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[2020] NSWSC 479
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Cubic Metre Pty Ltd v C & E Critharis Constructions Pty Ltd [ 2020] NSWSC 479 (1 May 2020)
Last Updated: 1 May 2020
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Supreme Court
New South Wales
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Case Name:
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Cubic Metre Pty Ltd v C & E Critharis Constructions Pty Ltd
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Medium Neutral Citation:
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Hearing Date(s):
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29 April 2020
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Decision Date:
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1 May 2020
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Jurisdiction:
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Common Law
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Before:
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Adamson J
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Decision:
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(1) Extend the time within which the summons is to be
filed to 30 July 2019. (2) Extend the time within
which the cross-summons is to be filed to 1 October
2019. (3) Grant leave to the plaintiff to appeal
on ground 4 and allow the appeal. (4) Grant leave
to the defendant to appeal on grounds 1 and 1A but dismiss the
cross-appeal. (5) Set aside the order for judgment
and interest made by Kennedy LCM on 4 June 2019 and the costs order made by
Kennedy LCM on
25 June 2019. (6) In lieu of the
orders in (5) above, make the following
orders: (a) Judgment for the plaintiff (C & E
Critharis Constructions Pty Limited) in the sum of
$1. (b) Order the plaintiff (C & E Critharis
Constructions Pty Limited) to pay the costs of the defendant (Cubic Metre Pty
Ltd). (7) Reserve the costs of the proceedings in
this Court. (8) Direct the parties to inform my
Associate in writing within seven days of the date hereof whether they wish to
be heard on the
question of costs.
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Catchwords:
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APPEALS — Appeal from Local Court to Supreme Court — damages
for breach of contract — whether magistrate erred by
awarding damages for
a loss that was not particularised or relied on at
hearing CONTRACTS — Remedies — Damages — where
damages claimed for costs of rectifying defect in construction — whether
magistrate erred in failing to award damages for rectification
costs CONTRACTS — Remedies — Damages — Remoteness
of damage — whether claimed loss was reasonably in the contemplation
of
the parties
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Legislation Cited:
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Civil Procedure Act 2005 (NSW), ss 60, 98, 100Home Building Act 1989
(NSW), ss 18B, 18E, Sch 4 Home Building Amendment Act 2011
(NSW) Limitation Act 1969 (NSW) Local Court Act 2007 (NSW), ss 39,
40Uniform Civil Procedure Rules 2005 (NSW), rr 42.1, 50.2, 50.3
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Cases Cited:
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Texts Cited:
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D Cremean, M Whitten and M Sharkey (eds), Brooking on Building Contracts
(5th ed, 2014, LexisNexis Butterworths)
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Category:
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Principal judgment
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Parties:
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Cubic Metre Pty Ltd (Plaintiff / Cross-defendant) C & E Critharis
Pty Ltd (Defendant / Cross-plaintiff)
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Representation:
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Counsel: B Webster (Plaintiff / Cross-defendant) R K Weaver
(Defendant / Cross-plaintiff) Solicitors: Just Dispute
Resolution (Plaintiff / Cross-defendant) Konstan Lawyers (Defendant /
Cross-plaintiff)
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File Number(s):
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2019/235538
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Decision under appeal:
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Court or Tribunal:
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Local Court
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Date of Decision:
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4 June 2019; 25 June 2019
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Before:
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Kennedy LCM
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File Number(s):
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2018/76455
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JUDGMENT
Introduction
- Cubic
Metre Pty Ltd, the plaintiff (the Contractor), and C & E Critharis
Constructions Pty Ltd, the defendant (the Builder) seek
leave to appeal, and
cross-appeal, to challenge orders made in the Local Court arising out of a claim
by the Builder for damages
for alleged breach of contract by the Contractor. The
breach was said to be that the sandstone supplied by the Contractor was
unsuitable
for use as cladding for a sea wall at the boundary of a residential
waterfront property at Watsons Bay owned by Vaughan and Jacqui
Blank (the
Owner).
- The
proceedings in the Court below were commenced by statement of claim filed on 8
March 2018 (which was subsequently amended on 6
April 2018). The Builder’s
claim was for the sum of $123,332, which it contended was the cost of rectifying
the sandstone cladding
on the stone wall. The proceedings were heard on 28
February 2019 and 1 March 2019. On 4 June 2019, Kennedy LCM ordered judgment
for
the Builder in the sum of $20,408.55, together with interest pursuant to s 100
of the Civil Procedure Act 2005 (NSW). On 25 June 2019, the magistrate
ordered the Contractor to pay the Builder’s costs.
- In
summary, the Contractor, in its appeal, alleges that the magistrate was in error
in deciding the case on a basis which was not
put by the Builder, failed to
apply the principles of law relating to assessment of damages for breach of
contract and failed to
give sufficient reasons. The Contractor also contends
that her Honour’s discretion as to costs miscarried because account was
not taken of the substantial discrepancy between the amount claimed by the
Builder ($123,332) and the amount awarded by her Honour
($20,408.55). The
Builder, in its cross-appeal, alleges that her Honour ought to have awarded the
sum claimed, being the cost of
rectification, which amounted to the cost of
replacing the cladding on the sea wall.
- By
further amended summons filed on 31 January 2020, the Contractor seeks an
extension of time for appeal, and, if required, leave
to appeal, against
decisions of Kennedy LCM made on 4 June 2019 (the substantive orders) and 25
June 2019 (the costs order). The
original summons was filed on 30 July 2019. By
amended cross-summons filed on 20 December 2019, the Builder seeks an extension
of
time for leave to cross-appeal from the substantive orders. The
Builder’s original cross-summons was filed on 1 October 2019.
- The
applicable time limit for commencement of proceedings for an appeal to this
Court against an order of the Local Court is 28 days
from the material date,
being the date on which the decision from which the appeal is brought was
pronounced or given: Uniform Civil Procedure Rules 2005 (NSW) (UCPR), rr 50.2
and 50.3. The parties agreed that each ought be granted an extension of time
under UCPR, r 50.3(1)(c).
The background to the appeal and
cross-appeal
The facts
- The
facts germane to the proceedings in this Court are largely agreed or
incontrovertible and are summarised below.
The Head
Contract
- In
June 2009, the Owner contracted with the Builder to construct a home at Watsons
Bay on a costs plus basis (the Head Contract).
The Builder’s margin was
stipulated to be 10%.
- Clause
2 of the Head Contract provided:
“Clause 2. Builder’s Obligations
2.1 The builder must carry out and complete the
building works in accordance with this
contract.”
- Clause
13 of the Head Contract relevantly provided:
“...
13.2 The owner must pay the price of the building
works progressively as claimed by the builder.
13.3 The builder must give the owner a written claim for
a progress payment at each progress stage described in Schedule 4.
13.4 A progress claim is to include details of the cost of
the building works for the building works carried out, the proportion
of the builder’s fee claimed and of other moneys then due to the
builder pursuant to the provisions of the contract.
13.5 A progress claim is to be accompanied by such invoices,
receipts or other documents as may reasonably be expected to support
the claim
and evidence of the cost of the building works being claimed.
13.6 The owner must pay a progress claim within 5
working days of the builder giving the claim.
13.7 Unless the owner disputes the amount of a progress
claim by giving the builder a written notice detailing the dispute within
5 working days of receiving a progress claim, the progress claim is
accepted by the owner as the cost of materials, labour and other items
provided by the builder which are the subject of the claim. This clause
does not limit the owner’s right to claim that the building works
done by the builder are not in accordance with this
contract.”
- Schedule
4 to the Head Contract, entitled “Progress Stages”
provided:
“Schedule 4. Progress Stages
The stage for when progress claims are to be made must be clearly defined in
this schedule. The stages may be by reference to work
completed or by period of
time or otherwise as agreed.
Describe progress stages here:
Progress Claims are either to be submitted monthly or in minimum amounts of
$250,000 at the discression [sic] of the Builder.
Payment of progress claims is to be made within 10 (ten) working days of receipt
of progress claims (incl. all supporting invoices).”
- Clause
18 of the Head Contract provided:
“Clause 18. Assignment and Subcontracting
18.1 Neither party may assign this contract or any part
of their rights, benefits or obligations under this contract without the
prior written consent of the other party.
18.2 The builder may subcontract any part of the
building works but remains responsible for all of the building
works.”
- Clause
25 of the Head Contract provided for a defects liability period in the following
terms:
“25.1 The defects liability period is a period of 13
weeks commencing on and including the date of practical completion.
25.2 The owner may, before the end of the defects
liability period, give the builder one list of defects in the building
works that appear after the date of practical completion.
25.3 The builder must rectify defects that are the
builder’s responsibility and which are notified to the
builder during the defects liability period.”
- Clause
32 of the Head Contract relevantly provided:
“Clause 32. Warranties
32.1 To the extent required by the Home Building Act, the
builder warrants that:
(a) the building works will be performed in a proper
and workmanlike manner and in accordance with the plans and specifications
attached to this contract;
(b) all materials supplied by the builder will be good
and suitable for the purpose for which they are used and that, unless otherwise
stated in this contract, those materials will be new;
...”
- It
was common ground that there were no specifications attached to the Head
Contract.
- The
Head Contract contained special conditions which included the
following:
“Retention: 10% of Progress Claims up to 5% of contract value. Retention
capped at $250,000.
Retention amount will be paid into a joint bank account.
Retention to be released 12 months after receipt by owner of final occupation
certificate.”
- For
any breach discovered before the progress payment, the Owner was entitled
to dispute the progress claim under cl 13.7. The Owner’s remedies for any
breach
by the Builder which was discovered after the progress payment had
been made were limited to the following: the Owner could retain the retention
money for a further 12 months
(under the special condition) and call upon the
Builder to rectify the works (clause 25) or the Owner could sue the Builder for
breach
of cl 32.1 of the Contract or for breach of statutory warranty under the
Home Building Act 1989 (NSW). The Owner was obliged to release any
retention monies after the receipt by the Owner of the final occupation
certificate.
The Sub-contract
- The
Builder entered into a contract with the Contractor by a document executed on 13
April 2011 (the Sub-contract). The Sub-contract
required the Contractor to
supply and install sandstone for the whole property at a cost of $520 per square
metre.
- Clause
13 of the Sub-contract provided:
“13 DAMAGE AND DEFECTS
(a) The Trade-Contractor will pay to the Builder the cost of
making good any damage by him or his employees or his Trade-Contractors
to the
work of the Builder or of any other Trade-Contractor.
(b) The Trade-Contractor will maintain the works until
completion and thereafter make good all defects that may appear in the
works
prior to the expiration of the Builder’s Defects Liability Period under
the Head Contract. This duty will not relate
to any defects which are caused to
the Trade-Contractor’s work by other parties for whom the Trade-Contractor
is not responsible.
(c) Corrective or remedial work must be undertaken within ten
(10) days (or an alternate period as agreed by the Builder) of notification
of
the same to the Trade-Contractor. If the need to carry out the corrective or
remedial work is urgent then the Trade-Contractor
will attend to the same as a
matter of urgency.
(d) A failure to comply with the above requirements will
entitle the Builder to arrange for other parties to carry out the work.
The cost
of this will be payable by the Trade-Contractor.”
- Special
condition 21 of the Sub-contract provided:
“Materials and Workmanship
21. Materials shall be new and both materials and workmanship
shall be in strict accordance with the provisions of this Contract
and the law
(including but not limited to the Home Building Act 1986, Fair Trading
Act 1987 and Sale of Goods Act 1923 in New South Wales, the Trade
Practices Act 1974 (Cth) and common law), Council by-laws, the Building Code
of Australia and any other applicable building codes and standards, including
those promulgated by the Standards Association of Australia. Materials and plant
shall be fit and proper for the purpose for which
they were obtained, free from
defects and consistent with the nature and character of the Works, and all
workmanship shall be executed
in a proper and workmanlike manner to the
satisfaction of C&E Critharis Constructions and in conformity with all the
reasonable
directions and requirements of C&E Critharis Constructions. The
Subcontractor shall if required furnish satisfactory evidence
that the materials
are of the origin and quality specified, otherwise C&E Critharis
Constructions may conduct its own tests to
ascertain the same at the
Subcontractor’s expense. The provision of this clause shall survive the
defects limitation period
and shall not merge on
completion.”
- It
was an agreed fact in the Court below that during the period from 13 April 2011
until not later than 9 March 2012, the Contractor
supplied and installed
sandstone pursuant to the Sub-contract. The sandstone was used throughout the
house and also as cladding for
a sea wall. The sea wall itself was constructed
by another contractor.
- There
was an issue in the Court below as to whether the Builder’s claim for
damages at common law was time-barred. This issue
turned on the date of last
breach. The breach alleged was that the Contractor had supplied stone which was
unfit for its purpose.
The evidence established that the stone had been supplied
in 2011. As the statement of claim was filed on 8 March 2018, the claim
under
the common law was statute-barred. However, as it was common ground that the
claim under the Home Building Act was within time (there being an outer
limit of seven years from the date of the contract), it is not necessary to
address this question
further, except in relation to what is referred to below
as the Contractor’s notice of contention.
- On
14 November 2012 the Builder notified the Contractor that the Owner had observed
that the stone in the sea wall was deteriorating.
There were negotiations
between the Builder, Contractor and Owner after this time which did not result
in any concluded agreement
as to rectification. No rectification work has been
done on the sea wall. The Owner continued to reside at the property at the time
of the proceedings in the Court below.
The proceedings in the
Court below
- In
its claim in the Court below, the Builder relied on the warranty implied by
s 18B(f), (now s 18B(1)(f)) of the Home Building Act). Section 18B
of the Act relevantly provided:
“18B Warranties as to residential building
work
(1) The following warranties by the holder of a
contractor licence, or a person required to hold a contractor licence before
entering into a contract, are implied in every contract to do residential
building work—
...
(f) a warranty that the work and any materials used
in doing the work will be reasonably fit for the specified purpose or result,
if
the person for whom the work is done expressly makes known to the holder of the
contractor licence or person required to hold
a contractor licence, or another
person with express or apparent authority to enter into or vary contractual
arrangements on behalf
of the holder or person, the particular purpose for which
the work is required or the result that the owner desires the work to achieve,
so as to show that the owner relies on the holder’s or person’s
skill and judgment.
(2) The statutory warranties implied by this section are
not limited to a contract to do residential building work for an owner
of land
and are also implied in a contract under which a person
(the principal contractor) who has contracted to do
residential building work contracts with another person
(a subcontractor to the principal contractor) for the
subcontractor to do the work (or any part of the work) for the principal
contractor.”
- The
Builder also relied on special condition 21 of the Sub-contract (which is set
out above) which required the materials used to
be fit for their intended
purpose. The difference between the provisions was material to the limitation
defence since the limitation
period for the claim under the contract was six
years from breach and the limitation period for the claim for breach of warranty
was, at that time, seven years after the completion of the work to which it
related.
- In
order to address the grounds of appeal and cross-appeal it is necessary to
examine the way the Builder put its case on damages
in the Court
below.
The pleadings
- The
Builder relevantly alleged in its amended statement of
claim:
“8. In breach of the sub-Contract and s 18B(f) of the
Home Building Act 1989 (NSW), the Defendant did not supply sandstone fit
for purpose in respect of the construction of the sea wall.
Particulars
...
9. Further to this beach, the Defendant has not provided the
technical specifications of the sandstone (being a further breach
of the
sub-Contract).
Particulars
...
10. In the alternative, if the cause for the deteriorating sea
wall was the failure to seal the stone, the Plaintiff asserts the
Defendant is
liable for same.
11. The Plaintiff claims damages for breach of sub-Contract,
specifically Clause 21 of the Special Conditions requiring materials
selected to
be fit for purpose (and of [sic] they were not fit for purpose, to advise of
same).
12. The Plaintiff has suffered damages in respect of the above
breaches by the Defendant of the sub-Contract as the Plaintiff is
obliged to
repair the defective sea wall pursuant to the Contract with the Owners, and has
suffered loss as a result of the Owners
withholding monies due to the defective
sea wall;
13. The Plaintiff has incurred significant costs in retaining
an Expert to provide reports on the quality and nature of the stone
supplied by
the Defendant.
Particulars
Clause 21 of the special conditions of the Agreement provides that such costs
are to be borne by the Defendant
14. The Plaintiff claims total damages in the sum of $87,183.80
plus interest and costs.
Particulars
14.1 Council permit to work on council land (4
weeks)
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$2,758 plus GST
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14.2 Labour to remove stone (5 men, 1 week):
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$11,000 plus GST
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14.3 Supply & Install Stone (100 square metres at $600
per square metre)
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$60,000 plus GST
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14.4 Tipping
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$2,500 plus GST
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14.5 Install, hire, and dismantle scaffolding
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$3,000 plus GST”
|
- It
can be seen that, although paragraph 12 of the pleading contained an
unparticularised allegation of loss suffered as a result of
the Owner
withholding money, there were no particulars provided and no damages associated
with that allegation included in the damages
claimed in the amended statement of
claim.
- Further,
it is also of significance that the breaches alleged were failure to supply
sandstone which was fit for its intended purpose
and failure to provide a
specification. There was no allegation of any misrepresentation made by the
Contractor as to the suitability
of the sandstone.
- In
its defence, the Contractor denied that it was liable for damages to the
Builder. Further, it alleged that the claim at common
law was statute-barred
because the six-year limitation period under the Limitation Act 1969
(NSW) had expired and, in relation to the alleged breach of s 18B(f) of the
Home Building Act (being the supply of sandstone), the seven-year period
under the Home Building Act had also expired.
The opening
of the Builder’s case
- When
Mr Weaver, who appeared for the Builder in the Court below and in this Court,
opened the case he said, at tr. 12.32-13.10:
“... so we are not in the situation we have to restore the property.
Now, we say that – well, Mr Blank will give evidence in relation to the
circumstances in any event, but our position is this
– that until that is
rectified, we can’t in good conscience, as builders of 35 years, leave it
the way it is, particularly
in a home, a prestige home, such as this one, and
what has to be restored is something that not only fits the aesthetic but also
fits the necessity of staying in place for a decent number of years and not
simply seven or eight years, as has been the case to
date.”
- There
was no reference to any withholding monies in the opening and no submission that
they were to be relied upon as constituting
part of the claim for damages. Mr
Weaver can be taken to have accepted that the Builder was not legally obliged to
rectify the cladding
on the sea wall.
The Builder’s
evidence
The evidence of Mr Critharis
- In
its case in chief, the Builder relied on the evidence of its principal, Elia
Critharis. In his affidavit of 11 September 2018,
he deposed as
follows:
“43. The Owners have withheld part of the Plaintiff's
final progress claim as a result of the defective stone in the sum
of
$20,408.55.
44. Further, I estimate that the costs needed to replace the
rear sea wall is [sic] over $80,000.00 and itemised as follows:
(a) Four (4) weeks is needed to work to
bring down the current wall and erect the new wall
(b) The Council permit needed to work on council land (for 4
weeks) is $2,758.00 plus GST.
(c) Five (5) men working for one week to remove the stone would
involve labour costs of $11,000.00 plus GST.
(d) The supply and installation of the correct stone (100
square metres at $600 per square metre) is $60,000.00 plus GST.
(e) The costs of tipping the removal of the current stone will
equal $2,500.00 plus GST.
(f) To install, hire, and dismantle scaffolding will be
$3,000.00 plus GST.”
- Mr
Critharis did not address the question of damages in his second affidavit of 14
December 2018. In neither affidavit did Mr Critharis
depose as to his intentions
with respect to the wall. In particular, he did not depose that he intended to
rectify the wall.
- In
cross-examination, Mr Critharis confirmed that each of the invoices rendered by
the Contractor in respect of the stonework had
been paid in full by the Owner.
Mr Critharis admitted in cross-examination that he, meaning the Builder, had not
done any further
work on the property since 2012 and had not done any work on
the sea wall at all (tr. 105.24-106.5).
The evidence of Mr
Barker
- Mr
Barker, a quantity surveyor, gave evidence in a report dated 5 October 2018 in
which he estimated the cost of replacing the sea
wall, which totalled $123,332.
This figure formed the basis of the Builder’s claim. The Builder accepted
that, if successful,
it would have to forego the excess over the $100,000
jurisdictional limit of the Local Court.
The evidence of Mr
Blank
- Mr
Blank, one of the Owners, gave evidence in chief by affidavit but did not
address the replacement of the stone wall. In cross-examination
Mr Blank said
that he had done no maintenance work at all on the sea wall, notwithstanding
that he had noticed some deterioration
in November 2012 (tr. 119.12-.25).
Mr Blank gave evidence that there had been some negotiations with the Builder as
a result of which
a deed had been drafted and considered but that no deed had
ever been signed and there was no agreement requiring the Builder to
rectify the
wall. Mr Blank agreed that there were no legal proceedings between the Owner and
the Builder about the wall or at all
(tr. 120.23-.26). In re-examination, Mr
Blank said that he had waited for the wall to be repaired but that nothing had
been done
(tr. 122.17-.21).
- At
the conclusion of the hearing on 1 March 2019, her Honour made directions for
written submissions.
The parties’ written
submissions
- The
submissions of the parties in the Court below on the issue of damages are
summarised or extracted below.
The Contractor’s written
submissions
- Mr
Webster, who appeared on behalf of the Contractor in the Court below and in this
Court, provided written submissions to the Court
below dated 22 March 2019. He
said, on the question of damages:
“Alleged damage
63. Counsel for the plaintiff conceded in opening that the
plaintiff’s alleged ‘obligation’ to replace the stone
on the
seawall (to the extent that the stone is in need of replacement) was a moral
obligation arising from the plaintiff’s
long standing as a builder of
repute.
64. Any contractual obligation (if any) as between the owner
and the plaintiff arising from any of the statutory warranties in
part 2C of the
HBA [Home Building Act] would appear to have expired by about 8 March 2019,
being the date 7 years after practical completion.”
- On
the question of loss, the Contractor’s written submissions said as
follows:
“Loss
121. The question of loss only arises if the court is against
the defendant on the question of liability.
122. The plaintiff’s alleged loss is pleaded at
paragraph 12 of the ASOC. It states:
The Plaintiff has suffered damages in
respect to the above breaches by the Defendant of the sub-Contract as the owner
is obliged to
repair the defective sea wall pursuant to the Contract with the
Owners, and has suffered loss as a result of the Owners withholding
monies due
to the defective sea wall.
123. Mr Elia Critharis agreed under cross examination that the
plaintiff received from the owners payment in full for the defendant’s
invoices with respect to the sub-contract. That is, the plaintiff has suffered
no loss arising from the sub-contract between it and
the defendant.
124. Rather, the owner has allegedly withheld from the
plaintiff part of the builder’s margin due under the head contract.
To the
extent that such withholding is even a breach of the head contract (which was
not a live matter before the court), such alleged
breach lies as between owner
and plaintiff.
125. There is currently no evidence before the court that
would allow a conclusion to be drawn that any loss alleged by the plaintiff
has
been caused by the defendant. In fact, there is no documentary evidence at all
before the court that any payment has been withheld.”
- The
Contractor also made detailed written submissions criticising the evidence of Mr
Barker, the quantity surveyor called by the Builder.
The Contractor concluded as
follows:
“77. The defendant submits that Mr Barker’s report
should not be considered as probative of the cost of replacing the
stone on the
sea wall in any event, and in particular to the extent, if any, that the need
for replacement has been caused by the
defendant.
78. The defendant also notes that Mr Elia Critharis under
cross examination did not press his own estimate of replacement, preferring
to
rely on the evidence of Mr Barker and was therefore not cross examined further
on that point. Mr Critharis’s evidence on
the cost of replacement should
be excluded.”
The Builder’s written
submissions
- In
its written submissions dated 25 March 2019, the Builder said, on the question
of damages:
“The Court would be satisfied on the ordinary proof that Mr Barker’s
assessment of the costs of rectification is accurate
and fair and grant judgment
for them [to the] plaintiff accordingly ...”
- In
further written submissions dated 22 April 2019, said to be in reply, the
Builder did not respond to the Contractor’s submissions
on loss set out
above and can, in those circumstances, be taken not to have pressed any
alternative claim for withholding monies.
- In
further written submissions dated 24 April 2019, the Contractor did not
specifically address any issue relating to damages.
The decision
of the Court below on the substantive orders
The findings of breach
- Her
Honour accepted the evidence of Mr Cass that the stone was not fit for the
purpose for which it was being used, namely in the
“wet zones” of
the sea wall. On this basis, her Honour found that the Contractor was in breach
of the Sub-contract and
the statutory warranty. There is no challenge to these
findings on either the appeal or the cross-appeal. They are only potentially
relevant to the notice of contention (the grounds of which are set out in
paragraphs 8-15 of the further amended summons).
The assessment
of damages for breach
- Her
Honour referred to the evidence of what would be required to rectify the wall
and found that “total replacement is the appropriate
method of
rectification”.
- Because
of its importance to the appeal and the cross-appeal, I propose to extract her
Honour’s findings on damages in full:
“Issue of Loss
[114] Turning then to the issue of loss. There is no doubt that
the plaintiff can demonstrate a loss to it for the withholding
of $20,408.55 of
the retention moneys as a result of the defective wall. The defendant says this
is not referable to the dispute
between the plaintiff and defendant. I find this
is a direct loss to the plaintiff based on the evidence of Mr Critharis that
this
money has not been paid to him as a result of the failure of the wall. I
accept that evidence and it remained largely unchallenged.
[115] The more pressing question is whether the cost of
rectification of the wall is a loss that can be demonstrated by the builder.
Section 18B(1)(f) extends to allow a cause of action to be brought by a builder
against a subcontractor.
[116] However, the defendant says that in this case there is no
action by the owner against the plaintiff, there is no rectification
order made
by Council, and suggests that any legal action by the owner against the builder
is statute barred. It says the only thing
the plaintiff can point to is a moral
sense of right that it should repair the sea wall.
[117] The plaintiff did not address this issue in submissions
nor in submissions in reply, and provided no assistance to the court
on the
issue. It appears that the highest it can point to is a moral obligation to
repair the wall which of course remains the property
of the owner. This is an
admirable attitude towards responsibility to the owner pursuant to the contract.
However, there was no direct
evidence from Mr Critharis of what he intends to
do. It may be implied from his approach and attitude. I am troubled about this
aspect.
On one hand there was a contractual obligation for Mr Critharis to build
a wall for the owners that was fit for purpose. This sea
wall was not. However,
in the last 6 years there is no evidence that remedial work has commenced. There
was no evidence of quotations
or indeed any other action but for the experts
engaged in this case.
[118] There was no evidence from the owner as to his position
in relation to the builders' obligations pursuant to contract for
the
rectification. It is the plaintiff which must establish on balance the loss. It
was curious that no direct evidence was lead
from these witnesses in the
proceedings as to even an intention to rectify. There was no evidence led of any
agreements or contracts
between the owner and the builder.
[119] The act itself provides a mechanism to allow the builder
to bring such a claim against the subcontractor. The act envisages
rectification
is the motivation. I accept that the builder has a contractual relationship with
the owner, and I have that contract
in evidence. I accept that it has been
consistent with the conduct of the builder to arrange repair and rectification
of the sea
wall pursuant to its agreement. It has made attempts to resolve the
matter with the defendant. It has obtained expert evidence to
determine the
source of the deterioration of the wall.
[120] The Plaintiff has satisfied me that it is entitled to
claim pursuant breach of contract being breach of the warranty pursuant
to
clause 21, and pursuant to section 18B(1)(f) of the Home Building Act. It
makes a claim for greater than the jurisdictional limit and therefore agrees to
abandon the remainder of its claim.
[121] However, I have not been provided with any authorities to
assist me in demonstrating a loss to the defendant can be made
out on a moral
responsibility alone. I have no evidence upon which I could be satisfied that
the builder has a liability to the owner
to repair the wall. Any award I made in
the Local Court can only require the payment of the sum to a builder to
compensate him, and
I cannot order that such a sum be passed on to a third
party, nor direct any work to be undertaken. I am not satisfied on balance
that
the plaintiff has established that the loss of rectification is a loss to it on
the facts of this matter.
[122] I am satisfied that money that was retained by the owner
has been retained as a result of the breach of contract established
against
[the] defendant. The defendant says that this loss is both avoidable and that
the plaintiff has not taken reasonable steps
to avoid its loss. I find that the
loss is directly related to retention of moneys as a result of the breach by the
defendant. It
attempted to resolve the matter through involvement with the
defendant in 2012 when the issue arose. I consider it took all reasonable
steps
to avoid its loss. Doing the best I can with the evidence before me I make the
following orders:
Orders
a. Verdict [sic, judgment] for the Plaintiff in the sum of
$20,408.55
b. Interest in accordance with section 100 Civil Procedure
Act
c. Matter listed for any argument regarding costs on 11 June
2019.”
The decision of the Court below on costs
- As
referred to above, the Court below delivered reasons and made the substantive
orders on 4 June 2019. The matter was listed before
her Honour on 25 June 2019
for argument on costs.
- The
Builder sought indemnity costs on the basis of an offer to accept $20,000 which
was contained in a letter dated 15 February 2018
which was expressed to be
“without prejudice except as to costs”. In the alternative, it
sought costs on the ordinary
basis.
- The
Contractor submitted that the Builder’s claim had been for $112,000
(limited to $100,000 because of the limits on the Local
Court’s
jurisdiction) but that the Builder had, in effect, abandoned that claim on the
first day of the hearing by accepting
that it had no more than a moral
obligation to rectify the wall. The Contractor further submitted that the
judgment sum was only
slightly more than the jurisdiction of the Small Claims
Division. The Contractor submitted that the Builder had recovered only about
20%
of its initial claim and that, accordingly, it ought not receive its costs. The
Contractor relied on the principle of proportionality
and referred the
magistrate to Young v Kruger [2012] NSWSC 628 in support of a submission
that there should be no order as to costs. The Contractor also submitted that
the “offer”
which the Builder had tendered in support of its
application for indemnity costs had not been one which was capable of
acceptance.
- After
a short adjournment, her Honour delivered reasons for making the costs order set
out above. Her Honour rejected the Builder’s
application for indemnity
costs on the basis that the letter relied upon did not amount to an offer
capable of acceptance and did
not specify the time within which it would be open
in any event. Her Honour referred to ss 60 and 98 of the Civil Procedure
Act. Her Honour purported to apply the general rule that costs ought follow
the event and made an order to that effect.
The grounds of appeal
and cross-appeal
The grounds of appeal
- In
respect of the substantive order, the Contractor relies on the following grounds
of appeal:
“1. The learned Magistrate failed to give reasons for
finding that the sum of $20,408.55 withheld by the owner from the
plaintiff:
a. was retained as a result of
the breach of contract established against [the] defendant; and
b. that the plaintiff’s loss was directly related
to retention of moneys as a result of the breach by the
defendant.
2. The learned Magistrate failed to give reasons as to why the
plaintiff’s loss was not too remote that the defendant should
be liable
for the loss.
3. The learned Magistrate erred in implying (at paragraph 114
of the court’s reasons for decision) that the defendant bore
any onus of
proof with respect to the withholding of $20,408.55 by the owner from the
plaintiff.
4. The learned Magistrate erred in holding that the defendant
was liable to the plaintiff for the withholding of $20,408.55 by
the owner from
the plaintiff.”
- In
respect of the costs order, the Contractor relies on the following grounds of
appeal:
“5. The learned Magistrate failed to apply principles of
proportionality in awarding costs on the ordinary basis, without
further
qualification, to the plaintiff.
6. The learned Magistrate failed to take into account the
material consideration that the defendant was largely successful in
defending a
claim of damages for $123,332.
7. The Costs Order was unreasonable or plainly unjust to the
defendant in circumstances where the plaintiff effectively abandoned
its main
case in opening and the relief ultimately awarded to the plaintiff – in
the absence of any supporting documentary
evidence – was only marginally
greater than the limit at which a maximum costs order would normally apply by
virtue of Local
Court Practice Note Civ 1.”
- In
its amended summons, the Contractor added further grounds as
follows:
“In response to the defendant’s cross-summons for appeal, the
plaintiff relies on the following further grounds of appeal:
8. The learned Magistrate erred in holding that the relevant
limitation period for the common law breach of contract claim as
pleaded ran
from the date on which the plaintiff’s work was completed rather than from
the date the pleaded cause of action
arose.
9. There was no evidence to support the finding of the learned
Magistrate that caulking of the wall in question was finished on
or around 9
March 2012.
10. The finding of the learned Magistrate that evidence that
caulking of the wall in question finished on or around 9 March 2012
was not
refuted by Mr Taplin was contrary to the evidence admitted.
11. The learned Magistrate erred in applying a test for
fitness for purpose of the stone in question that was not based on an
objective
assessment of the express terms of the contract between the plaintiff and the
defendant.
12. There was no evidence that the words expressing the
particular purpose for which the work was required, relied upon in respect
of
the statutory warranty claim pursuant to section 18B(1)(f) of the Home
Building Act 1989, showed that the owner relied on the plaintiff’s
skill and judgment.
13. The learned Magistrate erred in holding that there was
liability on the part of the plaintiff either in relation to the common
law
breach of contract claim or the statutory warranty
claim.”
- As
referred to above, the Contractor relies on grounds 8-13 as a notice of
contention in response to the Builder’s cross-summons.
The effect of this
is that, if the Contractor is successful in its appeal and successful in
defeating the cross-appeal, both of which
relate to the amount of the judgment
sum, it does not press the challenge to the findings of breach. Mr Webster
submitted that this
would be an “acceptable commercial outcome” for
the Contractor. I understand him to accept that, at least commercially,
a
judgment in favour of the Builder for nominal damages with a costs order in
favour of the Contractor, would be as good as judgment
in favour of the
Contractor with a costs order in favour of the Contractor.
The
grounds of cross-appeal
- The
Builder relies on the following grounds of cross-appeal:
“1. The learned Magistrate erred in finding that it could
not be demonstrated that the loss of the rectification was a loss
to the
cross-plaintiff on the facts of the matter and the cross-plaintiff is entitled
to an award of the $123,332 (reduced to $100,000
being the Local Court’s
jurisdictional limit).
1A In support of appeal ground 1 above, the cross-plaintiff
relies on the line of authority from Jones v Stroud District Council
[1986] 1 WLR 1141.”
- The
Builder further claims that, if it succeeds on the cross-appeal, it ought be
awarded costs of the proceedings in the Court below
and in this Court on an
indemnity basis.
Consideration
The Contractor’s application for leave to appeal
- The
Contractor challenges the substantive order on the four grounds set out above.
It is convenient to address ground 4 first since
it challenges the legal and
forensic basis for the finding on which the substantive order was
based.
Ground 4: the alleged error in assessing damages by
reference to the withholding monies
General principles
- The
starting point is the principle that the measure of damages for breach of
contract is that sum of money that will put the wronged
party in the same
position, as far as money can do it, as it would have been in had the contract
been performed: Robinson v Harman [1848] EngR 135; (1848) 1 Ex 850 at 855; [1848] EngR 135; (1848) 154 ER
363 at 365. This requires a comparison to be made between the current position
of the wronged party (in this case, the Builder) and that
party’s position
had the contract been performed rather than breached. Had the Contractor
performed the contract, the cladding
on the stone wall would not have
deteriorated to the extent that it did. The question is, accordingly: what loss
has the Builder
suffered as a result of the unsuitability of the sandstone
supplied by the Contractor, that being the alleged breach?
- Had
the contract been performed, the Builder would have been entitled to be paid in
full by the Owner for the work relating to the
supply and installation of the
sandstone and would have been obliged to pay the Contractor in full under the
contract. As the Builder
was the plaintiff in the Local Court, it bore the onus
of proving that it was in a worse position, financially, as a consequence
of the
Contractor’s breach.
Whether the finding was open having
regard to the way in which the Builder put its case
- At
first instance, the Builder claimed to be in a worse position as a result of the
breach by reason of the moral obligation to replace
the deficient cladding on
the sea wall. It put its claim for damages squarely on the premise that it had
an obligation to rectify
the works and that the only reasonable way of
rectifying them was to replace the sandstone cladding on the sea wall. This was
the
sole basis on which Mr Weaver opened the case. There was no alternative case
put on the basis of the claim for the withholding payment.
The Builder failed to
establish its claim for the cost of rectification because no work had been done,
there were no proceedings
on foot between the Owner and the Builder, the breach
by the Builder of the contract with the Owner was statute-barred and the
Builder’s
“moral” obligation to the Owner did not give rise to
damages recoverable against the Contractor.
- The
only evidence of the withheld payment was that contained in paragraph 43 of Mr
Critharis’s affidavit set out above. No documentary
evidence was adduced
in support of his statement. Mr Critharis was not cross-examined about it but he
confirmed that all of his invoices
to the Owner had been paid. Mr Blank was not
asked about the withholding payment but confirmed that there were no legal
proceedings
between the Owner and the Builder.
- It
is an important aspect of the adversary system that a party is bound not only by
its pleadings but also by the conduct of its counsel:
R v Birks (1990) 19
NSWLR 677 at 683-684 (Gleeson CJ). The function of pleadings is to delineate the
issues in the case and forms the basis for evidentiary rulings
on relevance:
Dare v Pulham (1982) 148 CLR 658 at 664 (Murphy, Wilson, Brennan, Deane
and Dawson JJ); [1982] HCA 70; Banque Commerciale SA (En Liqn) v Akhil
Holdings Ltd (1990) 169 CLR 279 at 286 (Mason CJ and Gaudron J); [1990] HCA
11.
- The
opening is designed to indicate to the court the way in which the plaintiff puts
its case and the way in which it hopes to prove
the case, as well as to indicate
to the opposing party, the case which is required to be met. The questioning of
witnesses is also
designed to achieve procedural fairness as are submissions,
both those in writing and those given orally.
- In
the present case, although there was a reference in paragraph 12 of the amended
statement of claim to the “Owners withholding
monies”, the only loss
particularised related to the cost of rectification. There was no alternative
claim for the amount of
monies alleged to have been withheld by the Owner. In
Dare v Pulham, the High Court described the exception to the general
principle that the parties are bound by the pleadings in the following terms
at
664:
“Apart from cases where the parties choose to disregard the pleadings and
to fight the case on issues chosen at the trial,
the relief which may be granted
to a party must be founded on the pleadings ... But where there is no
departure during the trial
from the pleaded cause of action, a disconformity
between the evidence and particulars earlier furnished will not disentitle a
party
to a verdict based upon the evidence ...”
- The
Builder did not depart from its pleaded cause of action or particularised loss
in the way it put its case in the Court below,
except to the extent that the
actual cost of rectification claimed was particularised at $87,000 in the
pleading and a figure in
the order of $123,000 in the expert evidence. The
revision of the figure in that context fell within the exception in Dare v
Pulham set out above.
- Mr
Weaver’s opening similarly was confined to the claim for the cost of
rectification. Although he read the paragraph of Mr
Critharis’s affidavit
referred to above, he did not re-examine on the evidence given by Mr Critharis
that he had been paid
in full by the Owner for the work. Nor did he raise any
issue with the Owner, who was called as a witness in the Builder’s
case
and who admitted that there were no proceedings between him and the
Builder.
- Mr
Webster, in the Contractor’s submissions in chief, which happened to have
been filed before Mr Weaver’s submissions,
specifically (and presumably
for more abundant caution) noted the absence of a case based on the withholding
monies, to which Mr
Weaver can be taken to have chosen not to respond. There
was, even after Mr Webster drew the Court’s and the Builder’s
attention to the lack of evidence or particularised claim for the withholding
monies, no application for leave to amend to claim
the withholding monies in the
alternative.
- What
is set out above does not amount to a criticism of Mr Weaver, who can be taken
to have acted on instructions to put the Builder’s
claim for damages
solely on the basis of the cost of rectification. There were several objectively
demonstrable forensic reasons
why the Builder might have chosen not to put the
claim on the alternative basis. First, the claim for monies withheld was
significantly
less than the claim for the cost of rectification and, subject to
the determination of costs, a judgment on that basis might be regarded
as a
Pyrrhic victory. Secondly, there would have been a significant issue whether
monies withheld would fulfil the requirement that
it not be too remote (this
issue was raised by Mr Webster in his written submissions dated 22 March 2019).
This issue is addressed
further below.
- For
these reasons, the Court below was not entitled, as a matter of law, to find
that the Builder, having failed to establish an entitlement
to damages based on
the cost of rectification, was nonetheless entitled to damages equivalent to the
monies said to have been withheld,
since this was not the way the
Builder’s case had been put. It follows that ground 4 of the amended
summons has been made out.
- I
should add for completeness that the requirement that a court determine a case
within the framework of the parties’ dispute
as delineated by the
pleadings and the way the case has been conducted is not to say that a court is
always bound to accept one party’s
case or the other. However, a court is
not entitled to assess damages on a basis which was outside the pleading or
which was not
traversed at the hearing, since this will almost inevitably amount
to a denial of procedural fairness. Judges at times are required
to assess
damages on the basis of scant evidence (which can lead to the use of the
prefatory words, “doing the best I can”)
or uncertain bases,
particularly in cases where the damages are difficult to assess: see, for
example, McRae v Commonwealth Disposals Commission [1951] HCA 79; (1951) 84 CLR
377 at 411–412 (Dixon and Fullagar JJ); [1951] HCA 79 (a contract for
the recovery of an oil tanker which was not at the location specified in the
contract) and Commonwealth of Australia v Amann Aviation Pty Ltd [1991] HCA 54; (1991)
174 CLR 64 at 83 (Mason CJ and Dawson J), 102 (Brennan J), 119, 125-126 (Deane
J) and 153 (Gaudron J); [1991] HCA 54 (a contract awarded by government tender
when it could not be shown that the contract would be likely to be profitable
but there
was a real prospect that it would be extended). However, even in those
cases, the plaintiff still bears the onus of showing the loss
of something of
value.
- The
present case presented no such difficulty. Having rejected the sole basis on
which the Builder’s claim for damages was put,
her Honour’s error
was to proceed to assess damages on a basis which was neither pleaded nor
particularised or part of the
Builder’s case at first instance. Given that
it was not part of the Builder’s case, her Honour did not receive the
detailed
assistance she might otherwise have received from counsel as to the
legal principles which applied to the question whether such damages
had been
proved or were available in the present case (although, it must be said, these
principles were referred to by Mr Webster
in the Contractor’s submissions
dated 22 March 2019).
Whether it was open to the Court below to
assess damages on the basis of the withholding monies having regard to
applicable legal
principles
- I
propose to turn to the second aspect of ground 4: whether the evidence adduced
by the Builder was in any event sufficient, as a
matter of law, to establish
damages in the sum of the withholding monies and whether such damages were too
remote to be recoverable.
There are two aspects to the Contractor’s
complaint in this Court: first, that the evidence adduced by the Builder at
first
instance was insufficient to establish that the alleged loss was caused by
the breach; and, secondly, that the damages were in any
event too remote.
- I
accept the Contractor’s submission that the evidence adduced by the
Builder was insufficient to discharge the onus of proving
an entitlement to
damages based on the amount of the monies said to have been withheld. The
Builder had been paid in full by the
Owner (plus the added 10% margin) for all
invoices rendered by the Contractor for the supply of sandstone and the
stonework. Thus,
the Contractor had established that the Owner had not retained
any percentage of these invoices pursuant to the special condition
set out
above. This evidence tended to indicate that the Owner withheld money from the
Builder as a result of some dissatisfaction
with the work unrelated to the
Contractor’s work. In these circumstances, it was not necessary for the
Contractor to probe,
in cross-examination of either or both of Mr Critharis or
Mr Blank, the basis on which monies were withheld and what connection,
if any,
they had to the stone supplied or the work done by the Contractor since it bore
no onus. The Contractor was entitled to leave
the scant evidence of Mr Critharis
on that issue alone: see Vidal v NRMA Insurance Ltd [2005] NSWCA 390 at
[15] (Handley JA, Mason P and Brownie AJA agreeing). The evidence was
insufficient to establish on what basis the monies had been withheld
under the
Head Contract or the extent to which the Builder was itself responsible for the
withholding monies given its obligations
to the Owner under the Head Contract. A
consideration of the terms of the Head Contract and the Sub-contract does not
lead to an
inference that loss flowing to the Builder from its breach of the
Head Contract (leading to monies being withheld by the Owner) would
be
recoverable from the Contractor. Indeed the Sub-contract expressly conferred
rights on the Builder in respect of any breaches
by the Contractor.
- The
requirement that the damages not be too remote is commonly referred to as the
second limb of Hadley v Baxendale [1854] EngR 296; (1854) 9 Ex 341; (1854) 156 ER 145. The
remoteness limitation has given rise to what was referred to by Brennan J in
Baltic Shipping Company v Dillon [1993] HCA 4; (1993) 176 CLR 344 at 368; [1993] HCA 4
as the “merged principle”. This principle was articulated by Lord
Reid in C Czarnikow Limited v Koufos [1969] 1 AC 350
(Czarnikow) at 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.”
- While
the Contractor could reasonably expect that any deficiencies in its work would
give rise either to a demand from the Builder
that it make good any defects or
to a claim by the Builder under cl 13 of the Sub-contract, it by no means
followed that it was in
the reasonable contemplation of the parties that the
Contractor would be liable for any monies withheld by the Owner under its Head
Contract with the Builder: see Ipp JA’s consideration of the distinction
between reasonable foreseeability and being within
the parties’ reasonable
contemplation in Stuart Pty Limited v Condor Commercial Insulation Pty
Limited [2006] NSWCA 334 at [107]- [123]. The determination of this issue in
the Builder’s favour would require at least some evidence beyond that
which Mr Critharis
had given in his affidavit, to establish that it was not too
remote and that it was a head of damages which can be taken to have
been
reasonably in the contemplation of the parties to the Sub-contract at the time
it was entered into. No such evidence was adduced.
- For
the reasons given above, I do not consider that it was open to the Court below,
as a matter of law, to assess damages on the basis
of the withholding monies.
The evidence was insufficient to discharge the Builder’s onus of
satisfying the merged principle
in Czarnikow set out above in respect of
those withholding monies, which were plainly not a direct loss under the
Builder’s contract with the Contractor but rather alleged to be a
consequential loss under the Head
Contract between the Owner and the Builder.
Her Honour was in error in determining in [114] of her reasons that the loss was
a “direct
loss to the [Builder]”.
Whether leave ought
be granted
- Although
significant principles of law are engaged, the question raised by ground 4 is
not solely a question of law but rather a question
of mixed law and fact since
there was some evidence to support the finding. Accordingly, leave to
appeal is required under s 40(1) of the Local Court Act 2007 (NSW). I am
satisfied that a grant of leave is warranted because of the importance of the
legal principles and the errors established
in her Honour’s approach: see
Café Du Liban Pty Ltd v Bespoke Garage Pty Ltd [2017] NSWSC 779 at
[4] (Beech-Jones J).
The appropriate relief
- It
follows that the Builder is not entitled to judgment in his favour in the amount
of the withholding monies. However, having established
breach of contract, the
Builder is entitled to judgment, breach being the gist of the cause of action.
Subject to the fate of the
cross-summons, the Builder is entitled to no more
than nominal damages as he has established no actual loss.
The
consequences for costs
- Since
the judgment to which the costs order made by her Honour related must be set
aside, the costs order, too, will fall away. The
appropriate order for costs in
the Court below, and whether such order ought be made by this Court or by the
Court below on remitter
will be considered after the cross-summons has been
addressed.
Grounds 1 and 2
- In
these circumstances, it is not necessary to address separately grounds 1 and 2
(which concern the adequacy of the magistrate’s
reasons). Although grounds
1 and 2 do not require leave, sufficiency of reasons involving a question of
law, (s 39 of the Local Court Act), it follows from what I have said in
relation to ground 4 that the legal error was not so much in failing to explain
the course
taken but in making the finding itself.
Ground
3
- Ground
3 (which concerns the onus of proof) does not strictly arise, having regard to
my conclusion that ground 4 has been made out.
In other words, it is not to the
point whether the claim was established to the requisite standard and which
party bore the onus,
since her Honour was not entitled to make the finding,
having regard to the way the Builder had put its case and the evidence before
her Honour.
- In
these circumstances, it is also unnecessary to address the Contractor’s
submission that the judgment sum was required to
be reduced to make allowance
for GST and therefore fell below $20,000, being the jurisdictional limit of the
Small Claims Division
of the Local Court.
The Builder’s
application for leave to appeal
- As
referred to above, the Builder seeks leave to cross-appeal against the rejection
by the Court below of its claim for the cost of
rectification.
- The
Builder argued that her Honour was in error in refusing the claim for the cost
of rectification. Mr Weaver relied on legal principles
established by
authorities which he accepted that he had not raised in the Court below. A party
is generally not entitled, on appeal,
to make a different case than the one put
below. In Coulton v Holcombe (1986) 162 CLR 1; [1986] HCA 33 the
plurality (Gibbs CJ, Wilson, Brennan and Dawson JJ) said at
7-8:
“... To say that an appeal is by way of rehearing does not mean that the
issues and the evidence to be considered are at large.
It is fundamental to the
due administration of justice that the substantial issues between the parties
are ordinarily settled at
the trial ... In a case where, had the issue been
raised in the court below, evidence could have been given which by any
possibility
could have prevented the point from succeeding, this court has
firmly maintained the principle that the point cannot be taken afterwards
...”
- One
of the authorities now relied on by the Builder in this Court, Bellgrove v
Eldridge (1954) 90 CLR 613; [1954] HCA 36, was raised in the Court below by
the Contractor in its submissions. The Builder did not respond to the
Contractor’s submissions
in this respect, thereby indicating that it did
not rely on the stream of authority that included Bellgrove v
Eldridge.
- Her
Honour’s reasons for rejecting the claim for damages based on the cost of
rectification are contained in [115]-[121], which
are extracted above. It
appears to me that, although the argument put by the Builder in this court
(based on Jones v Stroud District Council [1988] 1 All ER 5, referred to
below) was not put in the Court below, the evidence adduced, and the authorities
relied on, by the Contractor raised
the issue squarely. Accordingly, I consider
that the Builder is entitled to make submissions in this Court. However, if the
Builder
is successful on a point not taken in the Court below, the consequences
for costs would need to be addressed.
- The
summary of evidence relevant to the appeal and the cross-appeal (but not to the
notice of contention) shows that there was no
evidence that the Builder was
either obliged to, or intended to, rectify the wall. Indeed the evidence adduced
was to the contrary.
The Owner did not depose to any present expectation that
the wall would be rectified by the Builder and he confirmed that there were
no
proceedings on foot between him and the Builder. It was common ground that any
such proceedings would now be statute-barred. Indeed
so much can be taken to
have been accepted by the Builder since Mr Weaver opened the case on the basis
that the Builder could not
“in all good conscience” leave the wall
as it was. The objective facts showed that the Builder had done precisely that
for the period of over six years since November 2012 when the Owner first
noticed the deterioration of the wall and 28 February 2019
when Mr Critharis
gave his evidence.
- Mr
Weaver sought to overcome the lack of evidence which could assist the Builder on
the issue of the prospects of his rectifying the
wall by submitting that I ought
draw the inference from the fact that there had been negotiations between the
Owner and the Builder
for the rectification of the wall that it would be
rectified. Mr Weaver also submitted that I should infer that the Builder had
obtained
detailed costings for rectifying the wall, not merely for the purposes
of the proceedings, but also because it intended to carry
out the work. He also
asked rhetorically: if there was “any suggestion or any thought in [Mr
Blank’s] mind that this
would not lead to a completion of the wall,
you’d have to ask why he would bother to attend Court to give evidence in
the proceedings”.
Mr Weaver also sought to distinguish the subject
property (a waterfront at Camp Cove) from “a single fibro bungalow in
another
part of Sydney” to support a submission that “this is a home
where people aren’t going to put up with something
that is half
done”. I regard these matters as no more than speculation. They are
insufficient to cast any doubt on the factual
findings drawn by the Court
below.
- The
more significant obstacle in the path of the Builder’s challenge to her
Honour’s rejection of its claim for damages
measured by reference to the
cost of rectification was that it was based on the factual findings set out in
[115]-[121] and, in particular,
her Honour’s conclusion at
[121]:
“... I have no evidence upon which I could be satisfied that the builder
has a liability to the owner to repair the wall ...”
- Even
if this finding could be characterised as raising a question of mixed fact and
law, and therefore susceptible to a grant of leave,
it was plainly correct. The
incontrovertible facts were that, at the time of the hearing, seven years after
the completion of the
head contract, no rectification work had either been done
or requested. The Limitation Act period of six years had expired in
relation to any relevant breach of either the Head Contract or the Sub-contract.
The limitation
period for any action by the Owner against the Builder pursuant
to Part 2C of the Home Building Act for breach of a statutory warranty
was seven years after the completion of the work to which it related: s 18E, as
in force prior to the Home Building Amendment Act 2011 (NSW), which
relevantly applied because of cl 109 of Schedule 4 to the Home Building
Act. Accordingly, at the time Mr Blank gave his evidence on 28 February
2019, he had slightly more than a week to bring proceedings against
the Builder
for any damages for breach of a statutory warranty. He gave no evidence
whatsoever that he had any intention of doing
so. It would, in any event, appear
that Mr Weaver accepted this to be the case, having regard to the way in which
he opened the Builder’s
case in the Court below.
- I
discern no error in her Honour’s approach which was entirely consistent
with the authorities to which Mr Weaver referred this
Court, to which I will
now, for completeness, turn.
- Mr
Weaver relied on the following passage from Brooking on Building Contracts
(5th ed, 2014, LexisNexis Butterworths) at [11.14]:
“A plaintiff seeking damages must prove a loss, but if property belonging
to a plaintiff has been or will be repaired, the
court in awarding damages is
not further concerned with the question of whether the owner has had to pay for
the repairs out of the
owner's own pocket or whether the funds have come from
some other source. This principle, established in Jones v Stroud District
Council [1988] 1 All ER 5 at 14 was said to remain ‘good law’ in
Burdis v Livsey [2002] EWCA Civ 510 at 102 and was not doubted in
Powercor Australia Ltd v Thomas [2012] VSCA 87.”
- The
principle, which derives from Jones v Stroud District Council, allows an
owner of property to recover damages by reference to the cost of rectification
of the property to bring it to the condition
it would have been in had the
contract not been breached, irrespective of whether the property has actually
been rectified at the
owner’s expense. Neil LJ said at
14:
“It is true that as a general principle a plaintiff who seeks to recover
damages must prove that he has suffered a loss, but if property belonging to
him has been damaged to an extent which is proved and the court is satisfied
that the property has been
or will be repaired I do not consider that the
court is further concerned with the question whether the owner has had to
pay for the repairs out of his
own pocket or whether the funds have come from
some other source.”
[Emphasis added.]
- Thus,
there were two express riders to the principle: first, that the plaintiff must
have a proprietary interest in the property in
need of rectification by reason
of the defendant’s breach; and, secondly, that the plaintiff has proved
that the property “has
been or will be repaired”.
- In
Alucraft Pty Ltd (in liquidation) v Grocon Ltd (No 2) [1996] 2 VR 386
(Alucraft v Grocon), the question arose as to the quantum of damages to
be awarded to a contractor, Grocon, which had breached the head contract with
the proprietor by reason of a breach by a sub-contractor, Alucraft, of the
sub-contract. Grocon had sued Alucraft on a cross-claim
and claimed the cost of
rectifying Alucraft’s defective work. Alucraft argued that Grocon was not
entitled to the cost of rectification
since three years had elapsed since the
work was done and there was no evidence that the proprietor was likely to take
action. It
submitted that to award damages to Grocon on that basis would be to
put it in a better position than had there been no breach. In
response, Grocon
submitted that the appropriate measure of damages was the cost of rectification
and that it was immaterial whether
the rectification would be carried out.
Grocon relied on authorities which included Bellgrove v Eldridge in which
the builder sued for payment for the construction of a house. The owner
cross-claimed for damages for breach on the basis
that the house needed to be
demolished and re-built in accordance with the plans and specifications. Smith J
in Alucraft v Grocon distinguished Bellgrove v Eldridge on the
basis that Grocon was not the proprietor and therefore had no proprietary
interest in the finished product. His Honour said
at 392:
“The question before the court [in Bellgrove v Eldridge] was the
appropriate approach to quantification of the loss of the owner who had a
proprietary interest in the finished product.
That loss continued whether the
rectification work was done. In the present case, Grocon did not have a
proprietary interest in the
finished product. It had an interest in the result
produced by Alucraft not because it wished to enjoy the physical result itself
but because Alucraft's work was being used by it in the performance of the head
contract. Its interest lay in the financial result
which depended in part on
whether and to what extent the rectification work was done or
required.”
- His
Honour proceeded to assess the damages for which Grocon was entitled to
compensate it for Alucraft’s breach on the basis
that it was “an
extremely remote possibility that it [the proprietor] will now seek to have them
rectified at Grocon’s
cost” (399). As the only relevant bar to
action by the proprietor was the Limitation of Actions Act 1958 (Vic) and
the period had not yet expired, there was still a chance that the owner would
require Grocon to rectify the default. Smith
J assessed the cost of
rectification at $35,000 and awarded the sum of $5,000 as compensation for the
risk to which Grocon remained
exposed that rectification would be required.
- In
Roman Catholic Trusts Corporation v Van Driel Ltd [2001] VSC 310, Hansen
J approved of the following statement by Lord Griffiths in Linden Gardens
Trust Ltd v Lenesta Sludge Disposals Ltd [1994] 1 AC 85 at 97; [1993] UKHL
4:
"The second ground upon which the recovery of damages is resisted is that
Investments in fact reimbursed Corporation for the money
they spent on the
repairs. But here again in my view who actually pays for the repairs is no
concern of the defendant who broke the
contract. The court will of course
wish to be satisfied that the repairs have been or are likely to be carried out
but if they are carried out
the cost of doing them must fall upon the defendant
who broke his contract."
[Emphasis added.]
- In
Pourzand v Telstra Corp Ltd [2012] WASC 210 at [205], Edelman J referred
to a qualification on the general requirement that the property must be owned by
the plaintiff for the principle
in Jones v Stroud District Council to
apply as follows:
“A hypothetical example given by Lord Goff of Chieveley in Alfred
McAlpine Construction Ltd v Panatown Ltd (dissenting in the result, but
joined in this reasoning on this point by Lord Millett; and Lord
Browne-Wilkinson assuming it to be
true is instructive. Lord Goff spoke of a
wealthy philanthropist who contracts for work to be done to the village hall.
The work
is defective. Can the philanthropist sue the builder, perhaps to obtain
damages to repair the work? Lord Goff described as 'absurd'
the suggestion the
philanthropist will fail because he does not own the hall, and because he will
not incur the expense himself of
employing another builder to do the remedial
work:
The philanthropist's cause of action does not depend on
his having actually incurred financial expense ... he ‘has suffered
loss
because he did not receive the bargain for which he had contracted with the
first builder’.”
- In
the hypothetical example, the philanthropist had spent real money, the contract
price, to get an actual result: the repair of the
hall. The money required to
put him in the position he would have been in had the contract been performed
was, in that case, the
cost of the repair of the hall. In the present case, the
Builder had been paid in full for the work referable to the Contractors
work on
the wall. The Owner had not required him to rectify it and there was, as her
Honour was entitled to find, no prospect that
the Builder would actually rectify
the wall or arrange for someone else to rectify it. Accordingly, the Builder
failed to prove that
he suffered loss or that his damages ought be measured by
reference to the cost of rectification.
- None
of these cases, even had they been brought to her Honour’s attention,
could, on proper analysis, have altered the result.
I note that Mr Weaver
accepted the correctness of Alucraft v Grocon which is consistent with
the other authorities referred to.
- Having
considered the issue raised by grounds 1 and 1A of the cross-appeal in some
detail, I am disposed to grant leave to the Builder
to appeal pursuant to s
40(1) of the Local Court Act but otherwise dismiss the
cross-summons.
Remaining matters
- It
is, accordingly, unnecessary, for the reasons given above, to address the
Contractor’s notice of contention. In particular,
it is not necessary to
address the contention that the Contractor could not, as a matter of logic, have
been in breach of s 18B(1)(f)
in circumstances where the Contract was entered
into a couple of years before the Sub-contract, thereby making it impossible for
the Owner to be relying on any expertise by the Contractor, the Contractor
having not even been identified when the Contract was
entered into: see
Ashford Shire Council v Dependable Motors (1960) 104 CLR 139; [1960] HCA
87.
Conclusion
- For
the reasons given above, the substantive orders made by the Court below must be
set aside, together with the costs orders made
as a consequence of them. The
Builder is nonetheless entitled to judgment on its claim since it established
that the Contractor breached
the contract. The Contractor’s challenge to
this finding was limited to the notice of contention and therefore is not
pressed
and does not need to be determined. The Builder has failed to establish
that it has suffered loss and therefore is entitled only
to nominal damages to
register the infraction of its legal right: Baume v Commonwealth [1906] HCA 92; (1906) 4
CLR 97 at 116–117 (Griffith CJ); [1906] HCA 92, following The
Owners of the Steamship Mediana v The Owners, Masters and Crew of the
Lightship Comet [1900] AC 113 at 116 (Lord Halsbury LC). The parties agreed
that I should determine the appropriate costs order in the Local Court if I
considered
it to be appropriate to do so. Given the orders I propose to make, I
consider that the only appropriate order in the Local Court
would have been to
order the Builder to pay the Contractor’s costs. Accordingly, that order
will be made.
Costs
- The
Contractor has been wholly successful in these proceedings. In these
circumstances, the application of the general rule in UCPR,
r 42.1 that costs
follow the event, would lead to an order that the Builder pay the
Contractor’s costs of the proceedings in
this Court. However, the parties
indicated that they wished me to reserve the question of costs of these
proceedings to provide them
with an opportunity to address me on
costs.
Orders
- For
the reasons given above, I make the following orders:
- (1) Extend the
time within which the summons is to be filed to 30 July 2019.
- (2) Extend the
time within which the cross-summons is to be filed to 1 October 2019.
- (3) Grant leave
to the plaintiff to appeal on ground 4 and allow the appeal.
- (4) Grant leave
to the defendant to appeal on grounds 1 and 1A but dismiss the
cross-appeal.
- (5) Set aside
the order for judgment and interest made by Kennedy LCM on 4 June 2019 and the
costs order made by Kennedy LCM on 25
June 2019.
- (6) In lieu of
the orders in (5) above, make the following orders:
- (a) Judgment
for the plaintiff (C & E Critharis Constructions Pty Limited) in the sum of
$1.
- (b) Order the
plaintiff (C & E Critharis Constructions Pty Limited) to pay the costs of
the defendant (Cubic Metre Pty Ltd).
- (7) Reserve the
costs of the proceedings in this Court.
- (8) Direct the
parties to inform my Associate in writing within seven days of the date hereof
whether they wish to be heard on the
question of
costs.
**********
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