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England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions >> Blue Manchester Ltd v North West Ground Rents Ltd [2020] EWHC 2777 (TCC) (20 October 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2020/2777.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 2777 (TCC) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS IN MANCHESTER
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT (QBD)
1 Bridge Street West Manchester, M60 9DJ |
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B e f o r e :
(Sitting as a Judge of the High Court)
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BLUE MANCHESTER LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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NORTH WEST GROUND RENTS LIMITED |
Defendant |
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Draft judgment circulated: 2 October 2020
Approved judgment handed down: 20 October 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
This judgment was handed down remotely to the parties and by publication at 2pm on 20 October 2020
I direct that pursuant to CPR PD 39A paragraph 6.1 no official shorthand note shall be taken of this Judgment once approved and handed down and that copies of this version as handed down may be treated as authentic.
His Honour Judge Stephen Davies
"… As the authorities referred to above demonstrate, the starting point is the position as it existed at the time of the lease and aesthetic considerations are in principle relevant matters to be taken into consideration. Whilst various witnesses have expressed differing views as to the aesthetics of the tower, there can be no doubt that the unitised appearance of the glass facades, which depends upon there being no obvious externally visible fixings between the separate panels, is an important aspect of the overall design and original appearance of the building. Moreover, whilst various witnesses have expressed differing views as to the impact of the stitch plates, again there can be no doubt that they have a significant adverse impact on the unitised appearance of the glass facades and that they are more intrusive and more ugly than would be the case even if the glass facades had been designed and constructed to have externally visible connectors between the separate units from the outset ...
As well as seeing photographs in the trial bundle I have, as I notified the parties at the beginning of the trial, walked past the hotel and looked up at the facades. The stitch plates are so called because they give the appearance of the panels being stitched together by some giant hand, around 16 stitch plates in total to each panel. Whilst the glass panels do not completely abut each other, because there is a thin strip of weather-seal separating them, without the stitch plates the facades have a clean, modern and unitised appearance which is significantly and adversely affected by the presence of the stitch plates. In my view there would have to be some compelling reason why a tenant such as the claimant should have to accept this as a repair for a building such as this other than as a temporary time-limited repair pending a permanent repair to restore the tower to its original appearance."
"4. The Defendant shall:
(a) Remove the existing stitch plates from the SBU's to the external Façade of the Building;
(b) Remove the existing SBUs (and frames as appropriate) from the Façade;
(c) Reinstate or replace SBUs (and frames as appropriate) so that the new SBUs, their frames, and component parts are securely affixed to the structure of the Building in such a way as provide substantially the same external appearance as was present at the date of the Lease and prior to June 2014, and preserves the design intent for the function of the curtain wall system; and
(d) Make good any damage caused to the Façade ("the Repair Works").
5. The Defendant shall complete the Repair Works by no later than 31st July 2020.
…
8. The parties shall have a liberty to apply in relation to compliance with paragraph 4 and 5 above.
9. In particular, the Defendant shall have a liberty to apply:
(i) to be permitted to undertake some different remedial scheme if the Repair Works required by this order are revealed by investigation and analysis by a suitably qualified consultant to be not reasonably practicable other than at disproportionate cost; and
(ii) to extend compliance with paragraph 5 above."
"1. Paragraph 4 of the Order dated 11 February 2019 be and is hereby varied so that, instead of removing and reinstating the SBUs, the Defendant should:
(a) Provide aluminium pressure plates to the vertical edges of all the SBUs forming part of the external envelope of the Building, using mechanical fixings at circa 300 mm to which aluminium plates are to be fitted;
(b) Provide cosmetic cover caps for the aluminium plates; and
(c) Make good any damage caused to the façade.
2. Paragraph 5 of the Order dated 11 February 2019 be and is hereby varied so that the Defendant should complete the Repair Works (as hereby varied) by 31 July 2021."
"(a) The judgment has been delivered and the Order made. The judgment has not been appealed. This court does not have the jurisdiction to interfere with that, unless the court's specific power (from the judgment) or general power (from the CPR) is engaged. Neither are. All parties agree that option B1 is achievable by competent contractors and that the cost of option B1 is approximately the same as last trial. There is therefore no question of any of the liberty to apply provisions being engaged.
(b) The defendant has not shown why the court should exercise its discretion in its favour, in circumstances where the defendant has substantially delayed in making this application.
(c) The reasons for making the judgment and the order have not changed. The judgment explains why appearance must remain the same and the order requires the external appearance to be substantially the same after the repair. The method the defendant now wants to adopt (called option C) breaches that requirement and offends that reasoning, providing a different appearance;
(d) The defendant has not explored alternative methods of achieving the court-ordered repair (e.g. B2 and B3);
(e) Option C, which is in reality a variant of option A, has not been shown to be a viable technical solution;
(f) The costings of option C are still in question;
(g) The finances of the defendant are irrelevant and should be ignored not least since, by its own admission, it cannot afford either option B or option C.
(h) The court should not impose upon the claimant an alternative, inferior repair where the claimant still has an extant claim against third parties for the costs of carrying out the court-ordered repair."
(a) An initial witness statement from Mr Jones, the defendant's solicitor, in support of the application. It was not necessary for Mr Jones to give oral evidence.
(b) A witness statement from Mr Naish, a director of the defendant's parent company, who gave oral evidence.
(c) A witness statement from Mr Robinson, a director of the company which is itself the sole director of the defendant, who also gave oral evidence.
(d) Expert evidence from Mr Andrew Webster, its expert building surveyor, who had provided a report in support of the application and subsequently contributed to a joint statement and then produced his own separate report. He also gave oral evidence. He had not been involved in any way in the previous stage of the litigation, when the defendant had relied upon the expert evidence of Dr Newby of Sandberg, consulting engineers.
(a) Witness statements from Mr Marsden the claimant's solicitor, who also did not need to give oral evidence.
(b) A witness statement from Ms Brown of the claimant company, who gave oral evidence.
(c) Expert evidence from Mr Clarke, its expert facade engineering specialist, who also contributed to the joint statement, produced his own separate report and also gave oral evidence. Mr Clarke had provided technical input as a façade specialist in the previous stage to Mr Kavanagh, the claimant's primary expert, and had participated in the experts' joint discussions and joint statement produced pre-trial, but had not given oral evidence at trial.
Relevant legal principles
"The trial is not a dress rehearsal. It is the first and last night of the show."
Is the ordered remedial scheme reasonably practicable?
Option A1 Carillion continuous external pressure plates
Option A2 Fill UK individual pressure plates
Option B1 Carillion replace glass on existing carrier frames
Option B2 Fill UK replace glass on new carrier frames
Is the cost of the court ordered scheme disproportionate in itself?
Comparison with the option as proposed by the defendant
Practicability
Cost
Aesthetic considerations
Other relevant factors
Conclusions
Note 1 Either during rainfall or whilst the façade is wet. [Back] Note 2 Throughout this judgment all sums are net of VAT and any professional fees unless the contrary is specifically stated. [Back]