to be carried on under that covenant, which on one reading amounted to a breach. The solicitor was therefore negligent because, against the background of a threat of litigation, the advice should have been more cautious. It is clear that the fact that there was a current threat of litigation in the Queen Elizabeth Grammar School case was the deciding factor: see at [47]. That is not a feature present here. The dispute here only arose after completion, and (the Defendant says) due to the Claimant's provocative conduct. The Claimant has neither pleaded, nor proved, in this case that he would have taken cautious advice, and he certainly did not take the Defendant's advice in any other respect.
(b) In Herrmann v Withers LLP [2012] EWHC 1492 does not contain any test, but an application of Queen Elizabeth to the facts. It concerned a very little read and particularly badly drafted Act of Parliament from 1851 without any guiding authority (see at [69]). Again, there is no pleaded case from the Claimant as to why a conventional Underlease with a standard easement within it is to be treated as the same as advice on an obscure Act of Parliament.
iv) The Claimant has never identified a clear "risk" factor, and the unpleaded case was simply put to Mr Davies with no forewarning in cross-examination. The Defendant's position is that nothing in the Underlease brings it within the "risk" principle, which requires some special factor. There is nothing pleaded that shows any feature demonstrating an enhanced risk existed similar to the risk that was present in both of the authorities which the Claimant seeks to rely on at this late stage in the proceedings.
v) This new argument "misses the target" in any event:
a) The Claimant accepted in correspondence that he had been fully involved in the drafting of the Underlease II/487E;
b) The argument based on risk aims at the wrong part of the Headlease and Underlease, and is irrelevant. The provision which the Claimant fastens on as being somehow "unusual" is the definition of the demise, and the use of the word "belong". As to that:
i) The use of the word "belong" is in the Underlease. Anacar was the landlord under that. Anacar never gave the Claimant any trouble at all and in fact supported him. The risk argument on this basis does not get off the ground.
ii) The attempt to make something out of the definition of the "demise" under the Headlease and the Underlease also misses the point:
(a) In relation to the Underlease it is completely irrelevant as Anacar were no trouble.
(b) In relation both the Headlease and Underlease, the question is not what the demise means, but what the rights conferred by Schedule 1 of the Headlease and Clause 3 of the Underlease mean. There has been no suggestion that there was anything unusual about those. As Mr Davies correctly stated in evidence, the definitions and the rights were sufficiently broad to allow the Claimant to do what he needed.
(c) The "risk" argument does not therefore attach to any relevant provision in these proceedings.
vi) Further, the line of questioning of Mr Davies in cross-examination did not take into account that the drafting of the Underlease is inevitably conditioned by the definitions in the Headlease. The draftsman of the Underlease is bound to follow the scheme in the Headlease, otherwise there will be a mis-match.
vii) No-one seriously argued that there was no right to connect into and use the Ventilation Shaft at all. The debate was centred on (a) the Claimant's proposed user of Unit 1, and (b) the external works which the Claimant wished to do, being (ultimately) the installation of the chimney in the main. There was never any serious doubt that the ventilation shaft was the conduit, or counted as media. As the problem was with the chimney, and as the Claimant accepts he never referred to the need for a chimney, the Claimant cannot succeed in any event.
viii) The conferral of easements automatically includes the conferral of ancillary rights to put the easement into effect (see Gale on Easements, 1-90, first sentence, and the authorities of Platt v London Underground [2001] 2 E.G.L.R. 121 at 122 B - K; Carter v Cole [2009] E.G.L.R. 15, at paragraph [8]). It is so standard (and hence usual) in English real property law that it goes without saying-.
ix) Further, matters are expressly catered for in the Headlease (which is the document which is most relevant for these purposes), and the qualification to the easement in Schedule 1 paragraph 3 which requires that the works of connection and use of the ventilation shaft should be "subject to the regulations of any appropriate authority". Therefore, if the Council as planning authority, or as building regulations authority, required a sleeve or a chimney, the Claimant (through Anacar) was not merely empowered to comply, but positively obligated to do so.
Discussion and decision on the Underlease risk ground
The Condition 4 ground
i) Condition 4 of the planning permission [p216] provides that:
a) all fumes from cooking processes associated with A3 uses shall be extracted via a flue;
b) details of the ventilation and filtration equipment including details of all external plant equipment and trunking shall be submitted to and approved in writing by the Local Planning Authority pior to commencement of each A3 use; and
c) all flues, ducting and other equipment shall be installed in accordance with the details subsequently approved prior to either of the A3 uses commencing and shall be retained for the duration of the use.
ii) If the Claimant was installing the "flues, ducting and other equipment" required by Condition 4 then it was obvious these would run through the parts of the building owned by L&Q. In those circumstances Mr Davies should have advised the Claimant as to what rights he had to install something in the ventilation shaft. Such advice would have revealed to the reasonably competent solicitor that it was, at the very least arguable that neither the Claimant nor Anacar had the right to install anything and would probably have lead to involvement of L&Q.
iii) If there was already a flue installed in the shaft and all that was required was for the Claimant to connect into it, it could only be assumed that such flue was satisfactory if the Local Planning Authority had approved the flue in writing in accordance with condition 4.
iv) Reliance is placed on answers given by Mr Davies in cross-examination that if he understood something had been installed in the flue, then it would have been prudent to ask for sight of the consent and that a reasonably competent solicitor should have asked for the consent (note of evidence, lines 11-115; 130-131).
v) If Mr Davies had requested the written approval, as it is submitted he should, this would have flushed out that there was no flue etc installed in the ventilation shaft and Mr Davies would have advised accordingly.
i) The Claimant's argument only arises if the court has already accepted Mr Davies' factual account in relation to his instructions, namely that the ventilation shaft was "good to go". Thereafter, the Claimant needs to establish that the Defendant had a duty to go behind that answer and undertake further searches.
ii) The Claimant has not pleaded this ground and there has been no application to amend the Particulars of Claim. The Claimant ought not to be allowed to rely on it because he has not pleaded:
a) what the Defendant should have done over and above his Local Land Charges search (which he carried out, I/310);
b) what those additional searches he says would have revealed to the Defendant; and
c) whether what the Claimant says would have been revealed ought to have put the Defendant on notice that his instructions were factually incorrect, and that he should carry out further investigations.
iii) In cross-examination, the Claimant said he had contacted the Council himself in connection with Condition 4. He said he told them about the ventilation shaft and they say they did not need anything from him. They gave him a specific form to fill out. He had done so and submitted the form. He had told Mr Davies that he had spoken to a person at the local authority, but did not tell him he had specifically discussed Condition 4.
iv) This is consistent with what the Claimant said post-completion. He confirmed to Anacar that (G/476) "the Council have already informed me that there is no need for further planning permission for the extractor as one had already been granted to you earlier prior to the building being constructed".
v) A further investigation following on from the standard searches (which were undertaken) would in fact not have yielded anything to put the Defendant on notice he might have been instructed on a false factual basis.
vi) The Claimant has failed to distinguish between what was shown on the planning register and what was physically on site. All that a further query of the Council under Condition 4 could go to is the planning status of whatever was installed. It would not have revealed whether there was anything in the ventilation shaft.
vii) In Haigh v Wright Hassall [1994] E.G. 54, Hoffmann LJ expressed the position as follows:
"The solicitor is not a business advisor; he is a lawyer. Although most good solicitors will offer business advice, and will, to some extent, try to protect clients from themselves, it would be wrong, in my judgment, to hold that there was invariably a legal duty to do so. It must of course depend upon the facts of the case. There will be situations in which it is clear to the solicitor that the client is commercially wholly inexperienced and is deluding himself. In those circumstances there way well be a duty on the part of the solicitor to probe further."
viii) The questions in relation to the ventilation shaft were factual questions within the Claimant's knowledge and expertise. The Defendant was entitled to assume that the Claimant was giving a truthful account of what he had seen at Unit 1. There was no duty on the Defendant thereafter to undertake his own independent investigations to see whether that was true. In any event, he raised further enquiries with the Claimant at the time of the Licence (F/404)
ix) There was nothing in the replies to the Local Land Charges search to raise the prospect that there might be something amiss with the Claimant's instructions as to the physical state of the ventilation shaft. This is not a "noticing a problem case". The way the Claimant's case appears to be put is that the Defendant was under a duty to go and seek out a problem which he had been instructed did not exist.
x) The Claimant in his closing arguments relied heavily on Mr Davies' statements in relation to what he regarded as his failings in this regard. Mr Davies is an honest witness. Mr Davies was facing questioning on an unpleaded allegation and was not told that he had made enquiries to the Local Council in the normal way. What is reasonable, and what a reasonably competent solicitor would have done, and whether a breach results in damage, is a matter for the Court, and not for any witness to give evidence on: Healthcare at Home Ltd v The Common Services Agency [2014] UKSC 49. As set out above, Mr Davies, while frank, was not negligent if the Claimant is allowed to rely on this new and unpleaded ground.
xi) Investigations in relation to Condition 4 were either not required by the scope of the Defendant's duty, or the failure to press them further to check whether the Claimant was correct was not a breach, or there was no loss caused as those further investigations would have revealed nothing salient.
Discussion and decision on the Condition 4 ground
The inadequate plans ground
On 13 April 2011 at 12.32 Mirkwood Vincent sent an email to the Mr Davies stating (II/399):
"Plans for the works will need to be annexed with more detail in relation to the air-conditioning/ compressor units/ extractor units and the exact position of the existing ducting/ shafts to be used."
At 14.40 on 13 April 2011 Mr Davies forwarded this email to the Claimant, which said "Please see Corinne's email below and the attachments" (II/403a). One of the attachments was a letter/ licence (unsigned) to carry out the proposed works (see I/142).
At 16.48 on 13 April 2011 Mr Davies sent an email to the Claimant which said (II/404):
"Is there anything else which is still of concern to you or can I ask Corinne to go ahead and prepare the engrossments for signature? Please confirm that the letter/licence for the works is OK. I think they are after more than just the plans. They require more detail in relation to the air-conditioning/compressor units/ extractor units and the exact position of the existing ducting/ shafts to be used".
At 17.30 on 13 April 2011 the Claimant replied to Mr Davies and said:
"Chris, nothing else is of concern to me. As discussed at our last meeting, there is already an existing extractor shaft within the premises and that is the one which will be used."
i) The Claimant did not have a schedule of works drawn up before completion, but should have been properly advised by Mr Davies that his plans were inadequate and a schedule of works was necessary and for his benefit. If this had been done, then the need to install ducting work in the ventilation shaft would have been revealed and Mr Davies would have (or ought to have) then advised accordingly.
ii) Reliance is placed on Mr Davies' witness statement in which he described the plans as "inadequate" and his answers in cross-examination in which he said that in his opinion the plans were not detailed enough for the purposes of a licence to carry out works (note of evidence line 52).
iii) Mr Davies should have taken greater steps to ensure that the Claimant prepared more detailed plans based on a schedule of works, even if these were not required by Anacar for the grant of the licence.
i) The email correspondence shows that the Claimant was pressed for more detail but declined to give it. As is clear also from the post-completion dealing with London & Quadrant, the Claimant was exceedingly reluctant to engage a proper professional to do a proper, thorough job on his specifications until forced to do so, because of his overall view of the transaction. Insofar as the obtaining of the Licence was within the scope of the Defendant's duty, that duty was discharged. The Defendant denies that, on the basis of the correspondence at F/404 and the other pre-action assurances, the Defendant was under a duty not to take the Claimant's "no" as an answer, and to keep probing further.
ii) At the 8 April meeting Mr Davies told the Claimant that, in his view, the plans were inadequate and it would be usual to supply a full schedule of works when obtaining a landlord's licence for alterations. The Claimant's concern was to keep costs to a minimum and he was not prepared to incur the expense of having such a schedule prepared.
iii) Ultimately, Anacar did not proceed with their complaint that the plans were inadequate and gave their consent.
iv) The questions put to Mr Davies on "adequacy" failed to distinguish two different propositions:
a) a plan and licence may be inadequate if they show all of the works to be done in a general sense, but do not show the works in sufficient detail;
b) a plan and licence may be inadequate if they simply do not show all of the works to be done.
v) The Claimant's cross examination elided these two very separate points. They must be kept separate. In light of the instructions given to Mr Davies, the plan and Licence were not inadequate in sense (b). The plans showed exactly what the Claimant had asked for. Insofar as they were "inadequate" in sense (a), it was Anacar's concern and Anacar did not press that concern.
vi) This new allegation is based on a false premise and comes to nothing.
Discussion and decision on the inadequate plans ground
Overall conclusion
Costs