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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Aqua Design & Play International Ltd (t/a Aqua Design) & Anor v Kier Regional Ltd (t/a French Kier Anglia) & Anor [2002] EWCA Civ 797 (14 May 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2002/797.html Cite as: [2002] EWCA Civ 797, 82 Con LR 107, [2003] BLR 111 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
(His Honour Judge Richard Seymour QC)
Strand London WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE JONATHAN PARKER
LORD JUSTICE DYSON
____________________
(1) AQUA DESIGN & PLAY INTERNATIONAL LIMITED (IN LIQUIDATION) | ||
(trading as AQUA DESIGN) | ||
(2) FENLOCK HANSEN LIMITED | ||
(trading as FENDOR HANSEN) | ||
Claimants/Respondents | ||
- v - | ||
(1) KIER REGIONAL LIMITED | ||
(trading as FRENCH KIER ANGLIA) | ||
(2) KIER REGIONAL LIMITED | ||
(trading as FRENCH KIER ANGLIA) | ||
Defendants/Appellants |
____________________
Smith Bernal Reporting Limited, 190 Fleet Street,
London EC4A 2AG
Tel: 0171 421 4040
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Tuesday, 14th May 2002
"Notwithstanding anything to the contrary elsewhere in this Sub-Contract if the Employer is insolvent as defined in clauses 32.2, 32.3 and 32.4, the Contractor shall not be obliged to make any further payment to the Sub-Contractor of any amount which is due or may become due to the Sub-Contractor unless the Contractor has received payment in respect thereof from the Employer and then only to the extent of such receipt."
"During the drafting of the revisions to the Domestic Sub-Contract DOM/1, clause 32 was drafted and was the subject of discussions with representatives of the National Specialist Contractors Council and Specialist Engineering Contractors Group. Although both sub-contractor representative bodies no longer approved DOM/1 in its present form, it was agreed that clause 32 should be deleted. Due, however, to a printing error, this did not take place and clause 32 should therefore be deleted from the standard form."
"1.2The Sub-Contractor shall upon and subject to the Sub-Contract Documents and the provisions of the Main Contract carry out and complete the Sub-Contract Works shown upon and described by or referred to in those Documents.
1.3The Sub-Contract Conditions set out in "The Sub-Contract Conditions for use with the Domestic Sub-Contract DOM/1" including [b] Amendments 1 to 10 thereof inclusive and published by the Construction Confederation shall be deemed to be incorporated in Sub-Contract DOM/1 as executed by the parties hereto.
...
5.1The Sub-Contract Conditions shall have effect as modified by the amendments in the Particulars for sub-contract, form reference no.8115a."
"... the word `published' meant `distributed, or made available to the public' and was to be distinguished from the word `printed'. He submitted that what had been `published' by the Construction Confederation was the Conditions with the Corrections, whereas the Conditions without the Corrections had only been `printed'."
"I am satisfied that the submissions of Mr. Brannigan are well-founded. What, by Article 1.3 of the Aqua Sub-Contract, was incorporated into the Aqua Sub-Contract was the Conditions as published by the Construction Confederation. That meant, it seems to me, that it was the form of the Conditions in fact adopted by the Construction Confederation as at the date of the Aqua Sub-Contract and published, complete with any corrections, which was incorporated, not some other form. Mr Raeside's submissions proceed on the same basis, implicitly, if not explicitly, that in considering the Conditions the published corrections thereto are to be disregarded as being, as Mr Raeside put it in his skeleton argument, `standard amendments suggested by the Construction Confederation'. I just do not see how that can possibly be right. I therefore answer the preliminary issue in the negative.
On behalf of Kier, Mr Raeside submits that the judge was wrong for the following reasons. The judge failed to appreciate the significance of the tendering process in which Kier was indicating which of the corrections or amendments to the standard conditions and Articles of Agreement it was inviting Aqua to tender upon, and that these did not include the deletion of condition 32.1. He focused on the language of Article 1.3 to the exclusion of the other relevant Articles, namely Article 1.2 and 5. Article 1.2 made it clear that it was what Mr Raeside calls Kier's "bespoke" amendments to the uncorrected conditions of contract that were to apply. That is supported by Article 5. Thus, when regard is also had to Article 1.2 and 5, it is clear that the published conditions referred to in Article 1.3 must be the uncorrected conditions. Mr Raeside also submits that the judge attached too much weight to the word "published" by reference to dictionaries and grammar, as opposed to the way in which the parties must have intended the word to be used in the context of their own document.
On behalf of Aqua and Fenlock, Mr Brannigan submits that the judge reached the right conclusion for the right reasons. First, the reference to DOM/1 conditions "published by the Construction Confederation" was a reference to the conditions published by them, as opposed to a document printed by them but never distributed without correction. The conditions were only distributed with the corrections. Accordingly, the published conditions were the corrected conditions. The phrases "DOM/1 Form of Sub-Contract" (which appears in the Form 8115a) or "Domestic Sub-Contract DOM/1" (which appears in Article 1.3 of the conditions of the form of the subcontract) are, and should be, understood as referring to the standard conditions in their corrected form. Mr Brannigan seeks to support this submission by reference to the words "DOM/1" or "DOM/1 form" which were used by the parties during the course of their negotiations. He submits that it is clear that, in the context in which these words appear, these were references to the corrected standard forms. He also draws our attention to clause 19.6.3 of the main contract conditions (of which Aqua was deemed to have notice). This provides that Kier shall enter into a subcontract with a Specified Domestic Sub-Contractor on the "Standard Form of Domestic Sub-Contract DOM/1980 editions incorporating current standard amendments". Mr Brannigan submits that this must be a reference to the DOM/1 form of contract subject to the published corrections.
Secondly, Mr Brannigan submits that the judge was right for three reasons to reject the argument that it should be inferred from the bespoke amendments that the parties were referring to the uncorrected DOM/1 conditions. (a) The parties clearly and expressly agreed to include the DOM/1 conditions "published by the Construction Confederation" as further amended by them. The question of what conditions were published by the Confederation was independent of what the parties wished to make of those conditions. (b) The clear and obvious words used by the parties, in particular the use of the word "published", should take precedence over the suggested inference. (c) The basis of the suggested inference is that the only possible reason for including within the bespoke amendments corrections already set out in the correction sheet must be that the parties were intending to refer to the DOM/1 conditions excluding the corrections sheets. But that is not so: the corrections could have been included out of an abundance of caution, or because of a simple mistake. The evidence suggests that one of these latter reasons is the reason. Mr Brannigan relies on the fact that the signed Articles of Agreement are the DOM/1 Articles as corrected by the schedule of corrections and then further amended. Mr Brannigan's alternative submission is that the subcontract is ambiguous. It is unclear whether it incorporates the corrected or uncorrected conditions. Since Form 8115a and Article 5.1 were drafted by Kier, the contra proferentem rules should be applied and the ambiguity resolved against Kier.
I prefer the submissions of Mr Raeside. It is clear that the question of construction must be resolved by looking at the terms of the subcontract as a whole. I do not believe that the solution to the problem lies in a close analysis of the dictionary definition of the word "publish". The meaning of that word is plainly important, but it must be determined on the basis of what the parties intended it to mean, having regard to the context and terms of the agreement read as a whole: see per Lord Hoffmann in ICS Ltd West Bromwich Building Society [1998] 1 WLR 896, 912 H, and per Lord Bingham of Cornhill in BCCI v Ali [2001] UKHL/8 [2001] 1 All ER 961, 965 paragraph 8.
If the words of Article 1.3 are read in isolation, I accept that they are capable of referring either to the DOM/1 conditions in their corrected or in their uncorrected form. I can even accept, again if the Article is read in isolation, that the more natural interpretation is that they refer to the conditions in their corrected form. But they cannot be read in isolation. They must be read in context. In my view, if they are so read, it becomes clear that the words refer to the conditions in their uncorrected form. The express incorporation of Kier's form 8115a is critical. The opening words of that document are:
"Standard Amendments to the DOM/1 (incorporating Amendments 1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10) Form of Sub-Contract (Main Contract JCT 1998) Amend the following Clauses."
"Another rule of construction is that a deed or other instrument shall be construed more strongly against the grantor or maker thereof. This rule is often misinterpreted. It is only to be applied in cases of ambiguity and where other rules of construction fail."