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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> The Gray Aitken Partnership Ltd & Ors v. Link Housing Association Ltd & Ors [2007] ScotCS CSIH_4 (10 January 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2007/CSIH_4.html Cite as: [2007] ScotCS CSIH_4, [2007] CSIH 4, 2007 SCLR 343 |
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FIRST DIVISION, INNER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION |
|
Lord PresidentLord OsborneLord Eassie |
[2007] CSIH 4A1744/02 OPINION OF THE LORD PRESIDENT in RECLAIMING MOTION by THE GRAY AITKEN
PARTNERSHIP LIMITED and OTHERS Defenders and Reclaimers; in the cause LINK HOUSING ASSOCIATION
LIMITED Pursuers and Respondent; against (FIRST) PBL CONSTRUCTION
LIMITED and OTHERS Defenders: _______ |
Act: Howie, Q.C.,
Richardson; Harper Macleod LLP (Pursuers
and Respondents)
Alt: Wolffe; Simpson & Marwick (Second Defenders and
Reclaimers): Walker; Bishops (4th Defenders and Reclaimers): Erroch;
Drummond Miller (5th Defenders and Reclaimers)
[1] This is a
reclaiming motion from an interlocutor dated
[2] In May 1996
GAP Housing Association Limited, a body constituted under the Industrial and
Provident Societies Act 1965 ("GAP"), entered into a contract with the first
defenders for the construction of certain housing in
[3] By a special
resolution dated 16 October 2000 (subsequently confirmed on 2 November
2000) the members of GAP resolved to transfer for a certain consideration the
whole of the stock, property and other assets and all engagements of the association
to Link Housing Association Limited, another body constituted under the 1965
Act and having the registration number 1481R(S). Link Housing Association by resolution dated
[4] The
limitation provision in the collateral warranty provided:
"No action or proceedings for any
breach of this Agreement shall be commenced against the firm after the expiry
of 5 years from the date of practical completion of the Premises under the
Building Contract".
Practical completion occurred on or about 10 July 1997.
[5] The Minute of
Amendment was lodged and intimated on
[6] As at the
same date Article 1 of the Condescendence included the averment:
"The pursuers are Link Housing Association
Limited having its Registered Office at
Article 2, after a narrative of GAP's arrangements with the
other parties, included an averment -
"The pursuers have taken over the
whole right, title and interest of GAP under the contracts, Collateral Warranty
Agreements and appointments hereinbefore condescended on by virtue of transfer
of engagements in their favour, following on a resolution by the members of GAP
dated 2 November 2000 and the consent of Scottish Homes granted on 28 November
2000".
The clause "following on a resolution ... granted on
[7] The Rules of
the Court of Session confer wide powers of amendment. Rule of Court 24.1 provides:
"(1) In
any cause the court may, at any time before final judgment, allow an amendment
mentioned in paragraph (2).
(2) Paragraph
(1) applies to the following amendments -
...
(b) an
amendment which may be necessary -
(i) to
correct or supplement the designation of a party to
the cause;
...
(v) where
the cause has been commenced or presented in
the name of the wrong person, or it
is doubtful whether it has been commenced or presented in the name of the right
person, to allow any other person to be sisted in substitution for, or an
addition to, the original person ... "
[8] Mr. Wolffe
for the second defenders submitted that the material part of Rule 24.1 was
paragraph (2)(b)(v). The proposed
amendment involved the substitution of one person, Link Group Limited
(1481R(S)) for another person, Link Housing Association Limited
(SC225807). But the court's
discretionary power to allow such an amendment was constrained by the rule that
the court could not properly allow an amendment which would have the effect of
defeating a limitation to which another party was entitled (Hynd v West Fife Co-operative Limited 1980 SLT 41 at page 43). It was immaterial that there was some
connection between the original person and the person sought to be substituted
or added (Mclean v British Railways Board 1966 SLT 39; Arif v
Levy and Macrae, Lord Coulsfield, 17
December 1991, unreported). The Lord
Ordinary had further misinterpreted the facts in characterising the change as a
matter of form rather than of substance.
The essential question was which corporate entity had raised the
action; the answer to that question
could only be Link Housing Association Limited (SC225807). The proposed amendment sought to substitute
for the present pursuers a different entity, namely, Link Group Limited
(1481R(S)). The provisions of the
Companies Act 1985 emphasised the importance attached to a corporate name; reference was made to sections 2(1)(a),
26(1)(c), 28, 348 and 349. Similar
provision was made in the Industrial and Provident Societies Act 1965 - section
1(1)(b), Schedule 1, para. 1 and section 5. Reference was also made to Richards & Wallington (Earthmoving)
Limited v Whatlings Limited 1982
SLT 66, per Lord Maxwell at page 67.
Rule of Court 13.2(1) (as read with form 13.2-A) required the name,
designation and address of the pursuer to be inserted in the Instance. A person might sue under the name which he
used in his contracts and transactions with the public (Kinloch v Lourie (1853)
16 D 197, per Lord Cowan at page 200).
The name used by the pursuers in this summons was Link Housing
Association Limited, the name of company SC225807; Link Group Limited would, at the relevant
time, have been prohibited from using that name. The name used identified the particular body
and distinguished it from everybody else (Improved
Edinburgh Property Investment Building Society v Whites (1906) 8 F 903, per Lord Kinnear at pages 904-5). Reference was also made to Modern Housing Limited v Love 1998 SLT 1188. The circumstance that the pursuers made an
inaccurate averment that they had succeeded to the engagements of GAP did not
assist them. The name used in the Instance
uniquely identified Link Housing Association Limited (company number
SC225807). This was not a clerical error
by way of misnomer (cf Riach v Wallace (1899) 1 F 718). Rule of Court 24(1)(b)(i) could not be
applicable, "party" being defined in Rule of Court 1.3(1). What was sought to be done here was to
introduce a new pursuer. It would be
inappropriate to carry out an inquiry as to how this state of affairs had come
about. In England a rule of court had
been made to deal with situations of the present kind but it was in different
terms and of little assistance; reference
was made to Morgan Est (Scotland) Limited
v Hanson Concrete Products Limited
[2005] 1 WLR 2557, particularly per Jacob LJ at paras. 12-14, 19-22 and
41. The appropriate course was to recall
the Lord Ordinary's interlocutor, refuse to allow the pleadings to be amended
in terms of the Minute of Amendment and Answers and to dismiss the action in so
far as directed against the second defenders.
[9] Mr. Howie,
for the pursuers, responding to Mr. Wolffe's submission, acknowledged that, if
the proposed amendment amounted to the substitution of one corporate body for
another as pursuers, to allow it would involve an improper exercise of the
court's discretion, the limitation period having expired. This was not, however, truly a substitution. It was a case of a misdescription, analogous
to a clerical error - "Housing Association" had erroneously appeared in the
description rather than "Group". No
party could have been misled as to the person suing the action. It was clear from the averment in Article 2
that the pursuer was the person to whom the right, title and interest of GAP to
pursue the proceedings had been transferred.
That was the Industrial and Provident Society No. 1481R(S), now known as
Link Group Limited. That company had
existed at all material times. The
company now known as Link Housing Association Limited (SC225807) had not
existed at the date of transfer.
Although in Article I the statute under which the pursuers were
incorporated had not been referred to, each of the surviving defenders had been
designed as a company incorporated under the Companies Acts. The absence of any such description with
reference to the pursuers tended to confirm that they were incorporated
otherwise. The relative documentation
vouched that the transfer had been between Industrial and Provident
Societies. Reliance was placed on Watson v Frame (1983) 28 JLS 421 and Orkney
Islands Council v S. & J.D.
Robertson & Co. Limited 2003 SLT 775, especially at paras. [5] - [8]
and [11]. The defenders had taken no
plea of limitation (or prescription) prior to the pursuers seeking to amend,
although they must have been aware long before that of the error. There was no true prejudice to them as
evidenced by the lateness of their taking the point. It was in the interests of justice that the
amendment be allowed. Following an enquiry
by a member of the court, Mr. Howie advised that the instruction to commence
proceedings had been given to the solicitor on writing paper with the heading
"Link Group Limited". The blunder had
arisen from "a failure by the solicitor to appreciate the small print". Although there were errors in the Lord
Ordinary's reasoning such that the pursuers could not rely on his exercise of
discretion, this court could and should allow the proposed amendment. If the court was against him, Mr. Howie
conceded that, subject to a submission consequential on the first defenders not
having reclaimed (see below), the appropriate course would be to dismiss the
action in so far as directed against the second defenders.
[10] No party
sought an inquiry as to the precise circumstances in which this action came to
be raised in the name of Link Housing Association Limited. Certain documentary materials were put before
us by Mr. Howie vouching the history and basis of the transaction by which the
engagements of GAP were transferred to the
then styled Link Housing Association Limited, the latter's change of name
to Link Group Limited and the incorporation of a distinct company under the
style Link Housing Association Limited.
None of Mr. Wolffe or either of the counsel appearing for the other
reclaimers took any objection to the court having regard to that documentation,
albeit that history had not formally been admitted or proved. I proceed upon the basis that that history is
accurate and could readily have been ascertained by any interested party. I also take into consideration the account,
so far as it went, given by Mr. Howie as to the instructions given for the
raising of the action. It was not
suggested that the second defenders would be prejudiced by the amendment, otherwise
than in the obvious sense of their contractual limitation provision being in
effect overridden.
[11] The power of
the court to allow amendment is widely expressed. It is, however, well settled that there are
restraints upon the exercise of that power.
In Pompa's Trustees v Edinburgh Magistrates 1942 SC 119, Lord
Justice-Clerk Cooper said, at page 125:
"Further, our reports contain many
decisions showing that the Court will not in general allow a pursuer by
amendment to substitute the right defender for the wrong defender, or to cure a
radical incompetence in his action, or to change the basis of his case if he
seeks to make such amendments only after the expiry of a time limit which would
have prevented him at that stage from raising proceedings afresh".
The same restraint applies where an additional or substituted
pursuer is sought to be introduced (
[12] In substance
the issue before this court is a narrow one, namely, whether the amendment
proposed corrects the designation of an existing party to the cause or
substitutes another person for the original pursuer. The pursuers aver that they are "Link Housing
Association Limited having its registered office at
[13] The error
which was made, and undoubtedly there was an error, cannot, in my view, be said
to have been in the nature of a clerical error, that is, an error in the
mechanical process of writing or transcribing.
Although the names "Link Housing Association Limited" and "Link Group
Limited" differ only in the second and third words of the first as against the
second word in the second, there is no suggestion in the pleadings or otherwise
that the person framing the Summons (or giving the instructions for its
framing) mistranscribed the name of the pursuers (as in Riach v Wallace). Nor is it the case where a single existing
person has been misnamed (as in Watson v
Frame and Orkney Islands Council v S.
& J.D. Robertson & Co. Limited).
The error was, in my view, more profound than that. The plain inference from the circumstances as
disclosed is that the solicitor or counsel concerned, although aware that GAP's
rights had been transferred, did not appreciate that the original Link Housing
Association Limited (the transferee) had changed its name and that another
distinct body had been incorporated as Link Housing Association Limited. The action was, as a result, raised in the name
of the latter body. That error was, in
my view, a matter of substance going to the identity of the person suing. If that analysis is correct, then the
proposal to change the name of the pursuers involves the substitution of a
different person for the original pursuers (both being in existence at the time
the action was raised) and is struck at by the line of authority referred to.
[14] It was not
submitted that that line of authority should be overruled. Subject to the discussion which immediately
follows, the second defenders' submission is, in my view, well-founded and
effect should be given to it.
[15] Mr. Howie
submitted that, even if he were wrong in his primary argument, it was not open
to the court to open up the Lord Ordinary's interlocutor and thereafter refuse
amendment. That was because the first
defenders, who were also affected by the amendment, had not reclaimed. While in some circumstances it would be
possible to allow amendment in part (where the amendment affected only certain
parties discretely) that was not possible in respect of an amendment, such as
the name of a party, which affected all parties equally and with which one
party had not quarrelled. In my view
this argument is unsound. Where a
proposed change affects more than one party and one of these successfully
opposes amendment then, albeit another party or parties consent or do not
object to such amendment, the appropriate course is to refuse the amendment simpliciter. Where as here the consequence of allowing the
amendment is to release the successful party from the action, it will be open
thereafter for the pursuers to lodge a fresh Minute of Amendment proposing a
change of name. That, if granted, will
affect the position of the surviving defenders.
[16] Mr. Walker for
the fourth defenders adopted Mr. Wolffe's submission in relation to the
substance of the change sought to be made.
He was unable, however, to point to any contractual or other limitation
provision in his favour but contended separately that the operation of the
quinquennial prescription under section 6 of the Prescription and Limitation (
[17] In my view Mr.
Walker's separate submission cannot be given effect to at this stage. Unless it is apparent from a pursuer's
averments that the obligation has been extinguished by prescription, it is
generally for a party relying on a contention that it has been extinguished to
establish the factual basis upon which the contention depends (Strathclyde Regional Council v W.A. Fairhurst & Partners 1997 SLT
658). The letters referred to have
neither been admitted nor proved nor the background against which they were
sent explored. It cannot be said at this
stage that by the date of these letters the obligation to make reparation on which
the pursuers insist had arisen. Nor can
it at this stage be said that the proposed averments constitute a change to the
basis of the pursuers' case. Prima facie that case will remain one
based upon the contractual obligation to supervise, that case being amplified
by the identification of an objective standard against which that obligation
falls to be measured, and by greater particularisation of the duties and of
their breach. I would not have sustained
the reclaiming motion on the separate basis urged by Mr. Walker.
[18] Mr. Erroll for
the fifth defenders had no existing or proposed plea either of limitation or of
prescription. His contention was that,
having regard to the lateness with which the amendments were proposed and the
extent of those averments in so far as they affected the fifth defenders, the
Lord Ordinary had erred in the exercise of his discretion in allowing the
amendment. The present averments in
Article IX of the Condescendence were in general terms in respect of inspection
and liaison. In describing the basis of
the obligation relied on, the pursuers proposed to substitute "implied" for
"contractual" and to specify that inspection should have been done on a daily
basis. The premises had been demolished
in February 2003. That circumstance
could not otherwise than prejudice a party faced with a more detailed case of
obligation and breach of obligation. It
was, however, accepted that no contention of prejudice to the fifth defenders
had been advanced before the Lord Ordinary.
Reference was made to Thomson v
Corporation of
[19] In my view Mr.
Erroll's argument falls to be rejected.
Delay will not of itself justify refusal of amendment. There must be prejudice or some other
material disadvantage to the other party.
In Thomson v Glasgow Corporation the amendment was
sought after proof had been led. In Wood,
[20] In the
foregoing circumstances I move your Lordships to allow the reclaiming motion at
the instance of the second defenders, to recall the Lord Ordinary's
interlocutor, to refuse to allow amendment in terms of the Minute of Amendment
and Answers and to remit to the Lord Ordinary to proceed as accords.
FIRST DIVISION, INNER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION |
|
Lord PresidentLord OsborneLord Eassie |
[2006] CSIH 4A1744/02 OPINION OF LORD OSBORNE in RECLAIMING MOTION by THE GRAY AITKEN
PARTNERSHIP LIMITED and OTHERS Defenders and Reclaimers; in the cause LINK HOUSING ASSOCIATION
LIMITED Pursuers and Respondent; against (FIRST) PBL CONSTRUCTION
LIMITED and OTHERS Defenders: _______ |
Act: Howie, Q.C.,
Richardson; Harper Macleod LLP (Pursuers
and Respondents)
Alt: Wolffe; Simpson & Marwick (Second Defenders and
Reclaimers): Walker; Bishops (4th Defenders and
Reclaimers): Erroch; Drummond Miller (5th Defenders and
Reclaimers)
[21] I have had the
opportunity of reading the Opinion of your Lordship in the chair. I am in complete agreement with it and have
nothing useful to add. I agree with the
course of action which your Lordship proposes.
FIRST DIVISION, INNER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION |
|
Lord PresidentLord OsborneLord Eassie |
[2006] CSIH 4A1744/02 OPINION OF LORD EASSIE in RECLAIMING MOTION by THE GRAY AITKEN
PARTNERSHIP LIMITED and OTHERS Defenders and Reclaimers; in the cause LINK HOUSING ASSOCIATION
LIMITED Pursuers and Respondent; against (FIRST) PBL CONSTRUCTION
LIMITED and OTHERS Defenders: _______ |
Act: Howie, Q.C.,
Richardson; Harper Macleod LLP (Pursuers
and Respondents)
Alt: Wolffe; Simpson & Marwick (Second Defenders and
Reclaimers): Walker; Bishops (4th Defenders and
Reclaimers): Erroch; Drummond Miller (5th Defenders and
Reclaimers)
[22] I have also
had the opportunity of reading the Opinion of your Lordship in the chair. I am in complete agreement with its reasoning
on all of the issues and with the disposal of the reclaiming motion which is
proposed.