The paragraphs R1/103, 104 to which the judge referred are the paragraphs in the first report which I have set out at [30] above.
37 His Honour then said -
"153 That leaves the application of the principles. As the High Court pointed out in Bellgrove, whether work is reasonable in a particular case is a question of fact. Apartments devoted substantial time to showing that the referee's conclusion, that it was not reasonable for the works to be carried out, was incorrect. Again, although it embellished those submissions with the usual phrases, they were in truth no more than an attempt to reargue, or be heard twice on, the whole of its case under this head. I am satisfied that the referee dealt appropriately with the factual issues, and that the conclusion to which he came - that, in the circumstances, it would not be reasonable for the rectification works to be performed - was open to him. Indeed, if I may say so, I think that it was clearly the correct conclusion."
38 In following paragraphs his Honour considered particular matters, saying in summary -
· as an illustration, that the cost of rectification by replacement of skirting boards "is not, in Bellgrove terms, reasonable" (at [156]);
· that some submissions by Apartments concerning diminution in value were not accepted (they need not be described, since there was no reliance on diminution in value on appeal);
· that in particular cases the referee gave other reasons for finding against Apartments; and
· as to a particular item in respect of the mechanical ventilation system, that the referee's finding that if Apartments recovered the cost of rectification it would not spend it to carry out the work but would return it to shareholders "provides an appropriate basis for him to have concluded that performance of those works was not relevantly (for the purposes of the test in Bellgrove) 'reasonable': for the reasons identified by Giles CJ Comm D in Central Coast Leagues Club" (at [169]).
39 His Honour concluded this part of his reasons -
"170 In short, the referee dealt with this question (both generally and in relation to the particular issue of mechanical ventilation) by enquiring whether it was relevantly "reasonable" for the rectification works in question to be carried out. He concluded that it was not. Bellgrove makes it clear that that question is one of fact. Apartments has demonstrated no basis for interfering with the referee's conclusions on this question of fact."
40 Apartments submitted that the referee was in error because he had considered that it was not entitled to damages if it had not carried out the rectification work and did not intend to do so, and that the judge was in error in accepting that flawed approach to assessment of damages and regarding the referee's conclusion as factual conclusions in which he would not intervene. It said as well that the referee had failed to pay regard to evidence material to carrying out the rectification work. Constructions submitted that the referee was not satisfied that Apartments had suffered any loss or damage, or that rectification works were relevantly necessary and reasonable, and that the findings in these respects were factual findings which the judge was entitled to adopt in the exercise of his discretion.
41 Since the judge's decision this Court has considered what may be called the Bellgrove v Eldridge principles in Scott Carver Pty Ltd v SAS Trustee Corporation [2005] NSWCA 462 and Brewarrina Shire Council v Beckhaus Civil Pty Ltd [2006] NSWCA 361. Those cases refer to some further cases in which the principles have been discussed.
42 The fundamental principle in the assessment of damages for breach of contract is that the damages should put the plaintiff, so far as money can do so, in the position it would have been in had the contract been performed: Robinson v Harman (1848) 1 Exch 850 at 855. In The Commonwealth v Amann Aviation Pty Ltd (1991) 174 CLR 64 Mason CJ and Dawson J said at 80 -
"The award of damages for breach of contract protects a plaintiff's expectation of receiving the defendant's performance. That expectation arises out of or is created by the contract. Hence, damages for breach of contract are often described as 'expectation damages'."
43 Since the remedy is for disappointed expectation, a plaintiff's position is not found solely in any monetary loss it has suffered. In a contract for the performance of building work, the plaintiff can recover the cost of rectifying defective or incomplete work because, by receipt of the money in substitution for performance, it is given the means of putting itself in the position it would have been in had the contract been performed.
44 This is the basis of Bellgrove v Eldridge, in which defective foundations seriously threatened the stability of the plaintiff's house and it was held that she was entitled to recover the cost of demolition and re-erection. The damages provided her with the means of obtaining the performance expected under the contract. The primary measure of loss was the cost of the rectification work; the Court said at 617 -
"In the present case, the respondent was entitled to have a building erected upon her land in accordance with the contract and the plans and specifications which formed part of it, and her damage is the loss which she has sustained by the failure of the appellant to perform his obligation to her. This loss cannot be measured by comparing the value of the building which has been erected with the value it would have borne if erected in accordance with the contract; her loss can, prima facie, be measured only by ascertaining the amount required to rectify the defects complained of and so give to her the equivalent of a building on her land which is substantially in accordance with the contract."
45 But recovery according to the rectification measure is subject to the rectification work being necessary and reasonable. If it is not, then the plaintiff is left to diminution in the value of the property as the measure of damages. There may or not be a diminution in value, and if there is not the plaintiff recovers nothing; but the alternative diminution measure arises only if the rectification work is not necessary and reasonable. So the Court said at 619 -
"Many examples may, of course, be given of remedial work, which though necessary to produce conformity would not constitute a reasonable method of dealing with the situation and in such cases the true measure of the building owner's loss will be the diminution in value, if any, produced by the departure from the plans and specifications or by the defective workmanship or materials."
46 In Ruxley Electronics and Construction Ltd v Forsyth it was accepted that, if the rectification work was not necessary and reasonable and there was no diminution in value of the property, damages could be awarded for loss of amenity; see thereafter Freeman v Niroomand (1997) 52 ConLR 116 treating it as settled that a sum could be awarded as a solatium. No question of damages on this basis arises in the present case. It should be said, for completeness, that neither Apartments nor Constructions adverted to damages on other possible bases. In Alucraft Pty Ltd (in liquidation) v Grocon Pty Ltd (Victorian Supreme Court, Smith J, 22 April 1994, unreported) the builder claimed from a subcontractor the cost of rectification to bring steelwork to specification. The builder had denied any obligation to the proprietor to rectify the work, the proprietor had apparently accepted the work and had issued a final certificate, and the builder had been paid for the work. The builder did not intend to carry out the rectification work. His Honour considered, with respect correctly, that the builder was not in the same position as an owner, because the benefit it expected to derive from the subcontract was fulfilment of the head contract and payment under the head contract, not a building in conformity with the specification; he distinguished Bellgrove v Eldridge for that reason. On the assumption that, in accordance with Bellgrove v Eldridge, the rectification measure of damages was prima facie to be applied, his Honour found that it would not be reasonable to assess damages "on the basis of the work being rectified", and assessed damages on the basis of the builder's loss being the money it paid for the defective work or alternatively the risk of being required by the proprietor to rectify the work or pay for its rectification. Apartments did not contend for a loss of either kind.
47 What rectification work is necessary and reasonable is a question of fact, see Bellgrove v Eldridge at 619. The illustration of an unreasonable course given in that case at 618 was demolition and re-erection of walls which should have used second-hand bricks but used new bricks of first quality. In Ruxley Electronics and Construction Ltd v Forsyth reconstruction of a swimming pool which was nine inches less deep than it should have been, but was perfectly serviceable as a swimming pool, was considered to be unreasonable. In Brewarrina Shire Council v Beckhaus Civil Pty Ltd rectification of the dry side of a levee was unreasonable when the levee would adequately perform its function and the rectification work would not increase its capacity to repel floodwater. In that case Tobias JA said at [89], with the agreement of McColl JA and myself, that -
" … whether the rectification work is a reasonable course to adopt is dependent upon a finding of fact that the proposed work was reasonable in order to achieve the contractual objective. The rectification work would be unreasonable if it was out of all proportion to the achievement of that objective or to the benefit to be obtained therefrom."
48 Reasonableness involves regard to the purpose of the building work, for example in Brewarinna Shire Council v Beckhaus Civil Pty Ltd having a levee to repel floodwater. As Lord Jauncey observed in Ruxley Electronics and Construction Ltd v Forsyth at 358, it is reasonableness in relation to the particular contract and not at large, so that -
"if I contracted for the erection of a folly in my garden which shortly thereafter suffered a total collapse it would be irrelevant to the determination of my loss to argue that the erection of such a folly which contributed nothing to the value of my house was a crazy thing to do".
49 Sale of the property by the plaintiff does not of itself displace the entitlement to damages according to the rectification measure: Director of War Service Homes v Harris; De Cesare v Deluxe Motors Pty Ltd; Scott Carver Pty Ltd v SAS Trustee Corporation. In Director of War Service Homes v Harris Gibbs J, with whom the other members of the Full Court agreed, said at 278 that sale did not affect the plaintiff's accrued right to rectification damages, although the fact of sale "might be one of the circumstances that would have to be considered in relation to the question whether it would be reasonable to effect the remedial work". His Honour said at 278-9 that, assuming it would be reasonable to do the work -
" … the owner would still be entitled to recover as damages the cost of remedying the defects or deviations from the contract (assuming of course that the contract price had been paid). In assessing those damages it would not be relevant whether the owner was under a legal liability to remedy the defects, or whether he had made a profit or a loss on the sale of the building, for the builder has no concern with the details of any contract that the owner might make with a third party. … The owner of a defective building may decide to remedy the defects before he sells it so that he may obtain the highest possible price on the sale; he may sell subject to a condition that he will remedy the defects; or he may resolve to put the building in order after it has been sold because he feels morally, although he is not legally, bound to do so. These matters are nothing to do with the builder, whose liability to pay damages has already accrued."
50 In Scott Carver Pty Ltd v SAS Trustee Corporation Hodgson JA observed at [47] that, if it were shown that the price received on a sale was unaffected by the defects or that it was reduced by an amount less than the cost of rectification, this "could displace the Bellgrove measure". But Ipp JA said at [118] that Gibbs J had stated the position accurately, and at [121]-[123] that the details of the sale were not relevant. It is not necessary to resolve this possible divergence in the present case. So far as we were taken to the referee's findings, it was not shown that the prices at which the units were sold were unaffected by the defects of which Apartments complained. Rather, the referee said at [72(c)] of the first report, set out at [28] above, that there was no evidence of any diminution in the sale price of the units or that the sale price would have been increased but for the defects. No evidence of a fact does not establish the fact, and it was not submitted on appeal that an effect on sale prices bore upon assessment of Apartment's damages.
51 In De Cesare v Deluxe Motors Pty Ltd Doyle CJ accepted at 35 that Gibbs J was "correct in saying that in principle the relevance of the sale of the building is limited to its relevance to the question of whether it would be reasonable to effect the remedial work", and Nyland J cited Gibbs J with apparent acceptance. Their Honours did not elaborate on the relevance, but Doyle CJ observed at 32 that the sale of the building without the work being done did not suggest that the remedial work was unreasonable. The fact of sale of the units could go to whether rectification work was reasonable, for example, because achieving the contractual objective was not of any significance to Apartments or to the purchasers, whereby it would be open to find that rectification work to achieve the contractual objective was "out of all proportion to the achievement of that objective or to the benefit to be obtained therefrom".
52 What is the significance, if any, of whether or not the plaintiff will carry out the rectification work?
53 In Bellgrove v Eldridge, having held that the remedial work of demolition and re-erection was reasonable, the Court said at 620 -
"It was suggested during the course of argument that if the respondent retains her present judgment and it is satisfied, she may or may not demolish the existing house and re-erect another. If she does not, it is said, she will have a house together with the cost of erecting another one. To our mind this circumstance is quite immaterial and is but one variation of a feature which so often presents itself in the assessment of damages in cases where they must assessed once and for all. "
54 Ordinarily the court is not concerned with the use to which a plaintiff puts its damages, and if the likelihood of the plaintiff carrying out the rectification work were a consideration in the award of damages there would be the potential for expensive and time-consuming factual enquiries. On the other hand, adherence to the compensatory nature of damages suggests that, if the plaintiff will not put itself in the position it would have been in had the contract been performed, the plaintiff should not be given the means of doing so. For a (rather inconclusive) discussion of these tensions see, for example, Loke, "Cost of Cure or Difference in Market Value", (1996) 10 JCL 189 at 204-211.
55 In Tito v Waddell (No 2) at 332 Megarry VC, having accepted that a plaintiff's eccentricity of tastes should not preclude damages, said -
"Per contra, if the plaintiff has suffered little or no monetary loss in the reduction of value of his land, and he has no intention of applying any damages towards carrying out the work contracted for, or its equivalent, I cannot see why he should recover the cost of doing work which will never be done. It would be a mere pretence to say that this cost was a loss and so should be recoverable as damages."
56 In Ruxley Electronics and Construction Ltd v Forsyth at 358 Lord Jauncey took this as saying that it would be unreasonable to treat as a loss the cost of carrying out work which would never in fact be done. His Lordship said at 359 -
"The appellant argued that the cost of reinstatement should only be allowed as damages where there was shown to be an intention on the part of the aggrieved party to carry out the work. Having already decided that the appeal should be allowed I no longer find it necessary to reach a conclusion on this matter. However, I should emphasise that in the normal case the court has no concern with the use to which a plaintiff puts an award of damages for a loss which has been established. Thus, irreparable damage to an article as a result of a breach of contract will entitle the owner to recover the value of the article irrespective of whether he intends to replace it with a similar one or to spend the money on something else. Intention, or lack of it, to reinstate can have relevance only to reasonableness and hence to the extent of the loss which has been sustained. Once that loss has been established intention as to the subsequent use of the damages ceases to be relevant."
57 Lord Lloyd said at 372-3 -
"I fully accept that the courts are not normally concerned with what a plaintiff does with his damages. But it does not follow that intention is not relevant to reasonableness, at least in those cases where the plaintiff does not intend to reinstate. Suppose in the present case Mr Forsyth had died, and the action had been continued by his executors. Is it to be supposed that they would be able to recover the cost of reinstatement, even though they intended to put the property on the market without delay?
There is, as Staughton LJ observed, a good deal of authority to the effect that intention may be relevant to a claim for damages based on cost of reinstatement. The clearest decisions on the point are those of Megarry V-C in Tito v Waddell (No 2) [1977] Ch 106 and Oliver J in Radford v De Froberville (1977) 1 WLR 1262 …
In the present case the judge found as a fact that Mr Forsyth's stated intention of rebuilding the pool would not persist for long after the litigation had been concluded. In these circumstances it would be 'mere pretence' to say that the cost of rebuilding the pool is the loss which he has in fact suffered. This is the critical distinction between the present case and the example given by Staughton LJ of a man who has had his watch stolen. In the latter case, the plaintiff is entitled to recover the value of the watch because that is the true measure of his loss. He can do what he wants with the damages. But if, as the judge found, Mr Forsyth had no intention of rebuilding the pool, he has lost nothing except the difference in value, if any.