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Carmel Southend Ltd v Strachan & Henshaw Ltd

Landlord and tenant — Dilapidations — Damages — Covenant to deliver up in good and substantial condition — Roof — Repair or replacement — Whether measure of damages cost of patch repairs or more extensive overcladding demanded by incoming tenant — Section 18(1) of Landlord and Tenant Act 1927 — Whether some of works superseded by structural alterations carried out after termination of tenancy

The claimant was the freeholder of industrial premises constructed in the late 1970s on a steel frame with an asbestos and cement-covered roof. The premises were let to the defendant for a 14-year term expiring in December 2004; the defendant sublet them to a third party (M). Throughout the course of the defendant’s tenancy, the roof leaked, and attempts were made to patch it up. When the tenancy came to an end, the roof remained in disrepair, with defective roof lights and seals, areas of rainwater ingress and isolated cracked roof sheets. Building surveyors appointed by both parties agreed at that time that patch repairs, including the replacement of the roof lights and any defective roof sheeting, would suffice to comply with the defendant’s covenant to deliver up the premises “in good and substantial condition”. In July 2005, the claimant relet the premises to M. As a condition of entering into the tenancy, M insisted upon the overcladding of the entire roof, at the claimant’s expense, with metal sheeting fixed to the existing roof structure. These works were carried out. Without further inspection of the premises, the claimant’s surveyor altered his view regarding the adequacy of repairs and stated that only a new roof would suffice. The claimant contended that the defendant was liable for the cost of those works. The defendant submitted that: (i) patch repairs costing £24,462 would have been sufficient to bring the roof into the state of repair required by the repairing covenants; and (ii) it was further entitled to deduct from the cost of the patch-repair scheme £6,000, representing the cost of replacing the roof lights, by virtue of the provision in the second limb of section 18(1) of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1927. This prevented the recovery of damages for a breach of a repairing covenant in respect of any repairs that could be shown to be rendered valueless by “structural alterations” to be carried out after the termination of the lease.

Held: The claim was allowed in part. (1) Patch repairs were the most appropriate scheme given the particular disrepair to the roof and the terms of the repairing covenants. Such repairs were neither futile nor impracticable. The parties’ surveyors had all, at one time, considered that patch repairs were appropriate; the cause of the change of mind by the claimant’s surveyor was the decision to provide M with a new roof. However, that decision had been taken by the claimant without any advice to the effect that the cost of it was recoverable from the defendant. While the standard of repair must take into account the reasonably minded tenant taking a lease on the same terms as the actual lease, and the court can have regard to the actual stance taken by the actual incoming tenant, the standard of repair is an objective one. M’s request for a new roof was not based upon any consideration of the terms of the lease and was therefore outweighed by the evidence in favour of patch repairs. (2) The second limb of section 18(1) of the 1927 Act did not apply to the case. The fact that the claimant had undertaken a more extensive and expensive repair scheme than that for which the defendant argued did not trigger the second limb; that was not the type of situation with which that provision was designed to deal. It was doubtful whether the overcladding could be described as a “structural alteration”, and there was no injustice to the defendant in holding it liable for the lesser scheme without further deduction. Damages of £24,462 would be awarded.

The following cases are referred to in this report.

Commercial Union Life Assurance Co Ltd v Label Ink Ltd [2001] L&TR 29, Ch

Crédit Suisse v Beegas Nominees Ltd [1994] 4 All ER 803; (1995) 69 P&CR 177; [1994] 1 EGLR 76; [1994] 11 EG 151 and [1994] 12 EG 189

Elmcroft Developments Ltd v Tankersley-Sawyer [1984] 1 EGLR 47; (1984) 270 EG 140; 15 HLR 63, CA

Firle Investments Ltd v Datapoint International Ltd [2000] EWHC 105 (TCC); unreported 8 May 2000, TCC

Hungerford (Dame Margaret) Charity Trustees v Beazeley [1993] 2 EGLR 143; [1993] 29 EG 100; (1994) 26 HLR 269, CA

Ladbroke Hotels Ltd v Sandhu; sub nom Sandhu v Ladbroke Hotels Ltd (1996) 72 P&CR 498; [1995] 2 EGLR 92; [1995] 39 EG 152, Ch

Latimer v Carney [2006] EWCA Civ 1417; [2007] 1 P&CR 13; [2006] 3 EGLR 13; [2006] 50 EG 86

Pickering v Phillimore unreported 10 May 1976

Proudfoot v Hart (1890) 25 QBD 42

Salisbury (Marquess of) v Gilmore [1942] 2 KB 38

Stent v Monmouth District Council (1987) 54 P&CR 193; [1987] 1 EGLR 59; 282 EG 705; 19 HLR 269, CA

Ultraworth Ltd v General Accident Fire & Life Assurance Corporation plc [2000] 2 EGLR 115, TCC

Welsh v Greenwich London Borough Council (2001) 81 P&CR 12; [2000] 3 EGLR 41; [2000] 49 EG 118; (2001) 33 HLR 40, CA

This was the hearing of a claim by the claimant, Carmel Southend Ltd, against the defendant, Strachan & Henshaw Ltd, for damages for breach of repairing covenants in a lease.

Duncan Kynoch (instructed by Michael Conn Goldsabel) appeared for the claimant; Greville Healey (instructed by TLT LLP) represented the defendant.

Giving judgment, HH Judge Coulson QC said:

A. Introduction

[1] The claimant, Carmel Southend Ltd (Carmel), is the freehold owner of industrial premises known as units B and C, Ashton Vale Road, Ashton Gate, Avon (the property). Built in around 1979, the property was constructed from a steel portal frame, with a combination of metal |page:16| cladding and cavity brickwork to external walls beneath an asbestos cement-covered roof. That roof construction was of shallow pitch, in traditional design, with support afforded by galvanised steel purlins that spanned between the primary structural steel portal frame. The covering itself comprised a built-up system with prefinished plasterboard panels set within a galvanised steel grid internally, a layer of fibreglass or mineral wool quilt insulation of unknown thickness, and profiled asbestos cement corrugated sheeting to the external skin, securely positioned with metal hook bolts. GRP roof lights were provided to approximately 10% of the roof surface area to provide daylight to the inside of the property. The experts are agreed that the roof design was typical of the era (around 1979) and in keeping with other industrial units on the estate and other properties in close proximity.

[2] By a lease dated 14 December 1990, the property was demised to the defendant, Strachan & Henshaw Ltd (SH), for a term of 15 years from 25 December 1989 to 24 December 2004. During the course of its tenancy, in 2000, SH sublet the property to a company now known as Metso Minerals UK Ltd (Metso). Metso remained in occupation following the expiry of the lease in December 2004. On 7 July 2005, Carmel relet the property to Metso on the basis that Carmel would pay for the overcladding of the roof with new profile metal sheeting fixed to the existing roof structure. This overcladding work was carried out in 2005 and is at the heart of the remaining disputes between the parties.

[3] It was Carmel’s case that SH was in breach of various covenants in the lease and that, as a result, the property was in disrepair when it was yielded up. On 9 August 2005, a schedule of dilapidations was formally served on SH’s surveyor. The parties were unable to reconcile their differences and, on 4 July 2006, Carmel started these proceedings for damages for breach of covenant.

[4] Happily, agreement has now been reached in relation to all items included in the schedule apart from those items of disrepair relating to the roof. As to that issue, Carmel’s case is that the only way of successfully meeting SH’s obligations under the lease at the time of its expiry was to overclad the original roof using new profile metal sheeting panels together with repairs to the gutters and pipes. In contrast, although it accepts that it was in breach of covenant, SH denies that wholesale recovering was necessary and that the main problem, namely the deterioration of the roof lights, could have been dealt with by the installation of entirely new roof lights with waterproof joints. SH maintains that very few of the original roofing sheets were damaged and that the sheeting as a whole had not reached the point where it could not be repaired in accordance with its obligations in the lease.

[5] Now that SH admits liability, the principal remaining issue between the parties concerns the work that would have been required in order for the premises to have been yielded up in December 2004 with the roof in good repair and condition for the purposes of the relevant covenants in the 1990 lease. In order to deal with that issue, I propose to set out the relevant covenants in the lease (section B below), identify briefly the relevant principles of law (section C below), summarise the factual background and the history of the roof (section D below), identify the state of the roof as at 24 December 2004 and the works that were subsequently carried out (section E below), and then analyse whether the overcladding or the patch-repairs scheme was required by the repairing covenants in the lease (section F below). Finally, in section G below, I address the outstanding issues of quantum.

B. Lease

[6] The relevant covenants in clause 3 of the lease were as follows:

(3) The tenant, to the intent that the obligations hereby created shall continue throughout the term, HEREBY COVENANTS with the landlord as follows:

(4)(a) At all times during the continuance of the said term to repair and keep in good and substantial repair and condition the demised premises and all additions thereto and all drains soil and other pipes sewers sanitary and water apparatus glass paving walls fences gates and appurtenances

(5) To paint with two coats at least of good quality and suitable paint or such other paint as may first be approved both as to quality and colour by the landlord in a proper and workmanlike manner in the year ending 31st December 1991 and in every subsequent third year and in the last year of the said term (whether determined by effluxion of time or otherwise howsoever but not twice in any period of two years) all the gates fences and outside wood stucco and ironwork and other parts of the demised premises heretofore usually painted and any addition thereof proper to be so painted and at the same time as aforesaid in each case in a workmanlike manner to tar creosote distemper, colour whitewash or otherwise treat all other outside parts of the demised premises as have usually heretofore been so treated all such work as aforesaid to be carried out to the reasonable satisfaction of the landlord.

(6) To paint with two coats at least of good quality and suitable paint or such paint as may be first approved by the landlord in a workmanlike manner in the year ending 1994 and thereafter in every subsequent fifth year and in the last year of the said term… all inside wood and ironwork…

(35)(a) At the expiration or sooner determination of the term (howsoever the same may be determined) quietly to yield up unto the landlord the demised premises in such good and substantial repair and condition as shall be in accordance with the covenants on the part of the tenant herein contained, together with all fixtures, fittings, improvements and additions which now are or may at any time hereafter be in or about the demised premises (but excepting tenants’ fixtures and fittings) and in case any of the landlord’s fixtures and fittings shall be missing, broken, damaged or destroyed, forthwith to replace them with others of a similar character and of equal value…

(b) Notwithstanding the grant of these presents it is hereby agreed between the parties hereto that the alterations effected to the demised premises by the tenants’ predecessors in title… shall:

(c)

(iv) at the end or sooner determination of the term hereby granted if so required by the landlord in writing and the tenant shall not less than three months before the end or sooner determination of the term remove all or part of the said alterations and reinstate the demised premises to their original state specification.

C. Relevant principles of law

[7] There was a certain amount of debate about the relevant principles to be applied in a case of this type. I set out below what I consider to be the appropriate principles of law.

[8] Standard of repair generally

(a) A covenant “to keep in good and substantial repair” does not require the tenant to put the property into perfect repair (see Proudfoot v Hart (1890) 25 QBD 42) or pristine condition (see Commercial Union Life Assurance Co Ltd v Label Ink Ltd [2001] L&TR 29).

(b) The standard of repair is that of an intending occupier “who judges repair reasonably by reference to his intended use of the premises”: see Commercial Union. In that case, the judge criticised the landlord’s surveyor for basing its complaints upon “what a pristine building should look like, not what was required by covenant to keep what had been a pristine building in good and substantial repair”.

(c) An obligation to keep in good and substantial repair and condition is different and more extensive than an obligation merely to repair: see Welsh v Greenwich London Borough Council [2000] 49 EG 118*. This may be wide enough to require the tenant to put the property into that condition even if it had never been in such condition before: see Crédit Suisse v Beegas Nominees Ltd [1994] 4 All ER 803†. However, on that point, I accept Mr Greville Healey’s submission, on behalf of SH, that arguments about the difference, if any, made by the inclusion of the word “condition” in covenants of this type have tended to arise in circumstances where there is a challenge by the tenant to the scope of the works proposed or carried out by the landlord; where the tenant suggests that such works are so extensive that they have gone beyond mere repair. Here, that point does not arise directly because SH accepts that the overcladding was a repair option open to Carmel.

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* Editor’s note: Also reported at [2000] 3 EGLR 41

† Editor’s note: Also reported at [1994] 1 EGLR 76

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[9] Repair alternatives

(a) If there is more than one possible method of repair, each of which would comply with the required standard, the choice is for the tenant to make (see para 10-05 of Dilapidations: Modern Law and Practice by Dowding and Reynolds (3rd ed) 2004) and if there is a cost |page:17| differential, the measure of damages at common law is based upon the less expensive option: see para 29-12 of Dowding and Reynold.

(b) Often, the dispute, such as the one in the present case, is between, on the one hand, a replacement option and, on the other, a repair option. In such circumstances, replacement will be required only if repair is not reasonably or sensibly possible: see Ultraworth Ltd v General Accident Fire & Life Assurance Corporation plc [2000] 2 EGLR 115 and Dame Margaret Hungerford Charity Trustees v Beazeley [1993] 2 EGLR 143. In the latter case, the Court of Appeal agreed with the trial judge that, although a new roof was required, the carrying out by the trustees of running repairs during the tenancy was enough to demonstrate compliance with their obligations, particularly given the age and character of the property in question.

(c) A tenant cannot rely upon its own breaches of covenant in order to lower the standard of repair. As Robert Walker J, as he then was, put it in Ladbroke Hotels Ltd v Sandhu (1996) 72 P&CR 498*, at p504:

If a tenant disregards his repairing obligations and, as a result, the premises become run-down and commercially unattractive, it hardly lies in the tenant’s mouth to rely on that fact as lowering the standard of repair required under the tenant’s repairing covenant.

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* Editor’s note: Also reported at [1995] 2 EGLR 92

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[10] Futility

(a) There will be cases where, on the facts, the repairing covenant will require works that not only effect a repair but that also achieve the object of rendering continual repair work in the future unnecessary: see Stent v Monmouth District Council (1987) 54 P&CR 193†.

(b) In Elmcroft Developments Ltd v Tankersley-Sawyer [1984] 1 EGLR 47 (Court of Appeal), Ackner LJ, as he then was, said, at p49B-C:

The patching work would have to go on and on and on, because, as the plaster absorbed (as it would) the rising damp, it would have to be renewed, and the cost to the appellants in constantly being involved with this sort of work, one would have thought, would have outweighed easily the cost in doing the job properly. I have no hesitation in rejecting the submission that the appellants’ obligation was repetitively to carry out futile work instead in doing the job properly once and for all.

(c) I again accept Mr Healey’s submission that both these cases, and other similar authorities relied upon by Mr Duncan Kynoch, on behalf of Carmel, were based upon findings of fact rather than general statements of principle.

[11] Incoming tenant

(a) The standard of repair must also take into account the reasonably minded incoming tenant taking a lease on the same terms as the actual lease, including, as in this case, a full repairing covenant: see para 9-06 of Dowding and Reynolds.

(b) In considering this aspect of the dispute, the court may have regard to the actual stance taken by the actual incoming tenant: see Latimer v Carney [2006] EWCA Civ 1417‡, and Beegas. However, the standard of repair is an objective one, which does not depend upon what, in the particular circumstances at the relevant time, an incoming tenant would accept: see para 9-18 of Dowding and Reynolds.

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† Editor’s note: Also reported at [1987] 1 EGLR 59

‡ Editor’s note: Reported at [2006] 3 EGLR 13

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D. Factual background

[12] There were a number of events concerning the roof of the property that occurred between 1990 and 2005. Although, ultimately, this dispute will turn on the expert evidence, I consider that the factual background is of some importance. I therefore set out that background in some detail below, but before I do so, I should add one note of caution. Many of the events over this period were not the subject of any direct oral evidence, and, therefore, the only material available to the court comes from the disclosed documents. It is important, therefore, to note at the outset that some of the details of these events, including matters of potential significance, are simply unknown.

[13] Attached to the lease agreed in 1990 was a schedule of works to be carried out by SH. This included the replacement of all cracked roof lights and all cracked and temporarily repaired roof sheets. It also involved cutting out the mastic seals to the roof lights and the sealing of the valley-gutter joints. It appears that this work had to be carried out and completed by 30 April 1991. There are no documents evidencing precisely what was done and when.

[14] In May 1993, SH procured the carrying out of the wholesale remedial coating of the asbestos cement roofing using a liquid applied compound. This work was carried out by Rentokil Roofing and was the subject of a 10-year guarantee. It appears that this work had the effect of enhancing the performance of the roof sheets because, as we shall see, even 10 years on, nobody suggested that anything other than a handful of the sheets themselves needed to be replaced.

[15] The roof lights were a different matter. It appears that intermittent water ingress continued to occur around the roof lights. In the summer of 2000, Rentokil Roofing returned to the site to carry out further repair work to those roof lights. In its letter of 21 July 2000, it said that its principal task had been to reseal the laps to the lights. The remedial work that was carried out was apparently the subject of a guarantee, although Rentokil was at pains to make it clear that the life of those roof lights “must be drawing to an end”. In contrast, Rentokil said that the waterproofing treatment, namely the coating that had been applied a few years earlier, was “in generally good order”.

[16] The following month, there were further problems with the roof, this time in the location of the valley gutters and downpipes. On 17 August, Rentokil Roofing wrote again to SH to propose the addition of two new outlets to the valley gutter. The quotation was in the sum of just under £2,000. It appears that this work was done by 13 September and was also the subject of a guarantee.

[17] At just this time, SH was in negotiations with Metso (then called Svedala Ltd) concerning the possible subletting of the property. It obtained a survey of the roof from Davis Blackburn dated 7 September 2000, which contained the following conclusions:

The roof sheeting material is in generally serviceable order, there being no evidence of significant fractures or damage to the sheets or evidence of poorly executed remedial works. The Aquapol surfacing provided to the sheets is in generally fair condition, although slightly discoloured…

From our inspection we are able to advise that in our opinion the roof covering provided to the unit is generally satisfactory, although we have suggested that the jointing between the sheets be improved at a number of isolated locations by the application of a flexible sealant.

We are of the opinion that the guttering details and downpipe arrangements to the unit are inadequate to cope with the maximum likely discharge from the roof surface, there being an inadequate number of outlets provided to the gutter runs… We have made an approximate calculation of the roof volume and would advise that 150mm diameter downpipes are provided, replacing the existing, to cope with this discharge volume.

[18] It appears from the documents that although, as we have seen, the number of rainwater outlets was increased (see [16]), no steps were taken to replace the existing downpipes with downpipes of a wider diameter. Despite that, in October 2000, Metso became the subtenant of the property.

[19] It seems that the problems continued with the roof. On 6 March 2003, Mr Rickards, Metso’s general manager, wrote to Rentokil Roofing to complain about “the same leaks in the same places”. Oddly, it does not appear that, at this time, the document was sent to either SH or Carmel, nor was any claim made under the guarantees previously provided by Rentokil.

[20] In its reply dated 10 March 2003, Rentokil Roofing said:

It is in our opinion that the existing roof covering is nearing the end of its useful life and that consideration should now be given to carrying out a complete refurbishment, as repeated remedial visits have proved in many cases unsuccessful. The most likely reasons for this are the overall age of the existing roof covering and the degradation of ancillary items such as lap sealant and fixing washers. |page:18|

It suggested oversheeting or resheeting. However, despite this letter, neither Metso nor SH put any part of these works in hand, and it does not appear that Carmel was aware of the document at all.

[21] In August 2003, Rentokil Roofing provided a further written recommendation that “all or part of the roof be overcladded and override the existing internal eaves” gutters. Overcladding all the roof was estimated at £35,800 plus VAT; overcladding a part of the roof only (it is not clear which part) was estimated at £12,300 plus VAT. Again, it does not seem that either of these options was taken any further.

[22] In late 2003, Carmel had engaged two different surveyors in connection with the property: Mr Goldstone, of Robinson Lowe Francis, who was going to deal with SH and, in particular, negotiate the termination of the lease and the repairs required to remedy the dilapidations, and Mr Watson, of Alder King, who was engaged to negotiate a new lease with Metso. Mr Goldstone informed Mr Uzel, of Carmel, on 1 December 2003, following his first visit to the property, that it was “in a considerably better condition” than when it was originally let to SH. He said that “the majority of items which will require attention relate to the roof”. The letter made clear that Carmel’s starting point was, not unreasonably, to get SH to carry out the repairs required by the lease, which would put that property, it hoped, into a condition in which Metso would then accept, by way of a new lease, a full repairing covenant.

[23] In the run-up to the expiry of the lease and the possible new lease with Metso, the roof was the principal matter addressed in the correspondence between the respective surveyors. For example, on 2 March 2004, Mr Henson, of Hurst Warne, the surveyor acting for Metso, wrote to Mr Watson to say:

I am aware that there is a continuing problem with roof leakage and that the most substantial claim against SH will relate to this item of the building.

[24] At the same time, in late February 2004, a draft schedule of dilapidations was prepared by Mr Goldstone on behalf of Carmel. The production of the draft schedule followed Mr Goldstone’s detailed inspection of the roof, which was carried out on 5 February 2004. On that inspection, he was attended by the roofing contractors, Options. It was carried out with the aid of a cherry picker. Mr Goldstone confirmed that it was the only detailed inspection of the roof that he ever undertook. In respect of the repairs to the roof, his schedule identified Mr Goldstone’s view that the necessary remedial action was to “replace the defective roof sheeting, including the provision of new soaker sheets, bargeboards and roof lights”. In his oral evidence, Mr Goldstone confirmed that, although this envisaged the replacement of all the roof lights, it recommended the replacement of only a handful of the roof sheets because, by and large, they were in a reasonable condition. He accepted, in cross-examination, that he was therefore of the view that, at this time, this solution (called in the evidence “the patch repairs”) was the appropriate way of putting the roof into proper repair and condition.

[25] It also seemed that Mr Goldstone had considered, and rejected, any sort of overcladding solution. When he sent his draft schedule to Carmel, his covering letter of 11 March 2004 said:

As you are aware, the subtenant has carried out substantial works to the property to convert it from the original warehouse into good quality offices. The items which I have highlighted in the schedule relate to the exterior of the property, and in particular problems with the roof. I believe that the only sensible way to deal with the roof at this stage would be to renew it in total. I do not consider that the overlaying of the roof would be acceptable as the existing covering is a profiled asbestos cement sheeting.

[26] Mr Goldstone was cross-examined about that letter. He confirmed that, at that time, he did not consider that the overlaying solution was appropriate or acceptable. In cross-examination, he explained the apparent inconsistency between the patch repairs set out in his draft schedule and his letter, which talked about renewing the roof in total. He said that although he thought that the patch repairs were the limit of what was required by the terms of SH’s lease, hence its inclusion in his draft schedule, he also thought that what he called “more extensive work” than was required by the lease would have to be carried out by Carmel at the termination of the lease itself. So, although Mr Uzel said in cross-examination that, in his letter, Mr Goldstone was contradicting himself, I do not believe that that is a fair criticism. Mr Goldstone was in fact identifying two, at least potentially different, things: the work that he thought was required by the lease, and the work possibly required for the purposes of Carmel’s long-term investment in the property. He was, at that point, properly keeping the two concepts separate. As we shall see, the principal difficulty in this case arose when, a few months later, he was obliged to blur the edges between them.

[27] On 22 April 2004, Mr Watson wrote to Mr Henson, saying:

Repairs

Insofar as is possible, it is our intention to draw up a tenant full repairing lease following rectification of all outstanding dilapidations. We understand you are agreeable to this in principle, except that your client will not accept full repairing liability for the main roof unless the existing covering is replaced in its entirety with appropriate warranties in place.

In his reply, Mr Henson confirmed this, noting that:

unless the roof covering is replaced in its entirety with appropriate warranties in place, I believe the best way to deal with the roof would be for your clients to retain direct responsibility for maintenance and repair throughout the lease term at their own cost.

I find, on the evidence, that this was entirely typical of Metso’s stance both before and after the date of this letter: they always wanted a new roof covering.

[28] In his negotiations with Metso, Mr Watson persisted in the opposite view, writing again on 9 June 2004 to say that “the roof covering will be repaired as required but it is not our client’s intention to replace this in its entirety”. Although his next letter to Mr Uzel of 22 June indicated that Mr Henson, Metso’s surveyor, had agreed to this, Mr Henson’s own letter of 30 June made Metso’s position crystal clear. He said:

I further put to my clients, with regard to the roof, that they will be responsible only for maintaining this in a wind and watertight condition throughout the term of the lease. Unfortunately, whilst the main principle of their repairing obligations is accepted, the proposal concerning the roof alone is not. Our main contact at the subject premises, David Rickards, who is the general manager, has advised that the above proposal would not be acceptable due to the fact that it will be impossible to patch repair the roof to a standard that keeps the building wind and watertight throughout the term. Even over the last few weeks, significant water ingress has occurred due to the failure of the roof covering.

We are therefore 99% agreed with regard to the terms of this lease renewal, but need to resolve the question concerning roof covering, and in this respect I would envisage that the only feasible option would be for your client to commit to recladding/overcladding of the roof.

[29] Mr Watson said in evidence that he was more of a valuation specialist and that it was Mr Goldstone who was dealing with the details of what works were required to comply with SH’s repairing covenant. However, on 1 July 2004, Mr Watson offered a view to Mr Uzel that was at least consistent with what was in Mr Goldstone’s draft schedule. He said:

You will see that, regarding roof repairs, David Rickards feels that it will be impossible to patch repair the roof to a standard that keeps the building wind and watertight throughout the term. I am sure that this is not the case, as presumably once all the necessary repairs are carried out, the roof will be in sufficient repair for Metso to take wind and watertight liability.

[30] On 5 July 2004, Mr Uzel sent Mr Goldstone the correspondence that had passed between Mr Watson and Mr Henson concerning the roof. Mr Goldstone’s reply was curious because it suggested that his schedule included for roof renewal, when, as he accepted in cross-examination, it patently did not. He said that he could not explain why there was this discrepancy. It does not seem to me that anything turns upon it.

[31] Just at this critical moment, there was then an outbreak of further leaks at the property. It seems that Metso dug its heels in as to |page:19| its proposal for a new roof. Mr Uzel was finally obliged to agree to it. On 21 July, he wrote to Mr Goldstone to tell him that he had agreed with Metso “that we will be putting on a new roof and charging this back to SH”. He also said that Metso was going to let him have a letter that said, in terms, that it would not take the building unless a new roof was put on. It was not suggested that this decision was based upon any advice whatsoever from either Mr Watson or Mr Goldstone.

[32] The promised letter from Mr Rickards, of Metso, was also dated 21 July 2004. This said that “in addition to the existing leaks, substantial new areas of leaking have developed”. He identified the extensive damage caused by these leaks and concluded by saying that “unless we can be convinced of moves to provide a permanent solution to the leaking roof, we cannot consider signing the proposed new building lease”. Mr Ryan, of SH, said in evidence that he had no idea of these events; he was surprised that, if Mr Rickards had had a real difficulty with the state of the roof, he had not contacted SH at all during this period.

[33] Mr Uzel forwarded this letter to Mr Goldstone on 26 July and asked him to instruct Options “to give us a price for a new roof as per your design. This could potentially be, I suppose, an overcladding or a complete recladding.” Although this letter made plain that Carmel had decided upon either overcladding or recladding, Mr Goldstone remained of the view that the patch repairs solution was the appropriate measure of work for the purposes of the schedule of dilapidations against SH. We know this because, on 30 July, he produced another version of that schedule, with the patch repairs referred to again, although this time it identified all 56 roof lights to be replaced. The revised schedule identified just 20 asbestos roof sheets that, in Mr Goldstone’s view, would need to be replaced. The revised schedule was sent to Mr Hewitt, the surveyor acting for SH, on 9 August 2004.

[34] Mr Hewitt responded on 2 September 2004. He said:

Roof

The roof covering has been subject to remedial works and the covering itself is in a serviceable condition. The roof lights show signs of soiling, although are generally serviceable. I do not therefore concur with your assessment of the works required in relation to the roof.

[35] However, the dispute between the parties was actually just about to grow much larger, because, on 16 September, in what was a purported response to this letter, Mr Goldstone said:

Roof I have had an opportunity to inspect the roof and I must disagree with your comments. The roof is currently leaking and has had significant water ingress over the years. The sub-tenants have carried out works to the roof which involves the application of a bituminous type of compound. Even with this, water ingress is still occurring and as a result the sub-tenant will not be prepared to sign a lease with a full repairing covenant. With this in mind and considering the condition of the roof, the only thing we see possible would be to replace the roofing and I will be detailing this more thoroughly when I write to you with regard to the schedule as a whole.

The letter concluded with these words:

The sub-tenants are not prepared to enter into a full repairing lease for the property, and my schedule deals with those items which will allow them to take the property on a full repairing basis.

SH says that this letter demonstrates that Mr Goldstone had adopted the wrong criterion, and had included the replacement works in the next version of the schedule because of the commercial requirements of Metso, not because of SH’s obligations under the lease. I address that point in some detail in section F below. What is beyond doubt is that this was the very first time that Mr Goldstone had said that, contrary to the terms of his original schedule, he believed that the roof had to be recovered. Mr Goldstone again accepted that in cross-examination.

[36] Mr Goldstone’s next letter on this point was dated 19 October 2004. This letter set out a more detailed explanation of why he considered that the existing roof was not in a condition that would justify patch repairs only. The letter included this paragraph:

It is quite clear that the roof is leaking at present and that the sub-tenant will not accept responsibility for the repair of the roof in its present condition. It is therefore in disrepair and as part of the dilapidations claim should be put into repair. I do not believe that the application of any compound will provide a suitable repair and that the only method of dealing with the roof would be to overclad.

In his further response of 15 November 2004, Mr Hewitt said that “the roof suffers from an inherent deficiency and, as such, responsibility for changing this does not fall to my client”. The battle lines had now been drawn.

E. Condition of the roof and subsequent works

[37] The parties’ experts are agreed that, as at 24 December 2004, when SH’s lease expired, the roof was in a state of disrepair. They are agreed that the following defects were apparent:

(a) Rainwater ingress adjacent to the valley gutter and gable end wall gutter, associated with the gutters not performing satisfactorily due to a blockage and build up of detritus.

(b) Degradation and deterioration to roof lights with a general loss of translucency.

(c) Defective seals to edges of the roof lights.

(d) Areas of rainwater ingress internally, generally associated with the poor condition of roof lights and failure of the seals at the perimeter of roof lights.

(e) Isolated cracked roofing sheets.

(f) Corroded fixing bolts externally with brittle rubber washers.

In summary, the principal problem areas were the roof lights and the gutters. There was no inherent problem with the roof sheets themselves, with just a few (estimated by Mr Hewitt to be around 20, the same figure as was in Mr Goldstone’s draft schedule) being damaged and requiring replacement.

[38] Subsequently, the overcladding to the roof was carried out at Carmel’s expense. SH accepts that this overcladding work was a repair option open to Carmel but it does not say (unlike the tenants in one or two of the reported cases referred to above) that the work went beyond repair and constituted enhancement or betterment. However, it says that the patch repairs, which first featured in Mr Goldstone’s original schedule, were a cheaper repair option that was reasonably and sensibly possible and ought therefore, in accordance with the principles noted in [9] above, to form the basis of the calculation of damages. In response, Carmel says that the patch repairs were not an appropriate method of repair in all the circumstances and/or were impracticable. I address that key issue in section F below.

F. Patch repairs or overcladding?

F1 Agreed scope of the works in 2004

[39] Mr Goldstone made a detailed inspection of the roof on 5 February; Mr Hewitt made his detailed inspection of the roof shortly thereafter. Following these inspections, as set out in [24] to [33] above, Mr Goldstone was of the view that, in order to put the roof in to proper repair and condition, all roof lights had to be replaced and other work was necessary to the valley gutters. Mr Hewitt subsequently agreed with that. In addition, both men were of the view that only a handful of the roof sheets themselves required to be replaced. Although, as I have pointed out, this solution was called “the patch repairs” in the evidence, it obviously involved rather more than that. On the facts, therefore, I find that, up to 9 August 2004, both Mr Goldstone and Mr Hewitt were generally agreed that the patch repairs, as opposed to a more radical solution, were sufficient to meet SH’s liability under the covenants in the lease.

[40] That, so it seems to me, is an extremely important starting point for any investigation into the dispute as to the appropriate remedial work under the lease. Mr Goldstone had said publicly that the patch repairs were appropriate. From 5 February 2004, when he made his inspection, through the production of his original schedule on 27 February, his exchanges with Mr Uzel between March and July 2004, through his production of his revised schedule on 30 July, right up to when he sent it off to Mr Hewitt on 9 August, Mr Goldstone was of the opinion that the patch repairs identified in the draft schedule were what was required to put the building into proper repair and |page:20| condition (in accordance with the relevant covenants), and nothing else. He had also said expressly that he was not in favour of overroofing.

[41] By 16 September 2004, Mr Goldstone had changed his position. There is, of course, nothing wrong with that; indeed, experts, if they are doing their job properly, should always be willing to review the information available to them and, if appropriate, to change their position in the light of that information. However, given the circumstances of this case, it is necessary for the court to examine in a little more detail why Mr Goldstone wrote to Mr Hewitt on 16 September, just five weeks after he had reiterated his patch-repair recommendation, and without having undertaken any further inspection of the roof, to say that only replacement was justified in order to put the roof into appropriate repair and condition in accordance with the terms of the lease.

F2 Why did Mr Goldstone change his position?

[42] The evidence, both written and oral, makes it clear that the most significant event in the summer months of 2004 was Mr Uzel’s decision in July to provide Metso with a new roof: see [31] above. Mr Uzel told me that that was his decision based upon his conversations with Metso. It was not a decision that he had discussed with Mr Goldstone or Mr Watson beforehand, and it was not a decision that was based upon any pre-existing advice from either Mr Goldstone or Mr Watson; indeed, it could be said to be contrary to Mr Watson’s express advice, as well as being clearly contrary to Mr Goldstone’s draft schedule of dilapidations.

[43] The decision to replace the roof was, of course, entirely sensible from a commercial perspective, given Metso’s continuing complaints about it and Carmel’s desire to enter into a new lease with it. It was also consistent with Mr Goldstone’s letter of 11 March (see [25] and [26] above) to the effect that, regardless of the position under the lease, a replacement roof was a sensible step. It was also consistent with Mr Watson’s evidence that an incoming tenant such as Metso might well insist, with a property of this age, on a new roof before it agreed to a full repairing covenant. However, it is clear that it was a decision taken with the position of Metso firmly in mind, and with no consideration of the potentially different position under the terms of SH’s lease. When Mr Uzel made his decision, he hoped that he could get the cost of the work back from SH, but nobody (certainly not Mr Goldstone) had given him any advice to that effect.

[44] For these reasons, it is impossible not to conclude on the facts that what happened was this: Mr Goldstone advised both Mr Uzel and SH that, under the terms of SH’s lease, the patch repairs were appropriate; Mr Uzel, for understandable commercial reasons, provided Metso with a new roof. Mr Goldstone then had no real option but to alter his position and argue that a new roof, or certainly overroofing, was justified under the lease after all. Indeed, he explained in cross-examination his changed position by reference to his letter of 16 September 2004, and he appeared to admit that he had altered his view because of what he called “the subtenant’s demands”.

[45] Mr Goldstone also suggested that he had changed his mind because of advice that he had received from Options (the roofing contractor) about the practical difficulties of carrying out the patch repairs. His evidence as to the detail of that advice, and how and when it was given, was very vague. For the reasons set out above, it would have had to have been provided between 9 August 2004, when the second version of the patch-repairs schedule was sent out by Mr Goldstone to Mr Hewitt, and 16 September, when the letter referred to in [35] was sent to Mr Hewitt by Mr Goldstone. However, there is no written record or note of any advice about the roof being given by Options to Mr Goldstone during that period; neither was Mr Goldstone able to say that any such advice had been given orally within that period of around five weeks.

[46] Indeed, on all the evidence, I consider that it was most unlikely that Options gave the advice suggested during this period. In particular:

(a) Options was present during Mr Goldstone’s only detailed inspection on 5 February. That inspection led Mr Goldstone to conclude that the patch repairs were appropriate. It was clear that Options did not at that stage suggest that such works could not practicably be carried out.

(b) On 9 August 2004, Options sent a quotation for the overcladding works to Mr Goldstone. It was not asked to and did not provide an alternative quotation for the patch repairs. Thus, it must be an appropriate inference to draw that Options would have had no reason at this stage to consider the question of patch repairs and would not therefore have needed to advise Mr Goldstone, after 9 August, about the alleged difficulties with such works.

(c) On 6 September 2004, Options sent Mr Goldstone another quotation “to replace 58 roof lights to the existing roof”. On its face, this was a description of the principal element of the patch repairs, although it may have been that, at this stage, this work was envisaged as part of the overcladding. However, either way, this quotation makes no mention of any alleged impracticalities involved in doing the replacement work.

[47] Perhaps most tellingly of all on this question, Mr Goldstone did not at any time seek to justify the overcladding solution to Mr Hewitt on the ground of practicality, and he made no reference at all to any such advice having been given to him by Options, or by any other roofing contractor. Instead, as he accepted in cross-examination, his letter of 16 September sought to justify replacement because “the subtenant will not be prepared to sign a lease with a full repairing covenant”. He made the same point in his letter of 19 October. As I have already noted, he agreed that he was seeking to justify overcladding by reference not to the covenant but to Metso’s demands. Not only was that the application of the wrong criterion, it was also the best evidence that Options had not in fact given the advice that he later suggested it had during this period. If it had given that advice, I consider that he would inevitably have referred to it in his correspondence. It would have been the best possible reason to justify his change of position.

[48] For all those reasons, therefore, I do not accept the suggestion that Mr Goldstone’s change of mind between 9 August and 16 September had been caused by advice from Options or other roofing contractors. The only relevant event during this period, as I have indicated, was Mr Uzel’s decision to provide Metso with a new roof, and I am in no doubt that that was the cause of Mr Goldstone’s change of position.

F3 Patch repairs or overcladding

[49] In summary, and for the reasons that I have given, I find that:

(a) Following his inspection, Mr Goldstone was of the same view as Mr Hewitt, namely that patch repairs were the appropriate works under SH’s lease;

(b) Mr Goldstone changed his position because of Mr Uzel’s unilateral decision to provide Metso with the new roof that it required, which had nothing to do with the terms of SH’s lease.

(c) However, even if Mr Goldstone’s explanation for his change of position was confused or erroneous, and he was simply trying to “back-fit” Carmel’s decision to the terms of the covenant, it is still necessary for me to consider whether, in all the circumstances, patch repairs or overcladding was the appropriate method of putting the roof into the appropriate repair and condition pursuant to the terms of those covenants.

[50] In my judgment, there is a strong case for concluding that the patch repairs were the most appropriate scheme under the terms of the covenants. That is because, for the reasons that I have already set out, it was the patch repairs that had been agreed as such by Mr Goldstone and Mr Hewitt. Both men confirmed that they had been involved in other jobs where similar sorts of patch repairs to roofs of this type and age had been successfully carried out; indeed, Mr Hewitt told me of a project in Milton Keynes that he had just completed where precisely this type of work had been completed. In addition, it must not be forgotten that Mr Watson was also of the view that the overroofing was not necessary and that patch repairs were appropriate: see [27], [28] and [29] above. There was, therefore, unanimity, at least up to 9 August 2004, between Mr Goldstone and Mr Watson, the surveyors engaged by Carmel, and between them and Mr Hewitt, SH’s surveyor. |page:21|

[51] Furthermore, it should also be noted that the sort of patch repairs proposed were, as Mr Hewitt confirmed in cross-examination, very common in the industry. As he explained, the Green Book of the Advisory Council for Roofing contains details as to how such work should be properly carried out. In addition, the Health & Safety Executive produces its own specific methodology for replacing isolated roof sheets and roof lights. What, therefore, made this work, which is relatively common, unacceptable or inappropriate in this particular case?

[52] Two rather different attacks on the patch-repairs solution were made by Carmel. The first was the suggestion that such works were futile because of the history of the roof leaks and the condition of the roof, and that, as a consequence, the patch repairs, as Mr Kynoch put it, represented “flogging a tired old horse”. The second was the suggestion that such works were impracticable. I deal with each of those criticisms below.

[53] I reject the suggestion that the patch repairs originally advocated by Mr Goldstone and maintained by Mr Hewitt were in some way futile because of the history and/or the condition of the roof. After all, Mr Goldstone had inspected the roof and concluded that, far from being futile, the patch repairs were what was necessary to put the roof into appropriate repair and condition. He did not suggest that at any time had he received advice from Options, or indeed anyone else, that made him alter that view or persuaded him that the repairs were in some way futile; nor, it seems to me, could he have possibly done so, given that such matters were entirely for him, as Carmel’s surveyor, to assess and decide. He therefore plainly concluded that the patch repairs were appropriate and not futile.

[54] Furthermore, if that were not enough, I should also note that this was not a case (unlike those cited in [10] above) in which SH was arguing for a futile repair scheme to an element of the property that really needed to be replaced. On the contrary, the one element of the original roof that everybody was agreed had reached the end of its natural life was the roof lights. SH was not suggesting that the roof lights be the subject of futile repair; on its case, they would be replaced in their entirety. On the evidence, it seems to me that the roof lights were the principal source of the leaks in the past. Therefore, their proposed replacement was the opposite of futile; it was a critical step to prevent further leaks into the property. For all those reasons, therefore, I reject the futility argument; I simply do not accept that it is applicable on the facts.

[55] The second attack was the suggestion that the patch repairs were impracticable. I deal with each of the relevant criticisms below.

(i) Replacing roof lights

It was suggested that, if the roof lights were replaced, this would damage the existing seals. That suggestion was not controversial because it explained why the new roof lights would have to be sealed into position with new sealant; that was part of the proposed scope of the patch repairs. Mr Goldstone was obviously aware of the need for such sealing once the new roof lights had been installed when he suggested their replacement in the first place; it was simply a feature of the patch-repairs scheme. As Mr Hewitt observed, and I accept, roof lights often have a shorter life than the surrounding roof sheets and require replacement within an existing roof. Such work is quite common. Particular care has to be taken when the roof lights are sealed into position, but that does not render such work impracticable in any way.

(ii) Disturbance of roof sheets arising out of replacement of roof lights

The patch repairs involved replacing the roof lights in their entirety. As Mr Hewitt agreed, that would involve the possibility of disturbance of some of the surrounding roof sheets. That possible disturbance would bring with it the possible risk of damage. Again, it seems to me that that was inherent in the replacement process and was therefore again something that Mr Goldstone would have had well in mind when he originally concluded that the patch repairs was the appropriate scheme. He did not require to be told that this somehow rendered the scheme impracticable. No building operation to an existing building can be entirely risk-free; the question is whether the risk of disturbance to the existing roof lights was unjustified. There was no evidence that it was. It was again simply an inherent feature of a type of remedial works that are commonly carried out. The possible damage caused by possible disturbance does not begin to justify overcladding instead of the patch repairs, or render the latter not reasonably or sensibly possible.

(iii) Bolts and washers

The evidence was that generally the bolts were protected adequately by the liquid coating that had been applied in 1993. It was also clear that some bolts had corroded and some washers had become brittle. That is a common enough problem on a roof of this age and, according to Mr Hewitt, it was quite capable of being addressed on the patch repair basis. Again, I am bound to note that this was also Mr Goldstone’s original view. Again, it seems to me that replacement was not a question of practicability, because, if it had been, he would have pointed that out in his original schedule. Mr Hewitt agreed that, because some bolts were corroded, they would need to be replaced, but he said that that was a relatively straightforward operation. The particular areas of the roof in question would be accessed by workmen on access gantries. He rejected the criticism that it would be dangerous for those below. He said that it was a straightforward matter of coordination with the tenant to ensure that no one was beneath the areas of the roof that were actually being worked on. I accept Mr Hewitt’s evidence in relation to that point.

(iv) Asbestos roof sheets

It was clear that the removal of the 20 or so roof sheets that were damaged would be difficult because they contained asbestos. Again, this was known to Mr Goldstone when he advocated their replacement in February 2004. In any event, there are hundreds of roofs all over the country with these asbestos roof sheets and the procedures for handling them and disposing of them as licensed waste were, according to Mr Hewitt, well-known and entirely normal. Again, I accept that evidence and I reject the suggestion that the nature of the roof sheets created some sort of impracticality for the purposes of the patch-repair solution.

(iv) Health and safety considerations generally

There was some cross-examination on the basis that the patch repairs were somehow dangerous or difficult from a health and safety point of view. I make two general points about that. First, general health and safety criticisms of a particular remedial scheme can often be made, but, in my judgment, for such criticisms to be sustainable there has to be a detailed critique of the works that were required and the particular health and safety risks that might be created by those works. I do not believe that there was such evidence in the present case. Second, since both the patch repairs and the overcladding here were schemes involving works to and on a roof, they both raised particular health and safety issues. The real point was whether the patch repairs were somehow more dangerous or involved an unacceptable level of risk as compared to the overcladding. I conclude that there was no evidence to suggest that they were.

[56] Both schemes involved risks to the occupants below that would have had to have been addressed by careful project management, as Mr Hewitt explained. Both schemes required proper safety measures, whether by way of netting or harnesses and inertia reels. Neither scheme allowed access from below because of the suspended ceilings installed by Metso. There was nothing to say that one scheme was any more dangerous or any more difficult from a health and safety perspective than the other.

F4 Summary

[57] For all these reasons, I consider that neither the “futility” nor the “impracticability” arguments advanced by Carmel are sustainable. They do not render the patch-repair scheme, which Mr Goldstone originally advocated, impracticable or unjustified. On the contrary, the patch repairs, including the replacement of all the roof lights and the work to the gutters, were the appropriate repair works, given the particular disrepair to this roof and the terms of the covenants. The overcladding of the roof was the result of a decision taken by Carmel without any |page:22| advice to the effect that the cost of such work was recoverable from SH. For all the reasons given, I conclude that it was not.

[58] I should also say by way of summary that this conclusion was the same as that reached by Mr Hewitt, Mr Watson and Mr Goldstone, at least up to 9 August 2004. It was therefore supported by the vast majority of the oral expert evidence that I heard during the trial. Although Mr Kynoch properly pointed out that others, including the various roofing contractors, Rentokil, Options and Icon (the contractors to which Mr Hewitt referred), and Mr Greenyer, the surveyor acting for Metso, all advocated reroofing of some sort, that was a view that in each case:

(a) was not based upon a consideration of the terms of SH’s covenants;

(b) was not tested in cross-examination;

(c) was based, on the part of the contractors at least, upon a major degree of self-interest because they would be paid more for overroofing than for carrying out patch repairs.

Thus, I conclude that the weight of the evidence, particularly that adduced orally in court, was firmly on the side of the patch repairs.

[59] For the avoidance of doubt, and by reference to the principles outlined in section C above, I conclude that:

(a) The patch-repair option was prima facie an appropriate method for putting the roof into the state of repair and condition required by the covenants: see the principle in [8] above. In other words, the fact that the covenants referred to repair and condition did not somehow render the patch repairs inappropriate or inadequate.

(b) The patch-repair option was, on the evidence, reasonably and sensibly possible: see the principle in [9(b)] above. Mr Hewitt said that he was “confident that they could be done” and I accept his evidence.

(c) In reaching the conclusions at (a) and (b) above, I do not consider that SH was seeking to rely upon its breaches of covenant in order to lower the relevant standard of repair (see the principle in [9(d)] above), nor did it lower the relevant standard.

(d) The patch repairs in this case were far from futile: see the principle in [10] above. They addressed the problems with the roof and included the replacement of a major element of that roof, namely the roof lights.

(e) I have taken into account Metso’s request for a new roof covering (see the principle in [11] above), but it was not based upon a consideration of the terms of the lease. It is therefore outweighed by the evidence of the surveyors that I heard, all of whom at one time or another considered that the patch repairs were the appropriate method of dealing with the problems with the roof in accordance with the terms of the covenants.

G. Quantum

[60] The parties are agreed that the figure for the patch repairs is £24,462.44. This includes the claims for fees and so on, and also allows for a deduction in accordance with the first limb of section 18 of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1927 (the 1927 Act). Prima facie, Carmel’s claim is in this sum. For this reason, Mr Kynoch’s criticisms of Mr Hewitt’s calculations are now nothing to the point (because the appropriate figure has been agreed). Furthermore, as I observed during argument, Carmel did not offer an alternative figure for the patch repairs in any event.

[61] However, SH has a further argument that it says reduces the correct figure to £18,278.44 by stripping out the work involved in the replacement of the roof lights. This argument relies upon the second limb of section 18 of the 1927 Act, which provides that:

and in particular no damage shall be recovered for a breach of any such covenant or agreement to leave or put premises in repair at the termination of a lease, if it is shown that the premises, in whatever state of repair they might be, would at or shortly after the termination of the tenancy have been or be pulled down, or such structural alterations made therein as would render valueless the repairs covered by the covenant or agreement.

In essence, SH argues that the overcladding superseded the replacement of the roof lights and that, as a result of section 18, the cost of the replacement works should be deducted from the sum otherwise due.

[62] The second limb of section 18 has been explained on the basis that:

Before it was enacted, a lessor could recover damages from his tenant for breach of a covenant to deliver up in repair notwithstanding that the buildings were going to be pulled down or structurally altered in such a way as to make it useless to perform the covenant. The enforcement of the covenant in such circumstances was regarded as an unjust enrichment of the lessor and the legislature in s18, sub-s 1 set itself to remove the injustice:

see Marquess of Salisbury v Gilmore [1942] 2 KB 38, at p45.

[63] The authorities suggest that the term “structural alterations” is to be given a wide interpretation: see Firle Investments Ltd v Datapoint International Ltd [2000] EWHC 105 (TCC) and Pickering v Phillimore unreported 10 May 1976. However, these and other authorities all proceed on the (not unreasonable) assumption that the structural alterations are entirely different from the repairs covered by the covenants, and that they are not (as would be the case if Mr Healey were right in his submissions in this case) one and the same.

[64] In my judgment, this is the principal reason why the situation here is a long way from the sort of position with which the second limb of section 18 was designed to deal. Here, there was a straight fight between two different remedial schemes, both of which were described by the experts as repairs. I have decided that the lesser scheme was appropriate because it was reasonably and sensibly possible. However, the mere fact that Carmel undertook a more extensive and expensive repair scheme does not, in my view, trigger the second limb of section 18. I derive support, for what I hope is a common-sense analysis, from various observations of Arden LJ in Latimer, and, in particular, [51], where she said:

On the other hand, it does not seem to me that the landlords should necessarily be deprived of their remedy simply because they performed the repairs to a higher standard than the outgoing tenants were required to do.

[65] Accordingly, I conclude that there should be no deduction by way of the second limb of section 18. I do not consider that this is a section 18 case. There is no injustice to SH in my conclusion that it is liable for the lesser, rather than for the more extensive repair scheme, without further deduction. The work done by Carmel was work of repair and, as Mr Healey fairly accepted, it did not go beyond that. It seems to me that this therefore takes it outside the meaning and intent of section 18. Thus, the work actually carried out does not supersede the patch-repair scheme.

[66] In addition, to the extent that it is relevant, I am doubtful whether the overcladding could be described as a structural alteration. As I have already noted, the experts referred to it as a repair. Moreover, it was suggested that it might be a structural alteration because it imposed a greater loading on the steel frame. However, most repair work involves an increase, to a greater or a lesser extent, to the loading imposed on the frame of a building. If that were the only test for a structural alteration, it might be very difficult to identify any work of repair that was not also a structural alteration. Again, that is plainly not what the second limb of section 18 was designed to address. On that ground as well, I consider that the section 18 arguments fail.

[67] For these reasons, I reject SH’s submission that the second limb of section 18 is relevant. I conclude that the patch repairs were the appropriate repair scheme, without deduction, in the sum of £24,462.44. That will be the amount of Carmel’s damages. I will deal separately, but not this afternoon, with all remaining questions of interest and costs.

Claim allowed in part.

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