Date:
Tue, 13 Sep 2005 13:44:53 +0100
From:
Andrew Tettenborn
Subject:
2 contribution cases
To
end the summer, a couple of interesting English cases re contribution
between wrongdoers.
First,
for those who haven't spotted it, a welcome decision preserving
the width of the statutory right to contribution. Contrary to what
was often assumed, you don't need a payment in cash by D1 to C to
trigger a right to contribution against D2.
In
Baker v Wilks [2005] 3 All ER 603 defects appeared
in a block of housing association flats. For the sake of argument,
the court assumed the defects were the fault of both the builder
and the consulting engineers. The builder settled with the owners
on the basis that it would remedy the defects free of charge. Did
it have a right to contribution from the engineers? Yes: the fact
that no cash had been paid to the owners was irrelevant, at least
where what the builder had done was capable of money valuation.
There was also a limitation point: time, it was held, ran in such
a case from the time of the agreement to settle.
This
seems obviously sound. No doubt it can be extended. For example,
suppose a debtor has a right to set off the same liability against
2 different creditors, C1 and C2. If he sets it off against a demand
by C1, there now seems little objection to C1 claiming contribution
against C2: C1 may not have paid the liability in cash, but he has
done the next best thing.
Secondly,
something more controversial. In Brian
Warwicker Partnership plc v HOK International Ltd [2005]
EWCA Civ 962 commercial premises were misdesigned so as to be a
wind-tunnel and hence tenant-unfriendly. This was partly the fault
of the architects & partly that of the consulting engineers. Having
shelled out to the owners for the cost of correction, the engineers
claimed contribution from the architects. In apportioning the loss
between the two defendants, the judge took account of certain acts
of negligence by the architects that were non-causative of the owners'
loss and used them to increase the share the architects had to pay.
The CA said this was unexceptionable, affirming an earlier case
where this had been done. The argument was that relative responsibility
wasn't the sole criterion on apportionment under the relevant legislation
(the Civil Liability (Contribution) Act 1978), and that it was just
and equitable that all fault should be in account.
To
me, this proposition seems a tad iffy. If you can't be sued directly
for non-causative negligence, it seems a bit curious - perhaps even
unjust and inequitable - to take it into account indirectly in contribution
proceedings. Warwicker also creates a potential mismatch
with the Law Reform (Contributory Neg) Act 1945, where - even though
the wording of the relevant apportionment provision is similar to
that under the 1978 Act - it's long been accepted that only causative
negligence by the claimant is relevant to the apportionment exercise.
Best
wishes to all
Andrew
Andrew
Tettenborn MA LLB
Bracton Professor of Law
Tel:
01392-263189 / +44-392-263189 (international)
Cellphone: 07729-266200 / +44-7729-266200 (international)
Fax: 01392-263196 / +44-392-263196 (international)
Snailmail:
School of Law,
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Exeter
Law School homepage: http://www.law.ex.ac.uk
My homepage: http://www.law.ex.ac.uk/staff/tettenborn.shtml
LAWYER,
n. One skilled in circumvention of the law. (Ambrose Bierce, 1906).
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