Loh Wai Lian
- vs -
SEA Housing Corporation Sdn Bhd
Coram
LORD
BRIDGE OF HARWICH
LORD
TEMPLEMAN
LORD
GRIFFITHS
LORD
MACKAY OF CLASHFERN
LORD
OLIVER OF ANYLMERTON |
3 MARCH 1987 |
Judgment
Lord Oliver of
Aylmerton
(delivering the
Judgment of the Board)
-
In 1966 there was
introduced in West Malaysia a scheme for the protection of purchasers of
new houses and for the control and licensing of housing developers. Its
provisions are contained in the Housing Developers (Control and
Licensing) Act 1966 (Act 118). The Act laid down stringent provisions
for licensing developers and in s 24 conferred upon the Minister of
Local Government and Housing power to make regulations which might (inter
alia)
regulate
and prohibit the conditions and terms of any contract between a
licensed housing developer, his agent or nominee and his
purchaser. |
-
That power was
exercised by the Housing Developers (Control and Licensing) Rules 1970
which came into force on 15 July 1970. Rule 12(1) provided:
Every
contract of sale shall be in writing and shall contain within its
terms and conditions provisions to the following effect, namely
... |
-
There followed a
list of twenty-one matters which were required to be contained in the
contract, the relevant ones for present purposes being the following:
(o) |
Provisions specifying the date of
delivery of the vacant possession of the housing accommodation to
the purchaser which date shall be not later than 18 months after
the date of signing of the contract of sale; ... |
...
(r) |
Provisions binding on the licensed
housing developer that he shall indemnify the purchaser for any
delay in the delivery of the vacant possession of the housing
accommodation. The amount of indemnity shall be calculated from
day to day at the rate of not less than eight per centum per annum
of the purchase price commencing immediately after the date of
delivery of vacant possession as specified in the contract of
sale: |
-
Rule 12(2)
conferred on the Controller (an office established by the Act) power to
waive or modify the provisions of r 12(1) in respect of any contract of
sale if he was satisfied that special circumstances rendered compliance
with that Rule impracticable or unnecessary.
-
The respondent is
a corporate licensed housing developer which, on 18 March 1974, entered
into a contract with the appellant for the purchase of a shop house to
be erected on a housing estate at a price of $175,000, payable by stage
payments as the building proceeded in accordance with cl 3 of the
contract. Clause 17 of the contract was in the following terms:
Subject to
cl 32 hereof and/or to any extension or extensions of time as may
be allowed by the Controller the said building shall be completed
and ready for delivery of possession to the purchaser within 18
calendar months from the date of this Agreement. Provided always
that if the said building is not completed and ready for delivery
of possession to the purchaser within the aforesaid period then
the vendor shall pay to the purchaser agreed liquidated damages
calculated from day to day at the rate of eight per centum (8%)
per annum on the purchase price of the said property from such
aforesaid date to the date of actual completion and delivery of
possession of the said building to the purchaser. |
-
Clause 32, which
has an historical significance in the events leading up to this appeal,
was a clause which purported to exonerate the respondent from liability
for failure to perform the contract for causes outside the respondent’s
control including inter alia
disability of contractors or subcontractors employed by the respondent.
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In fact the
building was not completed on the due date, i.e. 18 September 1975.
Possession was not finally delivered until 7 November 1977. On 21 April
1980, the appellant by a letter from the solicitors demanded payment of
the sum of $29,972.01, a sum equal to interest at 8% per annum on the
full price of $175,000 calculated for a period of twenty five months and
twenty one days. The respondent’s solicitors replied on 26 April 1980,
repudiating liability for the sum claimed and basing themselves on cl 32
of the contract, alleging unavoidable shortages of sub-contractors and
building materials. That defence was never put to the test and there the
matter rested for the moment.
-
On 19 March 1982, however, the Federal Court
delivered judgment in a case of SEA Housing Corp
Sdn Bhd v Lee Poh Choo [1982] 2
MLJ 31, which concerned a contract with the respondent containing, as cl
32, provisions identical with those of cl 32 in the contract with which
this appeal is concerned. The Federal Court there held that cl 32 was
void since it contradicted provisions expressly required to be inserted
in the contract by r 12(1) of the 1970 Rules and, in particular, paras
(o) and (r) of that rule. Whilst it was permissible for details not
specifically mentioned in the Rules to be inserted into individual
contracts, such details had to be consistent with the Act and the Rules.
The defence adumbrated by the respondent’s solicitors in their letter of
26 April 1980, therefore fell to the ground and on 9 September 1982, the
appellant issued a specially endorsed writ claiming a sum of $29,874.65
(being 8% per annum on $175,000 over 779 days) together with interest
from 27 July 1982. Why the claim for interest was limited by reference
to this latter date is unclear. A summons for summary judgment was
subsequently issued and was heard before the Senior Assistant Registrar
on 14 April 1983, when judgment for the sum claimed and interest was
entered in favour of the appellant. From that judgment the respondent
appealed to the Judge in Chambers and on 29 September 1983 Mohamed
Dzaiddin J allowed the appeal and dismissed the appellant’s claim,
holding that it was statute-barred under the provisions of s 6(1)(a) of
the Limitation Ordinance 1953. That section provides:
Save as
hereinafter provided the following actions shall not be brought
after the expiration of six years from the date on which the cause
of action accrued, that is to say —
(a) |
actions grounded on a contract or on tort ... |
|
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The judge’s view was that the appellant’s
cause of action had accrued on, 18 September 1975, when the period of 18
months prescribed by the contract expired, and that accordingly her writ
was eleven months out of time. The appellant appealed to the Federal
Court which, on 23 February 1984, dismissed her appeal.[a] The grounds
upon which the appeal was dismissed were contained in a written judgment
of Mohamed Azmi FJ delivered on 28 June 1984. From that judgment the
appellant now appeals to their Lordships’ Board pursuant to special
leave granted on 17 December 1984.
-
The reasoning
both of Mohamed Dzaiddin J and of the Federal Court was that since the
sum claimed was no more than damages for breach of contract to be
ascertained by agreement between the parties on a particular basis the
appellant’s cause of action accrued immediately she was in a position to
issue a writ claiming damages for failure to complete on the due date,
even though it was impossible at that time to quantify the amount of her
claim or to recover judgment for the amount which the respondent, in the
event, became obliged to pay. That date was the date on which, under cl
17 of the contract, the building ought to have been completed. The
provision for payment of liquidated damages was merely a formula for the
quantification of the claim which then accrued and accordingly the
entire claim of the appellant became barred on 18 September 1981, so
that she was entitled to nothing.
-
Mr. Newman QC, with his customary frankness,
has sought only faintly to support the proposition that the appellant’s
claim was barred in toto and was
disposed to concede that in addition to a claim for damages for breach
of contract there was a parallel claim in debt accruing from day to day
so long as the building remained uncompleted with the result that the
appellant’s claim was timeously made in relation to the period from 9
September 1976 to 7 November 1977. Thus, theoretically, he submitted,
the appellant could have issued a writ for an amount equal to one day’s
interest at 8% per annum on 19 September 1975 and a separate writ for a
similar sum on each successive day thereafter.
-
Mr. Kidwell QC, on the other hand, contended
that both the trial judge and the Federal Court were wrong to approach
the case on the footing that the claim was a simple claim for liquidated
damages for breach of contract. He submitted, and their Lordships agree,
that the analysis of the accrual of the appellant’s cause of action
depends not upon the label which was put upon the sums which the
respondent became obliged to pay but upon what, on the proper
construction of the contract, was the true nature of the respondent’s
obligation.
-
To some extent there is a danger of becoming
mesmerised by the term “liquidated damages” when applied to a payment to
be made. It might equally well, for instance, be called “permissible
penalty.” What in essence the proviso to cl 17 was creating was a
contractual obligation in a particular event to pay a single sum by way
of indemnify for the period during which the appellant was kept out of
the building for which, in large measure, she would already have paid,
such sum being calculated upon a particular basis. The true construction
of the clause, Mr. Kidwell submits, is that the respondent was
undertaking to pay not a series of interest payments accruing
ex die in diem but a single aggregate
sum which could not be calculated and did not become due until the
building was completed and ready to be handed over. Their Lordships have
found Mr. Kidwell’s submissions persuasive. It is, of course, beyond
doubt that the failure to complete the building on the stipulated date
was a breach of contract, but that is not, in their Lordships’ view,
necessarily determinative of the nature of the obligation which follows.
-
The starting point is that this contract is
one the terms of which are regulated by statute and which therefore
falls to be construed in the light of the statutory provisions to which
it was designed to give effect. Rule 12(1)(r) imposed on the developer
the obligation to indemnity the purchaser for any delay in delivery of
possession and then went on to provide a formula by which “the amount of
indemnity” was to be calculated. The use of the word “indemnity” is
significant, for in its natural meaning it imports the notion of
compensation for a loss already suffered when the compensation is paid
(see, for instance, Yorkshire Electricity Board
v British Telecom [1986] 1 WLR 1029,
1034; [1986] 2 All ER 961). The calculation of the amount of the
indemnity was to be an entirely artificial one based on a day to day
calculation of a rate of interest starting from the contractual
completion date. This was to operate as the definitive ascertainment of
the purchaser’s right in respect of the delay which had occurred, but it
did not, save in so far as a limitation is implicit in the use of the
word “indemnity”, otherwise fetter or limit any right of damages for
breach of contract. That rule, when incorporated into the actual
contract between the parties, was modified in two ways.
-
First, the “indemnity” provided for by the
rule was translated as “agreed liquidated damages.”
-
Secondly, the formula for calculation of
the indemnity was modified by specifying not only the
terminus a quo as provided in the
rule but also the terminus ad quem,
that is to say, the date of actual completion and delivery of
possession.
-
It is, in their Lordships’ view, tolerably
clear that the only rational purpose of defining a payment to be made by
the vendor, by reference to what has become a conventional term, as
“agreed liquidated damages” was to make it clear that the purchaser was
not to have any right to any other payment by way of damages in respect
of the delay over and above what the vendor was undertaking to pay, for
there could not sensibly be any prospect of a sum calculated according
to mandatory statutory provisions being held to be irrecoverable as a
penalty. But the description of the amount as “liquidated damages”
cannot in any event be determinative of the date on which the sum is to
be payable. The clause has to be reasonably and sensibly construed. The
obligation is introduced by the words “the vendor shall pay” and there
follows the calculation of the sum which he is to pay carefully defined
by its opening and closing date.
-
A construction
which would import into the clause a fresh obligation on the vendor to
pay the calculated amount at the end of each day would be capricious,
involving as it does a series of breaches of contract as each day passes
without payment being made. The whole tenor of the clause is, in their
Lordships’ view, that the vendor is assuming as a matter of contract and
subject to the occurrence of the condition precedent that the building
remains uncompleted on the stipulated date, an express contractual
obligation to pay a single sum which cannot become due, because it
cannot be ascertained, until the building has been completed and
possession can be delivered. If the question is asked “in the absence of
such an express provision when would the purchaser’s right of action for
damages for breach of contract accrue?”, the answer is plainly the date
on which the breach occurred. But parties to a contract are, of course,
entitled to regulate or modify their rights in the event of breach in
any way that they think fit and the accrual of any cause of action then
becomes a matter of the correct construction of what they have provided.
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This appeal
raises no point of principle but simply a question of what is the true
construction of the contract in which the parties entered. In their
Lordships’ judgment, the only sensible construction of cl 17 is, as Mr.
Kidwell has contended, that it imposes an obligation to pay, in
substitution for any other right to damages which the purchaser might
otherwise have, a single sum to be calculated and ascertained at a
particular date and that until that sum has been ascertained it does not
become due and cannot be sued for.
-
Their Lordships
will accordingly advise His Majesty the Yang di-Pertuan Agong that the
appeal should be allowed and that the order of the Senior Assistant
Registrar should be restored. The respondent must pay the costs before
their Lordships’ Board and in the courts below.
Cases
SEA Housing Corp
Sdn Bhd v Lee Poh Choo [1982] 2 MLJ 31;
Yorkshire Electricity Board v British Telecom
[1986] 1 WLR 1029; [1986] 2 All ER 961
Legislations
Limitation Ordinance
1953: s. 6(1)
Housing Developers
(Control and Licensing) Rules 1970: r 12
Representation
Raymond Kidwell QC
(John Greenbourne with him) for the appellant (instructed by
Philip Conway Thomas & Co).
George Newman QC
(David Lingam with him) for the respondent (instructed by
Charles Russell & Co).
Notes:-
[a] See Loh v
SEA Housing Corporation Sdn Bhd |