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Lewin (Trading Standards Officer) v Barratt Homes Ltd

Prospective purchasers visiting development site and being shown pictures and show house – Purchasers entering into contract to buy properties – Houses constructed differing from pictures and show house – Whether pictures and show house amounting to misleading statements – Property Misdescriptions Act 1991, section1(1) – Magistrates dismissing charges – Appeal allowed

In 1997 two prospective purchasers visited the site office of the respondent property developer, Barratt Homes Ltd (Barratt). They spoke to a site negotiator about houses that were being offered for sale prior to their construction. They were shown a large framed picture of a detached house on the office wall, and a further picture of the same house on an A4 sheet of paper. Beneath the framed picture was a small sticker, which stated that the details of the property had been amended and requested customers to refer to the site negotiator for details. Also on the office wall was a framed A4 document, which warned that there might be a difference between the accommodation depicted in Barratt’s literature and that on offer in particular developments. The purchasers then visited a show house on the site. They agreed to purchase houses and paid 10% of the purchase price on exchange of contracts.

However, in November 1997, when they visited their respective completed houses, they noticed that they were different from the pictures and the show house in that: first, they had no gable roof over one window; second, they had no rendering to the top wall; third, there was no large window above the porch; and, fourth, there was no central lintel in the ground-floor window. The purchasers completed their purchases because they believed they would otherwise lose their deposits. They subsequently made complaints to a trading standards officer.

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