TEH KHEM ON & ANOR.
V. YEOH & WU DEVELOPMENT SDN. BHD. & ORS
HIGH COURT MALAYA, IPOH
DATO' PEH SWEE CHIN FCJ
[SUIT NO: 1759 OF 1985]
15 APRIL 1995
JUDGMENT
Peh Swee Chin FCJ:
It is rather remarkable that while the purchase price of the house in this
action is a mere RM78,5000, the parties to this action have involved not
only a housing developer-cum-vendor, but also a firm of architects, a firm
of engineers and the local authority of the area in which the house in
question is situated. What is really amazing is that the legal position on
which this action must have depended when it was filed, literally has gone
through nothing short of a revolution by the time the hearing of this very
long case was concluded on 14 January 1995. First, the evidence of the case
need be set out and I will try to make short work of it without losing sight
of the salient points, however.
The plaintiffs above entered on 29 November 1983 into a sale and purchase
agreement (P1) with the first defendant, a builder-cum-vendor when buying a
double-storey link house amongst a row of similar houses for the sum of
RM78,500 (the plaintiffs are hereafter calleld 'the purchasers' and the
first defendant, "the vendor/builder'). Clauses of the agreement which are
relevant to this judgement are set out below:
12 The said building shall be constructed in a good and workmanlike manner
in accordance with the specifications described in the second Schedule
hereto and in accordance with the plans approved by the appropriate
authority or other competent authority which specifications and plans have
been accepted and aapproved by the purchaser as the purchaser hereby
acknowledges ...
23 Any defect, shrinkage or other faults in the building which shall become
apparent within a period of twelve (12) calendar months after the date of
delivery of vacant possession to the purchaser and which are due to
defective workmanship or materials or the said building not having been
constructed in accordance with the said specifications and plans as approved
by the appropriate authority (amended or unamended as the case may be) shall
be repaired and made good by the vendor at his own cost and expense within
one month of its having received written notice thereof from the purchaser
...
The purchasers took possession of the house in November 1984, and then found
cracks on the walls, that the ground was not even, and one of the ceiling
boards had apparently been replaced earlier but it had not been painted,
with the bathroom upstairs leaking. On being informed, the vendor/builder
caused repairs to be carried out. The purchasers then moved into the house.
One or two weeks later, they found that the back door could not be closed,
the house itself seemed to tilt to one side and to be sinking too with a
long crack being seen between the kitchen and the lounge, vide P11, the
group of the photographs. The purchasers then moved out of the house in
August, the following year, in 1985. The Lembaga Letrik Negara disconnected
the electricity supply to the house after an inspection of the house,
apparently for the sake of safety. Solicitors for the purchasers wrote to
the vendor/builder which admitted the liability to repair the defects. This
Court observes the unusual commercial integrity of the vendor/builder from
the evidence in this case, even though the Court would have to make findings
of liability or non-liability according to the usual criteria.
It would appear that the neighbouring houses were similarly affected. The
vendor/builder even then, already attributed the problem of these cracks,
etc to the movement of soil underneath the land caused by a stream nearby
due to the dry season, an allegation, of course, that remained to be proved.
As more cracks appeared, the vendor/builder wanted to carry out 'cementgrouting'
to remedy the problem and the purchasers felt they had enough of these
repairs and wanted an assurance that such cement-grouting would really be a
measure that would remedy the problem, and would be a guarantee of its
non-recurrence. The vendor/builder would not give such a guarantee or
assurance. A stalemate was reached in which the purchasers would not allow
this cement-grouting to be done. The vendor/builder felt compelled to file
the present action claiming a mandatory injunction against the purchasers so
that it be allowed to carry out the cement-grouting.
The purchasers facing such a claim for a mandatory injuction have
counterclaimed against the vendor/builder for rescission of the sale and
purchase agreement, refund of the purchase price and damages etc.
The purchasers have further counterclaimed against the architects, ie the
second defendants, the engineers, ie the third defendants, and the local
authority of Batu Gajah, ie the fourth defendant, by bringing in all of them
as the new parties for the purchasers to proceed with their counterclaim
against them.
I believe I indicated to all the parties at the outset of the hearing that
the purchasers would be hereafter cited and referred to as the plaintiffs;
the vendor/ builder, the first defendant, the architects, the second
defendants, the engineers, the third defendant, and the local authority of
Batu Gajah, the fourth defendant, to reflect the true nature of this action
at that time. All parties were aware that by that time, the earlier sole
claim for the mandatory injuction aforesaid by the vendor/builder had been
met by a consent order of both the vendor/ builderand the purchasers, so
that for all practical purposes, the earlier part of the action for the said
sole claim had by then spent itself.
A consent order dated 9 April 1986, in respect of the injunction mentioned
above was granted and cement-grouting was duly carried out before the
hearing of evidence viva voce of this case.
The purchasers at great cost engaged a firm of experts, viz Dr. WH Ting
Consultants Sdn. Bhd. in November 1985, for the purpose of this action and
the consultants rendered their reports, being P20A, P20B, P20C,P20D and
P20E.
P20A describes the instrumentation scheme method and the amounts of fee
required. After the receipt of P20A, the purchasers gave instructions to
proceed further. P20B describes the preliminary result of soil
investigations, and P20C, the final result. P20D was intended as a 'factual
report'. P20E describes the findings by way of a final report. Detailed
evidence was given on these P20A-E in connection with the boring test,
general water measurement, MacKintosh probe test, 'shear vane test', and
monitoring work on the damage.
I find from the report and evidence of experts as follows.
In regard to the filling and levelling of the land before construction of
the purchasers' house started, the filling was done with 'very loose silty
sand'.
Before this 'fill' or filling, the soil itself was of compressible strata.
Piling work was found to be done. Settlement or subsidence of the house was
found near the front and rear parts of the house, respectively. Settlement
was found to be continous at rates varying between 0.02-0.15mm per day,
settlement at the rear of the house being higher than in the front of the
house. Cracks appeared to be still growing with increasing tilting of the
house. Settlement was found to be ongoing.
The damage to the house was due to total and differential settlements, the
latter would mean that, e.g. if one part of the house settled more than
another part, damage would be caused. The monitoring work on the 'fill' or
filling was carried out 2-1/2 years after the fill was placed.
The primary settlement or consolidation was under the fill of the soil
comprising the said compressible strata. Additional or secondary settlement
or consolidation took place, when 'the partially saturated fill' collapsed
and also due to secondary consolidation of the compressible strata below the
fill. Dr James Wong (PW2), one of the experts called, explained to the
effect as follows about the saturated fill collapsing. When any soil was
compacted, it had minimal consolidation or settlement, but if the same soil
was further soaked, it would collapse in time, soaking could be due to
inundation by rainfall or flooding. As regards the lowering of the
water-table suggested by the defence, Dr James Wong said the contribution to
settlement was negligible.
I cannot help remarking even at this stage that I found the evidence of Dr.
James Wong, the knowledgeable young engineer, consistently convincing and
reasonable, despite bearing in mind the small risk of his partiality for the
purchasers who called him.
Dr Wong said further to the effect, that to avoid collapsed fill causing the
secondary settlement, the control of compaction of the fill itself was very
important during the work of the filling, by having regard to the thickness
of the fill. One would also expect the fill to be compact rather than that
of 'loose silty sand' as found in this case.
In this connection, the engineer from the third defendants' firm (hereafter
called 'the engineer'), recommended a fill of 31/2 ft, ie about 1m
thickness, P20E shows that the average fill was more than 2m in thickness
which according to the evidence of DW5, called by the defendants, would
settle more than if it was less thick. The engineer did not supervise the
fill, and it would seem to suggest that somebody responsible for bringing on
the fill material to the building site had presumably increased the value of
the fill material by bringing more of it than was necessary.
First, the Court concludes, to summarize, that damage to the house was due
to settlement or subsidence of the house, especially and principally due to
differential settlements, ie due to differential rates of such settlements,
especially between the area in the front of the house and at the rear of the
house, respectively.
Secondly, the Court concludes that the fill for the building site on which
the house in question was to be built was far too thick, ie an average of 2m
in thickness instead of the recommended thickness of just over 1m (31/2ft to
be more precise); that the materials of the fill was unsuitable, being loose
silty sand, was not sufficiently compact; and that these factors caused in a
material way, or significantly contributed to the aforesaid settlement.
Before giving my third conclusion, I will deal with another important
causative aspect of the damage to the house.
According to Dr James Wong, settlement of a house was also related to
stability of a foundation of a house. A stable foundation should not move.
If a foundation was not stable, the building would collapse. In designing a
foundation, the purpose was to transmit the load to the soil, if the soil
was competent to support the load. Using piles was an alternative if the
soil was not competent to support the load. Piles were used in this case.
The Court observes that piles were columns of metal or concrete to be sunk
deep into the ground to support columns and walls of a building on the
ground.
Dr Wong said that the settlement of the house was due to the movement of the
piles which, if stable, would not move. If the piles were driven to refusal,
ie to the point where it could not be driven further due to strong
resistance, one would not expect any significant movement of the piles. He
said to the effect that if the piles were not driven to refusal, if the
piles just rested on compressible strata (below the fill), 'negative skin
friction' would be caused, ie the soil would move up past the piles in turn
causing the piles to move or causing damage to the piles. If the piles were
moved or damaged, the house itself would settle.
I therefore conclude, thirdly (ie my third summary finding), that settlement
was also caused by inadequate piling or piles which have not been driven to
refusal, in other words, by rather inadequate foundations for the house in
question.
Fourthly, I conclude that the damage to the house is extensive and ongoing,
and that cement-grouting has not arrested the settlement or subsidence in
question so that the house is continuing to sink albeit more slowly. More
and more damage is anticipated as time goes on. It would not be reasonable
to expect the purchasers to contemplate moving into it again.
Arising from the conclusions thus reached, the Court next considers if each
of the defendants is liable, one by one, if necessary.
First, the Court deals with the first defendant, the vendor/builder.
The vender/builder by P1, has direct contractual relations with the
purchasers. Looking at P1, ie the sale and purchase agreement, subsidence or
settlement of house and exemption of liability therefore have not been
provided for in the agreement. There is neither any force majeure clause of
appropriate wording so as to exempt the vendor/builder in another way from
such liablity. The Court has no hesitation unless the defences of the
vendor/builder succeed, in saying that the vendor/builder is in breach of cl.
12 which provides for the house to be constructed 'in a good and workmanlike
manner'. The vendor/ builder should therefore normally be liable to the
purchasers, subject to other issues or defences raised against the
purchasers as stated below.
The vendor/builder has laid a great deal of stress on the earlier refusal of
the purchasers to permit the vendor/builder to carry out cement-grouting
causing the present action to be filed in the first place, it will be
remembered. The cement-grouting has been found by this Court to be
ineffective in stemming off the settlement or subsidence so that it would
not affect the damages payable by the vendor/builder under cl. 12 of PI.
Thus, the conduct of the purchasers in regard to their said earlier refusal
falls short of unreasonableness, though one could sense the frustrations and
anger which must have driven the purchasers then to behave in that way. As
one of the defences, by way of saying that purchasers have failed to
mitigate the damage, such defence fails.
Again, the vendor/builder and in fact, other defendants, all have joined in
a common subsmission by way of defence that the damage occured after the
defect liaibility period mentioned in cl. 23 of PI.
I share the view espoused by Lord Denning in Hancock & Ors v. BW Brazier
Ltd. [1966] 2 All ER 901;[1966] 1 WLR 1317, to the effect that such clause
similar to cl. 23 in our instant appeal about making good structural defects
discovered within six months, would not take away the right to sue in
respect of such defects which were not discoverable within such six months,
and that further in regard those defects discovered within the six months,
the provision of an express remedy of making good the same defects will not
ipso facto take away the rights of any purchaser which normally follow at
common law in the case of a breach of contract. It is pertinent to mention
that our cl. 23 provides for 12 months instead of six months. The same
princples would apply.
Thus, the said line of defence also fails.
Reverting in general to the question of direct contractual relations between
the purchasers and the vendor/builder and in particular to clause 12 of the
agreement about building the house 'in a good and workmanlike manner'; even
apart from liability under cl. 12, there are three implied terms when a
purchaser buys a house from a builder who contracts to build it. The
purchasers herein can also rely on them. The implied terms are first, that
the builder will do his work in a good and workmanlike manner; secondly,
that he will supply good and proper materials and thirdly, that it will be
reasonably fit for human habitation, but any of such implied terms could be
expressly excluded by contract; see Lawrence v. Cassel [1930] 2 KB 83;
[1930] All ER Rep 733, Miller v. Cannon Hill Estates Ltd. [1931] 2 KB 113:
[1931] All ER Rep 93, and Hancock [1966] 2 All ER 901;[1966]1 WLR 1317 at p.
1332. These three implied terms have often been lumped together as a
'threefold implied warranty'; which could give rise to an inaccurate
impression that for the implied warranty to apply, the three implied terms
must be present at the same time. They need not all be present in any
particular case. I prefer to call such implied warranty, the three implied
conditions.
The vendor/builder is clearly in breach of cl. 12 of the P1, and also in any
event, in breach of each of the implied conditions aforesaid. The
vendor/builder is therefore liable to the purchasers. Such being the case,
it would not be necessary to determine for the time being whether the
vendor/builder is liable also in negligence to the purchasers as pleaded.
The Court next deals with the terms or particulars of judgement it should
enter for the purchasers against the vendor/builder, and it is inevitable
that the Court would have to look at the prayers of the statement of claim.
By prayer (1), the punchasers claim an order that the said agreement dated
29 November 1983 "be rescinded' and that the vendor/builder do repay the
purchasers the sum of RM78,500, being the purchase price. There is something
unusual about this prayer.
The words 'be rescinded' could normally refer to the rescission abinitio in
equity for lack of free consent in regard to fraud, mistake, etc which
vitiates free consent and which also involves the remedy of restitutio in
integrum. When a contract is thus rescinded, it is abrogated as if it had
never been made.
The same words by themselves, could sometimes refer to a termination of a
contract by an innocent party to a contract on account of a breach of the
contract committed by the other party where the innocent party treats the
contract as at an end with the usual legal consequences.
In the light of what has just been stated, the prayer (1) sounds like a
rescission ab initio being asked for with the demand of the refund of the
full purchase price. But, the cause of action and the evidence on which it
is based are one of ordinary breach of contract, and not an equitable claim
or rescission of contract ab initio. The claim for refund of the purchase
price which is consistent normally with a rescission ab initio will thus be
disallowed.
The claim for rescission of contract for its breach could be considered by
the Court though it is unusual;unusual because a victim of a breach of
contract usually terminates or rescinds the contract for breach before going
to Court, instead of asking for an order for such rescission for breach.
This could mean that the purchasers had some doubt about the sufficency of
their cause of action and wanted the Court to adjudicate thereon.
Since the purchase price has been paid in full by the purchasers; the land
on which the house stands has already been conveyed to the purchasers and
the settlement or subsidence of the house has appeared after such
conveyance, the purchasers are only entitled to claim damages for breach of
conditions both express or implied as stated above.
I now deal with the measure of damages for the defective building or house
in question. We are not dealing with those common cases of failure to
transfer land pursuant to a contract. Thus, the normal measure of damages in
this case is more unusual, and could be gauged from the old case of Thornton
v. Place [1832] 1 Moo & Rob 218, in which the builder was held entitled to
receive the price of a defective building 'subject to a deduction and the
measure of that deduction is the sum which it would take to alter the work
so as to make it correspond with the specification'. The view was approved
in Dakin v. Lee [1916] 1 KB 566 . Please see also Stephen Forsyth v. Ruxley
Electronic & Constructions Ltd. & Anor. [1993]66 BLR 28.
The normal measure of damages would therefore be the cost of remedying the
defect, and such cost is RM98,625 the estimated cost of micropiling.
This sum is however, disproprotionately large, so that it has the potential
effect of offending the general principle that a victim of breach of
contract should not be put in a better position than if there had been no
breach of contract. It will be remembered that the contract price of the
house in question and the land on which it stands is RM78,500. The Court may
thus have to find if any, another measure of damages. Another possible
measure of damages will be the cost of the building the house in question
minus the land. Of this, there is no evidence and neither the cost of
relevant land and that of the relevant house are apportioned in the sale and
purchase agreement in question. The Court is thus compelled to adhere to the
cost of remedying the defect, and I therefore conclude that the purchasers
are entitled to the sum of RM98,625.
I may just as well point out that what the purchasers will do with the sum
of RM98,625 is entirely up to them, and the builder/vendor should not be
heard to say later that the purchaser ought to have been ordered to spend
this sum in actually carrying out the said micropilling. Please see the case
of Stephen Forsyth, for a decision also to this effect.
In connection with and arising out of the defective house in question,
investigation was conducted by experts into the causes of the damage to the
house. The cost of reports of such experts totalling RM21,141.35 would be
allowed. This was pleaded and proved. As regards other claims of expenses
they will not be allowed because either they were not proved by evidence, or
they have not arisen naturally in the usual cause of things from the breach
of contract, ie breaches of the express and implied conditions referred to
above. Such other claims of expenses are expenses incurred for executing a
charge in the land on which the house stands to some finance company,
payment of relevant interest on housing loan to that finance company. To
amplify, such expenses were not communicated to the vendor/builder with a
view to making a potential claim for them in the event of breach of
contract, so that both parties would have had the advantage of making
suitable provisions for them in their contract; to quote a sentence in this
connection from that celebrated passage in Hadley v. Baxendale [1843-60] All
ER Rep 461; '... of this advantage, it would be very unjust to deprive
them'.
The Court now begins to deal with the most difficult part of this case
regarding the purchasers' claims against the other defendants, viz the
architects, the engineers and the local authority, respectively in
negligence.
It ought to be mentioned at this stage that in the middle of the case, the
purchasers sought and obtained leave to discontinue wholly the action as
against the local authority, ie Majlis Daerah Kinta Barat, Batu Gajah, with
costs to the fourth defendant to be taxed. It is believed that some
statutory exemption of liability of the kind against the local authority was
behind this surprising move.
The Court now deals with the purchasers' claims against the other defendants
in negligence.
The claim against the architects is in negligence for, inter alia, failure
to investigate the nature of the soil on the land on which the house stands,
to supervise and inspect the construction of the foundations of the house,
or for issuing certificate of completion of the foundations etc.
The claim is in negligence likewise against the engineers for, inter alia,
failure to design adequate foundations, failure in designing adequate
piling, and failure to submit the earthwork plans to the proper authority,
etc.
There is however, a formidable obstacle to such claims in negligence against
the engineers and architects as the claims, in the circumstances of this
case, relate solely to the defective condition of the defective house with
the purchasers seeking to recover damages in regard to such defective
condition and expenses in connection therewith, eg the investigation
expenses in regard to such defective condition.
The claims are therefore for pure economic loss, and such pure economic loss
is not recoverable in negligence in the circumstances of this case. The
revolution, the Court spoke of earlier in this judgement, concerns the legal
position of the claimability of such pure economic loss in connection with
dangerous products of manufacturers and defective houses in actions in
negligence between parties not governed by any contractual provisions. The
Court owes an explanation which will neither be free from difficulty nor
short, for holding such claim in this case to be irrecoverable. The Court
will deal with such position compendiously.
The term pure economic loss or just economic loss is a broad term incapable
of any comprehensive definition, but dependent for its meaning and effect on
the context of circumstances in which the term is used, etc. but the meaning
in this case will become apparent later.
It all started with the landmark case which everyone concerned with the law
knows, ie the case of Donoghe v. Stevenson [1932] AC 562; [1932] All ER Rep
1. For the purpose of the instant action, three things happened in that case
and one of them is of tremendous import.
The case first decided that a manufacturer of products would, despite the
absence of contractual relations (from which liability could have been
normally affixed on a manufacturer), owe a duty of care to an ultimate
consumer of such a defective product to avoid: (a) causing injury to the
person of such consumer; and (b) causing damage to the property of such
consumer other than the defective product.
That case decided also expressly or by taking for granted, that any
compensation for the loss or damage to that defective product itself is not
claimable, so that the damage to property mentioned earlier in the preceding
para. is not to include the damage for the defective condition of the
defective product that gave rise to the injury or damage. This situation is
hereafter referred to as the said limitation. Such claim for such
compensation for such defective condition of the defective product is a
claim for pure economic loss or economic loss; the expression has therefore
acquired a rather special and loaded meaning in the instant case.
In the same vein, it would be instructive for all to read once more a
passage of Lord Brandon's dissenting speech in the extraordinary case of
Junior Books Ltd. v. Veitchi Co. Ltd. [1983] 1 AC 520 at p. 551; [1982] 3
All ER 201 at pp. 217-218; [1982] 3 WLR 477 at p. 499:
The first consideration is that, in Danoghue v. Stevenson [1932] AC 562 ;
[1932] All ER Rep. 1 itself and all the numerous cases in the principle of
that decision has been applied to different but analogous factual
situations, it has always been either stated expresssly, or taken for
granted, that an essential ingredient in the cause of action relied on was
the existence of danger, or the threat of danger, of physical damage to
persons or their property, excluding for this purpose the very piece of
property from the defective condition of which such danger, or threat of
danger, arises. To dispense with that essential ingredient in a cause of
action of the kind concerned in the present case would, in my view, involve
a radical departure from long-established authority.
The decision of Donoghue, in addition, has some earth shattering quality in
having formulated a general duty of care as a solid foundation to the tort
of negligence where there was no such general duty before, it having being
based on the forseeability of harm, vide the part of Lord Atkin's speech
about the love-your-neighbour principle is too well known to need its
repeating. Consequently, there have been a greatly increased number of
actions, which hitherto were regarded as not possible, with a corresponding
increase of categories of plaintiffs and defendants, with the new general
duty of care thus formulated being applied.
It is generally believed and agreed that the rationale for Lord Atkin's
confinement to the injury to the person of plaintiffs and the damage to the
property of the plaintiffs other than the aritcle or product that caused
such injury or damage, is to avoid the creation of liability 'in an
inderterminate amount for an indeterminate time to an indeterminate class',
to quote what is said to be the words of Cardozo CJ in the American case of
Ultramares v. Touche [1931] 255 NY 170 at p. 179, words that pithily and
vividly describe the underlying policy of the law on the said limitation.
Another important matter to bear in mind is that the principles of liability
for unsafe or defective products by virtue of a latent defect in them as
exemplified by Donoghue have been long extended to defective houses of
builders, like the house in question herein.
Most probably for doing justice in those 'hard' cases, the Courts for a long
time brushed aside the said limitation and awarded damages for pure economic
losses in similar cases, and among such notable cases is the case of Dutton
v. Bognor Regis Urban District Council [1972] 1 QB 373; [1972] 1 All ER 462;
[1972] 2 WLR 299, where the council was sued for negligently approving the
foundations of a house built on a rubbish dump. The walls had cracked and
the doors and windows would not close and the foundations were found to be
totally inadequate and the plaintiff sued, claiming loss by virtue of loss
in value of the house there and cost of repairs. The Court of Appeal upheld
the judgment of the trial Court.
The decision in Dutton was later to be overruled in Murphy v. Brentwood
District Council [1990] 2 All ER 908; [1990] 3 WLR 414, in which the same
decision was held to be wrong and Lord Bridge had this to say [1990] 2 All
ER 908 at p. 924; [1990] 3 WLR 414 at p. 434: 'That decision was certainly
without precedent and was, I think, widely regarded as judicial
legislation', more about the case of Murphy later.
After Dutton, came the highly controversial case of Anns v. Merton London
Borough Council [1978] AC 728; [1977] 2 WLR 1024, which approved the
decision of Dutton. In Anns, the foundations of the house in the form of a
concrete raft had settled or subsided differentially causing cracks to the
house there and damage to its gas and soil pipes The owner of the house sold
it and sued the Merton London Borough for negligently approving the
foundations. It appears that the defendant borough had sought, before
granting such approval to the foundations, advice of independent consulting
engineers. Judgment was entered for the plaintiff.
Anns case was followed in New Zealand in Bowen v. Paramount Builders Ltd.
[1975] 2 NZLR 546, a New Zealand Supreme Court case also involving
inadequate foundations of a house causing settlement and cracks. Anns was
followed, in regard to the recoverability in tort of such pure economic loss
against a defective crane manufacturer.
Anns case was not followed by the High Court of Australia in Sutherland
Shire Council v. Heyman [1985] 60 ALR 1.
There are many cases which are not mentioned in the judgment and which
allowed for recovery of pure economic loss in an action in tort. This is
neither the place nor the time to discuss all of them.
Anns> case, allowing the recovery of pure economic loss began to be
seriously disputed and dissented from, in D & F Estates v. Church
Commissioners for England [1989] AC 177, in which an action in negligence
was filed against the main contractors of a flat for defective plastering
therein in the sum of RM10,000. The House of Lords disallowed the claim of
the plaintiff on the ground of the damage being to the defective property
itself and not to the plaintiff's other property or personal injury.
That was the revolution I spoke of in the beginning of this judgment in the
context of Anns and other similar cases and D & F Estates later over the
years since Donoghue. On reflection, it was not only a revolution but also a
restoration to the status quo before Dutton and Anns but after Donoghue, to
the traditional principle explained above, i.e. the said limitation.
The decision of D & F Estates in the House of Lords, in so far as it
concerns the non-recoverability of such pure economic loss as described
above by an owner of the house against the builder in tort, i.e. by way of
an action in negligence, was confirmed twice by the House of Lords in Murphy
v. Brentwood District Council and Department of the Environment v. Thomas
Bates & Sons Ltd. [1990] 2 All ER 943; [1990] 3 WLR 457.
If the liability of a builder of a defective house in negligence is subject
to the limitation I explained above, an architect or engineer for similar
reasons in the absence of any direct contractual relationship with the owner
of a building, cannot also be liable in negligence in a claim for pure
economic loss, i.e. for economic loss for or on account of the defective
condition of the defective building.
For the reasons above, the claims against the architects (second defendats)
and the engineers (third defendants) would have to be dismissed.
In retrospect, to deal with or to overcome those 'hard' cases in order to
mete out ideal justice, a Court ought not to overturn a general established
principle of law but should only apply it to facts or situations amenable to
it. Where this is not possible, then let the custodians of the public
conscience, viz members of that august body called Parliament, deal with any
urgent or topical situation by legislation with appropriate details and
retrospective effect as desired, otherwise confusion will be caused to the
law, increasing the vulnerability of the Court to the criticism its being
engaged in out and out legislation.
The Court's sympathy is also with the vendor/builder which has shown such a
splendid attitude of commercial responsibility, by even going to Court to
compel the purchaser to allow repair work (though proved to be abortive
later), to be done.
On facts of this case, when the purchasers cited or sued the engineers and
architects, the purchasers had a practically unanswerable case against both
of them by virtue of Dutton and Anns, but the same case against them
foundered when D & F Estates and Murphy were decided. Though the architects
and engineers have succeeded against the purchasers and in the context of
the circumstances in this case, they have so succeeded in truth on a
technical point, for the inadequaate foundations of the house in question
and the extra thickness of the 'fill' have yet to be accounted for.
Considering all these in connection with also the comparatively small value
of the house in question, the architects and engineers should get no costs
against the purchasers.
On the question of costs as between the purchasers and the vendor/builder,
the latter has earlier obtained the mandatory injunction in the action with
costs to be taxed. Considering this in conjunction with the value of the
house in question also, the purchasers should get 1/2 costs only.
I therefore order as follows:
(1) that the sale and purchase agreement dated 29 November 1983, between the
first defendant of the one part and the plaintiffs of the other part, be
hereby terminated for breach of contract;
(2) that the first defendant is to pay forthwith a sum of RM98,625 with
interest at 8% pa thereon, from date of judgment to date of satisfaction to
the plaintiffs, and further, 1/2 costs to be taxed;
(3) that further, the first defendant is to pay forthwith RM21,141,35 with
interest at the rate of 4% thereon, from date of action to date of judgment
and thereafter at 8% to date of satisfaction; and
(4) that the claims of the plaintiffs against the second defendants and the
third defendants be dismissed but there be no order as to costs.
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