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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions >> St Austell Printing Company Ltd v Dawnus Construction Holdings Ltd [2015] EWHC 96 (TCC) (21 January 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2015/96.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 96 (TCC) |
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(2) HT-2014-000130 |
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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ST AUSTELL PRINTING COMPANY LIMITED - and - DAWNUS CONSTRUCTION HOLDINGS LIMITED |
Claimant Defendant |
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DAWNUS CONSTRUCTION HOLDINGS LIMITED - and - ST AUSTELL PRINTING COMPANY LIMITED |
Claimant Defendant |
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Ms Krista Lee (instructed by Michelmores LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 21 January 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
The Hon. Mr Justice Coulson:
1. INTRODUCTION
2. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
"We are currently reviewing your revised final account dated 10 December 2013. We understand that this revised account addresses out initial queries raised from your original submission and hence will require further assessment. We recently visited site on 11 December 2013 to meet with the client and his recently appointed advisors to discuss and further substantiate our version of the final account. During this visit to site it was clear a number of defects had not been addressed at this stage. With this in mind we will be writing to Dawnus formally detailing these outstanding defects. This document will include dates we see reasonable to address and rectify the defects highlighted and failure to do so will result in the possibility of corrective adjustments being taken by our client and the cost being incurred offset to your account.
We will endeavour to send you our final version of the account early in the New Year. We would consider this reasonable following your recent response to our measured accounts. In regards to Dawnus' loss and expense claim we have been able to meet with the client and his advisors to establish an accurate understanding of the events you have detailed within the claim document. We have another meeting to progress with these discussions scheduled for the week commencing 6 January 2014 following which we will respond to your loss and expense claim separately early in the New Year."
"There are a number of Changes within Interim Certificate 18, these are the 115 Changes which make up the bulk of the difference between the parties. The Referring Party limits submissions in this adjudication to these 115 Changes as identified in the attached schedule, and reserves its right to deal with other matters in Interim Certificate 18, and later certificates, in the future."
In Section 6 of the notice, at paragraph 6.1b), Dawnus expressly sought payment by St A of the sums claimed in respect of the 115 changes. Thus this is not a case in which, by reference to the relief claimed in the notice of adjudication, Dawnus limited their claim to a declaration as to their entitlement. They expressly sought an order for payment.
"For the avoidance of doubt, the dispute referred to in adjudication through this Referral relates only to the proper valuation of 115 Changes contained within the Schedule…for the purposes of this Adjudication, the Referring Party accepts the Responding Party's valuation in all other respects which for the avoidance of doubt includes all contract works, or deductions in respect of provisional sums and all valuations of changes not listed in the schedule. The Referring Party does however reserve its future position in respect of these matters."
"What DCL cannot do is to refer a dispute in respect of an element of the application (and strictly limit the jurisdiction of the Adjudicator to just this element) and then to seek payment in respect of just this element referred without consideration of DCL's or SAPC's entitlement in respect of the other elements of the application. The Contract does not envisage or give DCL an entitlement to payment in respect of an element of interim application as opposed to its entitlement, which is not contested, to payment in respect of the entire application."
3. OBJECTION 1: HAD THE DISPUTE CRYSTALLISED IN AUGUST 2014?
"3. The mere fact that one party (whom I shall call "the claimant") notifies the other party (whom I shall call "the respondent") of a claim does not automatically and immediately give rise to a dispute. It is clear, both as a matter of language and from judicial decisions, that a dispute does not arise unless and until it emerges that the claim is not admitted.
4. The circumstances from which it may emerge that a claim is not admitted are Protean. For example, there may be an express rejection of the claim. There may be discussions between the parties from which objectively it is to be inferred that the claim is not admitted. The respondent may prevaricate, thus giving rise to the inference that he does not admit the claim. The respondent may simply remain silent for a period of time, thus giving rise to the same inference.
5. The period of time for which a respondent may remain silent before a dispute is to be inferred depends heavily upon the facts of the case and the contractual structure. Where the gist of the claim is well known and it is obviously controversial, a very short period of silence may suffice to give rise to this inference. Where the claim is notified to some agent of the respondent who has a legal duty to consider the claim independently and then give a considered response, a longer period of time may be required before it can be inferred that mere silence gives rise to a dispute."
This analysis explains the general view that crystallisation may require no more than the service of a claim by the claiming party and subsequent inactivity for a further short period by the responding party. In practice, in the overwhelming majority of cases dealing with this point, the court has found that the dispute had crystallised by the time of the notice of adjudication.
"(1) The existence of a dispute or difference may be inferred from what is said or not said by the party in receipt of what may be termed "a claim".
(2) There does not have to be an express rejection of a "claim" by the recipient. In so far as the case of Monmouthshire County Council v Costelloe and Kemple Ltd (1965) 5 BLR 83 suggests otherwise, the more recent cases of Amec and Collins suggest otherwise.
(3) A "claim" for the purpose of giving rise to a dispute or difference may not be a claim for money or for the payment of money. The variety, extent and scope of disputes are infinite. It may involve simply an assertion of a right by one party.
(4) One needs to determine whether there is "claim" and whether or not that claim is disputed from the surrounding facts, circumstances and evidence pertaining up to the moment that the dispute, subsequently referred to adjudication (or arbitration), has crystallised."
(i) In Enterprise Managed Services Ltd v Tony McFadden Utilities Ltd, [2009] EWHC 322 (TCC); [2010] BLR 89 Utilities pursued Enterprise as assignees, but they did not notify Enterprise of the existence of either the assignment, or their claim as assignees, until the very date on which they purported to give notice of adjudication. Accordingly, because the notice of the claim as assignees was given at the same time as the reference was made, I said that it was simply not possible for a dispute between the parties about that claim to have crystallised prior to the notice of adjudication.(ii) In Beck Interiors Ltd v UK Flooring Contractors Ltd [2012] EWHC 1808 (TCC); [2012] BLR 417, Akenhead J ruled that, whilst there was plainly a dispute between the parties as to the increased costs of completion, the adjudicator had no jurisdiction to decide the liquidated damages claim. That was because he found that no dispute about that claim had crystallised at the time of the notice of adjudication. That in turn was because the claim was first intimated in a letter sent after close of business on the last working day before the Easter weekend, and the notice of adjudication was then issued on the Tuesday after that weekend. The (unsurprising) silence over the Easter bank holiday weekend could not amount to rejection of the claim.
4. OBJECTION 2: NO POWER TO ORDER PAYMENT FOR PART ONLY OF INTERIM APPLICATION 19
"21. Fastrack suggested that the reference that I am concerned with consisted of a number of disputes, each of which was one of the individual heads of claim that had been referred. Fastrack also suggested that the dispute that could be referred to an adjudication pursuant to the HGCRA need not be identical to the pre-existing dispute, it need be no more than a dispute which was substantially the same as that pre-existing dispute.
22. Neither of these contentions of Fastrack is sustainable. The statutory language is clear. A "dispute", and nothing but a "dispute", may be referred. If two or more disputes are to be referred, each must be the subject of a separate reference. It would then be for the relevant adjudicator nominating body to decide whether it was appropriate to appoint the same adjudicator or different adjudicators to deal with each reference. Equally, what must be referred is a "dispute" rather than "most of a dispute" or "substantially the same dispute."
23. In some cases, a referring party might decide to cut out of the reference some of the pre-existing matters in dispute and to confine the referred dispute to something less than the totality of the matters then in dispute. So long as that exercise does not transform the pre-existing dispute into a different dispute, such a pruning exercise is clearly permissible. However, a party cannot unilaterally tag onto the existing range of matters in dispute a further list of matters not yet in dispute and then seek to argue that the resulting "dispute" is substantially the same as the pre-existing dispute."
"15. …The Scheme (and, so as far as I am aware, other standard forms of contract) does not confer on an adjudicator a right to adapt, vary or otherwise modify a contract. Under the statutory Scheme an adjudicator has to decide a dispute under the contract (and in other schemes, disputes arising out of or in connection with the contract). It is a decision about to the rights and liabilities of the contract which are questioned. Thus paragraph 20 of the Scheme expressly provides for the review of a certificate that has been issued (sub-para (a)) and for the adjudicator to decide a person "is liable to make a payment under the contract … [emphasis supplied] and, subject to section 111(4) of the Act, when that payment is due and the final date for payment". His decision does not create or modify a right or liability except, perhaps, in one respect.
16. I agree with Mr Harding that since the Scheme (see paras 20 (b) and 21) provides for the time for compliance with an adjudicator's decision to be set, it or the adjudicator's decision may alter the time within which, for example, a payment might otherwise have had to have been made, where an adjudicator decided that there had been an under-payment or under-certification. The purpose is of this is clear. If an adjudicator were merely to decide that a different certificate should be issued or a different payment should be made the paying party could properly take the view that it would have the contractual period in which to honour the decision. Hence the statutory provisions make it clear that it has not to have that time. Indeed it may have had it already, and more, and that therefore a shorter period of time may be appropriate. Thus the Scheme permits the time within payment is to be made to be altered. Indeed if the decision does not set a time compliance is immediate which in my view shows that the decision does not affect or create a new cause of action. The scheme is an implied term of the contract. As part of the contractual scheme it therefore modifies the ordinary contractual relationship. Only to that extent might one say that there has to be, as it were, in the words of Judge Hicks, compliance with the adjudicator's decision other than in accordance with what would otherwise be the strict terms of the contract. The scheme and the other contractual terms have to be read together.
17. The words "due under the contract" mean what is due on facts and on a proper application of the contractual terms. The adjudicator decides that issue. The decision establishes what is due under the contract. The parties have agreed to accept the decision as binding (section 108(3) of HGCRA and paragraph 23(2) of the Scheme) so, unless otherwise agreed by them or determined by a court or arbitral tribunal, each agrees that, for example, the amount to be paid is and was due, and each must act accordingly and accept any assumptions upon which the decision must have been based…
If, for example proceedings are necessary to enforce the award the defendant cannot be allowed heard to allege that the decision was incorrect, i.e. that the claimant has not got a right or cause of action as some necessary fact or aspect of the law is missing, and is in effect temporarily estopped by its agreement from doing so. But ultimately the claimant will, if necessary, have to establish its right and cause of action. If the decision was itself a cause of action then it would supplant any cause of action."
"25. It is not uncommon for adjudicators to decide the scope of their jurisdiction solely by reference to the words used in the notice of adjudication, without having regard to the necessary implications of those words: that was, for example, what went wrong in Broadwell. Adjudicators should be aware that the notice of adjudication will ordinarily be confined to the claim being advanced; it will rarely refer to the points that might be raised by way of a defence to that claim. But, subject to questions of withholding notices and the like, a responding party is entitled to defend himself against a claim for money due by reference to any legitimate available defence (including set-off), and thus such defences will ordinarily be encompassed within the notice of adjudication.
26. As a result, an adjudicator should think very carefully before ruling out a defence merely because there was no mention of it in the claiming party's notice of adjudication. That is only common sense: it would be absurd if the claiming party could, through some devious bit of drafting, put beyond the scope of the adjudication the defending party's otherwise legitimate defence to the claim."
Accordingly, the absence of a cross-claim in the present adjudication cannot be the result of the wording of the notice of adjudication or of the referral, because neither would or could have prevented St A from raising any legitimate cross-claim by way of defence to the limited claim being advanced in the adjudication.