Sue Ryan
Partner
Article
12
The Court of Appeal has handed down judgment in URS Corporation Limited v BDW Trading Limited [2023] EWCA Civ 772. This is the first Court of Appeal decision relating to claims under the Defective Premises Act 1972 (DPA) since enactment of the Building Safety Act 2022 (BSA) in April 2022.
As noted in our previous insights, the extension of the limitation period under the DPA from six to 30 years (as well as the widening of its scope) is one of the most well-documented and controversial changes brought about by the BSA.
The Court of Appeal decision confirms inter alia that:
We summarise below the background to the case, and the key points arising out of the decision.
The key points decided by the Court of Appeal were as follows.
The Court of Appeal upheld the "entirely conventional and correct" decision of Fraser J at first instance that the losses claimed by BDW were within the scope of URS' duty of care.
URS had argued on appeal that the risk of harm URS were obliged to guard against was the harm to BDW's proprietary interests and/or the risk of BDW being exposed to claims by individual purchasers. Neither risk came to fruition, according to URS, because by the time BDW discovered the defects, they no longer had any proprietary interest in the developments and claims by purchasers were statute-barred.
The Court of Appeal rejected this argument. It held that the relevant risk of harm was that, in breach of the professional's duty, "the design of the buildings would contain structural defects which would have to be subsequently remedied." It was impossible to conclude that the "losses were somehow outside the scope of URS' duty."
The parties had also disagreed as to the date on which the cause of action accrued:
On this basis, URS submitted that at the time when they did owe BDW a full professional duty of care, BDW had suffered no loss – and conversely, when BDW did incur the loss in 2019, they no longer owned the developments and therefore had no entitlement to recover their expenditure.
The Court of Appeal upheld the decision of Fraser J at first instance that BDW's cause of action against URS arose, at the latest, on the date of practical completion of the individual buildings.
Lord Justice Coulson confirmed that, where the design deficiencies did not cause immediate physical damage, the cause of action was "complete" at the point when the "defective and dangerous structural design had been irrevocably incorporated into the buildings as built". The date of the claimant's knowledge was irrelevant.
Section 1(1) of the DPA imposes a duty on those "taking on work for or in connection with the provision of a dwelling" to see that the work is done in a workmanlike or professional manner, with proper materials, and so that the dwelling will be fit for habitation when completed.
URS argued that developers such as BDW were not a "person to whom a duty was owed under the DPA", on the basis that:
The Court rejected these arguments. It held that, as a matter of "simple statutory interpretation", it was clear that BDW were owed a duty by URS, since URS was a "person taking on work for or in connection with the provision of a dwelling".
A duty is owed either:
The buildings in question were provided "to the order of" BDW, who had a contract with URS for the structural engineering design. Therefore, URS owed a duty to BDW under section 1(1)(a).
Further, there was nothing in the DPA which would somehow limit the recipient of the duty to individual purchasers rather than commercial developers. Individual purchasers plainly fell within section 1(1)(b). Section 1(1)(a) would therefore serve no practical purpose if commercial developers were excluded.
Prior to the BSA, the limitation period for claims under section 1 of the DPA was six years from the date of completion. Section 135 of the BSA extends the limitation period retrospectively from six to 30 years for rights accruing before 28 June 2022.
URS argued that section 135 did not apply to parties involved in ongoing court proceedings.
The Court disagreed with this argument. It confirmed that:
With respect to the Contribution Act, the Court confirmed that BDW was entitled to claim a contribution from URS in respect of their liability to the purchasers of the flats, even though no claim by the purchasers had yet been made.
The Court of Appeal judgment in URS v BDW has been highly anticipated, particularly by parties already involved in, or who may be facing or considering bringing building safety / defects claims relating to residential properties.
Of particular interest will be the Court's decision to allow BDW to amend their pleadings to add a claim under section 1 of the DPA, following the enactment of the BSA. Three key takeaways from this decision are that:
In light of the 30 year retrospective extension of the relevant limitation period, such claims may go back as far as 1992. This will of course pose evidentiary issues since in many cases, records from the early 1990s will be non-existent or at the very least difficult to obtain. Whilst URS' associated rights under the Human Rights Act 1998 would remain available, those issues were stated to be a matter for trial.
If you have any questions about the issues raised in this article, please get in touch with Sue Ryan or Daniel Wood.
We are grateful to Simon Hargreaves KC and David Sheard for providing us with their summary of this judgment.
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