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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Supreme Court >> BPE Solicitors & Anor v Hughes-Holland (in substitution for Gabriel) (Rev 1) [2017] UKSC 21 (22 March 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSC/2017/21.html Cite as: [2017] PNLR 23, 171 Con LR 46, [2018] AC 599, [2017] UKSC 21, [2017] 2 WLR 1029, [2017] WLR(D) 199, [2017] 3 All ER 969 |
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[2017] UKSC 21
On appeal from: [2013] EWCA Civ 1513
JUDGMENT
BPE Solicitors and another (Respondents) v Hughes-Holland (in substitution for Gabriel) (Appellant)
before
Lord Neuberger, President
Lord Mance
Lord Clarke
Lord Sumption
Lord Hodge
JUDGMENT GIVEN ON
22 March 2017
Heard on 14 and 15 December 2016
Appellant David Halpern QC Adam Chichester-Clark (Instructed by Roose + Partners) |
|
Respondents Roger Stewart QC Scott Allen (Instructed by Beale & Company Solicitors LLP) |
LORD SUMPTION: (with whom Lord Neuberger, Lord Mance, Lord Clarke and Lord Hodge agree)
1. The issue on this appeal is, in summary, what damages are recoverable in a case where (i) but for the negligence of a professional adviser his client would not have embarked on some course of action, but (ii) part or all of the loss which he suffered by doing so arose from risks which it was no part of the adviser’s duty to protect his client against. The problem may be illustrated by one of the most celebrated legal parables of modern times, the story of the mountaineer’s knee devised by Lord Hoffmann in the course of argument in South Australia Asset Management Corpn v York Montague Ltd [1997] AC 191, at p 213:
“A mountaineer about to undertake a difficult climb is concerned about the fitness of his knee. He goes to a doctor who negligently makes a superficial examination and pronounces the knee fit. The climber goes on the expedition, which he would not have undertaken if the doctor had told him the true state of his knee. He suffers an injury which is an entirely foreseeable consequence of mountaineering but has nothing to do with his knee.”
Like all parables, this one over-simplifies the issue and will not bear too much analysis. But it serves the purpose which its author intended, of introducing one of the main dilemmas of the law of damages.
The facts
The proceedings
“I agree with Mr Davie that BPE would not be liable if what Mr Gabriel had in mind, that is expenditure of about £200,000 on a property which would not have an acquisition cost, was unviable and bound to fail so that Mr Gabriel would never have recovered his loan. Certainly, the evidence was to the effect that what was being proposed for Building 428 was likely to cost far in excess of £200,000. Nevertheless, I am not persuaded that no development whatsoever, particularly with Mr Little’s own company doing the construction, could have been achieved so as to make Mr Gabriel’s investment of £200,000 a viable proposition. Clearly, there would have been risks, not least from the unusual nature and location of the property, and it is quite possible that development plans would have required re-thinking. But, I do not think it would be right for me to conclude that this was necessarily going to be a doomed venture for Mr Gabriel from the outset.”
“There was no positive evidence to the effect that, if £200,000 had been spent on developing the property, its value would have been such as to ensure recovery of Mr Gabriel’s loan or, in other words, that the transaction was viable. On the contrary, such evidence as was before the judge suggested that expenditure in such amount would not have increased the value of the property. As Mr Stewart submitted, the judge, in my view wrongly, reversed the burden of proof by finding that the defendants had not persuaded him that no development was possible. That the value of the developed property, by the utilisation of funds of £200,000, would have been such as to ensure recovery of Mr Gabriel’s loan was a matter for Mr Gabriel to allege and to prove.”
The Court of Appeal accordingly held that the whole loss was attributable to Mr Gabriel’s misjudgements and reduced the damages to nil. They also held, for largely overlapping reasons, that had there been any recoverable loss, it would have been reduced by 75% for contributory negligence.
The viability of the development project
(1) Building 428 was on any view an unattractive investment prospect. It was an old and run-down disused heating tower. The ground was contaminated by hydrocarbons, and to comply with the conditions of the two planning permissions, it would have been necessary to spend about £30,000 on decontamination before any development could start. The Judge recorded the view of the auctioneers employed in July 2010 (Allsop) that it would be a difficult lot to sell. Some of their reasons reflected the difficult conditions of the commercial property market in the aftermath of the financial crisis. But others would have been relevant factors at any time. In their opinion, the building was in an unattractive location for a developer, likely to have high development costs and unlikely to attract much interest. This judgment was borne out by the result of the auction.
(2) The evidence clearly established that expenditure on development would have enhanced the value of the property only if the development had been substantially completed. It follows that although Mr Gabriel’s interest was in the value of the property as security for his loan, this was dependent on the viability of the development project, and in particular on there being enough money to complete it. It was not suggested that Mr Little would have had any resources available for completing it other than the £200,000 lent by Mr Gabriel. Mr Gabriel’s prospect of getting his money back therefore depended mainly on the reliability of Mr Little’s estimate of about £200,000 for the development costs.
(3) At the trial, most of the evidence about the costs of development related to the larger development envisaged in the planning permission of July 2009. It showed that Mr Middleton, an experienced quantity surveyor consulted by Mr Gabriel in November 2009, had estimated the cost of development in accordance with the 2009 planning permission at £468,359.98, not including VAT, fees or plastering to the water tower. Both of the expert quantity surveyors who gave evidence at the trial regarded this figure as too low. One of them (Mr Gabriel’s expert) estimated the costs at £667,804.73, not including fees. All of these figures implied a large loss had the 2009 project ever been completed.
(4) What is less clear is the relationship between the cost of development according to the 2009 planning permission and the cost of development according to the somewhat more modest development authorised by the 2004 planning permission which had existed at the time of the transaction in 2007. One would expect the 2007 project to have cost less. It was, however, Mr Gabriel’s own pleaded case that the “nature and cost of the required development/refurbishment” did not materially increase between November 2007 and November 2009. This may have reflected his understanding that a development of 3,500 to 4,000 square feet had always been envisaged. But whatever the reason, he did not resile from it and the cross-examination by BPE’s counsel of his expert valuer Mr Heming proceeded on that basis. Mr Heming accepted (on the same basis) that although development values were higher in 2007 than in 2009, a valuer of the security in 2007 would have concluded that the development project was unviable because £200,000 would not have been enough to complete it. Since the cost of development according to the 2009 plans was well over double and possibly as much as three and a half times Mr Little’s estimate of 2007, the Judge’s remark (para 49) that the figures “cast doubt” on the latter’s reliability, seems to be something of an understatement. He did not make a firm finding of his own about the development costs, but accepted (para 90) that they were likely to be “far in excess of £200,000”.
(5) This is consistent with Mr Little’s conduct between 2007 and 2009. For most of that period, he was attempting to obtain the planning permission for the enlarged scheme that was eventually granted in August 2009. The probability must be that this was because the economics of the 2007 project were even less satisfactory than those of its successor.
(6) Against this background, it is right to draw attention to the extremely tentative and conditional basis of the Judge’s conclusion. Having found that the development would cost much more than £200,000, he suggested that it was nevertheless “quite possible” that the development plans would have required some unspecified “rethinking”, and declared that he was “not persuaded that no development whatever, particularly with Mr Little’s own company doing the construction” would have enabled Mr Gabriel to recover his £200,000. He appears to have envisaged some unspecified modification to the plans. However, no such modification was proposed during the period between the making of the loan agreement and Mr Gabriel’s exercise of his power of sale, and none was canvassed with the witnesses. It is therefore difficult to attach any weight to the hypothesis on which the Judge appears to have proceeded. What stands out is that even on that hypothesis, the Judge made no finding that it would have enabled Mr Gabriel to recover his investment, only that the possibility could not be ruled out. In the face of the evidence which I have summarised, this falls a long way short of a finding that this project was viable at any stage.
The SAAMCO Principle
20. Courts of law, said Lord Asquith in Stapley v Gypsum Mines Ltd [1953] AC 663, 687, “must accept the fact that the philosophic doctrine of causation and the juridical doctrine of responsibility for the consequences of a negligent act diverge.” What Lord Asquith meant by the philosophic doctrine of causation, as he went on to explain, was the proposition that any event that would have not have occurred but for the act of the defendant must be regarded as the consequence of that act. In the law of damages, this has never been enough. It is generally a necessary condition for the recovery of a loss that it would not have been suffered but for the breach of duty. But it is not always a sufficient condition. The reason, as Lord Asquith pointed out, is that the law is concerned with assigning responsibility for the consequences of the breach, and a defendant is not necessarily responsible in law for everything that follows from his act, even if it is wrongful. A variety of legal concepts serves to limit the matters for which a wrongdoer is legally responsible. Thus the law distinguishes between a mere precondition or occasion for a loss and an act which gives rise to a liability to make it good by way of damages: Galoo Ltd v Bright Grahame Murray [1994] 1 WLR 1360. Effective or substantial causation is a familiar example of a legal filter which serves to eliminate certain losses from the scope of a defendant’s responsibility. It is an aspect of legal causation. So too is the rule that the defendant cannot be held liable for losses that the claimant could reasonably have been expected to avoid: Koch Marine Inc v d’Amica Societa di Navigazione ARL (the “ELENA D’AMICO”) [1980] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 75. But the relevant filters are not limited to those which can be analysed in terms of causation. Ultimately, all of them depend on a developed judicial instinct about the nature or extent of the duty which the wrongdoer has broken.
21. This is not a new idea, although it took some time for its significance to be fully appreciated. In Roe v Ministry of Health [1954] 2 QB 66, 85, Denning LJ pointed out that questions of duty, causation and remoteness were intimately linked and all directed to the same fundamental question: “Is the consequence fairly to be regarded as within the risk?” In Council of the Shire of Sutherland v Heyman (1985) 157 CLR 424, 487, Brennan J pointed out that the statutory duty of a local authority to approve building plans could not be made the basis of a general duty to protect a subsequent purchaser against even foreseeable problems in the course of construction:
“It is impermissible to postulate a duty of care to avoid one kind of damage - say, personal injury - and, finding the defendant guilty of failing to discharge that duty, to hold him liable for the damage actually suffered that is of another and independent kind - say, economic loss. Not only may the respective duties differ in what is required to discharge them; the duties may be owed to different persons or classes of persons. That is not to say that a plaintiff who suffers damage of some kind will succeed or fail in an action to recover damages according to his classification of the damage he suffered. The question is always whether the defendant was under a duty to avoid or prevent that damage, but the actual nature of the damage suffered is relevant to the existence and extent of any duty to avoid or prevent it.”
22. In Overseas Tankship (UK) Ltd v Morts Dock & Engineering Co Ltd (The Wagon Mound) [1961] AC 388, the Privy Council reframed an issue which had been presented as depending on remoteness of damage in terms of the scope of the duty owed in tort. Viscount Simonds, delivering the advice of the Board, observed, at p 425:
“It is, no doubt, proper when considering tortious liability for negligence to analyse its elements and to say that the plaintiff must prove a duty owed to him by the defendant, a breach of that duty by the defendant, and consequent damage. But there can be no liability until the damage has been done. It is not the act but the consequences on which tortious liability is founded. Just as (as it has been said) there is no such thing as negligence in the air, so there is no such thing as liability in the air … It is vain to isolate the liability from its context and to say that B is or is not liable, and then to ask for what damage he is liable. For his liability is in respect of that damage and no other.”
23. In Caparo Industries plc v Dickman [1990] 2 AC 605, the House of Lords held that a company’s auditor was not liable for negligent statements in his statutory report which led the plaintiff to make an offer for the company’s shares. The reason was that the purpose of the auditor’s report was limited to enabling shareholders to make informed decisions about the exercise of their rights under the constitution of the company. It followed that no duty was owed to non-shareholders. It also followed that, although a duty was owed to shareholders, the auditor’s legal responsibility to them did not extend to investment decisions that they might make in reliance on his report. Lord Bridge, citing Brennan J’s observation, said (p 627):
“It is never sufficient to ask simply whether A owes B a duty of care. It is always necessary to determine the scope of the duty by reference to the kind of damage from which A must take care to save B harmless.”
Lord Oliver in the same case at p 654 said:
“To widen the scope of the duty to include loss caused to an individual by reliance upon the accounts for a purpose for which they were not supplied and were not intended would be to extend it beyond the limits which are so far deducible from the decisions of this House.”
24. This principle underwent considerable development as a result of a number of cases arising from the negligent valuation of property for security purposes before the property crash of the early 1990s. The leading case is the decision of the House of Lords in South Australia Asset Management Corpn v York Montague Ltd [1997] AC 191 (“SAAMCO”), but the principle for which it is authority was subsequently elaborated in two further decisions of the House, Nykredit Mortgage Bank Plc v Edward Erdman Group Ltd (formerly Edward Erdman) (No 2) [1997] 1 WLR 1627 and Platform Home Loans Ltd v Oyston Shipways Ltd [2000] 2 AC 190.
“deliberately assumed the risk that they might suffer loss as a result of a fall in the property market. They did not rely upon John D Wood’s valuation to protect them against that risk. In these circumstances John D Wood owed no duty to protect BBL from this type of loss.”
At pp 806-807, Phillips J stated the principle as follows:
“Where a party is contemplating a commercial venture that involves a number of heads of risk and obtains professional advice in respect of one head of risk before embarking on the venture, I do not see why negligent advice in respect of that head of risk should, in effect, make the adviser the underwriter of the entire venture. More particularly, where the negligent advice relates to the existence or amount of some security against risk in the venture, I do not see why the adviser should be liable for all the consequences of the venture, whether or not the security in question would have protected against them.”
“I think that this was the wrong place to begin. Before one can consider the principle on which one should calculate the damages to which a plaintiff is entitled as compensation for loss, it is necessary to decide for what kind of loss he is entitled to compensation. A correct description of the loss for which the valuer is liable must precede any consideration of the measure of damages. For this purpose it is better to begin at the beginning and consider the lender’s cause of action.”
“On the other hand, the valuer will not ordinarily be privy to the other considerations which the lender may take into account, such as how much money he has available, how much the borrower needs to borrow, the strength of his covenant, the attraction of the rate of interest or the other personal or commercial considerations which may induce the lender to lend.”
Referring to the decision in Caparo, he said:
“A duty of care such as the valuer owes does not however exist in the abstract. A plaintiff who sues for breach of a duty imposed by the law (whether in contract or tort or under statute) must do more than prove that the defendant has failed to comply. He must show that the duty was owed to him and that it was a duty in respect of the kind of loss which he has suffered.”
29. Against this background, Lord Hoffmann expressed the principle thus, at p 214:
“It is that a person under a duty to take reasonable care to provide information on which someone else will decide upon a course of action is, if negligent, not generally regarded as responsible for all the consequences of that course of action. He is responsible only for the consequences of the information being wrong. A duty of care which imposes upon the informant responsibility for losses which would have occurred even if the information which he gave had been correct is not in my view fair and reasonable as between the parties. It is therefore inappropriate either as an implied term of a contract or as a tortious duty arising from the relationship between them.
The principle thus stated distinguishes between a duty to provide information for the purpose of enabling someone else to decide upon a course of action and a duty to advise someone as to what course of action he should take. If the duty is to advise whether or not a course of action should be taken, the adviser must take reasonable care to consider all the potential consequences of that course of action. If he is negligent, he will therefore be responsible for all the foreseeable loss which is a consequence of that course of action having been taken. If his duty is only to supply information, he must take reasonable care to ensure that the information is correct and, if he is negligent, will be responsible for all the foreseeable consequences of the information being wrong.”
“It would seem paradoxical that the liability of a person who warranted the accuracy of the information should be less than that of a person who gave no such warranty but failed to take reasonable care.”
31. The principle thus stated is, as Professor Murdoch has described it in an illuminating article, an “essentially negative one”: ‘Negligent Valuers, Falling Markets and Risk Allocation’, [2000] 8 Tort Law Review, 183, 198. The lender is prima facie entitled to the entire loss flowing from his entry into the loan transaction, except those which would still have been suffered if the property had been worth what the valuer said it was worth. In the follow-on appeal in Nykredit Mortgage Bank plc v Edward Erdman Group Ltd [1997] 1 WLR 1627, Lord Nicholls, with the concurrence of the rest of the Appellate Committee, described the two stages of the inquiry at p 1631. The first stage in a case where the lender would not have entered into the transaction but for the breach of duty, was to compare the position had he not entered into it with his actual position. This meant comparing the amount of the loan with the value of the real and personal rights obtained. Turning to the second stage, he said:
“However, for the reasons spelled out by my noble and learned friend, Lord Hoffmann, in the substantive judgments in this case [1997] AC 191, a defendant valuer is not liable for all the consequences which flow from the lender entering into the transaction. He is not even liable for all the foreseeable consequences. He is not liable for consequences which would have arisen even if the advice had been correct. He is not liable for these because they are the consequences of risks the lender would have taken upon himself if the valuation advice had been sound. As such they are not within the scope of the duty owed to the lender by the valuer.”
“An alternative theory was that the lender should be entitled to recover the whole of his loss, subject to a ‘cap’ limiting his recovery to the amount of the overvaluation. This theory will ordinarily produce the same result as the requirement that loss should be a consequence of the valuation being wrong, because the usual such consequence is that the lender makes an advance which he thinks is secured to a correspondingly greater extent. But I would not wish to exclude the possibility that other kinds of loss may flow from the valuation being wrong, and in any case, as [Counsel] said on behalf of the defendants York Montague Ltd, it seems odd to start by choosing the wrong measure of damages (the whole loss) and then correct the error by imposing a cap. The appearance of a cap is actually the result of the plaintiff having to satisfy two separate requirements: first, to prove that he has suffered loss, and, secondly, to establish that the loss fell within the scope of the duty he was owed.”
“It is of course also the case that the lender cannot recover if he is, on balance, in a better or no worse position than if he had not entered into the transaction at all. He will have suffered no loss. The valuer does not warrant the accuracy of his valuation and the lender cannot therefore complain that he would have made more profit if the valuation had been correct. But in order to establish a cause of action in negligence he must show that his loss is attributable to the overvaluation, that is, that he is worse off than he would have been if it had been correct.”
The result, as Lord Hobhouse put it in Platform Home Loans Ltd v Oyston Shipways Ltd [2000] 2 AC 190, 210, is that the damages
“are confined to that part of the plaintiffs’ basic loss caused by the defendants’ negligence which can be equated in money terms to the amount of the defendants’ overvaluation.”
“The principle approved by the House was that the valuer owes no duty of care to the lender in respect of his entering into the transaction as such and that it is therefore insufficient, for the purpose of establishing liability on the part of the valuer, to prove that the lender is worse off than he would have been if he had not lent the money at all. What he must show is that he is worse off as a lender than he would have been if the security had been worth what the valuer said.”
This is why in SAAMCO itself Lord Hoffmann had rejected the distinction made by the Court of Appeal between “no transaction” and “successful transaction” cases. It was “irrelevant to the scope of the duty of care”: p 218C-D, G.
“It is important to emphasise that this is a consequence of the limited way in which the House defined the valuer’s duty of care and has nothing to do with questions of causation or any limit or ‘cap’ imposed upon damages which would otherwise be recoverable. It was accepted that the whole loss suffered by reason of the fall in the property market was, as a matter of causation, properly attributable to the lender having entered into the transaction and that, but for the negligent valuation, he would not have done so. It was not suggested that the possibility of a fall in the market was unforeseeable or that there was any other factor which negatived the causal connection between lending and losing the money … Nor, if one started from the proposition that the valuer was responsible for the consequences of the loan being made, could there be any logical basis for limiting the recoverable damages to the amount of the overvaluation. The essence of the decision was that this is not where one starts and that the valuer is responsible only for the consequences of the lender having too little security.”
Criticisms
“one is really speaking about extent of the liability and not about the scope of the duty. … I shall try to mend my language in future. But I will say this. There is a close link between the nature of the duty and the extent of the liability for breach of that duty.”
It is, however, clear that Lord Hoffmann regarded the point as a mere question of terminology, which did not go to the real principle being applied. The scope (or “nature”) of the duty remained in his view a critical factor in determining the extent of liability. I agree with this. Questions of causation are normally concerned with identifying the consequences which flow from the breach. If the SAAMCO principle is to be classified as a principle of causation, it is certainly not directed to that question, as the House of Lords pointed out in Nykredit. The question which it poses is rather whether the loss flowed from the right thing, ie from the particular feature of the defendant’s conduct which made it wrongful. That turns on an analysis of what did make it wrongful. Whether one describes the principle in SAAMCO and Nykredit as turning on the scope of the duty or the extent of the liability for breach of it does not alter the way in which the principle applies. It is clear that Lord Hoffmann did not accept Professor Stapleton’s more fundamental criticisms of the so-called “SAAMCO cap” in his lecture of 2005, any more than he had accepted them in Nykredit.
42. What is clear is that the fact that the material contributed by the defendant is known to be critical to the claimant’s decision whether to enter into the transaction does not itself turn it into an “advice” case. Otherwise all “no transaction” cases would give rise to liability for the entire foreseeable loss flowing from the transaction, which is the very proposition rejected in SAAMCO. I respectfully agree with the careful analysis of this point by Rix LJ, giving the leading judgment in the Court of Appeal in Haugesund Kommune v Depfa ACS Bank (Wikborg Rein & Co, Part 20 defendant) (No 2) [2011] 3 All ER 655. The facts of that case were that a firm of lawyers had negligently advised that a Norwegian local authority had legal capacity to enter into a loan agreement, when it did not. A local authority’s legal capacity to borrow might fairly be thought fundamental to any decision to lend it money, and the evidence was that but for the lawyer’s advice the bank would not have lent. But under Norwegian law the debt would not have been enforceable against the assets of the authority even if legal capacity had existed, making the debt in effect one of honour only. Rix LJ held that it was an “information” case, because legal capacity was only one factor in a wider assessment of whether to lend the money, with which the lawyers were not concerned. At para 75, he said:
“It is of course true that Depfa would not have entered into the transactions at all unless it could be advised that the contracts were valid and within the kommunes’ capacity. In effect, that causal connection between advice and loss goes without saying in all such cases. It is not in itself the reason for finding that the scope of duty concerned embraces all the loss consequential upon entering into the transaction concerned. For these reasons it does not seem to me that it is a sufficient explanation for characterising a case as a category 2 [sc ‘advice’] case to say that, without the forthcoming albeit negligent advice, the transaction concerned would not have been ‘viable’. That is simply another way of saying that, if the claimant had not received the advice it did, it would not have entered into the transaction.”
43. Aneco Reinsurance Underwriting Ltd v Johnson & Higgins [2002] PNLR 8 was a case which on its facts fell on the other side of the line. The claimant reinsurer proposed to reinsure a book of excess of loss business. He intended to proceed only if he could retrocede $11m of the risk. He instructed a broker to place the retrocession. The broker reported that he had placed it, but he failed to present the risk fairly to the retrocessionaires, with the result that after the claimant had written the reinsurance his retrocession was avoided. The claimant claimed to be entitled to recover the entire loss, $35m, which had been incurred on the reinsurance on the basis that he would not have entered into it if he had not been assured that the retrocession was in place and (by implication) enforceable. The House of Lords, in agreement with the Court of Appeal, classified it as an “advice” case. This had the ironic consequence that although the claimant had apparently been content to assume an exposure of $35m on the reinsurance with protection by way of retrocession for only $11m, they recovered the whole $35m as damages, two thirds of which they would have suffered even if the retrocession had been effective. The critical feature of the case which led to this result was that the broker’s responsibility was found to extend beyond the placing of the retrocession to the entire transaction including the writing of the reinsurance itself: see paras 16-17 (Lord Lloyd), 40 (Lord Steyn). In particular, his duty was found to include reporting to the reinsurer the market’s highly adverse assessment of the reinsured risk.
44. It is right to say that at para 11 of his speech in Aneco, Lord Lloyd seems to have regarded the principle laid down in SAAMCO as turning on ordinary principles of foreseeability and remoteness considered in leading cases such as Czarnikow v Koufos [1969] 1 AC 350. This may be why he regarded the “advice” category as representing the ordinary rule, and the “information” category as exceptional: see paras 12-13. But, with respect, foreseeability was assumed in SAAMCO. For that reason, and because categorisation is inevitably fact-sensitive, I doubt whether it is helpful to describe either of Lord Hoffmann’s categories as “normal” or “special”. A valuer or a conveyancer, for example, will rarely supply more than a specific part of the material on which his client’s decision is based. He is generally no more than a provider of what Lord Hoffmann called “information”. At the opposite end of the spectrum, an investment adviser advising a client whether to buy a particular stock, or a financial adviser advising whether to invest self-invested pension fund in an annuity are likely, in Lord Hoffmann’s terminology, to be regarded as giving “advice”. Between these extremes, every case is likely to depend on the range of matters for which the defendant assumed responsibility and no more exact rule can be stated. In my judgment the decision in Aneco is not authority for any general proposition of law beyond the particular factual context of that case. The fullest statement of the law was that of Lord Millett at para 66. Lord Millett dissented on the facts, but the parties to this appeal agreed that, subject to one reservation, his summary of the law was correct. I think that they were right to do so. The reservation has no bearing on the present case. It is that Lord Millett confined his analysis of the law to the scope of the duty, and did not deal with the question of causation of loss. Normally, all the foreseeable loss flowing from the transaction will be treated as having been caused by the breach of duty, albeit that only that part of it which flows from the information being wrong will be recoverable as damages.
46. Criticism of this result is in my opinion unjustified. The principle laid down in SAAMCO depends for its application on the award of loss which is within the scope of the defendant’s duty, not on the exclusion of loss which is outside it. In a simple case, they may amount to the same thing. It may, for example, be possible in a valuation case to strip out the effect of the fall in the market if that is the only extraneous source of loss. Even there, however, the exercise will be complicated by the common practice of lenders to allow a margin or “cushion” between the loan and the value of the property to allow for contingencies including some adverse market movement. Where the loss arises from a variety of commercial factors which it was for the claimant to identify and assess, it will commonly be difficult or impossible as well as unnecessary to quantify and strip out the financial impact of each one of them. In York Montague’s case, the valuer’s duty had been to value the property at £5m instead of £15m. Given his duty to exercise reasonable care to get it right, £10m was the measure of the increased risk to which he exposed the lender by getting it wrong. That increased risk was the maximum measure of his own responsibility for what happened, and therefore provided the limit to what was recoverable by way of damages. It is fair to say that as a tool for relating the recoverable damages to the scope of the duty the SAAMCO cap or restriction may be mathematically imprecise. But mathematical precision is not always attainable in the law of damages. As Lord Hobhouse observed in Platform Home Loans Ltd v Oyston Shipways Ltd [2000] 2 AC 190, at 207, the principle is “essentially a legal rule which is applied in a robust way without the need for fine tuning or a detailed investigation of causation.”
Conveyancers
(1) The first of the three cases, Fancy & Jackson, was straightforward. The solicitor completed the transaction without obtaining a search certificate to establish title, but the certificate, if it had been obtained, would have been clear. There was therefore no recoverable loss.
(2) In Steggles Palmer, the solicitors failed to report that the transaction was by way of sale and sub-sale under which a connected intermediate vendor made a profit of £7,000. If the lender had known this, it would have concluded that the borrower was dishonest and would have refused on principle to lend to him. The judge held the solicitors liable for the entire loss on the loan account, because “the defendants should be responsible for the consequences of the society not being in the position to take the decision which it would have taken if the defendants had done what they should have done” (p 622e-f).
(3) Colin Bishop was another case of back to back sale and sub-sale with an uplift of £25,000, about a third of the purchase price, but in this case there was no reason to think that the borrower was connected with the intermediate vendor. That would have made no difference to the lender’s decision. They would still have walked away from the transaction because they had a strict policy of not lending where the proposed purchase was linked to a prior transaction, whether the parties were connected or not. Chadwick J had doubts about the objective rationality of the lender’s policy, but he accepted that it existed and would have been applied (p 619a-d). It followed that the existence of linked transactions was just as fundamental to the lender in Colin Bishop as it was in Steggles Palmer. But it was not as fundamental to the Judge. He appears to have distinguished between the two cases because of the quality of the lender’s reasons for walking away. In Steggles Palmer the lender would have refused to proceed because the borrower was an unacceptable counterparty, whereas in Colin Bishop, objectively the problem need not have been fundamental because it could have been rectified by a further valuation (p 622g-j). The Judge therefore concluded that in Colin Bishop if the true value corresponded to the lender’s valuation (a question which had yet to be determined), there would be no loss, whereas such a finding would not in his view have been relevant in Steggles Palmer.
“where a negligent solicitor fails to provide information which shows that the transaction is not viable or which tends to reveal an actual or potential fraud on the part of the borrowers, the lender is entitled to recover the whole of his loss. In other words, the whole of the loss suffered by the lender is within the scope of the solicitor’s duty and is properly recoverable.”
This involves the same error as affected Chadwick J’s analysis in Steggles Palmer, namely that the mere fact that the breach of duty caused the lender to proceed when he would otherwise have withdrawn was enough to make the solicitors legally responsible for the lender’s decision and all its financial consequences. All “no transaction” cases have this characteristic, whether or not the fact withheld or misrepresented goes to the viability of the transaction or the honesty of the counterparty, because in all of them the fact withheld or misrepresented is ex hypothesi sufficiently fundamental to have caused the lender to walk away had he known the truth. It is right to add that in at least one of the three cases before the House of Lords in SAAMCO (the York Montague case) the information withheld went to the viability of the transaction, and that in Banque Keyser Ullmann v Skandia Insurance Co [1991] 2 AC 249, which was regarded in SAAMCO as an application of the same principle, the information withheld not only went to the viability of the transaction but would also have revealed the dishonesty of the counterparty. Yet it was not suggested in either case that these were relevant considerations.
The burden of proof
“The appearance of a cap is actually the result of the plaintiff having to satisfy two separate requirements: first, to prove that he has suffered loss, and, secondly, to establish that the loss fell within the scope of the duty he was owed.”
Application to the present case
Contributory negligence
56. In these circumstances, no question of contributory negligence arises.
Conclusion