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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> PBS Energo A.S. v Bester Generacion UK Ltd [2020] EWCA Civ 404 (19 March 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2020/404.html Cite as: [2021] 1 All ER (Comm) 19, [2020] BLR 355, [2020] EWCA Civ 404, 191 Con LR 121, [2020] 4 All ER 1101, [2020] Bus LR 1626, [2020] WLR(D) 173, [2020] 1 CLC 522 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT (QBD)
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE PEPPERALL
HT-2018- 00382
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE ROSE
and
SIR TIMOTHY LLOYD
____________________
PBS ENERGO A.S. |
Appellant /Claimant |
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- and - |
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BESTER GENERACION UK LIMITED |
Respondent/Defendant |
____________________
Mr Steven Walker QC and Mr Tom Owen (instructed by Watson Farley & Williams) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 10th March 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE COULSON :
1 INTRODUCTION
2 THE FACTUAL BACKGROUND
3 THE JUDGMENT OF PEPPERALL J
a) In respect of the water-cooled grate, he found that it was arguable that the grate had been sold by the time of the relevant witness statement in the adjudication (which represented that the grate was in the possession of the appellant) and that each of the appellant's relevant representations in respect of the grate were arguably false.
b) In respect of the flue gas cleaning equipment, the judge concluded at [40] that it was properly arguable that, contrary to the representations made to Mr Judkins, the appellant had neither paid for nor obtained title to the entire flue gas cleaning equipment and had never held the entire flue gas cleaning equipment to the respondent's order.
c) In respect of the selective non-catalytic reduction equipment ("SNCR"), the judge found at [46] that it was properly arguable that, contrary to the representations made to Mr Judkins, none of the SNCR was now available to the respondent.
d) In respect of the equipment report, the evidence in the summary judgment proceedings demonstrated that the equipment available for handover was not the same as had been stated by the appellant in the adjudication. As the judge said at [49], the subsequent acceptance of discrepancies by the appellant was "not good enough". They sought summary judgment, so it was incumbent upon them to explain any discrepancy openly and fully. He found that they had not done so and that he was driven to the conclusion that the appellant would not have been making any concessions, but for the diligent analysis of the appellant's disclosure undertaken by the respondent's legal representatives.
4 THE GENERAL LAW: ADJUDICATION AND FRAUD
"20 Some basic propositions can properly be formulated in the context albeit only of adjudication decision enforcements:
(a) Fraud or deceit can be raised as a defence in adjudications provided that it is a real defence to whatever the claims are; obviously, it is open to parties in adjudication to argue that the other party's witnesses are not credible by reason of fraudulent or dishonest behaviour.
(b) If fraud is to be raised in an effort to avoid enforcement or to support an application to stay execution of the enforcement judgement, it must be supported by clear and unambiguous evidence and argument.
(c) A distinction has to be made between fraudulent behaviour, acts or omissions which were or could have been raised as a defence in the adjudication and such behaviour, acts or omissions which neither were nor could reasonably have been raised but which emerge afterwards. In the former case, if the behaviour, acts or omissions are in effect adjudicated upon, the decision without more is enforceable. In the latter case, it is possible that it can be raised but generally not in the former.
(d) Addressing this latter case, one needs to differentiate between fraud which directly impacts on the subject matter of the decision and that which is independent of it. Examples of the first category are where it is later discovered that the certificate upon which an adjudication decision is based is discovered to have been issued by a certifier who has been bribed or by a certifier who has been fraudulently misled by the contractor into issuing the certificate by a fraudulent valuation. Examples of the second category are fraud on another contract or cross claims arising on the contract in question which can only be raised by way of set off or cross claim. Whilst matters in the first category can be raised, generally those in the second category should not be. The logic of this is that it is the policy of the 1996 Act that decisions are to be enforced but the Court should not permit the enforcement directly or at least indirectly of fraudulent claims or fraudulently induced claims; put another way, enforcement should not be used to facilitate fraud; fraud which does not impact on the claim made upon which the decision was based should not generally be deployed to prevent enforcement."
"20 In each of SG South, Gosvenor and Speymill, the question of fraud was in issue in the adjudication. In the first two cases, it was alleged that the contractor had fraudulently overcharged for work done. Both SG South and Speymill involved allegations of theft. Where - as in these cases - the alleged fraud has been adjudicated upon, then, as Akenhead J made clear in SG South, the adjudicator's decision should without more be enforced. So too, an adjudicator's decision should usually be enforced where the defendant failed to take an allegation of fraud which should reasonably have been taken before the adjudicator. There is, however, an important distinction between cases in which the fraud was, or should have been, put in issue in the adjudication and cases in which the adjudication decision was itself procured through fraud that was reasonably discovered after the adjudication was over.
21. The statutory policy of enforcing the temporary finality of an adjudication decision is important. As Fraser J rightly observed, the court must be robust not to allow such policy to be undermined simply by the assertion of fraud. In my judgment, such policy consideration must, however, yield to the well-established principle that the court will not allow its procedures to be used as a vehicle to facilitate fraud. Where, exceptionally, it is properly arguable on credible evidence that the adjudication decision was itself procured by a fraud that was reasonably discovered after the adjudication, the court is unlikely to grant summary judgment. I say unlikely rather than never since it is possible to conceive of a case in which the claimant might be able to establish that the defendant has no real prospect of successfully defending the claim and there is no other compelling reason why the case should be disposed of at trial even without relying on the impugned adjudication."
a) If the allegations of fraud were made in the adjudication then they were considered (or will be deemed to have been considered) by the adjudicator in reaching his decision, and cannot subsequently amount to a reason not to enforce the decision: see S G South, GPS Marine, and Speymill.
b) The same principle applies if the allegations of fraud were not made in the adjudication but could and should have been made there: see Gosvenor.
c) If the adjudicator's decision was arguably procured by fraud (such as in Eurocom) or where the evidence on which the adjudicator relied is shown to be both material and arguably fraudulent (as here) then, on the assumption that the allegations of fraud could not have been raised in the adjudication itself, such allegations can be a proper ground for resisting enforcement.
5. THE GROUNDS OF APPEAL
a) Ground 1: The judge erred in concluding that the allegations of fraud were relevant to the adjudicator's decision;
b) Ground 2: The allegations of fraud could/should have been raised in the adjudication:
c) Ground 3: The judge should have found that, because the respondent had not filed a defence alleging fraud, the allegations of fraud were not open to the respondent:
d) Ground 4: The judge had failed to distinguish between granting summary judgment and enforcing judgment. He ought to have granted summary judgment, even if he had then stayed some or all of that judgment.
6. GROUND 3: THE ABSENCE OF A PLEADED DEFENCE
"The claim form should be accompanied by an application notice that sets out the procedural directions that are sought. Commonly, the claimant's application will seek an abridgement of time for the various procedural steps, and summary judgment under CPR Part 24. The claim form and the application should be accompanied by a witness statement or statements setting out the evidence relied on in support of both the adjudication enforcement claim and the associated procedural application. This evidence should ordinarily include a copy of the Notice of Intention to Refer and the adjudicator's decision. Further pleadings in the adjudication may be required where questions of the adjudicator's jurisdiction are being raised."
"If a claimant applies for summary judgment before a defendant against whom the application is made has filed a defence, that defendant need not file a defence before the hearing."
On the face of it, therefore, r.24.4(2) would appear to be a complete answer to the suggestion that a defendant in adjudication enforcement proceedings is required to plead a defence alleging fraud before those allegations can be considered at the summary judgment/enforcement hearing.
"It was entirely proper of Aygun to have served a defence, as indeed fraud can only be alleged if specifically pleaded."
At paragraph 14 of my judgment on appeal, I identified the service of the pleaded defence together with 3 witness statements but (since the point was not in issue) I made no comment as to whether or not the service of such a defence was a condition precedent to the ability to raise the allegations of fraud.
7. GROUND 4: SUMMARY JUDGMENT AND STAYS OF EXECUTION
8. THE EFFECT OF COCKERILL J'S JUDGMENT
9. CONCLUSIONS
LADY JUSTICE ROSE:
SIR TIMOTHY LLOYD: