Not for love of money, but of Humanity. "Greater is he who works for the good of all, then he who works for the good of himself only" ~ Matthew 25:40: "The King will reply, 'I tell you the truth, whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers of mine, you did for me.'"- (NIV). I live in Singapore where the Emperor must not be disturbed.

Wednesday, June 29, 2016

Overpaid? Singapore court judges very idle, listen to boliao* issues to kill time?....

As I understand, before any case can be allotted court time, the court registra will examine the complexity/validity of the case before scheduling an amount of court time before well paid judges to hear out a case.

In the b/m case of 'Ng Huat Seng and another v Munib Mohammad Madni and another', I cannot understand why the court would even have to focus on the issue of vicarious liability if the said contractor who damaged a neighbour's building was insured and would agree to compensate for the damages. Instead of focusing on whether Mr Munib Md was vicariously liable, wouldn't justice be more economically achieved if the courts focused upon placing an injunction on continuing any further damaging works and compelling the rectifications/ immediate compensation of damages caused to neighbouring buildings, especially if the contractor is not only solvent but also insured?
Shouldn't the issue of vicarious liability only arise if the contractor is either bankrupt or disputes the damages caused?
Perhaps the issue of vicarious liability would NOT EVEN HAVE OCCURRED if Singapore court judges (instead of dawdling on ivory-tower type superfluous issues), had heard the case at short notice an issued immediate stop work order injunctions so that the damages would not have grown so immense and severe at first instance.
It seems to me that Singapore judges have a lot of free time to kill (just churning out work for themselves) and thus perhaps, the Minister of Finance might consider REDUCING the funding to the Judiciary for the coming work year.

PS: I am not a lawyer nor know any parties to the case (just disgruntled with high GST etc tax rates), but I do not think from reading the news report that Singapore judges are prudent with state funds being spent on hiring judges. My 2¢ in this case is also that the owner Munib Md SHOULD be vicariously liable to compensate for damages to his neighbours house if contractor Esthertix is bankrupt and unable to compensate (especially if he were earlier cognicent of any damages caused): this is because he could well have hired a well insured contractor to do the job but did not: resulting in his neighbour suffering a loss: for the sake of good social order: those responsible for damages due to failure to insure against such occurrence should be expected to make good any such damage caused.

PS: as I understand, the first 3 days hearing in High Court is FOC for the parties concerned: which means GST/ tax payers are paying the judges/ staff salaries: this is not acceptable since LHL says GST rise is for charity, not pay for judges amusement / ivory-tower type superfluous discussions.

PS: * 'Boliao' = superfluous
Quote:
Neighbour loses claim against neighbour over damage
Straits Times
Date 28 Jun 2016
K.C. Vijayan

Demolition during works on Mr Munib's house (in the rear) resulted in debris hitting Mr Ng's house (in front). Mr Ng took his neighbour and the contractor - Esthetix - to court, but was awarded damages only against the contractor.PHOTO: TIFFANY GOH FOR THE STRAITS TIMES

Landowners cannot be expected to look over contractors' shoulders, says judge

A house owner who hired a contractor to rebuild his unit was held not liable when demolition works damaged a neighbour's house.

The High Court rejected a move to make the owner liable in addition to the contractor, making clear that property owners cannot be expected to supervise what contractors do, as a matter of policy.
"It would be intolerable if the law were to hold that all landowners who seek to construct homes on their property would have a duty to look continually over the shoulders of the independent contractors they hire to ensure that they take reasonable care in the performance of their tasks," said Judicial Comissioner See Kee Oon in judgment grounds released yesterday.
The case arose after demolition works by contractor Esthetix Design on a three-storey unit in Jalan Lim Tai See in September 2011.
Owner Munib Mohammed Madni had hired Esthetix to turn the existing house into a three-storey detached structure with a basement and swimming pool.
Debris from demolition works hit a boundary wall of neighbour Ng Huat Seng's house, which is in front and down a slope.
Some debris also hit his house, breaking window panes, damaging four air-con condenser units and cracking the backyard, among other things.
Mr Ng sued both Mr Munib and Esthetix for negligence in the State Courts where he won $136,796 and costs against Esthertix last year.
District Judge Seah Chi Ling found Mr Munib and his wife Zahrah Ayub not liable in negligence as they had exercised reasonable care in outsourcing work to Esthetix.
Mr Ng appealed to the High Court against this decision at a two-day hearing earlier this year.
His lawyers, Senior Counsel N. Sreenivasan and Mr Tan Cheow Hin, argued Esthetix was not an independent contractor, which meant Mr Munib was indirectly liable as his employer. They argued the work was "ultra-hazardous", which meant the duty of care could not be delegated from the house owners to the contractor.
Mr Munib, represented by lawyers Raymond Wong and Os Agarwal, argued the works were not "ultra-hazardous" and Esthetix was to be treated as an independent contractor that the owners had taken reasonable care in hiring.
The judge ruled Mr Munib was not indirectly liable. He found Esthetix was an independent contractor as it took out its own insurance, hired its own staff and dealt with various sub-contractors and consultants in its own name.
He noted this was the first case where the so-called "ultra-hazardous" exception was considered at length and appointed lawyer Keith Han to assist the court as amicus curiae, or friend of the court.
Despite the demolition being done close to Mr Ng's house and the relative elevations of the two houses, this did not mean the demolition was "a dangerous operation in its intrinsic nature", he added.
The judge added that the Court of Appeal may some day decide that the doctrine of ultra-hazardous acts "no longer has a place in our law and will instead deal with such cases by applying the general principles of the law of negligence".
Mr Ng's lawyers are seeking permission to appeal to the apex court.
Source: Straits Times © Singapore Press Holdings Ltd. Permission required for reproduction.

http://www.straitstimes.com/singapor...ur-over-damage

Ng Huat Seng and another v Munib Mohammad Madni and another [2016] SGHC 11


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