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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions >> States of Guernsey v Jacobs UK Ltd [2011] EWHC 918 (TCC) (15 April 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2011/918.html Cite as: [2011] 2 All ER (Comm) 175, [2011] ArbLR 32, [2011] EWHC 918 (TCC) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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STATES OF GUERNSEY |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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JACOBS UK LIMITED |
Defendant |
____________________
Rachel Ansell (instructed by Beale & Co) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 1 April 2011
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Akenhead:
The History and the Facts.
"At present, all contracts are expressed to be subject to English law. In general, it would be expected that the contracts would be subject to Guernsey Law and the jurisdiction of the Royal Court and I would advise that this would be appropriate for a project such as this. By specifying Guernsey Courts having jurisdiction purposes, this would avoid needless travel and delay in the event of any dispute and the use of Guernsey Law ought to avoid the misapplication of the UK and other Regulations by the contractors or related interpretation problems in the event of a dispute."
There is nothing in this letter, which was copied to Jacobs by the Architect, about arbitration. Indeed the only way that this letter can be interpreted is that Guernsey was asking for a Guernsey Law and Guernsey Court jurisdiction.
"I attach, for your information, copies of documents with regard to the Guernsey Airports Contracts for the following parties:
Babtie (letter dated 07 June 2001)
Kensington Taylor (letter dated 06 June 2001)
Davis Langdon & Everest (letter dated 06 June 2001)
I should be most grateful to receive any comments that you may wish to make at your earliest possible opportunity…"
The attached documents relating to Jacobs' appointments were a commentary on the ACE form of agreement and conditions. Against Clause 9.2, which in the standard form does not contain an arbitration agreement, there was an arbitration clause in relation to any dispute arising between the Consulting Engineer and Guernsey. The commentary on the QS appointment also provided for Guernsey arbitration.
"These have been completed as required for the Project and the agreed Fee Agreement
Particular alterations you will note are for Guernsey Law, [that /but/there] is no Arbtn or Adjn or VAT and not a Deed
As the States have not come back in regard to warranty this has been knocked out, as for KT and DLE…"
"Arbn" and "Adjn" obviously mean arbitration and adjudication. The draft agreements make it clear that while Guernsey Law is to apply dispute resolution is to be through the "non-exclusive jurisdiction of" The Guernsey Courts.
"Moving on to matters relating to our appointment, DLE recently forwarded a copy of a revised ACE Conditions…B(1) for civil/structural engineering and B(2) mechanical and electrical services in buildings. We feel unable to sign these documents as there are inconsistencies with both our original draft agreement and your project brief.
In our original ACE Conditions of Engagement 1998 B(1), we identified that our payment of fees for undertaking Normal Services as defined in section A 20.1 would be 4.5% of the outturn cost…
In our recent review, we have identified that a number of services that we had been instructed to undertake are clearly Additional Services as defined in the ACE agreement and therefore should be paid at the defined hourly rates. We are currently producing a document detailing and substantiating these Additional Services and will forward this for your comment…
To summarise, we have identified a number of areas of structural and mechanical and electrical design, which we consider to be Additional Services and as such we should be reimbursed at the specified hourly rates…"
Jacobs did not like some handwritten amendments which restricted its rights to claim for "Additional Services"; this was to feature later in the contractual story.
"Although I have been continually promised that you will deal with the matter, I have been chasing you for the revised "Consultants Agreement" documents for DLE, K-T and Babtie, over the last few weeks. This followed the fixing of a meeting to be held with representatives of the Board of Administration and States of Guernsey Law Officers to close the action out.
I remind you that this meeting is for Friday, 1 August 2003, at 10.00 am and I am expecting to take the three documents mentioned above with me, in an amended state that reflects the various comments and changes requested by the Law Officers. I also recall that I still do not have the said documents and expect them to be sent by courier tomorrow…without fail. I do not want to be "shot as the messenger" if they do not arrive."
"At the start of this project the intention was for Babtie to act as sub consultants to Kensington Taylor. Accordingly we drafted two 'back to back' ACE agreements B(1) 2nd edition 1998 documents, one from Babtie to Kensington Taylor, and the second from KT to the Board of Administration. These agreements identified normal and additional services: …
Late in the year we were presented with two new documents by DLE, a revised B(1) and a B(2) both using the latest format as reprinted in August 2000 with minor corrections. DLE had handwritten text in the agreements stating that "C9.1 Additional Services included: Services additional to those in C1 to C9: the Consulting Engineer has agreed to perform as Additional Services deemed to be included and catered for by the Schedule as described in A 20.1 and no further payment of fees shall be due". This was contrary to our original agreement and totally unacceptable and we advised you and DLE that we would not be prepared to agree to these documents.
… I reported that I had discussed the matter with my board and have been asked to produce two new Agreement documents. I will draft a new B (1) directly between Babtie and Board of Administration using exactly the same wording as in our original document and a new B (2) covering the M&E using the same wording for the payment clauses."
It is clear that both sets of agreements being discussed in this letter had no arbitration agreement.
"The Law Officers have made a number of red line amendments to the original copies, and I should appreciate it if you would incorporate these. They have also asked that you include a provision relating to the Fee.
I await the finalised copies for signature in due course."
I will refer to this matter and the attachments as "the Offer". The attached Agreements and conditions contained a significant number of red lined or handwritten amendments. Clause 9.2 relating to adjudication was deleted and the new clause 9.2 was added in each of the two draft agreements:
"If a dispute should arise between the Consulting Engineer and the Client whether before or following completion or alleged completion or abandonment of the project or the determination of the appointment of the Consulting Engineer or out of any contested invoice or any determination of the appointment of the Consulting Engineer under Condition 5.4 or 5.5 the dispute shall be referred to the arbitration of a person to be agreed between the parties to act as arbitrator or failing agreement within one month of a notice by either party to the other requiring agreement to an arbitrator, to an arbitrator appointed by the Senior Advocate in private practice (not in conflict) in Guernsey and in his absence the next Senior Advocate so qualified. Arbitration shall be conducted in accordance with the Arbitration (Guernsey) Laws 1982 and 1986 save that the parties hereby agree that the hourly rates at which on a party-party basis they may recover their advocates costs shall be limited in accordance with the standard maximum contained in the Royal Court (Costs and Fees) Rules 2000 as amended from time to time."
"…We apologise for not replying earlier. As I said when we met at our offices on 24 November, I had forwarded our ACE Agreements with your written comments on to our legal team and have now received an initial response.
We have to say that we are very surprised that you should come back to us at this stage in the negotiations over the final agreement with a large number of amendments that appear to reflect differences required due to Guernsey legal requirements and operating procedures, many of which must have been known to you from the start of the project.
We had assumed that all negotiations were now complete; if you intend to raise new issues at this stage then we would also wish to raise a number of issues that we now require in recent versions of our agreements. Please let us know how you would like to receive these."
"I refer to your letter… the contents of which are somewhat surprising.
Back in 2001 we forwarded the comments from the Law Officers on the necessary amendments required to the form of appointment, to make it compliant with Guernsey Law, and since that time we have been concerned to get the forms of appointment completed and executed. Those prepared by you were forwarded for checking to the Law Officers in July of last year and they did not comply with the original amendments required. This fact was communicated to you. By the time we held our meeting on 24 November 2004, we had still not heard from you on the documents and were advised at that meeting that the matter was with your legal department and they would respond to us by Christmas.
Your response therefore that a large number of amendments and operating procedures had been raised 'at this stage' completely ignores the fact that these matters were highlighted to you at the commencement of this project. The amendments requested are simply to make the documents compliant.
Will you therefore please ask your legal department to have the courtesy of reviewing the amended documents and let us have a final copy for our approval in anticipation of them being signed without further delay."
"The following is a very brief chronology of relevant events:
- We initially issued draft ACE B(1) in 1999, with our fee set at 4.5% of the outstanding cost.
- We chased your Project Manager repeatedly to get these finalised before the detailed design was commenced.
- In June 2000, Kensington Taylor forwarded a single document to yourselves, combining the three professional documents together, namely RIBA for KT, RICS for DLE and the ACE for Babtie.
- In November 2002 we received considerably revised ACE B (1) and B (2) documents from Davis Langdon & Everest. We wrote to Phil Nokes on 6 December 2002, detailing why we were unable to sign these documents.
- We issued our ACE B (1) and B (2) agreements to Phil Nokes on 10 February 2004.
For your information we scan, hyperlink and database all incoming and outgoing correspondence from this office. We have no record or recollection of receiving any correspondence from the Law Officers during 2001. Moreover, we did not receive any correspondence from your office relating to the professional agreements in 2001. I have spoken to Keith Hudson and he, like me, also has no recollection of receiving any such comments. It may be this was sent to Davis Langdon, who were liaising with the Law Officers over professional appointments. However, if you have a record of the issue of this correspondence to us then I would be pleased to see copies of the same.
More recently I have forwarded your 'red line' revised ACE B (1) and B (2) agreements to our legal advisers in October 2004. The feedback received was that if it is intended to raise these new issues at this late stage then we would also wish to raise a number of issues for inclusion in any agreements. Can you please confirm how you would wish to proceed."
"The agreements should reflect the agreement that was reached between the parties at the commencement of this project. I can confirm that the last amendments made by the Law Officers did not seek to introduce new terms, but simply to reflect the matters raised by them in that original memorandum and in particular relating to the Guernsey jurisdiction. We do not agree therefore that it would be appropriate for you to seek to introduce new matters at this point.
We do however await your comments on the document.
I am in receipt of invoice 580062 from you dated 16th November 2004. The work for which the invoice has been rendered appears to fall within clause 8.1 of the Appointment conditions where you are to:
'perform work or advise the client in connection with any claim or matter where such claim or matter arises out of any contract to the execution of the Works and is referred for the first time to the Consulting engineer…'
I wish to reiterate that whilst the States of Guernsey will pay any sums that are properly and lawfully due to Babtie, the question of additional fees cannot be considered until we understand and can agree the legal basis upon which you consider that any such fees are due. This would therefore seem to emphasise the need to reach agreement upon the form of appointment. We accordingly wait to hear from you."
The invoice referred to was for some £7-£8000 and related to time spent by Jacobs in examining an extension of time claim relating to structural and stainless steel work.
"You state in your letter that comments were passed to the Project Manager on 22 June 2001. As we stated in our letter of 22 March 2005, we did not receive any correspondence from your office relating to the professional agreements in 2001..."
It then goes on to refer to its letter dated 6 December 2002 (see above) and quoting the Additional Services clause which it had objected to. It continued:
"It was the introduction of this clause rather than any reference to Guernsey Law which led to us being unprepared to sign the revised agreement. We certainly did not agree to perform any Additional Services as part of our original fee.
Our legal advisors have reviewed your 'red lined' proposed amendments to our ACE B (1) and B (2) agreements as sent to us on 19 October 2004. Our senior directors are prepared to sign the revised agreement on the condition that you acknowledge that the detailed examination of the structural and stainless steel extension of time claim was an Additional Service for which we will be reimbursed accordingly.
You state that you are in receipt of our invoice 580062. You also suggest that the work undertaken appears to fall within clause 8.1…The relevant section however, is the remainder of this clause which goes on to read: "… provided that this service shall not extend to the detailed examination of any financial claim"…
We consider that the work undertaken on the structural and stainless steel extension of time claim is clearly an Additional Service and we invoiced you accordingly last November. This invoice is now in excess of 3 months overdue and we request that it is paid without further delay.
Could you please write to confirm your agreement that the work undertaken in the detailed examination of the structural and stainless steel extension of time claim was an Additional Service as defined under C10.19 of the ACE B (1) agreement. Upon receipt of this letter we will then re-draft and resubmit the ACE B (1) and B (2) agreements revised in accord with your 'red lined' notes for your approval and signature…."
I will refer to this letter as the "Counter-Offer".
"I am now in a position to respond to the letter… dated 7 April 2005 relating to the agreement and to the claims were additional expenses. We confirm that it is our understanding that the agreement will entitle Babtie to additional payment for additional services in certain circumstances. Accordingly to assist us assess whether any further payment is due, will you please let us have the following information:
- A description of the work undertaken and copies of any reports and other documents produced by you in relation to this additional work
- Confirmation of who gave you the instruction to undertake this additional work, (with copies of the instructing letter authority)
- Whether you gave any estimate as to the cost for undertaking this work
- A copy of the invoices relating to this work with (if not apparent on the face of the invoice) a breakdown of time spent, and the activities to which the relevant time refers.
We will then be glad to give this matter our immediate attention."
"The Appointment forms have still not been agreed or signed. There is still a major outstanding issue on additional services. Accordingly the question of the disbursements is one that is governed by the original agreement and not the draft ACE Conditions."
Guernsey followed that up with another letter on 20 July 2006, stating:
"Despite the efforts of the States of Guernsey, Jacobs Babtie have not agreed or signed their form of appointment and accordingly I cannot see how it can govern the terms of your appointment."
Agreement was later reached so far as an amount for disbursements was concerned.
These Proceedings
Discussion
"Under this test, once the parties had to all outward appearances agreed in the same terms on the same subject matter, then neither can, generally, rely on some unexpressed qualification or reservation to show that he had not in fact agreed to the terms to which he had appeared to agree. Such subjective reservations of one party therefore do not prevent the formation of a contract." (Chitty on Contracts-Para 2.002)
This has been applied in many cases, a recent one being Maple Leaf Macro Volatility Master Fund v Rouvroy [2009] EWCA Civ 1334.
(a) Jacobs made it absolutely clear that historically it had not been prepared to sign an earlier version of the agreement because it objected to amendments relating to Additional Services.
(b) It explained that its motivation was nothing to do with Guernsey Law being sought to be incorporated but because it was not prepared to perform Additional Services (properly so called) for no additional sum.
(c) Jacobs indicated clearly that it would sign the revised agreement but "on condition" that its work involved in dealing with a particular extension of time claim (presumably from the contractor) "was an Additional Service for which [it] would be reimbursed accordingly".
(d) The rest of the letter is wholly consistent with it being made clear to Guernsey that Jacobs would only sign up to the red-lined draft agreements if and when Guernsey acknowledged and confirmed that this work was an Additional Service.
(e) The fact that Jacobs' claim for this work was only some £7-8000's worth of work does not mean that Jacobs was not in some way entitled to raise this requirement by way of Counter-Offer.
(f) It might have been different if the parties had positively agreed to leave this issue over but nonetheless sign up to the proffered agreements, but this was not to be the case. There is no real hint in the wording which it used, looked at in the round, that Jacob was accepting that the parties could or should proceed on this partial basis.
(g) The wording of this letter construed objectively is that Jacobs was only prepared to agree to accept the revised agreement (including the arbitration clause) if Guernsey would accept that the invoiced claim was a justified one. Historically, this invoice was contested for good or bad reason by Guernsey; it does not matter that the reason was good or bad because Jacobs was seeking, as the price for it agreeing to the revised forms of contract, that Guernsey accepted the invoice.
Decision