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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 >> MW High Tech Projects UK Ltd & Anor v Biffa Waste Services Ltd [2015] EWHC 949 (TCC) (02 February 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2015/949.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 949 (TCC) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
110 Fetter Lane, London EC4 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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MW HIGH TECH PROJECTS UK LIMITED & ANOTHER |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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BIFFA WASTE SERVICES LIMITED |
Defendant |
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Digital Transcript of Wordwave International, a Merrill Corporation Company____________________
MR J NASH QC and MS E CAMPBELL (instructed by Nabarros) appeared on behalf of the Defendant.
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE STUART-SMITH:
Introduction
The Contractual Structure
"The Contractor shall complete the Works…ensuring that ATC1 is achieved on or before the Planned ATC1 Date;…"
Clause 22 provided for liquidated damages for delayed completion. Clause 22.1 provided:
"If ATC1 has not been issued by the Planned ATC1 Date, the Employer shall issue a notice in writing the Contractor to that effect."
Clause 22.3 provided:
"Subject to Clause 22.4, provided a notice has been issued under Clause 22.1 (and has not been cancelled), the Contractor shall, upon the Employer's demand, pay or allow to the Employer liquidated damages, at the relevant rate stated in Clause 22.8, from the relevant Planned ATC1 Date up to and including the ATC1 Date."
Clause 22.7 said:
"The Employer may (at any time after demanding the same) deduct liquidated damages arising under this Clause 22 from any sum due or to become due to the Contractor under this Contract. Further or alternatively, the Employer may recover the same from the Contractor within eight (8) Business Days of the Employer's demand."
"It shall be a condition precedent to the Employer's right to make a call upon either the Performance Bond or the Retention Bond that the Employer has first called upon the Parent Company Guarantee…in respect of the same matter. In the event that the Guarantor has not accepted in writing each and every aspect of such a call on the Parent Company Guarantee…made by the Employer, including any requirement to make payment within ten (10) Business Days of receipt of a notice from the Employer pursuant to Clause 1 of the Parent Company Guarantee…then such condition precedent shall be discharged."
While the requirement that the employer "has first called upon the parent company guarantee" is not qualified or explained further, it is obvious that such call may be controversial, because the second sentence contemplates that the guarantor may not accept each and every aspect of the call. Where that happens, the condition precedent is discharged.
"If a breach falling within limb (k) (failure to achieve ATC1 by the ATC1 Longstop Date) of the definition of 'Contractor Default' has occurred, this Contract shall terminate on the day after the ATC1 Longstop Date."
49.1.2 said:
"If a Contractor Default other than that referred to in Clause 49.1.1 above has occurred and the Employer wishes to terminate this Contract, it must serve a Termination Notice on the Contractor."
Clause 50.1 said:
"On termination of this Contract under Clause 49 (Termination on Contractor Default) the provisions of Part 2 of Schedule 10 (Compensation on Termination) shall apply."
"Y is the total damages for delay in respect of the Works calculated as follows:
(i) the liquidated damages (if any) for which the Contractor is liable pursuant to Clause 22 prior to the Termination Date and which have not been paid;
(ii) the liquidated damages (if any) that the Contractor would have been liable for had it not been for the termination of this Contract, such liquidated damages being based on the state of progress of the Works as at the Termination Date as measured against the Works Programme and the Planned ATC1 date."
"3.1.1 The termination of this Contract is without prejudice to the rights, obligations and liabilities of the Parties accrued prior to termination.
3.1.2 The termination of this Contract for any reason shall not affect the continuing rights and obligations of the Parties under this Clause and Clause 14.11 (Duty to Mitigate),…Clause 73 (Notices),…and Schedule 10 (Compensation on Termination), or under any other provision of this Contract which is expressed to survive termination or which is required to give effect to such termination or the consequence of such termination."
"57.1 Subject to Clause 57.5 and without prejudice to any remedy which may arise or has arisen in favour of the Contractor under this Contract before or after termination of this Contract…the compensation to be paid to the Contractor pursuant to the provisions of Schedule 10 (Compensation on Termination) shall be the Contractor's exclusive remedy as against the Employer under this Contract in connection with and arising from the termination of this Contract and vice-versa."
Clause 57.5 said:
"Nothing in this Clause 57 shall prevent either Party from seeking injunctive relief or specific performance or other discretionary remedies of the court."
"Any demand, notice or other communication given in connection with or required by this Contract shall be made in writing and shall be delivered to, or sent by ... first-class post."
The Guarantee
"The Guarantor as primary obligor hereby absolutely irrevocably and unconditionally guarantees to the Employer the due and punctual performance by the Contractor of all the obligations on the part of the Contractor under or pursuant to the Contract ("the Terms") and agrees that if the Contractor shall in any respect commit any breach of or fail to fulfil any of the Terms, then the Guarantor will within ten (10) Business Days of receipt of a notice from the Employer setting out details of the breach perform and fulfil in place of the Contractor each and every term in respect of which the Contractor has defaulted, or which is unfulfilled by the Contractor. The Guarantor shall be liable to the Employer for all losses, damages, expenses, liabilities, claims, costs or proceedings which the Employer may suffer or incur by reason of the said failure or breach."
This is a form of guarantee under which the guarantor would be entitled to take every point of defence that would be open to the primary obligor. It is therefore significantly different in kind from on-demand retention bonds, which typically are regarded as akin to cash, the precise meaning of a given bond, of course, being a matter of construction of its terms.
The Retention Bond
"The Employer may from time to time make a written demand upon the Surety signed by a director of the Employer, stating:
(a) that the Contractor has failed to perform or observe any of its duties and/or obligations arising under or in connection with the Contract, and/or has committed a breach of any provision and/or has failed to fulfil any warranty or indemnity set out in the Contract and/or has failed to satisfy any of its liabilities under or in connection with the contract and/or an Insolvency Event has occurred; and
(b) the amount claimed by the Employer."
Clause 3.2 reads:
"The Surety shall within 7 days of receipt of any such demand served from time to time by the Employer pay to the Employer the amount demanded to the extent that such amount together with the amount(s) of any previous payment(s) by the Surety to the Employer under this Bond does not in the aggregate exceed the Maximum Sum."
"Any demand made by the Employer in accordance with clause 3 shall be conclusive evidence that the sum stated in such demand is properly due and payable to the Employer under this Bond…"
"The Surety acknowledges and agrees that the obligations of the Surety under this Bond shall not be impaired, reduced, discharged or otherwise affected by reason of any of the following:…(f) termination of the Contract or of the Contractor's employment under it;…"
The Factual Background
"Biffa is now taking steps to assess its entitlement in accordance with Schedule 10 of the EPC Contract to compensation on the termination of the EPC Contract for contractor default".
"Biffa provided written notice to Neil Pailing at M+W on 26 June 2013 confirming that the ATC1 was not issued by the Planned ATC1 Date in accordance with clause 22.1 of the EPC Contract. Clause 22 of the EPC Contract confirms that, where M+W fails to achieve ATC1 by the Planned ATC1 Date, liquidated damages are payable by M+W to Biffa at a rate of £31,413 per week. Please find enclosed a copy of Biffa's notice of 26 June 2013.
There has been no extension of time to the Planned ATC1 Date of 26 June 2013. Biffa therefore wrote to David Greggan and Roy Meakin at M+W on 5 December 2014 demanding payment of the liquidated damages payable from 26 June 2013 to 5 December 2014 in the sum of £2,387,388 in accordance with clause 22.3 of the EPC Contract. Please find enclosed a copy of Biffa's letter of 5 December 2014.
On the basis that M+W has not made the demanded payment to Biffa within 8 business days of the deemed service of this demand as required under clause 22.7 of the EPC Contract M+W has therefore failed to make the required payment within the contractually prescribed timeframe under the EPC Contract.
M+W has committed a breach and failed to fulfil the terms of the EPC Contract in relation to liquidated damages. Biffa therefore notifies M+W Group of this breach and requests that M+W Group, in accordance with clause 1 of the Parent Company Guarantee, perform and fulfil M+W's obligation to make payment of the liquidated damages sum of £2,387,388 to Biffa."
Submissions and resolution
"It is only in exceptional cases that the courts will interfere with the machinery of irrevocable obligations assumed by banks. They are the life-blood of international commerce. Such obligations are regarded as collateral to the underlying rights and obligations between the merchants at either end of the banking chain. Except possibly in clear cases of fraud of which the banks have notice, the courts will leave the merchants to settle their disputes under the contracts by litigation or arbitration as available to them or stipulated in the contracts. The courts are not concerned with their difficulties to enforce such claims; these are risks which the merchants take. In this case, the plaintiffs took the risk of the unconditional wording of the guarantees. The machinery and commitments of banks are on a different level. They must be allowed to be honoured, free from interference by the courts. Otherwise, trust in international commerce could be irreparably damaged."
"Letters of credit are an important commercial means of providing cash or security for those who in return provide goods or services. Typically a seller agrees to sell goods to a buyer. The buyer establishes a letter of credit with a confirming bank in favour of the seller. The terms of the letter of credit spell out the circumstances in which the beneficiary – the seller – is entitled to draw it down. The terms will typically include presentation to the bank of specified shipping and insurance documents and the like. The bank's concern is to be satisfied that the terms of the letter of credit are fulfilled, whereupon the bank is obliged to pay the beneficiary. Because the letter of credit is, subject to its terms, the equivalent of cash, the bank is not concerned with any disputed question, not within the terms of the letter of credit itself, which may arise under the underlying sale contract between the seller and the buyer, as for instance, if the goods were said to be defective or to have arrived late – see generally United City Merchants v. Royal Bank of Canada [1983] 1 A.C 168 at 183. This is also the effect of Article 3(a) of the ICC Uniform Customs and Practice for Documentary Credits (1993 Revision) which was incorporated in the letter of credit in this case. Absent fraud by the seller presenting documents to the confirming bank seeking payment, the court will not restrain a bank from paying a letter of credit which is payable according to its terms, nor a beneficiary from seeking payment – see Group Josi Re v. Walbrook Insurance [1996] 1 Lloyd's R. 345 at 360-1. Nor, again absent fraud, will the court restrain a beneficiary from drawing on a letter of credit which is payable in accordance with its terms on the application of a buyer who is in dispute with the seller as to whether the underlying sale contract has been broken – see for both these propositions the Deutsche Ruckverischerung case at 1030 where Phillips J considered the authorities. This is the autonomous nature of letters of credit. By means of it, banks are protected and the cash nature of letters of credit is maintained. There is no authority extending this autonomy for the benefit of the beneficiary of a letter of credit so as to entitle him as against the seller to draw the letter of credit when he is expressly not entitled to do so."
"To that extent the letter of credit was less than the equivalent of cash and Sirius' security was correspondingly restricted." [see paragraph 27].
"21. explained by Lord Diplock, the rationale for this well-understood and long-hallowed approach is that the guarantee is intended to be an autonomous contract, independent of disputes between the seller and the buyer as to their relative entitlements pursuant to the different contract between themselves. That same rationale underlies the equally well-established analysis that the underlying contract between seller and buyer, or between beneficiary and the party at whose instance the guarantee is procured, is subject to an implied term that the beneficiary will account to the other party to the underlying contract to the extent to which the beneficiary has been over-compensated by the guarantor…
22. As I indicated at the outset, these principles underlie the basis upon which international trade is routinely financed. They are completely inimical to the implication of a trust impressed upon the monies in the seller's hands by reason of circumstances arising after accrual of the seller's completed cause of action under the guarantee. It is critical to the efficacy of these financial arrangements that as between beneficiary and bank the position crystallises as at presentation of documents or demand as the case may be, and that it is only in the case of fraudulent presentation or demand by the beneficiary that the bank can resist payment against an apparently conforming presentation or demand."
Approbation and reprobation
Conclusion