Facts
- Spartan Steel & Alloys Ltd operated a factory supplied with electricity by a power cable.
- Martin & Co (Contractors) Ltd, while working nearby, negligently severed this power cable, causing a power outage at Spartan Steel’s factory.
- As a direct result, Spartan Steel suffered three types of loss: (1) physical damage to a melt of metal in the furnace, (2) loss of profit on the damaged metal, and (3) further loss of profit due to factory downtime caused by the interruption.
- The losses were assessed under common law negligence principles, with the classification of each loss type being central to the court’s analysis.
Issues
- Whether the physical damage to the melt and the consequential economic loss were recoverable in negligence.
- Whether the loss of profit resulting from factory downtime, characterized as pure economic loss, was recoverable.
- How the duty of care in negligence applies to financial losses unconnected to physical damage.
- Whether any exceptions would allow recovery for pure economic loss in these circumstances.
Decision
- The Court of Appeal held that only the physical damage to the metal and the economic loss directly consequential to that physical damage were recoverable in negligence.
- The court found that the loss of profit from the factory’s downtime, as pure economic loss unconnected to physical damage, was not recoverable.
- The distinction between consequential economic loss and pure economic loss was upheld as fundamental to limiting liability in negligence claims.
- The court recognized narrow exceptions to this rule, such as liability for negligent misstatements in certain circumstances, but none applied on the facts.
Legal Principles
- Pure economic loss in negligence, defined as financial loss not arising from physical damage to person or property, is generally irrecoverable to prevent indeterminate liability.
- Consequential economic loss, directly resulting from physical property damage, is recoverable.
- The requirement for a proximate causal link and direct consequence from the defendant’s act is essential for recoverability.
- The distinction between tort and contract law is maintained through the bar on pure economic loss in negligence claims.
- Statutory and common law exceptions to the rule against recovering pure economic loss exist only where there is an assumption of responsibility, as in negligent misstatement (e.g., Hedley Byrne & Co Ltd v Heller & Partners Ltd [1964] AC 465).
- Attempts to create additional exceptions, such as the "complex structure theory," have been rejected in later case law.
Conclusion
Spartan Steel & Alloys Ltd v Martin & Co established that, in negligence, only losses directly linked to physical damage or its immediate economic consequences are generally recoverable; pure economic loss, such as loss of profit from mere interruption of business, remains irrecoverable except in narrowly circumscribed situations.