Claim
No: CHY09015
IN
THE CENTRAL LONDON COUNTY COURT
BETWEEN:
MS JO GAVIN (1)
MS CHANTAL CRACY (2)
Claimants
and
COMMUNITY HOUSING ASSOCIATION LIMITED
Defendant
SKELETON ARGUMENT ON BEHALF OF THE CLAIMANTS
FOR Permission to appeal ON 5th
sept 2011
In the trial at the Central London County Court July 2010
the Claimants succeeded on one cause of action, ‘damage’ and were awarded a
nominal amount of £100.
All other claims were dismissed.
It was ordered by HHJ Cowell that the Claimants do deliver
up possession of 104 and 106 Cromer Street WC1H 9PB, trading as Scarlet Maguire
Art Gallery and spaceshift… a contemporary multi-functional space available for
hire. Both venues social enterprises of New NAYPIC / Youth Parliament www.youthparliament.co.uk run by
social entrepreneurs and investors Ms Jo Flores and Ms Chantal Cracy, the
Claimants.
The Claimants were ordered to pay back £12,310.57 to the
Defendant with interest per annum of £676.54, until payment with regard to 104
since the onset of proceedings in November 2008 and continuing interest at
£1.86 per day until payment.
The Claimants were ordered to pay back £25,075 to the
Defendants with interest per annum of £1,381.46 until payment with regard to
106, since the onset of the proceedings in November 2008 and continuing
interest at £3.63 per day until payment.
The Claimants were ordered to pay the £388,000.00 legal
costs of the Defendants plus interest at 5.5% per annum amounting to £21,000
per annum until payment.
The Claimants were ordered to pay half of the fees of the
Single Joint Expert Mr Doug Hall of Smith and Williamson, which it was stated
in HHJ Cowell’s order had been paid by the Defendant. However the Claimants had
already paid Mr Hall £8,000 in full before the SJE commenced working in his
capacity as SJE, therefore this judgement should be disregarded as an error.
The amounts above mentioned were to be paid by 4pm on the 20th
Oct 2010 giving the Claimants one month to pay nearly half a million pounds to
the Defendants, with possession of both the Claimants businesses effective
immediately.
The Claimants asked for permission to appeal but this was
refused on the grounds that there was no chance of success.
The Claimants persisted and it was ordered that the
Claimants pay for the, ‘transcripts’ of the trial including the Judgements at a
substantial cost, a highly unorthodox request before they could begin to even
ask for permission to appeal, the order making it in the Claimants view as
difficult for them as could be possible.
In the light of the Judgement against the Claimants, they
asked that the ‘transcripts’ be paid for at public expense since they had paid
over £200,000.00 into their two businesses as well as this court case to be
compensated for their business interruption and consequential losses, so now
having just lost everything they could not afford to continue at their own
expense and would be at the time scale and mercy of the public purse.
On the 13th Oct 2010 the Claimants applied for a stay of
execution on both 104 and 106 businesses respectively and stated that all
payments ordered to be made by the Claimants, including mense profit and all of
the Defendants costs may vary depending on the outcome if permission for appeal
is granted. Further they asked for an extension on the order that once the
‘transcripts’ have been received they be given a mere 3 weeks to file a
skeleton argument. 3 weeks seemed hardly enough time to prepare such a complex
case especially when neither of the Claimants to date have had the legal
reasons given to them as to why there claim was dismissed and once they do have
the legal case arguments assessed to be correct by HHJ Cowell in his honours
Judgment(s) in the form of the ‘transcripts, since neither of the Claimants are
legally trained, 3 weeks seems to be a harsh time scale to argue such serial
complex arguments. For example why the Claimants believe Lord Millets judgement
in the Southwark V’s Mills case, often referred to regarding ‘sound insulation’
in low cost housing bears no relation whatsoever to our case and as far as the
‘Guild’ case is concerned the Claimants believe it too does not apply.
The Claimants after 9 months received just one ‘transcript’
of 7 pages on the bank holiday weekend of Saturday 27th August 2011
at 12noon. This ‘transcript’ (of just an hour in the morning of that day of
Judgement) in part was a repeat of the ‘EXPLANATION’ HHJ Cowell gave referring
to the bank holiday weekend of the 28th – 30th August 2010, where
his honour failed to read the Claimants ‘Submissions On Liability’ 92 pages,
245 paragraphs and the rest of this ‘transcript’ referred to his honours
previous Judgement on liability made two days before with any changes that his
honour may as his honour put it, ‘wish to make’ to that Judgement ‘or not’,
having now given himself a day in between the two Judgements to now read the 92
pages, 245 paragraphs, ‘submissions on liability on behalf of the Claimants’,
referring to a further 359 pages of exhibits from the 19 volumes of case file
bundles a truly remarkably task given the days grace, to adjust any findings.
Unfortunately after 9 months with no other additional
‘transcript’(s) to the most important Central Judgement of two days before, yet
making constant reference to it, in this now only available ‘transcript’ given
to us as paid for by the public purse, this situation has just made it further
impossible to know legally how and why are claim has been dismissed save for
£100 in nominal damages.
It is argued by the Claimants in asking for permission to
appeal that the trial was completely unfair in the sense of ‘a fair trial’ and
thus we find this is not uncommonly accompanied by persistent errors as this
latest one clearly demonstrates.
The Claimants case has always been simple and consistent
from 2004.
The Claimants were jointly insured for the two buildings
with the landlord as set out in the lease, for all repairs. The landlord the
‘policy holder’ the leaseholder a ‘noted interest’ on the policy for commercial
premises and as such paid a premium as required to the landlord for the
building insurance.
The landlord ‘failed’ to make claims when repairs outside of
the Claimants control and covered by the building insurance arose.
The landlord further, broke the terms of our insurance by
not mitigating their losses by repairing with speed, when they choose to repair
themselves rather than to make a claim.
The insurers therefore would not pay the landlord the
‘policy holder’ to pay us ‘the noted interest’ for commercial leases for any
consequential losses with regard to our loss of opportunity to trade and with
regard to rent losses etc.
The landlord left us the commercial leaseholders in a
position of ‘indifference’ with regard to disrepair with an inability to trade
until the landlord resolved their own affairs with their insured, with the
landlord threatening to sue their insured as they believed they should be
covered whether they did wrong or not.
This too then exacerbated what were modest building
insurance claims for repair by the Claimants to larger claims of lengthy
periods of business interruption suffered as a result of the continuing
disrepair and time taken in the landlords protracted dispute with their
insured.
The landlord had the ‘means’ to repair at all times and
whether they had a dispute with their insured or not that should not have
affected or even involved us.
The Landlord who had separate insurance cover for liability
then instead of owning up to then simple issues of liability and paying a small
amount of compensation to the Claimants used all its might to have the
claimants compensation requests thrown out.
The Claimants small business people could not afford to have
this happen to them financially and too knew they were in the right and had
been substantially put out of pocket. They disputed the landlord all the way.
The insurance in the face of a growing claim of liability
had a conflict of interest and took a commercial decision, likely to be based
on re-insurance and politics, to back the landlord even though they had decided
that the landlord had breached the terms of their own insurance. They all
collaborated to take down the Claimants so as no one would have to pay. This
incensed the Claimants who would not be taken down to save the landlord and their
insured a claim for fair compensation and to be put back to the position but
for these building problems had not happened.
Interest on loans put the Claimants in financial hardship
and one of them lost her house. The two shops have too now been lost. The
social enterprise has now too been lost. However the Claimants stand steadfast
that they are still in the right.
The Claimants believe that although the case is now so
complex and unhealthily consuming financially on both sides that the cause for
all losses lies with the landlords original failure to disclose by blatant
deceit building regulation failures as well as to with any speed effect repairs
when pipes regularly burst into the Claimants two businesses, which had also
been built with 10 million pounds of public money, £400,000 specifically for
the six shops on the street allocated, by the landlord in just 1999 by
Kingsbury Construction their contractor, less than 7 years before all hell
broke loose with disrepairs, building regulation breaches and bad workmanship
for which the landlord was too insured by HAPM for structural defects but
failed to effect any claim to this day making the place still illegal to trade
from. Further also attempting to pass it off to another unsuspecting potential
leaseholder by deceit as A3.
All issues have been proved to be correct in the court at a
trial of ten days however it would seem that the principle of law through the
paid assistance of QC Ms Zia Bhaloo and her team for the Defendants in any
event allowed this case to have gotten off lightly with a technicality which
the Claimants to date have still been left in the dark as to what that is
exactly.
We ask that this case be dealt with now at convenient speed
to allow us to legally put our position clearly.
It must be noted that on the last days of Judgement and of
costs Ms Flores had taken ill the day before with a serious abscess in the roof
of her mouth swollen to the size of half a golf ball. Despite applying for the
day to be adjourned this was ignored by his honour HHJ Cowell and Ms Cracy was
forced unprepared to represent the Claimants.
We shall in the absence of the 9th Sept 2010
transcript refer to the notes of Ms Flores of His Honours Judgement to put our
case for permission to apply to appeal. For the purposes of ease of reference I
shall write our reasoning for disagreement with this Judgement in italic and
head this with, ‘JF Comment’:
Notes on Judgement 9th Sept 2010 on What HHJ
Cowell said and JF Comment:
HHJ Cowell: The claimants have represented themselves in
this case and at times have been assisted by various counsels.
Undoubtedly in this case the claimants suffered foul sewage
from April 2004 – 2005 quite enough to daunt the bravest of spirit.
104 Cromer Street, WC1 known as Scarlet Maguire was let to
one Ms Jo Gavin now Ms Flores on the 8th June 2000 for a term of 6
years. This was a ground floor and basement shop below a four stories
residential setting owned by the defendants above. The lessor of the premises
own’s the left and right of 104 Cromer Street itself. G1 – 87,88, bottom of 87
front 104 left is an area not demised to the premise and the top is 106-108
Cromer Street left of 104 area retained by the defendant’s. Left 106-8 is the
spaceshift premise. Let is the ground floor and basement on a lease commencing
8th April 2004 for 2 years and further a lease dated 17th
March 2005 until April 2014.
The defendant sought to forfeit entrance by peaceable
re-entry on 29th Oct 2008.
JF Comment:
There is no explanation as to why and on what grounds. However it is noted that
the correct term ‘sought to forfeit’ is used, since the claimants have always
contented this was illegal, no legal forfeiture occurred hence they contend
although being often pushed to do so there is no need to apply for relief. Instead
the claimants went to the high court and obtained two injunctions to re-enter with
the proviso for quiet enjoyment in that the landlord to fix the issues that
were currently rendering them incapable to trade and subject to all the issues
of disrepair to be dealt with at trial. The (as this was not stated) landlord
entered on the ground of non-payment of rent which the claimants believed not
only was not owed and had anyway to the date of entry and beyond that been paid
(disputed by the landlord as they say they lost the cheque paid by the
claimants so then the claimants paid on-line and delivered evidence of payment
to avoid the second break and entry, which still took place) so constituted
trespass and unlawful breaking and entering twice not withstanding that the
cessor of rent clause (6iii) should have been in operation as stated by the
claimants solicitors (shown to the courts) before both break ins and further
that there where in the past countless issues of disrepair that had delayed
payment of rent (so lease clause for non-payment could not be invoked) on many
occasions until the issues were resolved so there were historic examples
of how the said current dispute in
Oct 2008 and subsequent issue of a section 25 notice and threat to double the
rent constituted harassment added with breaking and entering were over zealous
the actions and further that the claimants believe they were actions to conceal
the breaching of building regulations and or further evidence of disrepair. It
was stated at the hearing of 14th Nov 2008 by Justice Clarke that the
claimants had always paid the rent as a gesture of goodwill despite the claim
by them that the landlord was holding £31,292 (they claimed owed due to the
cessor of rent clause 6iii in the leases when they building was not in use)
representing part of £59,500 paid by them in trust (and partly to avoid any
lawful actionable eviction) until outstanding issues of repair had been
resolved with the landlords being that they were indemnified by their insured
so they should make a claim under that clause with which they were covenanted
to do so in terms of the lease for repairing obligations to the building and
all liability under clause 7(ii).
HHJ Cowell: There was a court ex party hearing on 4th
Nov before Justice Clarke and on the 14th Nov 2008, for the
claimants to remain and further the claimants should specify the nature of
claims, which as such amounted to a counter claim, which would indicate no
rent.
JF Comments: No
mention of two high court injunctions and that it was at the claimant’s request
that the full case of ‘disrepair’ on numerous issues be brought to the Central
London County Court
HHJ Cowell: On 4th Nov 2008 part of the
claimant’s particulars seemed very difficult to obtain what the causes of
action were.
No mention of
an order by HHJ Cowell suggesting that the causes of action were better
particularised because of a complaint by the defendants that this be done (the
claimants had enlisted the help of a lawyer friend Ms Woods to date a
specialist in immigration only, to help particularise their complaints to save
cost they could not afford and to be able to proceed with the case not being
thrown out on these grounds at an early stage). It was then and only then that
the claimants already put to undue expense were forced to pay for specialist
counsels assistance to satisfy the courts. In a judgment that HHJ Cowell
himself described as surreal the better and professionally clearer particulars
were not accepted and they were dismissed. The claimants at times do plead for
example in the new particulars, derogation from grant, harassment contrary to
section 1 of the protection from harassment act 1997, by virtue of section 3 of
the said act entitling the Claimants to civil remedy in respect of the
harassment including damages, as well as various other relevant causes of
action quiet enjoyment (which was allowed but too was in the originals),
nuisance, expressed terms in the leases. They also state a breach of the
‘cessor of rent’ clause 6(iii) with the single joint expert having further
assessed by that point the amount owed as £45,365.00 back to the Claimants by
the landlord. Further and/or in the alternative, by virtue of sub-clause
5(12)(c) of the leases, there is an implied term that the Defendant had a ‘duty’
to examine decorate repair and rebuild the structure of the demised premises.
Further, pursuant to section 4 of the Defective Premises Act 1972, such implied
term places the landlord under an obligation to the tenant for that description
of maintenance or repair of the premises. Further in breach of the said
expressed term for quiet enjoyment and/or the said implied term the Defendant
failed to keep safe the fire escape areas and finally the Claimants asked for
an order that the Defendants take all steps to prevent further water
penetration, to remedy the damage that remains to be repaired. For the
defendants to install an adequate number of airbricks to ventilate (as planning
cannot be obtained by the tenant) and to remedy such damage as remains to repair.
The claimants
did all the above at a total cost of £22,000 for counsel. This has been
overlooked by HHJ Cowell in his final judgment of the 9th Sept 2010
and no real reference was made to this within the bundles made up by the
Defendants solicitors for which only one copy was given to the Claimants on the
day before trial with no time to assess any missing data of which there was a
substainsial amount in the form of 19 bundles and no time to familiarise
themselves with the order which had been changed from the original bundles in
which so much had also been duplicated unnecessarily and as the judge became
aware vital parts were missing
too, including evidence that the landlord has threatened to sue their insured
and their insured threatened them to back down. HHJ Cowell stated at the time
25th March 2010 that the more professionally particularised causes of action by
specialist lawyer Vikram Sachdiva of 39 Essex were not the ‘relevant ones’ (causes) anyway and so it was that our
newer and costly particulars were very early on in the case thrown out again
the subject of why we feel we did not have a fail trial and were nearly very
well costed out or thrown out if we did not act on advice by the courts. Judge
Cowell said by way of justification at the time that he ‘now understood the
case better and that all leaks were outside of the building and out of our
control’. His honour ruled to keep the original particulars as he now
understood the claimants particulars, which are now again the subject of strong
criticism, one could say, ‘you can’t have it both ways’ with justification
because ‘no causes of action’ with this background properly stated leaves a lot
to de desired in terms of fairness. This gives rise to it being a proper fact
that the issues are then not dealt with. The previous causes of action need to
be analysed to check whether this first Judgment was either harsh and/or
whether we have been mislead and that our original particulars of claim should
not back then have been allowed to proceed wasting our time and money to
proceed with particulars that would later be ruled as not good enough. We feel
we assisted the court and the other side, which took a lot of time and money
and were dismayed since this was done by us on the judge’s advice/order. We were
also ordered to pay the other sides costs regardless of the outcome for wasting
their time. This exercise amounted to an estimated further cost to us the Claimant
of about £42,000 in total (borrowed money as we had lost too much to get
stopped in getting justice now) in being helpful to the courts, when in the end
the courts preferred the original particulars which only cost us a few hundred
pounds, yet would use them effectively against us in this judgement.
HHJ Cowell
did however allow our ‘schedules’ in the amended particulars of claim, which
are a coherent table of all the incidences, dates reported, dates repaired,
description of damage and date resolved by the defendant. This Judge Cowell
stated was very helpful and it was also closer to what HHJ Clarke had ordered
on the 14th Nov 2008 too rather than a list of events as HHJ Cowell
put it, which the claimants felt important to the sequence of events that lead
to the harassment and unlawful eviction to save a claim and cause exposure for
the large scale, well known and politically and judicially connected social
landlord and all those associated with this claim. A recent judgement although
not relevant to this claimant but may explain such a costly defence had
provided for that this was indeed a public body and therefore open to Judicial
review with larger consequences for its funding and existence and public
reputation. We say this because there are legalities involved too.
There was one
more counsel involved Mr Marc Beaumont who charged £10,000 and was double
booked and ill prepared on the day he appeared for us. We asked that a cause of
action be ‘Fraud’ which was suggested to HHJ Cowell who said it was fraught
with difficulties so again that was left out.
Finally three
extra amendments were also allowed they are:
The Claimants’ business plan was:
(a) to
use 104 as an art gallery
(b) to
use 106 as a multifunctional space available for hire
(c) to
establish an independent Youth Parliament economy
(d) to
develop a business model with Spaceshift which could be franchised by young
people throughout the UK
3(A) There were express terms of both leases that the
Claimants should have quiet enjoyment of the 104 and
106 as against the landlord and all persons claiming title through the
landlord.
3(B) The Claimants at all material times operated the
businesses of an art gallery (“Scarlet Maguire”) and multifunctional space
available for hire (“Spaceshift”) from 104 and 106.
HHJ Cowell: A broad outline:
Insurers to pay; -
April 2004 Glass Bricks Pavement let water through. Best to
understand this look at G1.71 in fact shows repairs with gap at the edge of the
paving, which let water in.
We disagreed
as in our ‘schedules’ it is in fact stated that ‘wear and tear’ of the asphalt
sealant on the pavement was NOT insured as stated by us in the trial and is
proven in the insurance documents. The wording ‘edge’ of the pavement by HHJ
Cowell is ‘misleading’ and fits the landlord’s defence in that the defendants
made an (bogus) insurance claim that BT lifted the pavement in order to cover
this as an insurance job on the first occasion it leaked (April 2004 claim made
in Nov 2004) and could not get cover on any other further occasion it leaked as
the landlord was not indemnified for gradual ‘wear and tear’ of a public
pavement. We believe the defendant lied about this to get the repair covered by
the insurers after seven months delay when they accepted no liability and where
they claimed and maintained even throughout the hearing that they did not own
this pavement. It was proved by the claimant and ruled as such in this
judgement that they did in fact own the pavement and they did not demise it to
the claimants.
It can been
seen and needs to be stated that the broken sealant was across the pavement and
not just around the edges as can be seen clearly in the said exhibit.
HHJ Cowell: Sept 2004. Repairs to ‘gaps’ were done by
Kingsbury Company, which originally inserted the glass bricks and dealt with.
JF Comments: There
is no mention of the claimants assertion throughout trial and is as seen in
number 7 Of their particulars that it was only after much denial from the
defendants and protracted efforts by the claimants to find out who was
responsible and therefore liable for fixing the pavement in what amounts to a
‘very expensive’ repair (they couldn’t afford) which was not on the claimants
premises but affecting them severely that it was the claimants (and never the
landlord) who tried to mitigate their loss and to attempt to find out how to
get the repair done at the cost of mortgaging one of the Claimants houses
rather than go out of business owing £30,000 in small loans as setting up
capital expenditure. The claimants as seen in Jo Gavin’s (Flores) witness
statement got a quote from ‘Luxcrete’ the name on the glass brick area of the
pavement of £20,000. Despite this extortionate quote the claimants had already
put too much money into the refurbishment as well as bills, rent and business
rates so they made a decision (with the advice of professional friends who thought
the place was a goldmine and we should not lose our capital at this early
stage) it would be better to pay and argue about it later for the sake of their
business. This is again similar to the claimant’s attitude when paying £3,500
for the flooded ceiling to be replaced. It was stated throughout the case that
when ‘Luxcrete’ then told Ms Gavin that they personally did not do the sealing
of the asphalt they had just laid the structural part (sealing is a job
involving a large lorry of burning asphalt and five professional builders) but
would find for us the claimants the company who did the original job as they
would be specialised and more local, it was only then that the name Kingsbury
Construction was given to the claimants by Luxcrete, the claimants realised
immediately was the defendants contractor who had converted the entire building
as seen on a plaque on the building for the ‘Kingsbury Construction’
refurbishment 1999 recently completed with public funds. The defendant through
Jaqui Greene then immediately ‘admitted liability’ which they had tried to
conceal and the job was then done on instruction from the landlord in the next
two days by the landlord’s contractor Kingsbury and paid for by the assisted by
the BT story (bogus) insurance claim.
HHJ Cowell: 20th Jan 2006 – Insurances paid £150
excess £100 briefly described as rainwater ingress, D3 75.
This issue
which is the same pavement as above was not and still is not an insured risk it
involves planned bi-annual maintenance by the landlord as it would breach the
lease that ‘we are to be protected from the elements’ (much like a roof) as
proved at trial. There is no mention of delays here or interestingly what exactly
this payment refers to, nor as claimed in the Claimants particulars that led to
trial no mention that the landlord ‘failed to effect insurance claims’ except
for this tardy claim very much later on as complained by us as a cause of
action for damages for breach of quiet enjoyment that it would seem is now
completely overlooked as if it is just a mere fact without delay.
HHJ Cowell: The second matter this was in Sept 2004 – Waste
stack sewage from the flats above entering to the rear wall demised at 104
leaked/damaged the wall with odour sewage permeates.
JF Comments: HHJ
Cowell is stating it was Sept 2004 as claimed by us after looking at the
evidence disputed by 5 months by the Defendants who said the repair took just a
few days in Feb 2005.
HHJ Cowell: Jan/Feb 2005 the defendant’s contractor replaced
the rear wall.
The leak was stopped on the 31st Jan 2005 and
replacements later.
Insurers paid £100- £150 somewhat misleading which is
immaterial 27th April 2004.
JF Comments:
Please clarify this point, as it is important. The leak did not occur from
April 2004. However, there was another leak in April 2004 in the same location,
where the wall had to be replaced, which was dealt with far quicker therefore
no complaint was not made by the Claimants nor forms any part of this trial.
Why then mention the insurance paid for something at a later date that maybe
they did not. Did they ever pay for this repair or did they even know about it,
this is not clear.
HHJ Cowell: No sooner had that leak been dealt with then
another occurred on the 7th Feb 2005 with a small drop in the
basement bathroom from the waste stack, which passed down very close to the
rear wall. This leak was stopped on 26th April but we’ll hear much
more about then in due course.
JF Comments: No
mention of which premises as it was the shop next door at 106 or the fact that
the leak was of imminent health and safety danger as was foul waste excrement
clearly showing and was stopped again with a delay (a breach of an expressed
obligation for quiet enjoyment and hazardous waste) of two and half months.
Repairs to put back the new walls were done much later leaving exposed sewage
pipes visible.
HHJ Cowell: Insurers paid nothing in relation to that but
this was the 3rd matter I dealt.
Our case
states the insurers still did not know as the insurance was not triggered with
speed an expressed obligation in the leases to insure and later we fixed the
wall as the Defendants were too slow to do so and we were paid by the insurance
later so above is incorrect.
HHJ Cowell: 25th June 2005 – Leak inundated the
gallery one week before an exhibition. 14th Oct 2005- Cost after
£100, eventually paid direct as were all to the claimants.
JF Comments:
Major flooding from ceiling overnight so the description of leak really not
accurate. The claimants paid for the ceiling replacement not merited or mentioned.
Anything eventually paid was because the Claimants demanded it to be paid back
by getting in touch with the insurers agent directly and made a lengthy
complaint regarding business interruption save that the landlord may have never
effected a claim or told their insured but for our letter to the landlord
asking for compensation of £10,000 in total to be put back to the position we
would have been had these delays not happened therefore the material damage
claim was eventually put to the insurance and they paid material damage but
then investigated liability and said that the landlord failed to mitigate its
own losses and were therefore liable and/or had breached the terms of their own
insurance so would not be indemnified to pay us through the landlord to get
compensation as was normally covered by the insurance under the property owner
liability POL therefore the landlord was breaching the leases to of clause
7(ii) and quiet enjoyment and nuisance and building regulations and health and
safety environmental health and not acting with speed to mitigate losses for
which the claimants were entitled under the insurance to business interruption
as it was a building issue not a contents one. It is expressed in the lease
that we cannot cover the building separately with insurance cover. So us not
getting covered were in fact due to the landlord’s failures solely.
HHJ Cowell: 20th June 2006 - £3141.65p other sum
£3,441.65p, which was sent by the insurer in the form of a cheque to the
claimants.
JF Comments: This
was exactly the borrowed money that had been paid out by the claimants to
builders to fix the premises to mitigate further losses as history had shown
the landlord would fail to repair making the claimants go out of business
waiting.
HHJ Cowell: In view of the considerable arguments and many
authorities referred to by Ms Bhaloo to determine what was demised to the
claimants and what was: -
JF Comments:
Unequal footing with claimants not legally trained in understanding of the
authorities but common sense did prevail despite the length of the argument and
the advantages to the landlord in terms of their QC paid for by the ‘building
insurers of the claimants and the landlord’, (a commercial decision we suspect
to save a now larger claim, re-insurance, conflict of interest etc). The demise
was not the pavement as was argued by the landlords QC.
HHJ Cowell: Leases both are similar
Lease A 340 – 17th March 2005 106-8 term was 7th
April £9,000 annual.
Demised premises are defined clause 1 sub clause 2 – Expression;
Internal plaster, exterior and interior plaster.
JF Flores: All
expressed so none can be implied
HHJ Cowell: All non load-bearing walls – boards served
JF Comments: Very
important no structural walls
HHJ Cowell: Conduits – public systems
I’ve read that because the question is are the pavements
included in the demise.
In my judgement not part not mentioned, only coverings of
ceiling demised, clause designed to demise as little as possible: Conclusion on
that!
JF Comments: Very
important point
HHJ Cowell: Importance of point – duty of repairing demised
the rest to the claimants.
Under lease – No duty to repair gaps in pavement lights –
not to say anyone does extent of duty defendants do but we’ll come to that.
JF Comments: It
is their pavement which leaks into us so no Caveat Emptor as an expressed
obligation in the lease is to be protected from the elements i.e. rainwater
stated in our final submission on liability and legal argument, admittedly the
Judge did not read.
HHJ Cowell: It hardly needs saying the stack is not demised.
The defendants had a right to enter for purpose of
repairing, lease enables or empowers – Also repair retained premises.
Plans one could be forgiven for concluding 106-8 where as
ground floor is not in (availability?)
JF Comments:
Need notes from other side, we have read that they have to provide us with them
as law since we are claimants in person but as per usual in this case the
courts are trying to put us to more expense getting costly and time consuming
transcripts and the other side are saying nothing when they know they have a
duty to provide. The whole thing seemed tied up between them and we feel
throughout very much treated as non-legal so therefore it is harder to argue
even what we know to be correct making us easer to take advantage of, which is
again points of order and lack of fairness in this trial.
HHJ Cowell: Not demised stack / Pavement –
106-8, pipe encased, it couldn’t be seen, in the wall
plaster board casing G1 77-80-81.
The defendant’s retained rights if pipes are on the demised
premises to enter in order to repair it. Clause 2, A3 page 346.
Tenants covenant: Clause 5.12 c (vi) permits landlord and
certain others to enter to repair-
JF Comments:
However they don’t have to use this unless there is an expressed obligation to
repair (with speed), which there was for the contractors paid for by insurances
to enter.
This is as gooder moment as any to mention the leases:
A3 143 – definitions expression the insured risks, loss of
damage by fire risks etc etc etc
JF Comments:
Throughout this trial the claimants bore in mind the directions of Justice
Clarke to show which insurances covered which risks. Bundles D1, D2, D3 and F1
specifically deal with insurance and what was covered as directed by the high
courts to include. This formed a substantial part of the trial so the use of
the words etc etc etc is belittling the serious issues in exact and appropriate
wording. Which is happening throughout this judgement, leaving points out
completely as if they do not matter.
HHJ Cowell: It is evident that the insurers paid for four
different leaks including escape of water- 343 5 sub-clause 3a – Tenant to pay
landlord due proportion of the premium.
371. 7(2) Covenant by the landlord to insure the premises
against insured risks, convenient speed – subject to lay out and apply rebuild
etc.
JF Flores: Convenient
speed important point and the fact that the defendant had a whole maintenance
team (large scale contractors whose clients include the MOD) at their disposal
that provided for ceiling replacements for example are very relevant.
HHJ Cowell: Number of provisions in fact insurance money
went direct to the claimants.
JF Comments: Yes
as we chased were as the defendant sat back
HHJ Cowell: There is an oddity – 5 (1) Service charge
payments clause 6 below nothing to do with service charges – so no service
charges in this case.
JF Comments:
This has been extensively referred to in our submissions on liability
HHJ Cowell: Clause 5 (6) Para 6 pages A3 356 – Covenant by
claimants to repair and every part thereof:
A3 – 69 – Cessor of rent clause stress unfit for occupation
of use. Suspended –fit for occupation.
JF Comments: Why
stress but not justify? This point is worth the rent taken while we could NOT
use the building. This is not a judgement we can either understand or has been
explained with any reason and since it is the point of the whole reason it went
to court needs some form of understandable Judgement needs to be put in place.
HHJ Cowell: In fact as I shall say now: There was not an
occasion when the premises were not ‘wholly’ and therefore that clause did not
come into operation. Odd fair proportion. There it is-
JF Comments:
Nothing odd about a fair proportion it is our building insurers too as we pay a
part. This is not judged or justified as to why it was not seen as unfit for
purpose by his honour in what amounts to 5000 days of disrepair.
HHJ Cowell: For this judgment is divided into chapters:
focusing on causes of action. The
claimants are seeking to rely on covenants implied on the landlord to repair
the demised unless statute provide to repair Landlords and Tenants Act 1985 –
JF Comments: No
not true and HHJ Cowell had not read our submissions on liability making
‘expressed terms’ apply, which are never mentioned once in this judgment. Nor is
the fact that our evidence was asked to be put into an email as QC Ms Bhaloo
acting for the defendant was allowed to keep (under constant protest by Ms
Flores to the Judge) Jo Flores in the witness box very unfairly for four days
making the trial of 10 days run out of time and it was not extended to let our
evidence be aired in the court of law which can hardly be considered to be fair
especially when now HHJ Cowell is using terms that are completely inaccurate re
our causes of action being implied when clearly they were not as implied is as
is very well known is very difficult to argue and would suggest that the terms
were left out which they clearly were not. Insurance covered all repairs and
neither party had to repair. Speed is the key, which is expressed. The pavement
the key is the ‘element’, which is expressed. The fire exits are building
regulations. The electricity cupboard is nuisance and the key is ‘notice’. The
air or lack of is not caveat emptor it is deceit and continues to be for a new
tenant as advertised and it is a breach of building regulations in a building
converted by less than 7 years in 2004, the contract is void from the start and
all losses stem from that cause. Hazardous substances are a matter for building
regulations too as clearly they burst all the time. So this judgement is
surreal.
HHJ Cowell: Skeleton argument terms of lease and true
construction, implied obligations on lessor’s part.
Exceptionally – Implied exterior – maybe Barrell Nova or 1
all England reports 151, correlative obligations 357 a b demands it.
Similarly a lessor is not bound the insurance does owe
duties – justice …… in the case of Vorell v’s Security Archives 60 – 258-
JF Comments: This
is not an insurance case (although the FOS is investigating AXA’s ‘commercial
decision’ and partisan legal cover in backing the landlord and RSA’s actions
through Anna Norrie of Plexus Law as well as other issues of concern re the
satellite dispute between the two insurers) or we would be suing them, they are
effectively a third party of the defendant. The defendant did, as time and time
again submitted, breach the terms of his or her own insurance and breached in
doing so the expressed terms of the leases 7(ii) to effect insurances with speed.
So whom ever they used as an excuse it is still an excuse and the initial
cause, which lead to all the other issues. Had they not breached the terms
then, there would perhaps have been a smoother transaction. The initial cause
is the ‘breach’ of leases.
HHJ Cowell: In this case: Defendants in no way stood in the
way.
JF Comments: They
did they breached the terms directly ‘standing in the way’ of what back then
would have amounted to a small claim which could have been paid had they raised
their hands to POL property owner liability (a cover) instead of a protracted
defence to date of facts or if they had been the ones who put it to their
insured some other bogus story (not suggesting that they should but history
shows that they do that) as they had done before instead of putting in ‘my
worded” claim which clearly was accusing them of being liable ‘(the truth’) as
I suggested to them when I said ‘are you sure you want me to put this to your
insured? They effectively made the claim blaming themselves not me when Tushar
Shar sent off my draft which was only to them, when they could have just paid
to put us back to our original position or used other methods of compensation
by way of rent set off or cessor at the time seeing as they could see they were
clearly responsible. They stood in the way through incompetence, harassment and
fraud and further delays in providing reports from Jaqui Greene and MR UK
through the loss adjusters (In the witness box Mr UK admitting in the end the
loss adjuster wrote Mr UK’s statement himself). Finally us being in touch with
the insured, the Prime Minister, the Housing Ombudsman, The Housing Minister,
the local MP, The local Mayor, the CEO of UKU (our building insurance) Paul
Smith, the press and Alan Harris our professional counterpart and others was
only part of the process of us exposing this and getting justice because we
insisted and still do that we were being treated unfairly and the landlord
could not stop that process. It is not for a Judge to then compliment them by saying
they did nothing to stand in the way when clearly they did everything in their
power to stand in the way and therefore escalated the small claim!
HHJ Cowell: The claimants enlisted the services of Alan
Harris a loss adjuster who had direct communication with the insurers and
agents.
JF Comments: Alan
Harris was a further expense to the claimant once we knew we were being fobbed
off, as the issues dragged on and on with still no acceptance of liability and
Alan said clearly that the insurers did not want to pay because ‘the defendants
breached the terms of their own insurance’ which we would never have known had
we not enlisted his help in what seemed to be us constantly being left in the
dark as to what was going on behind the scenes. The insurers were also as
stated again and again having a dispute as to who would cover the landlord,
which was just leaving us in a position of ‘indifference’ with substantial
interests accruing, for which the landlord was very aware, until the issues
were resolved. However as now
becomes clearer, on the suggestion of Anna Norrie the Lawyer for RSA they then
all teamed up together with the defendant to get rid of us the claimant
(clearly the weaker party) by firstly stating that we had not provided a proper
presentation of claim yet with no indication of what further we should provide and
then in very costly legal action, then with brand new found confidence once
they’d teamed up together putting us to further cost with not legally required
audited accounts and then section 25 notices and failure to effect the floor
claim until the liability claim was sorted out or to put in the ventilation
trying to find clauses that we had to install airbricks ourselves, leaving us
again unable to trade (the then current disaster in these beleaguered
buildings), the landlord further
has no hesitation in breaking into our premises not once but twice
successfully dancing us into the courts incurring more costs in further
harassment hence the court case. With this issue now having taken everything
from us and still drags on and on after 7 years.
HHJ Cowell; Start – concern – causes of action – Duke of
Westminster V’s Guild Lord Millet,
Southwark vs. Mills, A bench
+ two components 25 f.g.
Guild 701 f.g. Lord Justice Slade – Hargrove’s – 1 Kings
bench 172.
Duty of Care, “we have now turn & submission general
principle Hargrove Coburn
& Smith’ Landlords and Tenants; Where the lessor retains- Safe enjoyment
obligation retained not condition to cause damages to tenant.
JF Comments: We
need reasons why Hargrove was not relied upon as the landlord in all of our
case had the retained parts causing damage to the demise which were outside of
our control and upon giving ‘notice’ which is the common theme in Hargrove as
oppose to Guild which is more reliant on the ‘implied’ definition of rights to
enter and repair, definition of demise, easement etc. Clearly as was proved
with the majority of the trial concerned with those facts we gave notice within
days of any incident or immediately when we were aware and we are not looking
for an implied term here in this case. The landlord’s obligations and our own
are clearly expressed in the lease as opposed to implied. Neither party
overlooked the repairing obligations in the leases. We were both satisfied that
all repairs were covered by the building insurance. The expressed covenants
were ‘speed’ and ‘notice’ extremely clearly expressed in 7 (ii) and 5(xxii)
leases.
HHJ Cowell: Rainwater -the defendants failed to clear-,
-duty of care-, Coburn & Smith – similar – defects roof landlord-retained
control-
JF Comments:
No mention of our lease clause that is an ‘expressed’ term that we ‘should be
protected from the elements’, our submissions on liability have not been read
or referred to again here. This case is again not relevant to the contract in
leases of ‘expressed’ terms. It cannot be caveat emptor as firstly it has been
made clear it belongs to the landlord and not us and secondly it acts as a roof
that requires notice to fix if it leaks.
HHJ Cowel: Ryan & Flector – Where he retains Lord
Justice Banks & Sergeant – instances ‘duty’ obligated, obligation ‘duty’
existed: 2 K b 119 / 130/ 134 Woodfall-
Guild ‘duty’ – for short;
Essential point was waste stack pipes & was occupied by
the defendants the fact the defendant is the lessor is incidental as occupier
defendants under a ‘duty’ that nuisance remedy defect without delay.
JF Comments: Without
delay important word and back to lease where they had a major maintenance team
at their disposal
HHJ Cowell: Many cases neighbour: landlord Woodfall: Approve
Justice Slade Gill.
JF Comments:
If HHJ is referring to Woodfall again it does not apply as the landlord built
or converted the building in 1999 so building regulations apply and a ‘Duty of
Care’.
HHJ Cowell: 703-6- Dominant, Serviant, forcing serviant to
repair.
If an exterior has been demised that Barrett Lewnova if
exterior not demised regard – Occupier or neighbouring premises Coburn 7
Smith 355 b/c Barretts case, liability –
crucial feature – Neighbouring Occupiers.
Authorities 701 c/n Gill case Justice Slade – REMAINS- has
this been affected by 2 other cases by Gordon & Celico 1976 – relied –
Implied term – Elaborate Service Charge
JF Comments:
There should have been no physical interference with the Claimants quiet
enjoyment. Again neighbouring or dominant does not apply, as there is an
expressed obligation to not interfere with our quiet enjoyment. The landlord
does not define the use of neighbouring premises as ordinary use if the
premises are as a result of disrepair after having been put on notice repaired
with speed. This constitutes an actionable nuisance and especially with stack
pipes, which omitted foul and hazardous substances, it also falls under several
health and safety clauses, regulations and laws. It was not that they did not
cause the nuisance or did nothing about it once they were put on notice but
that the laws state hazardous substances cannot be left in continuance. Clearly
this also makes either premises at the time these hazardous substances were
being allowed to enter the premises wholly unfit for purpose to the claimants,
triggering the cessor of rent clauses and activating a personal injury claim or
further damages for nuisance.
HHJ Cowell: -Jackson v’s J.H Watson 2008- Para 52 – Defect
faulty construction I was also referred to: - Janet Rogers International LTD
2006 D W H C 174 Chancery- MAINTAIN – COVENANT-
Para 59 – Judgment & Guilds case not even mention and….
Guilds – RELEVANT LAW-
Condsulared – After he know’s – is he liable before he
knows, does he know?
JF Comments: Yes
he knew
Clerke & Lindells Tort 19th Edition 21-42
Footnote. 99 – HARGROVES COBURN & SMITH…
When a Landlord lets a flat to a tenant – proof of
negligence –
-Omitted to clear on notice he will be liable-
JF Comments: Yes
and the Gutter story was just a few days causing consequential damage. Ours
lasted months and damage was ongoing. Also there are foreseeability issues in
our case and the fact that the repairs often reoccurred in the same places. Is
it also good enough as a defence to say that you could not find a pipe leaking
for 4 years as in the electricity cupboard and further that when private
contractors paid for as should have been following the insurance terms in the
lease were brought in the leak was immediately found. Trace and remedy a leak
is an item covered in the insurance policy which is what HHJ Clarke directed us
to state therefore it follows that a leak causing nuisance for 4 years in the
neighbouring property but having an effect on our property in terms of seepage
and smell also fire risk should have been traced far earlier to avoid nuisance,
comply with health and safety and give us quiet enjoyment.
Particulars of claim – No part of any particulars are
sufficient
JF Flores: Again
the particulars were changed and dismissed old particulars said then to be fine
this is now misleading. Once again too the Judge admitted that he did not read
our submissions on liability which pointed to the legality of the situation
more so in terms of our word making legal sense which can be interpreted if
read to apply legally as law cannot be made or referred to as a law unto itself
without these careful words being what sets one law apart form another and
creates up to date precedent which are then relied upon. For want of a better
word the laws applied in this judgement in our case do not strictly apply
therefore our case has not these variables applied and does not therefore fit
the case law applied at all.
HHJ: Failure to allocate particular set of facts bedevilled
this case & made it difficult to try: Judgment that was given before looked
at this case;
JF Comments: Originally
perhaps it did as this is a serial complex case but many costly efforts were
made to then be accurate and simply clear especially in the schedules, which
were accepted as very helpful and easy to understand.
HHJ Cowell: Looked at: Callaghan – Knowledge – Knowledge or
means of knowledge of neighbouring land, may qualify the broad rule: which
appears to indicate is the actual feature and that delay knowing is a breach of
duty-
Many cases – defendant remedied problem, admittedly after
damage suffered. --When gave judgment 25th March on amendments –
obligation that no damage should arise & occur.
If defendants had not remedied the defect the claimants
would have a claim.
JF Comments:
Ventilation at 106 and floor still not remedied at 104. Other cases are the
subject of delays in remedying causing further damage as in Hargrove.
HHJ Cowell: If damage continued.
Defendants were well advised to repair- doesn’t follow:
Crucial matter
– Cause
origin of leak
– Defendant
became aware
– What
did they do
– When
did they take such action
Should the defendants repair sooner this exercised my mind
so much: - Easement
JF Comments:
Easement is if the owner gives you permission to use part of his demise. We
were in title the leaseholder subject to contract of the leases.
HHJ Cowell: Owner dominant repair/Serviant no duty at all
JF Comments: Not
true. It was our ‘duty’ to report or give notice under the expressed terms of
the lease 5 (xxii) so as to mitigate ourselves in term of insurances covering
repairs. If we failed to report we would fail to be covered. The dominant owner
had the same duty under the leases 7(ii) to effect claims but added to that he
was to effect repairs by way of insurance monies laid our or by his own repair
team (his choice depending on the excess) with speed, rebuilding etc.
HHJ Cowell: Pipe if leaks
Casing trespass &
Nuisance
Does knows & fails to remedy
JF Comments:
No he the dominant fails firstly to ‘report’ as is conditional under the
insurance policy and secondly he ‘fails’ to repair as in his choice but choice
or not (which is not under scrutiny) he does firstly fail to report the same
expressed lease obligation as the serviant. Neither have a ‘duty’ to repair but
both have an expressed ‘duty’ to ‘report’. Failure to report is the original
cause!!
HHJ Cowell: Strange if law provided different pipe adjoining
leaks onto neighbouring land & leaked into it
Damage: liability two different cases determined by same.
GULID CASE - LAW -
Footnote: Great deal of concern:
- Not
lawyers- referred by them, great sense of grievance on their part – did not
assist me determining the law.
- Early
stage – 3 large bundles of doc’s prepared by the claimants in an attempt to
save cost C1, C2, C3 – more documents then were produced by the defendants and
the claimants. A number of documents then were unfortunately reproduced D1, D2,
etc – having recourse to jump from one bundle to another.
JF
Comment:
The
bundles were rearranged too and not given to the claimants until the day before
trial leaving Ms Flores flummoxed as to where the exhibits were causing delay
and finding that some were missing more worryingly.
HHJ Cowell:
Footnote: Duplication either B2 exhibits concerns by spoke
for themselves, unnecessary costly exercise, suspicion not dispelled by that
the solicitors had prepared – what if anything the witnesses should add in what
he did or saw – not from documents.
JF Comments:
This last part about witnesses refers to the fact that solicitors also wrote
the witnesses statements to concur with their case put forward, clearly
directing the case and not using witness statements as evidence to the point
where witnesses would have to effectively rehearse the story and had no real
recollection of events since they were made to be puppets to the defence story.
Hence the witnesses when questioned by Ms Flores often tripped up with the
truth rather than the prepared statements.
HHJ Cowell: For example; Para 4 witness statement Jim Gorman
JG-54 B2 leak to the electricity cupboard – he says this; Ed Coster emailed me:
etc HHJ Cowell reads statement.
- 1st:
Exhibits email
- 2nd:
Perfectly proper – feature, helpful
- 3rd:
Intended as helpful – but is it – of any consequence?
- 4th:
What in document
- 5th:
Rises only evidences witnesses can give.
A proper sentence would have been in accordance then I
inspected and found…
Anyone who finds me over critical – drafting of particulars
– perhaps a history of events, with no purpose suffering with purpose blaming
the defendants for them conclude criticism of witness statements prevalent
amongst local authorities-
18th May 2005 B2 – 105-106
Concerns about first three or four events. Stack pipe 104
& 106-8. Emphasis on delay in remedying those things merely mention 12th
August 2005 – she is seeking compensation a minimum of £10,000 from the
defendant-
JF Comments: Always
trying not to fight with this landlord and being respectful, helpful and fair
in asking for exact ‘out of pocket expenses’ so as the landlord was not unduly
enriched with rent and overheads including forced loans continuing to be paid
by the claimants whilst interruption continued.
Referred to D2-375- D2 376-7
Cheque
Reference to detail: 388
One stage August 2005 – quantum of claimant to the insurers
for the fear of putting up the premium. Not making any claim on her insurance –
not a criticism in any way. Jan 2006 – claimants made further claims.
JF Comments: It's
a building claim that we are insured for with the defendant through AXA and are
forbidden as set out in the lease to get our own building insurance. A claim on
contents and public liability insurance is not relevant to a building issue.
HHJ Cowell: I will have at hand: Particulars of claim:
Early stage – Schedule prepared with assistance.
JF Comments: Exactly
so it did not bedevil the case as now used and stated here that it was prepared
at an early stage.
HHJ Cowell: A20, A3, paragraph 4, 5 & 6 of the
particulars of claim disclose no cause of action: amendments by adding
paragraph 3 – though it in itself was not in dispute.
JF Comments:
It is relevant to give a historical reference of events. A letter was sent to
the defendant prior to grant expressly asking that the new premises comply with
the ‘standards’ of the other shops. Since Ms Gavin (Flores) has previously
suffered business interruption at the defendant’s hands at 104, which she had
had for 4 years, she knew how the landlord could be stubborn and unhelpful. She
had resolved the previous issues by way of exposing them on a national TV.
Programme prompting the landlord to act and was compensated effectively with
this approach. This ‘standard’ letter send prior to grant was one of three
essential documents Ms Gavin used in this court case as she stated at the
opening of trial she would.
To make
reference in paragraphs 3. 4. 5. 6. In the particulars of claim as having no
cause of action with regards to the floor, the shutters, the ventilation and
the usage terms of the new space at 106 as a social enterprise available for
hire, is not looking at Particulars vi and vii in terms of the claimants
intentions for the demise, iv in terms of remedial action to reinstate a floor,
security shutters and ventilation (referring to the standards letter prior to
grant) all of which could be claimed for under the insurance as ‘theft’ since
monies had been laid out by the public purse to the previous tenant for these
‘standard’ fixtures the same as the other shops and to be expected as standard.
Structural remedy was too covered under the HAPM Housing Association Property
Management insurance for structural defects in construction, in that no
airbricks had been put in therefore there no air whatsoever, which should not
have been a problem in remedy since the defendant held as is legally required
in a new construction of less than 7 years (but it is actually cover for 30
years) and as covered it is easy to simply claim for and is a must since
building regulation were actively being breached. Ms Flores states this at the opening of trial as her second
of three documents relied upon, as she had asked for ventilation to be claimed
for very early on in the tenancy.
HHJ Cowell: Remedy of derogation from grant – none of those
matters arises –
JF Comments: In
our submissions they do derogate from grant and in our amendment refused we put
this, as a cause of action, as the property is not A3 as does not comply with
the planning for A3, which would include ventilation. All this is in our
submissions on liability but as we know was not read or referred to. So the
matter does arise but has been dismissed early on.
HHJ Cowell: Lord Millet & Southwark & mills
Bases stack pipe 104 – 15 – 19 Particulars of claim –
Paragraph 50 (13) (14)
Defendant dealt with this 20, 24 schedule 21 – hint what
cause of action
JF Comments: Hint
not explained what hint in which cause of action and how is it relevant?
Paragraph 50 is very clear in stating causes of action. Breaches of the lease
agreements, negligence, unlawful breaches of statutory duty, nuisance,
harassment, unlawful eviction and/or unlawful trespass and by reason of it the
Claimants have suffered immense losses and damage, damage to reputation, loss
of goodwill, depression, distress, stress, inconvenience and injury to
feelings.
HHJ Cowell: Paragraph 5 (i) (b) in breach of the said leases
but word ‘negligence’ is referred – not is expressed!!!
JF Comments:
Particulars of Claim PARTICULARS (i) quote: ‘The defendants have breached their
express obligations under both leases in that they have prevented the
Claimants’ quiet enjoyment of the two premises. How then is that not expressed
as expressed?
HHJ Cowell: Leak stopped 31st Jan 2005, early
Feb, casing.
G1-Tab page 3 – location stack shows
Point made by the defendant – report – ascertain its source
–
JF Comments: Which
point? This is very flimsy for a judgment. What also is the claimants point?
Claimant’s case rarely mentioned except maybe once in a derogatory way about us
always seeking to complain using ‘implied obligations’, which is inaccurate in
itself.
Claimants B2 – 105 complain – months of suffering – was
reasonable action taken, should cause of leak discovered earlier.
JF Comments:
Incompetence is not a defence professional contractors are paid for by
insurances and are their to give the leases its proper business efficacy. If we
were to rely on bob the builder we would have put him in the lease and not
insured. This is not an old fashioned case it is a modern case that simply
requires a landlord to inform an insurance company the minute an accident or
incident with a building occurs much like with car insurance or any other
insurance cover. It is within the terms of the policy and it is expressed in
the leases. There is no need to ponder some old law that is of no modern
relevance about easements, repairing obligations, duties, neighbouring
occupiers or the like. The landlord simply failed to inform their insurers end
of!
HHJ Cowell: Job card issued by B2, 184 27th April
04’ leak affected leak below, Mr UK.
5th May 2004 – Flat 3 Cromer House where leak
originated B2 187
12th May 2004 – Due B2 187 to be.
Repair – wall tiling 14th Oct 2004 tiling would
cure it.
Mr UK Jan 2005 – Attended 24th Jan – pinhole –
31st Jan – looked at stack pipe after
ascertaining no leak from flat 3 – before leak
Repaired 7ft rubber plant during artist A.R.s show, should
not been seen – pinhole promptly remedied by the defendants with jubilee clips
after casing removed
Jan – 3rd Feb 2005 –
One item in insurance claim-
Claimants ‘crack discovered’ 24th Jan – remained
3rd Feb fixed –
Guilds defendants not in breach of ‘duty’ flat above
bonafide source lay there.
JF Comments:
As proven, jubilee clips etc the cracked pipe was on the claimant’s premises so
the source lay there.
HHJ Cowell: Fortunately the defendants had insured against
physical damage –
JF Comments:
Yes so did the Claimants fortunately. This is very pro-landlord wording.
HHJ Cowell: 106-8 – Particulars of claim – 20-23 – Dates are
arie paragraph 20 20th July – but 7th Feb that year –
JF Comments:
At the end of January 2005 the claimants claimed tat the drop of water was
found on the ceiling this simply fell in line with Ms Gavin’s memory at the
time that the two leaks one at 104 and one at 106 happened one after the other.
It was established in the case that the claimants reported the second leak at
106 on the 7th Feb and that was agreed with fell to the telephone
record evidence. The stating that the repairs were not carried out in full is
correctly stated as July when the wall was put back by the claimants after
waiting for the defendants who failed to put the wall back. It was however
established again with repair record evidence that the leak itself of hazardous
waste in the form of excrement was stopped at the end of April.
HHJ Cowell: Para (50), (15), (16) – Defendants (25-27)
Schedule 22
Part of insurers claim – G1 35/36
Feb 2005 – Claimants did works in the bathroom new boiler –
first drop of water 7th Feb, diary entries 7th, 8th,
14th –
Visit 28th Feb Mr UK
Works orders flat above
Doesn’t matter flats above works
or not the trouble 29th March reported again resulted in visit by Mr
UK 1st April – 4th April, Easter weekend before that,
Damp on wall Mr UK anxious to ascertain weather the leak had come from above –
Optimistic belief if staining spread
or decreased –
JF
Comments: How can Mr UK’s anxiety be implied how about he was busy drinking
tea, could that be implied equally?
HHJ Cowell: Result further
complaints by the claimants he decided to issue a works order on 2nd
April – 11th April that he did on 6th April – Removal of
duct casing & replacement C1 629 C1 170.
15th April 2008 –
Claimants took photo’s G1 77 – Brown staining on duct etc G1 80-81 – Pencil
mark.
Benefit of hindsight he had a
naive belief that the stain would dry out and would not spread –
JF
Comments: Naïve look up the word in a dictionary we are talking about well-paid
professional surveyors here again very pro-landlord use of wording. To paint
over shit is ridiculous in the extreme! We have no faith in this judgment it is
perverse in its wording.
HHJ Cowell; Carpenter 8th
April – he left
Plumber 11th April – he
left
Order not result in cure
Plasterer arrived – Except Ms
Flores evidence on this; I find 25th April – Ms Flores and the
plumber took off the casing and removed filthy material.
25th/26th/April
– Flood foul material.
26th April quote: ‘One
can see the state of ……’
G1 73/9 82/83
Show by 29th April –
Jubilee Clips
G1 728 – Secured
26th April 2005 –
reporting on case
D1 / 130 – Course of that email
Reference ‘last week there was a
really bad smell’
JF
Comments: No reference made to the fact Ms Flores was contacting these
contractors directly and also catching them in the street and going out of her
mind chasing anyone who could fix the problem. Such was the distress with this
problem that she even assisted a hesitant contractor in taking the wall down
which was so sodden they took it down by hand.
HHJ Cowell: 20th Feb
2006 – Loss adjuster – C1 337/8
Apparent from that email that
smell was really bad before visit to Mr UK & pencil markings which to my
mind makes it clear there was a very bad smell –
Paragraph … “really bad smell”
Description of visit refers to
pencil markings-
“The smell was really dreadful”
phone calls to Mr UK 6th April when her …
…..ordered ….. – 8th
& 11th April – didn’t stay.
Ms Flores oral evidence – casing
removed 27th April not before.
Mr UK last visited 8th
April, cure 26th April, renovations very much later –
As this was an insurance matter
…..
Leo installed central heating
system.
2nd April / 30th
May –
JF
Comments: What are these dates Leo did the central heating over two weekends and
one was a bank holiday. The ceiling in big office was installed as there was
not one ever but this was not a health and safety issue like the shit! The ceiling
was a designer improvement to look like the base of a spaceship with specialist
lighting for an executive boardroom style meeting room as advertised a large
meeting room.
HHJ Cowell: Chronology: Letter of
claimant 18th May 2005 – some decoration of basement done June
already mention 2nd August 2005 £10,000.
JF
Comments: £10,000 offer made to put us back on track with rent paid, bills,
business rates and to save the landlord from what turned out to be deemed as
failures on their part by their own insurers. Claims made then were accurate
and no amount of friendliness helped these bully’s and con merchants even when
we were ‘a good tenant’ as stated in Chris Natt’s the commercial Manager’s
evidence and Jaqui Greenes email where she implores repairs to act quickly for
this commercial tenant ‘who is putting thousands of pounds worth of
improvements into our buildings’.
HHJ Cowell: Emails as to wisdom of
making a claim; D1 154/5 – D1 185/7 – Estimate
JF
Comments: From the claimants point of view and not explained by his honour as
such as to how many times and right up until the end and even with a great loss
adjuster Alan Harris and expensive mediation through Lynne Brooke of Veale
Wansborough and Matt Kelly of 39 Essex did the claimants so often attempt to
settle and not fight with the landlord. This is a very valid point as the claim
could have been reduced if we all spoke about it. When we did eventually a few
days before trial the landlords only wanted to save the cost of the days in
court as reflected in their offer being directed on the phone by the insured.
HHJ Cowell; Eventually polish
builders did work ground floor.
JF
Comments: Paid for by the claimants.
HHJ Cowell: Oct 2005 – Insurance
paid Jan 2006.
Judgment – Sufficient alerting of
Mr UK
(1)
Only 2 months before 104 stack
(2)
Leak flat 1 if ever there was one cured
(3)
Despite evidence that he didn’t smell anything –
sufficient was a smell & photos state of premises 15th April
support evidence there must have been smell even if Mr UK did not smell it.
Jaqui Greene – impressed on Mr UK
urgent!
JF
Comments: Health and safety and no law mentioned by HHJ Cowell on this nor
reference to our submissions.
HHJ Cowell: Pencil – dry out!
Ms Flores it is suggested is
‘Prone to exaggeration’ – prefer Ms Bhaloo on this –
How
dare this assertion be put here! If the defendants had a defence they would not
need to lower themselves to use slander or character assasinasion!! This needs
to be justified, as is slander now from HHJ Cowell too. Its one thing the other
side trying to put down a claimant but to be accepted but a Judge without any justification
seems very odd and uncalled for. Is his honour suggesting our very solid
submissions or case is exaggerated with reams of documentary evidence and
photographs? Have they been read? This is a joke! Twenty-two months and
representing ourselves in person should be praised for its bravery and sheer
skill, which would have been better, placed doing our normal jobs, fighting for
children’s rights and running business. This case has its own merits and stands
alone without slanderous allegations as to the state of Ms Flores who is
extremely angry and stressed with justification, this was covered in our
submission but has not been referred to. Ms Flores has acted reasonably at all
times albeit with absolute anger stating her true losses. At a mere 3 bookings
a week at £500 each that is not exaggerated The word is not used by accident
either as the ‘only way’ the defendants can have their costs met by the
insurers, as it is in the small print of their policy, is if one exaggerated a
claim. I don’t think it is co-incidence that this was said in Judgement and
that numerous references to the insurers not being liable are also made when
the case was not even against them but they were they payees of it! All loose
end here are sublimely tied for the legalities necessary for the benefit of all
but the claimant but that slander is further salt in the wounds however
necessary it was for them all to use that word and we will rigorously defend
such slander in the court of appeal to have that self serving statement
revoked.
HHJ Cowell: Ms Flores should have
asked about the smell –
Mr UK should have raised an order
renewal of the casing and …..
Had that been done by the end of
that working week a delay of 3 weeks would have been avoided, claimants claim
is good for that 3 weeks.
JF
Comments: Where is the math? 7th Feb to the 29th April?
That is 7 weeks in a hazardous waste repair which should be dealt with within
48 hours.
HHJ Cowell: Difficult to determine:
Means of knowledge was with Mr UK 1st/4th April
Do not find the defendant is not
in breach of duty by the leaking – In my Judgment time that it took –
Information location of stack known to defendant.
No breach of ‘duty’ on insurances
JF
Comments: They failed to effect insurance claims to notify their insured how
then are they not in breach of the leases under the covenant to insure and the
insurance policy, which stated that they breached the terms this is
contradictory to the evidence and states no case law to back up the
contradiction.
Next event: 24th / 27th
– Flood –
-Schedule 22 – 24 –
Insurance Paragraph 32
7 (i) (5) In breach of the leases
negligence –
Sub plot: Floor tiling to floor
damaged to
Particulars 29 – 32 50 (19)
D 3 ? 36
Schedule 24 -26
HHJ Cowell: Flood unforeseeable
accident, Mr UK’s understanding gleaned from others, whether claimant no cause
of action repairs of done very promptly. After insurers paid complaints about
floor –
JF
Comments: How is a foreseeable accident justifying a two years outstanding repair,
which both our landlord and our own surveyors both say is an insurance job that
the claimants proved and was then accepted by the material damage policy now
not being accepted? Again a contradiction to the evidence with no law to say
what has made this decision held.
HHJ Cowell: No liability attached
by defendants & because they persisted to say any more – not to go on
except – 45/53 Ms Bhaloo’s submission…..
JF
Comments: Defendant’s submissions always referred to
(Lunch break from 1.05pm we
arrived back at 2.08pm and Judgment had already commenced in continuation
without us so we don’t know yet what was said…)
HHJ Cowell: June 2008 – Cause of
action….
Reply breach of lease –
Negligence –
Building regulations –
Pavement not demised to the
claimants
Possession and control defendants
Difficult to argue in Guilds case
cannot apply – Having knowledge should repair it-
JF
Comments: As in Hargrove.
HHJ Cowell: In its very nature may
leak, unlike pipe –
If pipe does leak clearly alerts
occupier to repair it –
Degree & smell – jubilee
clips.
But because a tenant could so
readily reach the pavement lights – Tenant could easily mitigate its damage.
JF
Comments: How can it be said that the claimants should touch, never mind fix something
that is on a public path and is not in their control or demise, should we for
example fix the roof as well because we can see it? In Oct 2004 there is no
mention that after exhaustion and mounting debts where now having to mortgage a
fully paid for house by one of the claimants and we did attempt to mitigate all
our losses within our control to continue with our business. So we did make an
attempt. It was only then we found it was the defendant’s contractor who had
installed the pavement and the defendant repaired in two days after repeated
denial of liability. Further at later stages we were forbidden see email Jaqui
Greene to contact Kingsbury directly when the leaking reoccurred. It would
further be then illegal if we employed our own contractors to touch their
pavement and we could be held liable to them for any damages. We did not at any
stage adopt the pavement as our own or the repairing of it as is right and
proper.
HHJ Cowell: Tenant is more aware –
Short answer by defendants –
Caveat Lessee
JF
Comments: Caveat Lessee cannot apply for reasons to do with conversion in 1999
and of the breaching of expressed obligations in the leases to have protection
from the elements including rainwater.
HHJ Cowell: Defect – 8th
April 2004 – 106-8-
Reason I find defect there at time
of grant, claimants say first time it rained – oral evidence satisfied – May
2005 – reported
HHJ
Cowell: This is outrageous it is not a structural ‘defect’ it is a water
ingress. This is a misleading judgment using the defendants very hard pushed stretched
argument of caveat emptor and never putting claimants case forward once in
summing up which is also imbalanced.
HHJ Cowell: Response landlord not
responsible –
1st written evidence
from defendant
15th Oct 2004 125
28th Oct D1 126 – after
she had written those emails – works been done by Kingsbury – works done 1st
Nov 2004 – oral evidence established that date though particulars of claim
suggested Sept emails show after that Ms Flores accepts 1st Nov
2004.
Defendants point about caveat
lessee is correct –
If wrong about that:
The test in Guilds case ‘doubt has
been expressed about the defendants responsibility’ this repair is simple in
comparison to waste pipe.
JF
Comments: It is not a simple repair and can only be carried out by Kingsbury.
It takes 5 professional builders, a lorry full of molten substance and is
undoubtedly expensive. We fore filled our internal repair obligations
extensively see submissions on liability. To now be told we should have filled
the ‘gaps’ in a public pavement demised to the landlord and that if the judge
is wrong then the test is ‘was it simple’ is again misleading, belittling and
down right outrageous. Had we touched their property they could sue us! The same
can be said if we cut into the structure of the building without permission to
install air bricks a subject which to date all requests to repair have been
since 2005 ignored. We are far from stupid to touch what is not ours and is on
a public path or to diamond drill holes into the defendants building without
firstly planning permission, which we cannot obtain, and secondly the right to
do so as it belongs to the landlord.
HHJ Cowell: Claimants remedy
matter later could have paid and paid later – Insurance –
No question under Guilds case –
-Not extraordinary work –
JF
Comments: The following is the next leaking of the same area in 2006.
Oct – attempt to remedy FWA
3rd Oct – useless
material used trodden on brought into space, remedy Kingsbury 16th
Oct
JF
Comments: the guest attending a magazine launch walked the useless material
referred to be bitumen a sticky black molten substance, which damaged our
wooden floor as, into 106 shop. There is no comment here that the leaking was
reported in June 2006 and that a botched repair was made the day before the
sponsored magazine launch. The repair was delayed, foreseeable and the
claimants suffered material damage and loss of reputation.
HHJ Cowell: 3rd Oct G1
40-44-52
G1 70-74- 16th Oct –
B2 151-2 Email 5th
August B2 150 3rd Aug
Claimants repeatedly phoning –
Delay – understood insurance might
pay for this particular matter Jaqui called insurers 7th Aug C4 215
19th August – Thames Water not fault of defendant –
JF
Comments: It was nothing to do with Thames Water. The word ‘might’ is very
interesting here as this was not an insured risk.
Insurance not liable to pay
anything – appears reasonably clear the defendants fixed Guild principle ‘no
culpable delay on part of defendants.
Defendants……………………………….
Claimants could have paid
Kingsbury and argued about who paid –
Defendants not in breach –
liability – Not the defendants –
JF
Comments: Again same problem as two years before and this pavement leaking
reoccurred again another two years later, which just shows it, needs bi-annual
maintenance. Evidence was shown that the previous tenants had the same leaking
in of rainwater from this pavement. If it is that the defendant wanted to
improve by way of conversion the premises by installing a glass ceiling effect
to the basement than rather the same as any roof it is foreseeable that the
sealant will need maintenance.
Electricity room – June 2005 – Nov
2005
Schedule pg 27 also deals with
second……
Jan – May June 08 – Reply 11 (i)
(v) hint of cause of action-
Again no covenant in lease which
assists the claimant but particulars never formulated.
JF
Comments: Submission on liability extremely clear but admittedly clearly not
read by HHJ Cowell. Also xxii in the particulars states the defendant
unlawfully failed to ensure that there were effective fire exits, again this is
also a breach of building regulations and statutory obligations.
HHJ Cowell: Breach of statutory
duty: Typical all allegations made!
JF
Comments: Derogatory to claimant in language used here.
HHJ Cowell: Not demised –
C3 Tab 4 131/4
August 2005
Work was done by Thames Water-
“Did not know where leak came from
– cannot be failing to remedy it”
JF
Comments: How many surveyors and how many years does it take to find a leak on
their own premises? No insurance effected after notice was given. Breaching
expressed terms in the leases to notify insurers as the seepage of leaking pipe
in the electricity cupboard permeated both premises in terms of water and of
smell. The repair took 4 years to find the leaking pipe and stop the water
ingresses. This was only after the insurers were alerted and the defendant
brought in a competent private contractor.
HHJ Cowell: OTHER PROBLEMS
JF
Comments: These are not other problems and should not be lumped together as
such as all the issues are serious or why would we take the time and expense of
court proceeding to add them in.
Paragraph 31 wiring, fire panel,
smoke detectors, security shutters & fire panel.
JF
Comments: The wiring with on spurs and as such was dangerous. To save a claim
on the building insurance the landlord told us we would have to fix the wiring
ourselves to make it safe, which was not true. The smoke detectors are also
covered by insurances, as was the fire panel as these are landlord’s fixtures.
We had other duties under fire precautionary action such as having
fire-fighting equipment again the landlord put us to the expense of fixing,
that which was not ours to fix. The security shutters were as seen on all the
other shops a standard requirement and since we did not them we were very early
on broken into via the window. We had asked for the shutters prior to grant and
although verbally agreed we also have in writing our request in the letter
requesting the lease. The shutters were paid for by the public purse so were
insured.
HHJ Cowell: No airbricks –
JF
Comments: Airbricks were a major issue and were extensively covered in our
submission, which has not been read. Clearly this breaches building regulations
and is derogation from grant of A3, which makes the who claim on 106 a total
constructive loss until 2014, on a ten year lease, never mind any other
problems which can be subsumed apart from harassment.
HHJ Cowell: Defendants improved
fire exit –
HHJ
Cowell is implying that the landlord went out of their way to ‘improve’ the
fire exits and not that this did not comply with building regulations and give
business efficacy where there would be none if it were not in the leases as an
expressed obligation. It is a case of ‘it goes without saying’ that the
premises required a means of escape from fire as the law and building
regulations require. There is no mention of claimant’s case or our submissions
on liability on this either. Improvements are misleading they were not up to
regulation a subject to a lengthy complaints procedure before they were made
safe after many years.
HHJ Cowell: Defendants answer –
caveat lessee
JF
Comments: Building regulations and fire regulations plus lack of business
efficacy cannot be defended by Caveat emptor. In this trial it was exposed that
the entire residential block also has no fire certificate. Perhaps if a death
occurred this would be the point where the landlord would be seen as liable in
negligence.
Ventilation – Airbricks
FAIR!!!!
Is
the word ‘fair’ a judgment and accordingly then to what law is the word ‘fair’ legally applied.
25th July 2010
difficulties…. Mr Hines came on scene C4 292, 8th August 2006-
JF
Comments: No mention that the loss adjuster was bias and wrote the defendants
witness statement as stated by Mr UK. “Difficulties’ falls much more in line
with the ‘commercial decision’ the insurance took to collaborate with the
defendant to save a claim. The solicitors who were also writing the witness
statements as stated by his honour and a total conspiracy from the start to
pervert the course of justice resulting in a miscarriage of justice with a very
one sided and law wise weak and shoddy judgement in its obvious sweeping errors.
Further a conspiracy to stop the claimants now in appealing this Judgment that
is said by all accounts to be highly unusual that we have been asked to provide
the transcripts and more so been given just three weeks to put together
argument without any recourse to funds as everything has been taken from us and
we have been put into nearly half a million pound debt. We may give up at this
stage because of the conspiratorial nature of this behaviour by all the law
people involved but we will attempt to try to be judged fairly having no more
faith that this could ever happen. God give me the strength to change the
things I can change and the wisdom to know the difference. The attempts to stop
us appealing and lack of acknowledgement in stopping the quantum hearing, as
well as a section 25 and the proposal that we needed to be relieved from
forfeiture when it is our case that it was trespass are corrupt and designed to
crush us. By the lunch hour the day after Judgment a green BMW drove onto the
pavement nearly running over two of the neighbours now witnesses and a guy
jumps out saying that our shops were now his shops. Attempts to pass off the
shops as A3 are still happening to date although a full year later both are
still empty.
HHJ Cowell: C4 246
The claimants made a claim for
£280,540 from the defendants & £164,??? From the insurers for delays water
damage, unable to assist…
C4 208 £400,000 – Gordon Ward –
Not provided sufficient evidence –
JF
Comments: Providing more and more evidence with added time delay and cost was
the most genius strategy adopted by Anna Norrie of Plexus Law the RSA insurers.
Anna Norrie is well versed in how to deal with insurance claims as she works
for the biggest insurance agents. Anna Norrie never made the nature of the
exact evidence clear as to what they could further provide that they had not
already. Further time and expenses was then put on the claimants in making them
do £2,000 worth of accounts. This was a two-pronged approach by Anna Norrie, as
seen in ‘satellite dispute’ letter she wrote to the building insurers. Who was
going to pay was Anna Norries concern, UKU building insurers or RSA liability
insurers. Evidence hi-lighted as one of the three documents that Ms Gavin would
rely on, proves this was the new approach adopted and directed by Anna Norrie.
Her next strategy was to beat us down in quantum to attempt to reduce the claim
and all this lets not forget as is most important point was at the beset need
for the landlord to be seen not to be liable to save them and their insured a
claim. Luckily for them all Mr Hall the Single Joint Expert was fantastic for
the job of reducing quantum as he holds a major conflict of interest in that he
is the other sides solicitors firms auditor and his evidence should be struck
out despite the fact we paid £8,500 for it. We did put him on notice as a joint
expert not to attend the Mondays quantum hearing but he did not even replied
and as has a cosy relationship as is obvious with Bircham Dyson Bell bullies.
The QC is understandably giving the Judge what he needs to make decisions and
justify them but to use laws that do not apply and to ride rough shot over our
claims in this judgement leaves a lot to be desired by the courts themselves.
HHJ Cowell: Claimants made threats
–
JF
Comments: Press threats were made but still we have attempted to remain
respectful although we are still at liberty to expose this perhaps because of
its length in a film, not something we relish just an option available still if
justice does not prevail. We can call it “£100 off”!!
HHJ Cowell: C4 164 Plexus Law 27th
Nov 2007
Proper presentation of claim 2008
C4 133
Ultimate point stemming from that-
JF
Comments: That is a bit subliminal as are the RSA lawyer’s exact words,
advantage Anna Norrie ‘tricks’ of the insurance trade executed perfectly!
Chancery in English Law nil… so far.
End Notes……………………..