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Home / Northern Advocate / Business

Leaky schools fight can go ahead

Northern Advocate
3 Aug, 2016 12:29 AM3 mins to read

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Carter Holt Harvey lost its final bid to throw out a claim that it's liable for the cost of fixing about 890 leaky schools.

Carter Holt Harvey lost its final bid to throw out a claim that it's liable for the cost of fixing about 890 leaky schools.

Carter Holt Harvey has lost its final bid to throw out a claim that it's liable for the cost of fixing about 890 leaky schools, with the Supreme Court siding with the Ministry of Education.

Chief Justice Sian Elias and Justices William Young, Susan Glazebrook, Terence Arnold and Mark O'Regan yesterday dismissed Carter Holt's application to strike out a claim that the building products maker was negligent in the way it sold plywood cladding product, known as Shadowclad, which the ministry says caused weather-tightness problems at a large number of schools.

The country's top court turned down the Auckland-based company's appeals that the negligence claim was arguable and dismissed its bid to impose a 10-year limitation period that could have excluded about 600 buildings from the suit.

"Many of CHH's arguments are variations on arguments made (and rejected) in the earlier cases before this court where this court ruled that striking out claims would be inappropriate," the judgment, delivered by Justice Mark O'Regan, said. "That suggests that, contrary to CHH's submissions, the duty of care said to arise in the present case is not novel, given the decisions of this court in negligence cases decided over the last 10 years."

The 10-year limitation claim is being closely watched by two separate class suits against cladding maker James Hardie Industries, as the time-bar had deterred homeowners from pursuing action. The Supreme Court also allowed the ministry's appeal allowing it to mount a case that the company had negligently misstated a variety of claims about the cladding product, saying the context of a trial was the best forum for it to be tested and analysed.

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The Education Ministry launched a claim against cladding manufacturers CHH, James Hardie and CSR in April 2013 to help cover a bill estimated to be as much as $1.5 billion. It has since reached confidential settlements with James Hardie and CSR, though there are some cross-claims because at least 73 school buildings used a mixture of cladding products.

At the same time as the school action, CHH has been in the process of being prepared for sale by its owner, billionaire Graeme Hart. Plans for an initial public offering of its Carters building supplies business were shelved over volatility in equity markets, having already pared back the inclusion of his New Zealand and Australian timber processing and building supplies businesses.

Carter Holt Harvey has one store in Whangarei.

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