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The price of daylight
The price of daylight has rocketed following the outcome of a recent landmark
court case, says Underwoods. Developers that interfere with the right
to light of an adjacent property owner of occupier are warned that they
may be held liable to pay substantial damages.
The High Court, in the case of Tamares (Vincent Square) Ltd v Fairpoint
Properties (Vincent Square) Ltd has ordered that the developer
must pay the owner of a neighbouring office building £50,000, just
below 30% of the developers profits, as compensation for loss of
light.
Craig Mattocks, head of building surveying services at Underwoods, says:
The case centres around the re-development of Rochester Row magistrates
court and police station by the defendant. The high court found that the
claimants right to light to two windows to a stairway leading to
the basement of the adjacent building in Vincent Square, Westminster had
been infringed. The court considered that, in the special circumstances
of the case, it would be oppressive to grant an injunction to require
the defendant to carry out the demolition works necessary to remedy the
breach and that instead the claimant should be entitled to a remedy in
damages only.
The judge, taking the half way point between two expert valuations, concluded
that a one third split in the profit resulting in a sum of £58,166
ought to be paid in damages but, given the insignificance of
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the infringement actually
suffered, reduced this figure to £50,000 to give a fairer result.
The actual loss in value caused to the defendants building by the
loss of light was, at most, only just over £3,000. However, if the
amount that the claimant could have reasonably demanded in return for
allowing the development to proceed unaltered would have been greater
than the actual loss suffered, then the claimant can recover this sum
instead.
Craig Mattocks adds: This ruling gives clear guidelines as to how
damages for infringing a right to light are to be calculated and has made
it clear that such damages are not be restricted to the actual loss of
amenity suffered but are to be calculated by reference to the amount of
profit being made by the developer.
No doubt, in light of this judgement, many property owners will
not appreciate that they should not simply tolerate infringements as to
their rights however minor, but should hold out for substantial compensation
or damages to any such proposed or actual infringement.
This case follows that of Regan v Paul Properties in October 2006, when
the Court of Appeal ordered the developer to stop work on the final floor
of a five-storey mixed-use scheme in Brighton after a neighbour won an
injunction because of lost daylight. The developer was also ordered to
partially demolish the offending structure.
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