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Scottish Sheriff Court Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Sheriff Court Decisions >> Strachan & Anor v. Highland Joinery Products Ltd [2008] ScotSC 7 (29 February 2008)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotSC/2008/7.html
Cite as: [2008] ScotSC 7

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SHERIFFDOM OF GRAMPIAN HIGHLAND AND ISLANDS AT INVERNESS

 

A686/06

JUDGEMENT

 

of

 

SHERIFF PRINCIPAL SIR STEPHEN S T YOUNG Bt QC

 

in the cause

 

MRS ANNE STRACHAN AND EDDIE STRACHAN

 

Pursuers and Respondents

 

against

 

HIGHLAND JOINERY PRODUCTS LIMITED

 

Defenders and Appellants

 

 

 

 

 

Act: Mr G I Hawkes, advocate, instructed by Simpson & Marwick, Edinburgh

Alt: Mr Lachlan McNeill, advocate, instructed by South Forrest, Inverness

 

 

Inverness: 29th February 2008

 

The sheriff principal, having resumed consideration of the cause, refuses the appeal and adheres to the interlocutor of the sheriff dated 24 September 2007; finds the defenders and appellants liable to the pursuers and respondents in the expenses of the appeal and allows an account thereof to be given in and remits the same, when lodged, to the auditor of court to tax and to report; certifies the appeal as suitable for the employment by the pursuers and respondents of junior counsel; quoad ultra remits the cause to the sheriff to proceed as accords.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Note

 

[1] In this case the pursuers and respondents are husband and wife. They reside together at Drumbeghouse, Drumbeg, Sutherland. On or about 7 October 2004 they contracted with the defenders and appellants for the supply of windows and doors at the property. They claim that the windows and doors which were in due course supplied by the defenders were not of satisfactory quality, in breach of the term implied into the contract in pursuance of section 14(2) of the Sale of Goods Act 1979. They say that as a result they sustained various losses, including a loss of profits from a business which they intended to carry on at the property, and they now seek damages from the defenders to compensate them for these losses. The defenders tabled two pleas-in-law directed to the relevancy and specification of the pursuers' averments, and these were the subject of a debate before the sheriff on 24 September 2007. The outcome of this was that by interlocutor of the same date he allowed a proof before answer. It is this interlocutor which is the subject of the present appeal, and in the grounds of appeal it is said that the sheriff erred in law in allowing proof of the pursuers' averments in support of their claim for loss of profit. It is said in short that these averments are irrelevant and should therefore have been excluded from probation.

 

[2] In article 2 of the condescendence the pursuers aver, inter alia, as follows:

 

The pursuers decided to carry out extensive renovation works to their property known as Drumbeghouse. In addition they wished to construct two studios within the ground of Drumbeghouse. The pursuers purchased the property in order to live there and to operate a business therefrom. As part of the refurbishment of Drumbeghouse and the construction of the two studios the pursuers required to install windows and doors. On or about 7 October 2004 the pursuers contracted with the defenders for the supply of windows and doors in both the studios and the main house. The defenders were supplied with information including drawing number S4.02.05 Revision C. In terms of that drawing the windows required to be purpose made by Nor-Dan ........ The defenders refused to come to the pursuers' home to measure for the windows. The first pursuer therefore took the plans to the defenders along also with a Nor-Dan brochure. The first pursuer explained to Mr Duncan Macdonald of the defenders that they were carrying out refurbishment of Drumbeghouse and constructing two studios in the grounds in accordance with drawing S4.02.05. The first pursuer explained that the pursuers were to be running a business ....... In pursuance of that contract the defenders manufactured windows and doors. It was an implied term of that contract that the windows and doors manufactured by the defenders should be of satisfactory quality ....... The defenders were fully aware that they were supplying windows to be installed into Drumbeghouse which was being refurbished and for the new build studios. By failing to supply windows and doors of a satisfactory quality they have caused the pursuers loss and damage all as hereinafter condescended upon.

 

Both before the sheriff and at the hearing of the appeal counsel for the defenders conceded that the words "within the property" were to be implied after the words "running a business" in this passage.

 

[3] In article 3 of the condescendence the pursuers aver that the windows and doors supplied by the defenders were not of satisfactory quality and they explain in some detail what were the defects which were found in them. They aver in particular that as a result of these defects "the windows and doors allow ingress or water into Drumbeghouse and the studios", and later on they aver that they "have been informed by Building Control that until the windows adequately provide ventilation and can be cleaned safely from inside the buildings any application for certificate of completion would be rejected".

 

[4] In article 4 the pursuers aver, inter alia, that the windows and doors are not reasonably fit for keeping wind and water out of their home and studios, nor for the purpose of providing adequate ventilation.

 

[5] In article 5 the pursuers aver, inter alia, as follows:

 

As a result of the defenders' material breach of contract the pursuers have suffered loss and damage. The ingress of water into Drumbeghouse and the studios has caused damage to the property. As the result of water ingress into the house the pursuers are unable to complete the required renovation works. They are unable to install flooring which they have previously purchased. That flooring is being stored in studio number 2. The pursuers are unable to live in the house and are living in studio number 1. The windows and doors require to be replaced in their entirety ...... The pursuers have been unable to carry out their business activities of offering accommodation and classes in Art and Cookery. The pursuers intended to commence trading by September 2006. They have been unable to do so. The projected turnover for the first year's trading is £158,592 with a projected gross profit of £97,864. The pursuers' projected cashflow forecast for the first year of trading anticipates that they would have commenced trading in April 2006. They would have done so. The anticipated sales in respect of accommodation is £100,467. The sale of wine is anticipated as being £17,873. They anticipated an income in respect of cookery classes of £25,344 and of £14,908 in respect of art classes. After payment of borrowings, outgoing in respect of cookery and art lessons, wine and food costs and other overheads their net cashflow is predicted to be £97,864. The pursuers reasonably estimate that they would have secured a net profit of £50,000 for the first year. After tax and national insurance contributions it is reasonably anticipated that the pursuers would have secured the sum of £17,000 each per annum. These losses are ongoing. The sum first craved is a reasonable estimate of the cost of replacement windows, necessary redecoration works, and loss and profits (sic).

 

[6] In each of articles 6 and 7 the pursuers incorporate averments in support of their respective claims for damages for the distress and inconvenience sustained by each of them personally as a result of the defenders' breach of contract. For present purposes it is necessary to notice only the averment which appears in each of these articles to the effect that draughts, rainwater and snow are able to enter the house and the studios, evidently (though this is not stated explicitly) as a result of the defective quality of the windows and doors supplied by the defenders.

 

[7] Section 53A of the Sale of Goods Act 1979 provides:

 

(1) The measure of damages for the seller's breach of contract is the estimated loss directly and naturally and resulting, in the ordinary course of events, from the breach.

(2) Where the seller's breach consists of the delivery of goods which are not of the quality required by the contract and the buyer retains the goods, such loss as aforesaid is prima facie the difference between the value of the goods at the time of delivery to the buyer and the value they would have had if they had fulfilled the contract.

(3) This section applies to Scotland only.

 

Section 54 of the Act provides:

 

Nothing in this Act affects the right of the buyer of the seller to recover interest or special damages in any case where by law interest or special damages may be recoverable, or to recover money paid where the consideration for the payment of it has failed.

 

[8] It is not in dispute in this case that section 53A opens up a claim for damages under the first rule in Hadley v Baxendale (1854) 9 Ex 341 while section 54 opens up a claim for damages under the second rule, and it is under this second rule that the pursuers' claim for loss of profits is based. The rules themselves were expressed (at page 354) in the following terms:

 

Where two parties have made a contract which one of them has broken, the damages which the other party ought to receive in respect of such breach of contract shall be such as may fairly and reasonably be considered either arising naturally, i.e. according to the usual course of things, from such breach of contract itself, or such as may reasonably be supposed to have been in the contemplation of both parties at the time they made the contract as the probable result of the breach of it.

 

The second rule was further amplified in the following passage (at pages 354/5):

 

....... if the special circumstances under which the contract was actually made were communicated by the plaintiffs to the defendants, and thus known to both parties, the damages resulting from such a breach of contract, which they would reasonably contemplate, would be the amount of injury which would ordinarily follow from a breach of contract under the special circumstances so known and communicated.

 

The rules have been interpreted and restated in a number of subsequent cases. In particular, in C. Czarnikow Ltd v Koufos 1969 1AC 350 Lord Reid said at page 385:

 

The crucial question is whether, on the information available to the defendant when the contract was made, he should, or the reasonable man in his position would, have realised that such loss was sufficiently likely to result from the breach of contract to make it proper to hold that the loss flowed naturally from the breach or that loss of that kind should have been within his contemplation.

 

[9] Opening the appeal, counsel for the defenders submitted that the sheriff had erred in law in allowing proof of the averments in article 5 which I have italicised. Counsel suggested that in the note appended to his interlocutor the sheriff had dealt with the defenders' attack upon these averments as an issue of specification. Counsel stated that the issue was truly one of relevancy, and had been argued as such before the sheriff. He submitted that the knowledge on the part of the defenders that the pursuers were to be running a business, by implication within the building which was being refurbished and the two new studios, was not in itself sufficient to lead to the conclusion that the defenders ought reasonably to have contemplated that the pursuers would be likely to suffer a loss of profits due to a delay in the commencement of their business in consequence of the defenders' failure to supply windows and doors that were of satisfactory quality. In the absence of averments by the pursuers that the defenders knew what type or types of business the pursuers intended to carry on, and more importantly when they intended to commence these businesses, there was no basis for saying that it would have been within the reasonable contemplation of the defenders that as a result of their breach of contract the pursuers would sustain the loss of profits of the kind averred by them in article 5 of the condescendence. It was accepted that the pursuers could recover the costs of replacing faulty windows and doors and carrying out redecoration, and also damages for the personal upset sustained by each of them, since these were all matters which would have been within the reasonable contemplation of the defenders. Both under section 53A and under section 54 of the 1979 Act the test was what ought to have been within the reasonable contemplation of the defenders, and the solitary averment in article 2 that the pursuers would be running a business was not of itself sufficient to bring within the reasonable contemplation of the defenders the fact that they would be likely to suffer a loss of profits of the kind referred to in article 5 if the windows and doors supplied were not of satisfactory quality.

 

[10] In response, counsel for the pursuers pointed out that the defenders knew that they were to supply windows and doors for use in the property, in other words the refurbished house and the two new studios, and further that the pursuers intended to run a business within the property. As a matter of relevancy this was, so counsel submitted, enough to support the pursuers' claim for damages by way of the loss of profits specified in article 5. At the debate it had indeed appeared that the defenders' point was one of specification rather than relevancy, namely that the pursuers had not stated what types of business they would be running from the property so that the defenders had not been in a position to assess whether or not they should take on the risks associated with entering into the contract with the pursuers. Counsel submitted that it must be within the reasonable contemplation of a supplier of windows and doors to be incorporated into a property who is told that the property is to be used for running a business that, if the property is rendered unfit for residential or business use on account of the defective quality of the windows and doors supplied by him, then he would face the possibility of a claim for loss of business profits even if he did not know what particular type of business the buyer proposed to carry on. Thus in the present case the defenders' Mr Macdonald, having been told that the pursuers intended to run a business within the property, ought to have realised that, if the windows and doors supplied by the defenders were not of satisfactory quality, they faced a possible claim, not merely for the costs of replacement, redecoration and relocation incurred by the pursuers, but also for loss of business profits. It must, said counsel, have been obvious to the defenders that if the windows and doors supplied did not protect the property against the elements, then the property would not be capable of being used for business purposes whatever the precise nature of the business. There was virtually no conceivable business that could be run from the property if it was rendered uninhabitable on account of the defenders' breach of contract.

 

[11] In my opinion the submissions for the pursuers are to be preferred. To adapt the language of Lord Reid in the passage quoted in paragraph [8] above, the question here is whether, if it is proved that the first pursuer explained to Mr Macdonald of the defenders that the pursuers were to be running a business within the property, this would be enough to support a finding that the defenders should, or the reasonable man in their position would, have realised that an inability to carry on business activities of the kind specified by the pursuers in article 5 of the condescendence, and hence a loss of profits on the part of the pursuers, were sufficiently likely to result from a breach by the defenders of the implied term of the contract that the windows and doors supplied by them would be of satisfactory quality to make it proper to hold that this loss of profits flowed naturally from the breach or that loss of that kind should have been within their contemplation.

 

[12] In my opinion this question falls to be answered in the affirmative. According to the pursuers' averments the defenders were on notice that the pursuers were refurbishing the existing property and constructing two studios in the grounds of the property, that the windows and doors to the supplied by the defenders were to be installed in both the existing property and the two new studios, and that the pursuers were to be running a business within the property. In these circumstances it seems to me that it would be open to the sheriff to draw the inference that the defenders ought reasonably to have contemplated that, if the windows and doors supplied by them were not of satisfactory quality, the property (including the two new studios) would not be wind and watertight and so would be rendered unfit for use by the pursuers for the purposes of the business activities that they intended to carry on within the property and hence that they would sustain a loss of profits. It matters not in my opinion that the defenders may not have known precisely what type of business or businesses the pursuers would be engaging in or when they intended to commence trading. All that is required here is that the defenders should reasonably have contemplated that the pursuers would be carrying on a business or businesses of the kind averred by them in article 5 and that they would commence trading within a reasonable period of time after the installation of the windows and doors which were to be supplied by the defenders. In my view it would be open to the sheriff to find that offering accommodation and classes in art and cookery are precisely the type of business activities which might reasonably be expected to be carried on within a dwelling house and studios situated in the north west of Scotland, and further that it ought not to have come as a surprise to the defenders, having contracted with the pursuers in October 2004, to learn that the latter intended to commence trading by April 2006, eighteen months or so later. In all the circumstances therefore I consider that the pursuers' averments in article 2, if proved, would be sufficient to support their claim for loss of profits as specified by them in article 5 of the condescendence. I have refused the appeal accordingly.

 

[13] In addition to the authorities cited above, in the course of the discussion I was referred to Benjamin's Sale of Goods (7th Edn) at pages 1082/3, Bence Graphics International Ltd v Fasson UK Ltd 1996 QB 87, Walker on Damages at pages 14/15, Sellar on Sale of Goods at paragraphs 6.16 et seq, Bunting v Tory 1948 64 TLR 353 and Bostock & Co Ltd v Nicholson & Sons Ltd 1904 1KB 725.


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