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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Brown & Anor v Complete Buildings Solutions Ltd [2016] EWCA Civ 1 (13 January 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2016/1.html Cite as: [2016] EWCA Civ 1 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
MANCHESTER DISTRICT REGISTRY
HH Judge Raynor QC
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE SIMON
and
THE RT HON. SIR ROBIN JACOB
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(1) Andrew Brown (2) Caroline Brown |
Appellants |
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and |
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Complete Buildings Solutions Limited |
Respondent |
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Mr Richard Bradley (instructed by C.E Law) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 16 December 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Simon:
Introduction
The facts
If a dispute or difference arises under this Contract which either Party wishes to refer to adjudication the Scheme shall apply except that for the purposes of the Scheme the Adjudicator shall be the person (if any) and the nominating body shall be that stated in the Contract Particulars.
If the final certificate is not issued in accordance with clause 4.8.1,
1. the Contractor may give a payment notice to the Employer with a copy to the Architect/Contract Administrator stating what the Contractor considers to be the amount of the final payment due to him under this Contract and the basis on which the sum has been calculated and, subject to any notice under clause 4.8.4.3, the final payment shall be the final amount.
…
3. If the Employer intends to pay less than the sum specified in the Contractor's payment notice, he shall not later than 5 days before the final date for payment give the Contractor notice of that intention … and the payment to be made on or before the final date for payment shall not be less than the amount stated as due in the Employer's notice.
An adjudicator must resign where the dispute is the same or substantially the same as one which has previously been referred to adjudication, and a decision has been taken in that adjudication.
The issue and the argument
(a) The parties are bound by the decision of an adjudicator on a dispute or difference until it is finally determined by court or arbitration proceedings or by an agreement made subsequently by the parties.
(b) The parties cannot seek a further decision by an adjudicator on a dispute or difference if that dispute or difference has already been the subject of a decision by an adjudicator.
(c) The extent to which a decision or a dispute is binding will depend on an analysis of the terms, scope and extent of the dispute or difference referred to adjudication and the terms, scope and extent of the decision made by the adjudicator. In order to do this the approach has to be to ask whether the dispute or difference is the same or substantially the same as the relevant dispute or difference and whether the adjudicator has decided a dispute or difference which is the same or fundamentally the same as the relevant dispute or difference.
(e - sic) The approach must involve not only the same but also substantially the same dispute or difference. This is because disputes or differences encompass a wide range of factual and legal issues. If there had to be complete identity of factual and legal issues then the ability to readjudicate what was in substance the same dispute or difference would deprive clause [9.2] of its intended purpose.
(f) Whether one dispute is substantially the same as another dispute is a question of fact and degree.
45. Paragraph 9(2) provides that an adjudicator must resign where the dispute is the same or substantially the same as one which has previously been referred to adjudication and a decision has been taken in that adjudication. It must necessarily follow that the parties may not refer a dispute to adjudication in such circumstances.
46. This is the mechanism that has been adopted to protect respondents from having to face the expense and trouble of successive adjudications on the same or substantially the same dispute. There is an analogy here, albeit an imperfect one, with the rules developed by the common law to prevent successive litigation over the same matter: see the discussion about Henderson v Henderson (1843) 3 Hare 100 abuse of process and cause of action and issue estoppel by Lord Bingham of Cornhill in Johnson v Gore Wood & Co (a firm) [2002] 2 AC 1, 30H-31G.
47. Whether dispute A is substantially the same as dispute B is a question of fact and degree. If the contractor identifies the same Relevant Event in successive applications for extensions of time, but gives different particulars of its expected effects, the differences may or may not be sufficient to lead to the conclusion that the two disputes are not substantially the same. All the more so if the particulars of expected effects are the same, but the evidence by which the contractor seeks to prove them is different.
48. Where the only difference between disputes arising from the rejection of two successive applications for an extension of time is that the later application makes good shortcomings of the earlier application, an adjudicator will usually have little difficulty in deciding that the two disputes are substantially the same.
Decision
It is quite clear from the authorities that one does not look at the dispute or dispute referred to the first adjudicator in isolation. One must look at what the first adjudicator actually decided. Ultimately it is what the first adjudicator decided which determines how much or how little remains for consideration by the second adjudicator.
… what was decided in the First Adjudication was the ineffectiveness of the notice given in December 2013. That was not raised at all as an issue in the Second Adjudication.
Sir Robin Jacob:
Lord Justice Beatson: