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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions >> Southern Electric v Mead Realisations [2009] EWHC 2947 (TCC) (04 November 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2009/2947.html Cite as: [2009] EWHC 2947 (TCC) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
Royal Courts of Justice |
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B e f o r e :
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SOUTHERN ELECTRIC | Claimant | |
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MEAD REALISATIONS | Defendant |
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MR. G. SOFAER (solicitor, Denniss Matthews) appeared on behalf of the Defendant.
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Crown Copyright ©
MR. JUSTICE AKENHEAD:
"We are able to offer to pay £50,000 by the end of October 2009 with another £50,000 at the end of November 2009, with the final balance of payment by 15th December 2009."
"We refer to your facsimile transmission to the Technology and Construction Court of today's date. Thank you for admitting your liability in respect of the full amount claimed. Our client has reviewed your proposed mechanism for payment. It is disappointed that you are not intending to pay this amount in full immediately. A month has passed since the adjudicator's decision was given and you have had adequate time to organise payment. Despite our client's frustration at the further delay, it has instructed us that it would be willing to accept a mechanism of payment as follows:
£50,000 to be received no later than 29th October 2009
£50,000 to be received no later than 30th November 2009
The balance to be received no later than 15th December 2009
All payments are to be made by direct transfer into our client account and not by cheque. Account details are: [and account details were given]. Interest will continue to accrue in respect of the outstanding amount until settlement has been agreed. We look forward to hearing from you by return in relation to the advanced proposal."
"We confirm receipt of your faxed letter of 23 October 2009 and confirm that a CHAPS transfer in connection with the first payment has been organised with our bank.
As requested, we therefore confirm our agreement to the settlement terms-
-£50,000 to be paid by transfer no later than 29 October 2009.
-£50,000 to be paid by transfer no later than 30 November 2009.
-Balance of £152,855.90, as per the adjudicator's decision, which includes-
(i) £2,600 (including VAT) paid by SEC to the adjudicator;
(ii) Interest as noted in the SEC letter dated 30 September 2009 of £160.83;
(iii) The balance of £152,855.90 less these items and less the £150,000 to be paid which is £95.07;
(iv) In total this balance is £2,855.90.
-The daily interest award of the adjudicator will need to be revised and agreed to take account of the payments made, but can also be paid as part of the balance payment."
"Further to our conversation, I confirm that the parties will need to lodge a Consent Order with the court in order to vacate the hearing date and to prevent the accruing of further legal costs (for which you will be ultimately liable) You will need to make the following payments to our client:
-£50,000 to be received no later than 29 October 2009.
-£50,000 to be received no later than 30 November 2009.
-'the balance' to be received no later than 15 December 2009.
As discussed, this final payment on 15 December 2009 needs to include an amount for interest and costs. The calculation for these is set out below."
The letter then refers to the fact that Southern Electric's costs to date are said to be £4,700 plus £705 VAT. An explanation is given as to what work that involved and included, and it was made clear that, if the consent order was not signed and filed by the following morning, further fees would need to be incurred in relation to trial preparation. It then set out a calculation with regard to interest, which produced a total up to 15 December 2009 of £3,431.04. The conclusion to the letter was:
"Accordingly, the final payment to be received from your client on 15 December is £12,531.94 the breakdown of which is as follows:
The balance of the amount outstanding on the adjudicator's decision is £2,855.90;
Interest £3,431.04;
Our legal costs - £5,405 including VAT; plus
Court fees - £840.
Attached is a draft consent order relating to the above…"
"SD stating the final payment includes our fees, [Mr. Biggs] okay but requesting a breakdown."
This suggests that Mr Biggs was aware that costs would be payable additionally.
"(i) This Court has recognised the importance of a summary and prompt procedure to secure enforcement of adjudicators' decisions properly reached.
(ii) In this case, some four weeks elapsed after the issue of the adjudicators' decisions before the enforcement proceedings were issued.
(iii) In their letter dated 17 October 2007, the Claimant's solicitors gave very clear warning that, unless the sum due under Mr Price's decision was paid promptly, proceedings would be commenced without further notice.
(iv) In correspondence, the Defendant's solicitors made it clear in effect that they would not pay primarily because, they argued, the adjudicator did not have jurisdiction. They were thus putting forward an apparently comprehensible defence to any enforcement proceedings
(v) Even in the "without prejudice save as to costs" letter, it was made clear that the offer did not recognise that the sum which Mr Price had decided was due was payable.
(vi) It can have come as no surprise that proceedings were issued. A party which makes a "without prejudice save as to costs" offer is not entitled in some way to have it responded to or to assume that threatened proceedings against it will or might be withheld. It would be different if the without prejudice correspondence had revealed some agreement by which the Claimant undertook, at least temporarily, not to issue proceedings. That is certainly not the case here.
(vii) The Defendant's argument that the Claimant has acted "secretively" in incurring substantial costs in preparing for its without notice application and its proceedings in general is without foundation. Glovers wrote in terms on 17 October 2007 that, if the amount due pursuant to Mr Price's decision was not paid promptly, proceedings would be commenced in the High Court without further notice. The Defendant obviously knew that Glovers were involved and they knew, because they had been so warned, that proceedings could be commenced at any time without further notice, particularly given that its solicitors had put forward a potential defence, and it must or should have appreciated that significant costs could be incurred if High Court proceedings were issued. They could have ascertained, as was likely, that, if the proceedings were commenced in the TCC, the TCC practice as contained in their Guide would or could be followed. That is exactly what happened.
(viii) The procedure, set out in paragraph 9.2 of the TCC Guide (Second Edition, First Revision, October 2007), appears to have been followed substantially by Glovers. The Part 7 Claim Form needed to be accompanied by Particulars of Claim and the Part 24 application needed to be accompanied by a witness statement which exhibited, at least, the construction contract and the relevant adjudication documents. This procedure is now the norm for adjudication enforcement proceedings.
(ix) It is inevitable in those circumstances that the costs will exceed by a very substantial amount the fixed costs called for in CPR 45.