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England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions >> AT Stannard Ltd v Tobutt & Anor [2014] EWHC 3491 (TCC) (24 October 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2014/3491.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 3491 (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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A.T. STANNARD LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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JAMES TOBUTT AND THOMAS TOBUTT |
Defendants |
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David Gibson-Lee (instructed by Grayfield Solicitors) for the Defendants
Hearing date: 17 October 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Akenhead:
The Background
The Adjudication
"(1) A letter of agreement exists drafted by Mr A T Stannard and signed by all parties that agrees that any retention received by JT Tarmac [the Firm] on contracts with Clancy Docwra Limited which specifically states that retention due to A T Stannard would only be paid when received by [the Firm]. This letter is current and is in force. [The Firm] at no time had any contracts with Messrs Optomise [sic] who only dealt with [the Company].
(2) To date despite the fallacious claims made none of the outstanding retention has been paid. On June 13th 2014 Messrs Clancy Docwra confirmed in writing that no retention had been released and further advised that subject to certain conditions 50% of the retention may be released, to date no money has been forthcoming.
(3) There is to be taken into consideration a counterclaim by [the Firm] against A T Stannard Ltd for the cost of defects and remedial works on "white work" carried out by A T Stannard on the Brixton Contract, money currently being withheld by Clancy Docwra against this defective work exceed £75,000.00…"
These Proceedings
The Law and Practice
85. The objective which underlies the Act and the statutory scheme requires the courts to respect and enforce the adjudicator's decision unless it is plain that the question which he has decided was not the question referred to him or the manner in which he has gone about his task is obviously unfair. It should be only in rare circumstances that the courts will interfere with the decision of an adjudicator. The courts should give no encouragement to the approach adopted by DML in the present case; which (contrary to DML's outline submissions, to which we have referred in paragraph 66 of this judgment) may, indeed, aptly be described as "simply scrabbling around to find some argument, however tenuous, to resist payment".
86. It is only too easy in a complex case for a party who is dissatisfied with the decision of an adjudicator to comb through the adjudicator's reasons and identify points upon which to present a challenge under the labels "excess of jurisdiction" or "breach of natural justice". It must be kept in mind that the majority of adjudicators are not chosen for their expertise as lawyers. Their skills are as likely (if not more likely) to lie in other disciplines. The task of the adjudicator is not to act as arbitrator or judge. The time constraints within which he is expected to operate are proof of that. The task of the adjudicator is to find an interim solution which meets the needs of the case. Parliament may be taken to have recognised that, in the absence of an interim solution, the contractor (or sub-contractor) or his sub-contractors will be driven into insolvency through a wrongful withholding of payments properly due. The statutory scheme provides a means of meeting the legitimate cash-flow requirements of contractors and their subcontractors. The need to have the "right" answer has been subordinated to the need to have an answer quickly. The scheme was not enacted in order to provide definitive answers to complex questions. Indeed, it may be open to doubt whether Parliament contemplated that disputes involving difficult questions of law would be referred to adjudication under the statutory scheme; or whether such disputes are suitable for adjudication under the scheme. We have every sympathy for an adjudicator faced with the need to reach a decision in a case like the present.
87. In short, in the overwhelming majority of cases, the proper course for the party who is unsuccessful in an adjudication under the scheme must be to pay the amount that he has been ordered to pay by the adjudicator. If he does not accept the adjudicator's decision as correct (whether on the facts or in law), he can take legal or arbitration proceedings in order to establish the true position. To seek to challenge the adjudicator's decision on the ground that he has exceeded his jurisdiction or breached the rules of natural justice (save in the plainest cases) is likely to lead to a substantial waste of time and expense – as, we suspect, the costs incurred in the present case will demonstrate only too clearly."
This of course does not mean that the Court will not fairly and justly review every challenge on its merits.
"36. Generally a party who wishes to do so can object to the jurisdiction of an adjudicator and may seek to do so either in general terms or by making a reservation on a specific matter.
37. The underlying issue is whether, taking account of the particular reservation, a party by participating in the adjudication has waived its right to object on grounds of jurisdiction. If the party does not raise any objection and participates in the adjudication then, even if there is a defect in the jurisdiction of the adjudicator, that party will create an ad-hoc jurisdiction for the adjudicator and lose the right to object to any decision on jurisdictional grounds. If a party raises only specific jurisdictional objections and those jurisdictional objections are found by the court to be unfounded then that party is precluded from raising other grounds which were available to it, if it then participates in the adjudication. That participation amounts to a waiver of the jurisdictional objection and confers ad-hoc jurisdiction. Obviously this assumes that, at the relevant time when the party participated in the Adjudication, the jurisdictional objection was available. Some jurisdictional objections, for instance as to the scope of the dispute, may only become apparent during the adjudication process or at the time of the decision."
Discussion
"(1) A party to a construction contract has the right to refer a dispute arising under the contract for adjudication under a procedure complying with this section."
The argument was that, as, on his client's argument, the parties to the construction contract had become Stannard and the Company, Stannard could no longer initiate adjudication at all. I disagree with his argument that this is not a jurisdictional challenge. There is acceptance (or at least no challenge) that there was a construction contract between Stannard and the Firm at least until February-March 2010 when the suggested novation took place and all the work to which the claim relates had purportedly been done before then. The Firm's argument has to be, put simply but properly, that the adjudicator had no jurisdiction because there had been a novation. It is a jurisdictional argument and, if it was sensibly arguable, it both could and should have been raised in the adjudication.
(a) Neither witness statement of the two Tobutt brothers provides any evidence from which one could infer a novation. James Tobutt says simply and only that the Firm traded as a partnership "which in 2010 changed its status to that of a Limited Company". That does not give rise to an inference that the Firm's pre-existing obligations and liabilities were transferred to the Company or that it was some sort of novation with Stannard. Indeed, the whole tenor of that statement is a challenge on the merits to Stannard having any entitlement, with arguments being mounted that there was a "pay when paid" agreement (not recognised as enforceable by the HGCRA) and that there were defects in Stannard's work which justified the non-payment of retention.
(b) Mr Scott's first witness statement says nothing about any transfer of obligations or liabilities from the Firm to the Company or about any novation. Indeed, he suggests if anything that the "pay when paid" arrangement was made between Stannard and the Tobutt brothers (which, if anything, points to the Firm being involved in such an arrangement).
(c) Mr Scott's second witness statement dated 14 October 2014 was admitted belatedly; there was no explanation why the Firm had held back this further statement until the date of the hearing which was 17 October 2014. All that this does is to state that the Company was incorporated on 8 February 2010 and that he wrote a letter to regular sub-contractors and suppliers including Stannard on 18 February 2010 which said:
"Please note that with effect from March 1st 2010 JT Tarmac are closing for business to be replaced with JT Tarmac Ltd.
All future dealings and outstanding matters will now be the responsibility of the new company.
If there is information you require please contact the undersigned."
I do not consider that it is possible to infer from this letter that Stannard, simply by receiving it, in some way inferentially agreed that all its rights to payment against the Firm were from then on to be considered to have been transferred to the Company so that it could never pursue the Firm for any outstanding payments. It is not uncommon for partners of a firm to incorporate their business into a company and it will often be the case that in practice the new company will assume in effect voluntarily the job of paying outstanding debts owed by the partnership. That sort of arrangement, which seems to be exactly the one being notified here, can not without more give rise to a novation, particularly one said to arise by inference.
(d) Mr Gibson-Lee then put before the court several cheques from the Company to Stannard post-February 2010, which he said demonstrated inferentially that Stannard must be taken to have agreed that all its pre-February 2010 contractual rights had been novated from the Firm to the Company. He was unable to say whether these cheques related to work which had been carried out after this time. Accordingly, even these cheques, which were not even referred to in Mr Scott's second witness statement, do not go to establish an effective or indeed any novation.
(e) Mr Gibson-Lee also attempted to rely upon a letter dated 13 September 2013 from the Company to Stannard which refers to outstanding retention money and a meeting held between them that day. It refers to 7 Thames Water projects with retentions totalling more than was claimed in the current adjudication and enforcement proceedings. He indicated that this document was signed by both parties. This was simply the "pay when paid" arrangement which is said to have been reached. However, apart from the fact that it is unenforceable under the HGCRA, this does not give rise to any inference that there was a novation.
(f) The Firm submitted a Defence supported by a statement of truth apparently signed by someone other than the Tobutt brothers. It effectively repeats what Mr Scott said in his second witness statement about all matters and undertakings relating to the dissolved partnership being transferred to the Company in March 2010. This does not add anything about novation. Indeed, if novation was to be relied upon, a properly pleaded case about novation should and could have been raised. As it stands, the pleading that there was a transfer of liabilities and obligations of the Firm does not provide a defence, because a transfer or assignment of obligations and liabilities can not be made in law, at least without novation.
(g) Finally, Mr Gibson-Lee applied for an adjournment and yet further time to submit yet further evidence to support his client's case that there had been a novation. I refused this application, not least because there was simply no, let alone any arguably good, explanation as to why any such further evidence had not been filed either in accordance with Mr Justice Edwards-Stuart's directions order, at the time that the Firm's initial evidence was filed (well over a month before the summary judgment hearing) or even at the time that Mr Scott's second witness statement was prepared. The primary purpose of the procedures developed by the TCC for the prompt hearing of summary judgement applications for the enforcement of adjudicators' decisions was to satisfy the policy of the HGCRA to provide prompt resolution of disputes arising in connection with construction contracts. Mr Gibson-Lee was unable to say what the further evidence would be other than in the most general sense. He was unable to say for instance that there had been any material discussions between Stannard and the Company representatives which would or might throw light on whether there was some sort of novation.
(h) The suggestion that there was or might have been a novation is one which obviously never occurred to the Firm or Mr Scott apparently until a few days (at most) before the hearing of the summary judgment application. If anything, the Firm's standpoint in the adjudication and indeed in its first series of witness statements was to the effect that there were defences of the Firm to Stannard's claim for payment of retention. This undermines the extremely belated attempt to argue that there was some novation.
Decision