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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions >> L Brown & Sons Ltd v Crosby Homes (North West) Ltd [2005] EWHC 3503 (TCC) (05 December 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2005/3503.html Cite as: [2005] EWHC 3503 (TCC) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH
DIVISION
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
133-137 Fetter Lane London EC4A 1HD | ||
B e f o r e :
____________________
L BROWN & SONS
LIMITED |
Claimant | |
- and - |
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CROSBY HOMES (NORTH WEST)
LIMITED |
Defendant |
____________________
MR NISSEN (Instructed by Messrs Eversheds) appeared on behalf of the Defendant
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Monday, 5 December 2005
MR JUSTICE RAMSEY:
Challenges to the jurisdiction and the adjudication
"I have further considered the submissions of the Parties and would state as follows:
i) I note clause 39A.1 was amended by the Parties to include the words "out of or in connection with," I am of the view that these express words cannot now be separated from Article 5.
ii) I am of the view that the Responding Party's representative's summarised questions relating to the dispute are not exactly correct. The redress sought by the Referring Party in the [adjudication] relates to an entitlement to payment of £407,672.58 (or other sum), ie the Responding Party's entitlement to withhold [liquidated damages] and the Referring Party's entitlement to a completion bonus on the terms alleged.
I am of the view that both of these matters (however paraphrased) arise " … out of or in connection with this Contract…" and I remain of the view that I have jurisdiction to act as Adjudicator in these proceedings..."
These proceedings before the court
"15. Brown's case was that the adjudicator's jurisdiction to determine the dispute derived from clause 39A of the JCT contract….
17. Brown's contention with regard to clause 39A is wrong. The provision which contained the agreement to adjudicate was Article 5 of the JCT Contract. Clause 39A merely contained the conditions applicable to any dispute which is referred to adjudication pursuant to Article 5…
18. Accordingly, the parties only agreed to refer to adjudication disputes or differences which arise under the JCT contract.
19. The dispute which Brown purported to refer to adjudication did not arise under the JCT Contract. The claims for acceleration payments and for release from liquidated damages derived from separate alleged oral agreements, not the JCT Contract. Those agreements would not themselves be susceptible to adjudication …
20. If, contrary to Crosby's primary case, the contract is to be construed by reference to clause 39A, such that a dispute arising under out of or in connection with the JCT Contract would fall within the scope of a permissible adjudication, then Crosby also maintains that the dispute referred was not one which fell within that ambit either. The claims derived from separate alleged oral agreements reached after the parties signed the JCT Contract and do not give rise to disputes arising out of or in connection with the JCT Contract."
It therefore sought declarations that the adjudicator lacked jurisdiction, and the decision of 26 October 2005 was of no legal force or effect.
"Browns case is that article 5 and clause 39A of the Contract (as amended) must be read together and that the amendment to clause 39A of the Conditions must also apply to Article 5."
It further stated at paragraph 37 that:
"It is patently obvious that the dispute referred must have and did arise under out of or in connection with the Contract: the variation to the Contract was an agreement as to how to deal with delays to the Contract, did not relate to any other contract, waived LADs that would otherwise have been levied under the Contract and related to the project that was the subject matter of the contract."
Continuing at paragraph 39:
"In other words even if the words "out of or in connection with the Contract" do not apply, the Dispute arose under the Contract in any event. The variations relied upon, oral or otherwise are variations to specific parts of the Contract and must therefore have arisen under the Contract."
The approach in these proceedings
The jurisdictional challenges
Jurisdiction under the contract
"If any dispute or difference arises under this Contract either Party may refer it to adjudication in accordance with clause 39A."
Clause 39A.1 of the conditions in turn, as unamended, provides:
"Clause 39A applies where pursuant to Article 5 either Party refers any dispute or difference arising under this Contract to adjudication."
The use of the word "under" in these provisions, mirrors section 108(1) of the Housing Grants Construction and Regeneration Act 1996, and paragraph 1(1) of the Scheme for Construction Contracts.
"Insert after the word "under" the words "out of or in connection with"."
In other words, clause 39A.1 of the condition now reads:
"Clause 39A applies where pursuant to Article 5 either Party refers any dispute or difference arising under out of or in connection with this Contract to adjudication."
However, there was no amendment to Article 5. If there had been the same amendment to Article 5, it is evident that there could be no dispute that this would have permitted adjudication of disputes or differences arising both "under" and "out of or in connection with" the contract.
"(4) The meaning which a document (or any other utterance) would convey to a reasonable man is not the same thing as the meaning of its words. The meaning of words is a matter of dictionaries and grammars; the meaning of the document is what the parties using those words against the relevant background would reasonably have been understood to mean. The background may not merely enable the reasonable man to choose between the possible meanings of words which are ambiguous but even (as occasionally happens in ordinary life) to conclude that the parties must, for whatever reason, have used the wrong words or syntax …
(5) The "rule" that words should be given their "natural and ordinary meaning" reflects the common sense proposition that we do not easily accept that people have made linguistic mistakes, particularly in formal documents. On the other hand, if one would nevertheless conclude from the background that something must have gone wrong with the language, the law does not require judges to attribute to the parties an intention which they plainly could not have had."
This second part was based on the well-known passage in the speech of Lord Diplock in Antaios Compania Naviera SA v Salen Rederierna AB [1985] AC 191, 201, where he said:
"I take this opportunity of re-stating that if detailed semantic and syntactical analysis of words in a commercial contract is going to lead to a conclusion that flouts business commonsense, it must be made to yield to business commonsense."
"… it is common sense that greater weight should attach to terms which the particular contracting parties have chosen to include in the contract than to pre-printed terms probably devised to cover very many situations to which the particular contracting parties have never addressed their minds."
In essence, Mr Hargreaves submits that it is apparent that the intention was to broaden the scope of the adjudication provisions and that I should construe the provisions of Article 5 and clause 39A.1 so as to give effect to that intention. He also relies on other provisions of the contract in relation to construction and discrepancies.
"The Articles of Agreement, the Conditions and the Appendices are to be read as a whole and the effect or operation of any article or clause in the Conditions or item in or entry in the Appendices must therefore unless otherwise specifically stated be read subject to any relevant qualification or modification in any other article or any of the clauses in the Conditions or item in or entry in the Appendices."
He also refers to clause 2.4.4 which was added by the amendments and which provides as follows:
"Where there is any discrepancy or conflict between or within the Contract Documents the Amendments will prevail over all other Contract Documents and the Articles of Agreement, the Conditions, the Supplementary Provisions and the Appendices will prevail over all Contract Documents other than the Amendments."
"The Second October Agreement … was alleged (by the Referring Party) to have been made on 14 October 2004 in a private meeting between Mr Murphy of the Referring Party and Mr Teage of the Responding Party. The essence of the Second October Agreement was to vary the (first) October Agreement such that the dates by which NHBC certification was required for the Referring Party to qualify for the apartment bonus was changed from 15 October 2004 to 15 November 2004 and the waiver of LADs term/date was similarly changed to the end of November 2004."
"I accepted on a balance of probabilities the Referring Party's submissions that the first October Agreement was amended such that the operative bonus dates for NHBC certification and the Responding Party's ability to legally complete on apartments were amended to 15 November 2004 and the end of November 2004 respectively. I further decide that the operative dates for those apartments on Levels 10 and 11 were removed from the agreement and the time for certification essentially became a matter of best endeavours."
"I preferred the Referring Party's evidence in this respect and I decided that the Referring Party had met the terms of the agreement to obtain NHBC certificates (on 104 No. apartments) by 15 November 2004 and that the Responding Party was able to legally complete on these apartments by the end of November 2004 and the Referring Party was entitled to receive bonus payments totalling £208,000 in respect of the said 104 No. apartments."
And at paragraphs 39 and 41 he said:
"Second, to the extent that I did not have the power to decide such discretionary matter then I decided that I preferred the Referring Party's version of the agreement partially evidenced by the Responding Party's letter dated 7 March 2005, such that there was a continuing agreement to waive LADs and the Responding Party was bound by such agreement.
…
41. I decided that these letters supported the Referring Party's case that there was an on-going (post 14 October 2004) agreement that the Respondent Party would waive LADs and I was of the view that such agreement was linked to the Referring Party's completion of apartments by the November 2004."
"The answer to the question whether a dispute falls within an arbitration clause in a contract must depend on (a) what is the dispute and (b) what disputes the arbitration clause covers. To take (b) first, the language of the arbitration clause in this agreement is as broad as can well be imagined. It embraces any dispute between the parties "in respect of" the agreement, or in respect of any provision in the agreement, or in respect of anything arising out of it. If the parties are at one on the point that they did enter into a binding agreement in terms which are not in dispute, and the difference that has arisen between them is as to their respective rights under the admitted agreement in the events that have happened for example, whether the agreement has been broken by either of them, or as to the damage resulting from such breach, or whether the breach by one of them goes to the root of the contract and entitles the other party to claim to be discharged from further performance, or whether events supervening since the agreement was made have brought the contract to an end so that neither party is required to perform further - in all such cases it seems to me that the difference is within such an arbitration clause as this."
"I propose, however, to decide this case on broader grounds, which I can state shortly. The parties have agreed to submit all their disputes to arbitration. The words "any dispute arising out of the contract ..." cover every dispute except a dispute whether there was ever a contract at all, because if there was no contract, there was no arbitration clause.
He also refers to Government of Gibraltar v Kenney [1956] 2 QB at 410, in which Sellers J said this:
"In my view, this arbitration clause is very wide. It covers "any dispute or difference" which arises or occurs between the parties "in relation to any thing or matter arising out of or under this agreement." The distinction between matters "arising out of" and "under" the agreement is referred to in most of the speeches in Heyman v. Darwins Ltd in the House of Lords and it is quite clear that "arising out of" is very much wider than "under" the agreement. This clause very widely incorporates a difference or dispute in relation to "any thing or matter arising out of" as well as "under" the agreement, and, in my view, everything which is claimed in this arbitration can be said to be a dispute or difference in relation to any thing "arising out of" the agreement."
"With these points made, unless precedent requires me to decide otherwise, I have no doubt that disputes between the parties based upon alleged mistake at the time this contract was entered into, and upon an alleged misrepresentation or negligent mis-statement, are ones "arising in connection" with that contract and thus within the scope of the arbitration clause in this case."
At page 503, Balcombe LJ added his comments, and he said this:
"Disputes as to the construction of the contract, or as to matters arising under the contract, are covered by the opening words of the clause. So disputes as to matters arising in connection with the contract must be taken to refer to disputes other than about questions of construction, or as to matters arising under the contract."
"During the said negotiations in Tehran between 7 June 1973 and 13 June 1973, a verbal agreement was reached between Mr Shamoon as agent of the Respondent of the one part, and the Claimant of the other part. The agreement provided:-
(a) That the Claimant should permit the Respondent to sell the said 7,200 metric tons of reinforcing bars to another purchaser on terms corresponding to Special Clause 6.
(b) That the Respondent should be relieved of the obligation to ship the said bars to the Claimant.
(c) That the Claimant should be relieved of the obligation to amend the said defective letters of credit.
(d) That, in accordance with the spirit of Special Clause 6, the Respondent would keep the Claimant informed of market trends and would only sell the said reinforcing bars with the Claimant's consent."
"It was pointed out by Mr Hunter that in order to understand what the agreement was, which had been entered into as the arbitrators had found during the negotiations in Tehran, one has to refer to the contract of May 10. One has to refer to it in the first place to ascertain what special cl.6 provided. Further in order to ascertain the overprice one would again have to refer to the contract and one would similarly have to make such reference in order to ascertain the technical description and sizes of the reinforcing bars originally sold by the respondents…"
"… the negotiations in Tehran … altered the contract of May 10 much more fundamentally than did the correspondence between the shipowners and the India office in the last mentioned authority."
That was a reference to the case of Union & India v EB Aaby's Rederi A/S.
"Nevertheless, as already indicated, the negotiations in Tehran and the agreement there reached particularly the latter, are unintelligible without referring back to the contract of May 10. In one sense the agreement made in Tehran was a new agreement, but in another sense it varied, though very radically, the contract of May 10. I see no reason for concluding that the agreement made in Tehran jettisoned the arbitration provisions contained in the contract of May 10."
"Even if there were a third agreement, I consider that a claim relating to a breach of it would, in the particular circumstances of this case, be connected with both the previous agreements. The services related to the investigation and repair of work done under the first agreement..."
"Thus, any dispute which is in connection with the contract is referable to arbitration. This expression is wide enough to cover disputes arising out of a second contract which is related to the contract containing the arbitration clause as can be seen from the decision of Mustill J in A and B v C and D…
It follows that a dispute arising out of a contract entered into to provide a means of resolving disputes that had arisen under an earlier contract are disputes which, in principle, arise in connection with the earlier contract."
"However, although neither the Wolff nor the Ashville Investments case are therefore binding because the clauses were in different terms, I do find the reasoning of those courts as to the width of expression such as "in relation to" and "in connection with" of considerable assistance in construing the present clause. Clearly the use of the phrase "in relation to" connotes a wider scope of arbitration clause than one which is limited to disputes arising under a contract such as whether there has been a breach of contract or not. "In relation to" includes disputes which whilst not arising under the contract, are related to or connected with it. In my judgment, a dispute concerning an alleged variation to a contract is a dispute which is "in relation to" that contract."
"Similarly, it is a principle of law that the scope of an arbitrator's jurisdiction and powers in a given case depend fundamentally upon the terms of the arbitration agreement, that is to say upon its proper construction in all the circumstances. However, I do not think that there is any principle of law to the effect that the meaning of certain specific words in one arbitration clause in one contract is immutable and that those same specific words in another arbitration clause in other circumstances in another contract must be construed in the same way. This is not to say that the earlier decision on a given form of words will not be persuasive, to a degree dependent on the extent of the similarity between the contracts and surrounding circumstances in the two cases. In the interests of certainty and clarity a court may well think it right to construe words in an arbitration agreement, or indeed in a particular type of contract, in the same way as those same words have earlier been construed in another case involving an arbitration clause by another court. But in my opinion the subsequent court is not bound by the doctrine of stare decisis to do so.
If I were wrong, then in any event it must be necessary to compare the surrounding circumstances in each case to ensure that those in the latter case did not require one to construe albeit the same words differently when used in the different context.
However, before turning to the authorities upon which counsel for Ashville particularly relied, there are in my opinion some further important considerations to bear in mind. First, it is trite law that the answer to the question whether a particular dispute falls within an agreement to arbitrate depends primarily upon the proper construction of that agreement."