Being accused of negligence is troubling enough but for an
architect to be accused of ruining construction when not appointed, and to have
done so even when not there, might worry the most confident practitioner. This inventive claim, concerning a back
garden, lead to a landmark case on liability for professional negligence in
tort.
The builder began shaping the clay banks. Shortly thereafter the couple fell out over cost, sacked the builder and, dispensing with the architect, continued the ground works with an unsupervised sub-subcontractor. With stalwart consistency, the couple then dismissed the sub-subcontractor to be left with incomplete work and much mud. Taking advice from others, in so far as advice could be procured at no cost, the couple threatened to sue in turn, the contractor, the sub-contractor, the sub-sub-contractor and finally the architect. This last they did.
Background
At the request of a married couple who were her friends, an
architect asked a builder if he could terrace a hilly back garden as shown on a
gardener’s drawings. The architect had
offered her services but to avoid professional fees the couple did not agree
this offer. Out of friendship she helped
get the work underway without requesting payment. The builder began shaping the clay banks. Shortly thereafter the couple fell out over cost, sacked the builder and, dispensing with the architect, continued the ground works with an unsupervised sub-subcontractor. With stalwart consistency, the couple then dismissed the sub-subcontractor to be left with incomplete work and much mud. Taking advice from others, in so far as advice could be procured at no cost, the couple threatened to sue in turn, the contractor, the sub-contractor, the sub-sub-contractor and finally the architect. This last they did.
Preliminary Hearing
A trial of preliminary issues was held with the following
results: Because of ambiguity and lack
of consideration, the architect was not under contract. Her role was sufficiently akin to a
professional relationship for the court to affirm her common law duty of acting
with reasonable skill and care. The judgement
was expressed in such a way that an architect’s liability in tort appeared to
be no less than that which would exist under a contract for the provision of professional
services. Thus, an architect could be liable
under tort for failing to perform services which she had not contracted to provide and for which she was not paid.
This was appealed.
Appeal
The appellant court clarified this judgement as follows:
there was no duty to design, budget or inspect.
Insofar as she did perform a professional service, her duty was to do
this with reasonable skill and care. Liability, if any, therefore turned on the
facts and the matter returned to the TCC for a full hearing.
Global claim and pure economic loss
The couple’s case included a global claim and pure economic
loss. The courts cautioned against the
global claim but allowed it to be heard.
The appeal court confirmed liability in tort could extend to pure
economic loss where a professional service, for which responsibility has been
assumed, is performed negligently. Say the
architect had intervened while supervising the work and negligently directed the
construction with the consequence that it failed causing economic loss, then
there would be a clear case of liability.
Lack of clarity
Undeterred by adverse judgements and mere logic, the claimants
confused what was done before and after dismissing the architect, and blamed her
for every supposed defect, positing that her absence was as detrimental as was her
presence and that she was the root cause of all their woes. This muddying of
the case proved unhelpful in court.
Final Hearing
The claim was divided into two parts: i) defective
construction and 2) deviations from the design.
The defendant was accused of negligence in: project management, design,
supervision, budgeting and cost control.
Much of the evidence of defects in the claimants’ statement
of case was based on the opinions of a builder, a surveyor and an engineer, none
of whom they called to give evidence in court.
The claimants’ architect expert had not seen the work. I had inspected the work. I
could advise the court from direct observation that that part of it, which was
done while the architect was involved, was acceptable. Deviation from the design occurred only where
errors in the garden designer’s drawing made this unavoidable. I could not say the same of the subsequent
work which was clearly of a different standard.
The judge recognised that the architect’s involvement was
terminated when the wife found out that the budget was higher than her husband
had told her and not because of any perceived fault in the works. The husband denied agreeing a higher budget
than known to his wife and claimed the architect had not given him this budget
and that if she had he would not have proceeded. This assertion was dismissed at the 1st
hearing. The claimants then decided not
only to accept they knew the budget but claimed that they had relied on it. Their claim evolved to include an assertion
that the budget produced by the architect was unachievably low and negligently
prepared. They felt they had been seduced
into a project which, had they known the real cost, they would not have started. As a consequence, they argued, the whole of
their losses arose out of the architect’s negligent pricing.
The judge noted both the inconsistencies between the
claimants’ evidence and contemporaneous documents and the inconsistencies in
the history of the claim which changed after each hearing to circumvent adverse
rulings. He condemned the scatter gun
approach to the claim and its lack of clarity.
The claim failed on every point but may have succeeded in doing what the
judge astutely noted as; “To pursue this claim suggests
that the Claimants seek to punish the Defendant for her alleged negligent
mistakes rather than seek fair and reasonable compensation …”. Being dragged through 5 years of vexatious litigation
is punishing.
The unsubstantiated
claims of unsafe work evoked images of imminent landslip threatening to bury
the claimants in their house. The result
was a landslide victory for the defendant.
The garden is finished but, with 5 years of litigation, at what cost?