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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> M'Intyre v. Gallacher [1883] ScotLR 21_58 (6 November 1883) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1883/21SLR0058.html Cite as: [1883] SLR 21_58, [1883] ScotLR 21_58 |
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Page: 58↓
[Sheriff of Lanarkshire.
A landlord who had been found liable in the amount of damage done to his tenant's premises by an overflow of water, brought an action for the amount he had to pay, and for his expenses in resisting the claim, against a plumber, on the ground that he had occasioned the damage by defective and insufficient work executed on the premises four years previous to the overflow. The Court awarded the damages sued for, being satisfied that the landlord had in point of fact established his averment.
Mrs Roche, who was tenant of a shop at No. 475 Gallowgate Street, Glasgow, sued her landlord, Patrick M'Intyre, in the Sheriff Court of Lanarkshire at Glasgow, for the sum of £30 as damages occasioned by an overflow of water which occurred on 29th May 1882, and by which her shop was flooded and the goods therein injured. She obtained decree in her favour, and M'Intyre was found liable in £20 of damages and £16, 5s. 1d. of expenses. Thereupon M'Intyre, having paid these sums, raised this action in the same Court against John Gallacher, a plumber whom he had employed in April and May 1878 to put in new supply pipes throughout the said property, and to do all necessary repairs for making the plumber work of the tenement secure. The ground of action was that the defender had at that time cut a pipe leading from the main pipe supplying the water-closet cistern to the kitchen jawbox, and that he had culpably failed to solder it securely, and that in consequence it burst and caused the overflow for which the pursuer had been found liable to his tenant.
The pursuer pleaded—“The pursuer having sustained loss and damage to the extent sued through the fault and negligence of the defender, is entitled to decree as craved, with expenses.”
The defender pleaded—“(1) In respect the alleged claim against defender has not been made tempestive, but after a period of nearly five years from the date when said work was said to be executed, the pursuer is chargeable with mora, and the action is inept and falls to be dismissed with costs. (2) In respect the alleged work
Page: 59↓
which is said to have proven defective is in any case the result of ordinary tear and wear, or of an accident or circumstances over which defender had no control, no action is competent against defender.” The facts disclosed by the proof sufficiently appear from the following interlocutor of the Sheriff-Substitute ( Guthrie), who found “that on the 28th of May 1882 a water-pipe in the pursuer's property in Gallowgate burst, and the water overflowed into the shop below, causing serious loss and damage to the goods therein: that the pursuer being convened in an action of damages in this Court at the instance of the tenant of the shop, was found liable in damages, and has paid under the decree the sum of £20 of damages and £16, 5s. 1d. of expenses: that the leak in the said pipe took place at or near the joint of a disused pipe leading from the main pipe supplying the water-closet cistern to the kitchen jawbox: that the said disused pipe was cut in 1878 by the defender or his workmen when he was employed by the pursuer to alter the mode of supply to the kitchen, and that he or his workmen then failed properly and securely to stop and solder it, in consequence whereof it burst and caused the said overflow: that the defender is therefore liable to make good the loss which the pursuer so sustains: And assesses the damages at thirty-six pounds five shillings and one penny sterling, for which decerns.
“ Note.—This is a narrow jury question; and the difficulty arises, in my opinion, not from any doubt suggested by the defender's contention that he did not stop up the stumps where the leak occurred, but from the age and general condition of the pipes, which, according to some of the evidence, made a burst not unlikely. It is further remarkable, and favourable to the defender, that there seem to have been overflows into the same shop on previous occasions, though in this case there is little evidence on that point. I should not have therefore been inclined to hold the defender responsible but for the distinct evidence of Cunningham, Wallace, Brown (defender's witness), and Shields (also a witness friendly to the defender), that it is untradesmanlike to close a pipe permanently by merely putting it together without using solder, and the preponderating evidence that this pipe was not soldered, but only hammered together.
It is apparently hard that the defender should be made liable for a flaw which was attended by no bad effects for more than four years; but if it be proved that it was a flaw, and that it caused this damage, the lapse of time is no defence. In many cases it may be impossible to convict plumbers of defective workmanship—to prove that overflows arise from negligence or want of skill and not from accident or ordinary tear and wear; but when the evidence is sufficient, there is no hardship, but plain justice and expediency, in making a tradesman who stands to his employer, as a plumber generally does, in a peculiarly confidential relation, pay for the loss which his negligence has caused. I think that the balance of evidence is distinctly in favour of the pursuer.”
The above findings in fact sufficiently show the import of the proof.
The defender appealed, and argued—In order to succeed here it was necessary that the pursuer must establish connection between the flooding in 1882 and the alleged previous defective plumber work by the very clearest evidence. It was just as likely that the leakage had been the result of four years’ wear and tear as of defective work. In point of fact, the evidence showed that the defender had done all he possibly could to execute his work in a tradesmanlike manner.
Argued for pursuer—No doubt it was difficult to establish the connection between the flooding of Mrs Roche's shop and the defender's defective plumber work of four years previous; but by the proof that had been done, and in point of law the ground of action for the amount of damage suffered by the pursuer through the insufficiency of that work was perfectly sound.
At advising—
Now, undoubtedly it is a good ground of action against a tradesman that he has executed the work for which he has been employed in an insufficient and defective manner. If his customer has suffered thereby, he is entitled to be released from the consequences. Circumstances no doubt may be infinitely various, and in each case there may be a good answer to the demand, but as a general rule a tradesman is answerable to his customer for insufficient work. Here these consequences, according to the pursuer's case, did not show till 1882, when the pipe alleged to have been treated in a defective manner gave way, and the flooding took place in the adjoining premises. Well, if the fact be as stated, it seems to me that the ground of action is good in law. It may be difficult or even impossible to prove that what occurred four years after is attributable to the insufficiency of the work executed. It is a question of fact on the evidence. But if it be satisfactorily proved, then there seems no legal difficulty in allowing action against the tradesman for relief against ill consequences.
The Sheriff has decided that the injuries for which the pursuer has had to pay have arisen from the defective manner in which the defender executed his work in 1878, and on that question I have only to say, that having listened with attention to Mr Thomson, I do not see any reason to differ, and therefore I consider the case on that assumption. The pursuer has overcome, in the opinion of the Sheriff, and rightly so in my opinion, the difficult task which met him at the outset, of establishing connection between the flooding in 1882 and the defective work in 1878. The flooding then has been shown to be the result of the defender's failure to solder the pipe in 1878. There only remains, then, the amount of damages to be awarded. The pursuer has satisfactorily proved the amount, and there is no evidence to the contrary, for the owner of the premises swears that she suffered damage to the extent of £20. She brought an action against the pursuer as proprietor of the premises. He put her to prove her case, and she proved that
Page: 60↓
I should therefore suggest that the appeal be dismissed.
The
The Court pronounced the following interlocutor:—
“Find that the loss sustained by the pursuer, as libelled, was attributable to the insufficiency of the work specified in the record, done by the defender on the employment of the pursuer: Therefore dismiss the appeal and affirm the judgment.”
Counsel for Appellant— Comrie Thomson. Agent— William Officer, S.S.C.
Counsel for Respondent— Keir — G. Wardlaw Burnet. Agent— George Andrew, S.S.C.