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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 >> J Murphy & Sons Ltd v Beckton Energy Ltd [2016] EWHC 607 (TCC) (18 March 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2016/607.html Cite as: [2016] BLR 448, [2016] TCLR 4, [2016] EWHC 607 (TCC), 165 Con LR 202 |
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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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J MURPHY & SONS LTD |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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BECKTON ENERGY LTD |
Defendant |
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Mr Justin Mort Q.C. (instructed by Norton Rose Fulbright LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 16th March 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
The Hon. Mrs Justice Carr DBE :
Introduction
a) Whether or not Beckton is entitled to recover payment of liquidated damages from Murphy under Sub-Clause 8.7 without agreement or determination by the Engineer of Beckton's entitlement to liquidated damages under Sub-Clauses 2.5 and 3.5 ("Issue 1");
b) Whether or not, if Murphy succeeds on Issue 1, a call by Beckton on the Bond would be fraudulent ("Issue 2");
c) If so, whether or not injunctive relief should be granted as sought by Murphy ("Issue 3").
a) For Murphy : a short statement of Mr John Murphy, Murphy's company secretary and in-house solicitor, dated 9th March 2016;
b) For Beckton : two statements of Mr Philip Reinheimer-Jones, a director of Beckton, dated 15th March 2016, the first a lengthy and detailed one.
The Contract
"2.5 Employer's Claims
If the Employer considers himself to be entitled to any payment under any Clause of these Conditions or otherwise in connection with the Contract, and/or to any extension of the Defects Notification Period, the Employer or the Engineer shall give notice and particulars to the Contractor. However, notice is not required for payments due under Sub-Clause 4.19 [Electricity, Water and Gas], or for other services requested by the Contractor.
The notice shall be given as soon as practicable after the Employer became aware of the event or circumstances giving rise to the claim. A notice relating to any extension of the Defects Notification Period shall be given before the expiry of such period.
The particulars shall specify the Clause or other basis of the claim, and shall include substantiation of the amount and/or extension to which the Employer considers himself to be entitled in connection with the Contract. The Engineer shall then proceed in accordance with Sub-Clause 3.5 [Determinations] to agree or determine i) the amount (if any) which the Employer is entitled to be paid by the Contractor and/or ii) the extension (if any) of the Defects Notification Period in accordance with Sub-Clause 11.3 [Extension of Defects Notification Period].
This amount may be included as a deduction in the Contract Price and Payment Certificates. The Employer shall be entitled to set off against or make any deduction from an amount certified in a Payment Certificate, or to otherwise claim against the Contractor, in accordance with this Sub-Clause."
"3.5 Determinations
3.5.1 Whenever these Conditions provide that the Engineer shall proceed in accordance with this Sub-Clause 3.5 to agree or determine any matter, the Engineer shall consult with each Party in an endeavour to reach agreement. If agreement is not achieved, the Engineer shall make a fair determination in accordance with the Contract, taking due regard of all relevant circumstances.
3.5.2 Without prejudice to either Party's right to refer any matter to adjudication and/or litigation in accordance with Clause 20 [Claims, Disputes and Litigation] each Party shall give effect to any such agreement and/or determination…"
"4 The Contractor…
4.2 Performance Security…
4.2.5 The Employer shall give …23 days' prior written notice to the Contractor of its intention to make a demand under the [Bond] stating the breach the Contractor has committed, during which period and without prejudice to the Employer's entitlement and discretion to claim under the relevant Performance Security at the expiry of the said 23 days, the Contractor may seek to remedy the relevant default and/or breach… .
4.2.6 If and to the extent i) the Employer was not entitled to make a claim under the Performance Security and/or ii) amounts recovered under any claim under the Performance Security exceed the entitlements and/or otherwise exceed the losses suffered and recoverable by the Employer under the Contract, the Employer shall be liable for and reimburse the Contractor such excess amounts."
"8.2 Time for Completion
The Contractor shall i) achieve the ROC Accreditation Milestone by the ROC Accreditation Date and ii) complete the whole of the Works within the Time for Completion for the Works, including :
a) achieving the passing of the Tests on Completion, and
b) completing all work which is stated in the Contract as being required for the Works to be considered to be completed for the purposes of taking-over under Sub- Clause 10.1 [Taking Over of the Works and Sections]."
"8.7 Delay Damages and Bonus
8.7.1 If the Contractor fails to :
a) achieve the ROC Acceditation Milestone by the ROC Accreditation Date the Contractor shall pay or allow to the Employer liquidated damages for such delay at the daily rate of £4,000 for each day commencing from the ROC Accreditation Date until the earlier of the achievement of i) the ROC Accreditation Milestone or ii) 31 March 2015; and
b) achieve the ROC Accreditation Milestone by the ROC Eligibility Change Date the Contractor shall pay or allow to the Employer a Bullet Payment; and
c) achieve the Taking-Over Date for the Works within the Time for Completion, the Contractor shall pay or allow to the Employer liquidated damages for delay. Such liquidated damages shall be payable at the daily rate of £23,000 for each day after the Time for Completion for the Works up to and including the Taking-Over Date for the Works…
8.7.4 Delay damages due pursuant to this Sub-Clause 8.7 shall be deducted from the next applicable Notified Sum following the end of the month in which such delay occurred or where no such Notified Sum is applicable or is disputed, shall be payable within 30 days of the end of the week in which such delay occurred."
"3.1 The Employer may from time to time make a written demand (signed by two directors of the Employer) upon the Bond Provider stating:
(a) that the Contractor has committed a breach of any provision in the Contract … including particulars of such breach and/or an Insolvency Event has occurred; and
(b) the amount claimed by the Employer as a consequence of such breach… and/or Insolvency Event."
The wider dispute
a) Murphy failed to achieve the ROC Accreditation Milestone and to achieve the Taking Over Date by the above dates as required by Sub-Clause 8.2 of the Contract;
b) Murphy's claims for extensions have not been granted by the Engineer on the basis that Murphy had not demonstrated that any event or circumstances giving rise to a claim for extension of time or payment had occurred.
The relevant correspondence
Preliminary objections by Beckton
Issue 1
The rival submissions
a) Beckton's position is that it considers itself entitled to payment (of liquidated damages) under Sub-Clause 8.7. Clause 2.5 is very widely drafted. This is not one of the two exceptions listed. Therefore Sub-Clause 2.5 applies;
b) As a matter of fact, Beckton did give notice pursuant to Sub-Clause 2.5 (and expressly referred to Sub-Clause 2.5 in doing so): see its letters dated 23rd December 2014 and 31st March 2015;
c) However, there has been no agreement or determination by the Engineer under Sub-Clause 3.5 of "the amount (if any) which the Employer is entitled to be paid by the Contractor";
d) It follows that Beckton is not entitled to set off against or make a deduction from an amount certified in a Payment Certificate or to otherwise claim against Murphy. In respect of the sums set out in Beckton's letter dated 25th January 2016 (i.e. the liquidated damages of £8,274,000), Beckton is not seeking to make a set off or deduction, but it is seeking "to otherwise claim" those sums from Murphy, as that letter makes clear.
a) The fact that Sub-Clause 8.7 was drafted specifically by the parties for the purposes of the Contract. Clause 2.5 is simply taken unamended from the FIDIC Yellow Book. Clause 8.7 should be given greater weight (see Homburg v Agrosin (The Starsin) [2003] UKHL 12 at paragraph 11). The deletion of the words "subject to sub-clause 2.5" from Clause 8.7 means that prima facie that parties did not intend Sub-Clause 8.7 to be subject to Sub-Clause 2.5;
b) Sub-Clause 8.7 specifically addresses liquidated damages;
c) At the time of agreeing the Contract the lender required immediately enforceable security against Murphy's performance, as was known to both parties;
d) Sub-Clause 2.5 is unreliable, referring as it does to "Payment Certificate", whereas the mechanism in Sub-Clause 8.7 refers to deduction from the Notified Sum;
e) Sub-Clause 2.5 is permissive only. Nothing in it purports to prevent Beckton from enforcing liquidated damages under Sub-Clause 8.7.
Analysis
"…More generally, it seems to the Board that the structure of clause 2.5 is such that it applies to any claims which the Employer wishes to raise. First, "any payment under any clause of these Conditions or otherwise in connection with the Contract" are words of very wide scope indeed. Secondly, the clause makes it clear that, if the Employer wishes to raise such a claim, it must do so promptly and in a particularised form : that seems to follow from the linking of the Engineer's role to the notice and particulars. Thirdly, the purpose of the final part of the clause is to emphasise that, where the Employer has failed to raise a claim as required by the earlier part of the clause, the back door of set-off or cross-claims is as firmly shut to it as the front door of an originating claim."
a) Sub-Clause 2.5 speaks of the amount agreed or determined by the Engineer as being included as a deduction in the Contract Price and Payment Certificates. Sub-Clause 8.7.4 on the other hand provides that delay damages due pursuant to Sub-Clause 8.7 shall be deduced from the next applicable Notified Sum. The Notified Sum (being a statement by Murphy) is a very different animal from a Payment Certificate (issued by an engineer);
b) Sub-Clause 2.5 contains no timetable for agreement or determination by the Engineer. Sub-Clause 8.7.4 provides for a precise, fixed and inflexible timetable. The interposition of Clause 2.5 into Sub-Clause 8.7.4 would cut right across this important part of Sub-Clause 8.7. Murphy struggled to overcome this difficulty. It was forced to suggest that the purpose of Sub-Clause 8.7.4 was simply to identify the earliest date for deduction of liquidated damages. I find this unconvincing. Ignoring the question of whether or not the word "shall" is permissive or not, the right to deduct is, if not mandatory, at least absolute on its face;
c) By Sub-Clauses 2.5 and 3.5 the amount payable, if any, to Beckton is left to the determination of the Engineer as to what is "fair in accordance with the Contract, taking due regard of all relevant circumstances". Sub-Clause 8.7 fixes precisely the sums payable.
Issue 2
Conclusion