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Estimating the width of the bracket

I wrote in these pages in (“The margin of error”, 2 March 2013) that we were now seeing a growing number of valuers’ negligence cases in the courts – the apparent product of over-enthusiastic prognoses in the mid to late 2000s. My article concerned the bracket of values within which a valuer’s negligence will not be held to have caused any loss – not because the valuer was not negligent, but rather because the tort of negligence requires it to be proved (among other things) that the negligent act resulted in a value outside the bracket of values that might be produced by reasonably competent surveyors. So, Valuer X might make a series of negligent errors, but provided that the end result is within the bracket, he or she will be off the hook.

The latest decision

The supply of such cases has continued to reach the courts. In Dunfermline Building Society (in special administration) v CBRE Ltd [2017] EWHC 2745 (Ch); [2017] PLSCS 204 the High Court in Leeds had to consider a claim for loss said to flow from a negligent valuation carried out in 2007 – the very year before the global financial meltdown, when few were able to prophesy what was about to happen to asset values.

In brief, the claimant had been asked to join in a loan to finance a housing development in Reading, which the borrower had agreed to buy for £17.5m; the defendant was instructed to provide a market valuation of the property to enable the claimant to determine whether it would provide suitable and adequate security for the loan; the defendant carried out a residual valuation in which it valued the property at £17.5m, with a gross development value of £107m; the claimant made its loan on the strength of that valuation; the market crashed; receivers were appointed; and the property was sold in 2012 for £3.75m. The claimant issued proceedings for damages in 2015. It claimed in particular that, at £17.5m, the defendant had overstated the property’s market value by £3.25m, which was outside the margin of error permitted to a reasonably competent valuer.

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