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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions >> Ove Arup & Partners International Ltd v Coleman Bennett International Consultancy Plc [2019] EWHC 413 (TCC) (29 January 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2019/413.html Cite as: [2019] EWHC 413 (TCC) |
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OF ENGLAND AND WALES
TECHNOLOGY & CONSTRUCTION COURT (QBD)
Fetter Lane, London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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OVE ARUP & PARTNERS INTERNATIONAL LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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COLEMAN BENNETT INTERNATIONAL CONSULTANCY PLC | Defendant |
MR C. DARTON (counsel) appeared on behalf of the Defendant.
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Crown Copyright ©
MRS JUSTICE O'FARRELL:
"(1) Arup will provide assistance with the overall project management of the Northern Powerhouse feasibility study programme, noting that other consultants will also be working on the feasibility study and their work will need to be coordinated with the Arup activities;
(2) Arup will carry out focused technical feasibility studies in the areas of tunnel design, route selection and station layout;
(3) Arup will carry out limited operational assessments and transport capacity assessments sufficient to define the system for tunnel and station design purposes;
(4) Arup will carry out preliminary costing exercises and system economic assessments.
(5) Arup will provide output material for inclusion in the Northern Powerhouse feasibility study report, which will be produced by others."
i) Outline definition of an initial ultrafast transport system, sufficient to enable work to begin in the absence of detailed information from HTI.
ii) Limited operational assessments and transport capacity assessments, sufficient to define the system for tunnel and station concept definition purposes.
iii) The development of generic conceptual designs for the stations.
iv) The development of generic conceptual designs for the tunnels and their interfaces with the stations.
v) Desk studies of the city centre areas of Leeds and Manchester, sufficient to identify appropriate sites and platforms for each station and to enable the following design requirements to be assessed, namely orientation, number and arrangement of platforms, depth and number of operational levels, passenger and baggage connections to the existing mainline stations, potential for aboveground developments.
vi) Desk studies of the Leeds/Manchester regional level geology and identification of significant obstructions along the selected route. The overall tunnel design approach will be formed around a fatal floor assessment of the alternatives and will include route definition, developing horizontal and vertical alignment corridors between Leeds and Manchester, assessing the impact of topography on the feasibility of a partially/fully tunnelled route, estimating the expected size of the tunnel based on space proofing requirements, defining the interfacing tunnelling aspects of any stations.
vii) Preliminary construction cost estimates and system economic assessments.
viii) Development of text and other suitable material for inclusion in the final Northern Powerhouse feasibility study report to be produced by others.
"The fee for conducting the studies defined above will be £350,000 plus VAT, costed at our normal rates. A definition of the anticipated expenditure profile for the project is appended. We are prepared to discount the above fee to £150,000 plus VAT in exchange for a 20% share in the ownership of the enterprise which is to be established as soon as possible between DC and HTI."
"Further to our telephone call this morning, this note confirms that DCN/CBI acknowledge the debt total of 350k for work undertaken. We are only able to settle this debt in instalments as follows:
(1) 75k paid to date;
(2) A further 75k to be paid 30 days from the date of invoice;
(3) A further 75k to be paid three months later;
(4) The balance to be arranged according to cash availability.
I trust that you will accept the above as good intention and that all material required to complete the DCN brochure currently in preparation will be available by close of business Thursday, 13th October 2016."
"Arup has provided professional engineering services to CBI pursuant to a contract between the parties ("The Appointment") entered into on or around 14 April 2016 and varied by agreement on or around 11 October 2016."
At paragraph 4, Arup stated that the appointment was a construction contract and the services to be performed were in relation to construction operations within the meaning of the Housing Grants, Construction and Regeneration Act 1996. Arup further stated that the appointment did not contain any express provision for adjudication and, therefore, by reason of section 108 of the Act, the adjudication's statutory scheme applied.
"91. In my view, the purpose of the 1996 Act would be substantially defeated if a responding party could, as a matter of course, reserve its position on jurisdiction in general terms at the start of an adjudication, thereby avoiding any ruling by the adjudicator or the taking of any remedial steps by the referring party; participate fully in the nuts and bolts of the adjudication, either without raising any detailed jurisdiction points, or raising only specific points which were subsequently rejected by the adjudicator (and the court); and then, having lost the adjudication, was allowed to comb through the documents in the hope that a new jurisdiction point might turn up at the summary judgment stage, in order to defeat the enforcement of the adjudicator's decision at the eleventh hour…
92. In my view, informed by that starting-point, the applicable principles on waiver and general reservations in the adjudication context are as follows:
(i) If the responding party wishes to challenge the jurisdiction of the adjudicator then it must do so "appropriately and clearly". If it does not reserve its position effectively and participates in the adjudication, it will be taken to have waived any jurisdictional objection and will be unable to avoid enforcement on jurisdictional grounds (Allied P&L).
(ii) It will always be better for a party to reserve its position based on a specific objection or objections: otherwise the adjudicator cannot investigate the point and, if appropriate, decide not to proceed, and the referring party cannot decide for itself whether the objection has merit (GPS Marine).
(iii) If the specific jurisdictional objections are rejected by the adjudicator (and the court, if the objections are renewed on enforcement), then the objector will be subsequently precluded from raising other jurisdictional grounds which might otherwise have been available to it (GPS Marine).
(iv) A general reservation of position on jurisdiction is undesirable but may be effective (GPS Marine; Aedifice). Much will turn on the wording of the reservation in each case. However, a general reservation may not be effective if:
i) At the time it was provided, the objector knew or should have known of specific grounds for a jurisdictional objection but failed to articulate them (Aedifice, CN Associates);
ii) The court concludes that the general reservation was worded in that way simply to try and ensure that all options (including ones not yet even thought of) could be kept open (Equitix)."
Those guidelines provide a useful test, which I will apply in this case.
"CBI does not accept that Part 2 of the Housing Grants, Construction and Regeneration Act 1996, or the Scheme for Construction Contracts Regulations 1998, apply to the matter or matters referred to in the notice and fully reserves CBI's position in relation to jurisdiction. CBI does not accept that this adjudication has been validly commenced or that the appointment adjudicator has jurisdiction in respect of the referring party's claim for the brief reasons set out below."
"Whilst CBI will participate in the adjudication, it will do so under protest and without prejudice to its contention that any adjudicator or adjudicators that are appointed lack jurisdiction. CBI therefore disputes jurisdiction on the grounds summarised above and on further jurisdictional issues that we have not yet had the opportunity to investigate in the limited time we have had since the service of the notice."
"The responding party, CBI, does not accept that this adjudication has been validly commenced or that the appointed adjudicator has jurisdiction in respect of the referring party's claim, for the reasons set out herein. By an email dated 11 October 2018, CBI gave notice that it challenged jurisdiction, which it will continue to maintain throughout the course of this adjudication. The rest of the submissions made within this document are made without prejudice to CBI's challenge to jurisdiction."
That was then repeated by the witness statement relied upon by Mr Coleman on behalf of CBI.
"CBI says, without explanation, the matters referred to the adjudicator do not fall within the scope of Part 2 of the 1996 Act. Arup disagrees."
"The issue has not been developed in detail by CBI in the response and there has been no issue taken with Arup's letter of 12 October in this regard."
"I accept the case for Arup, as set out in paragraphs 4-7 in its letter of 12 October."
"(i) At the time it was provided, the objector knew or should have known of specific grounds …
ii) [Or that it] was worded in that way simply to try and ensure that all options … could be kept open …"
"The appointment was a construction contract and the services to be performed and each of them was in relation to construction operations within the meaning of section 104 of the Housing Grants, Construction and Regeneration Act 1996."
"Save that CBI expressly denies the jurisdiction of the adjudicator to adjudicate upon this dispute for the reasons set out herein, paragraph 15 is admitted."
"The referred claim is brought under more than one contract and/or raises more than one dispute and, secondly, the adjudication is being brought against the wrong party."
'(1) In this Part a "construction contract" means an agreement with a person for any of the following -
(a) the carrying out of construction operations; …
(2) References in this Part to a construction contract include an agreement -
(a) to do architectural, design, or surveying work, or
(b) to provide advice on building, engineering …
in relation to construction operations.'
"(b) construction … forming, or to form, part of the land, including (without prejudice to the foregoing) walls, roadworks, power-lines, electronic communications apparatus, aircraft runways, docks and harbours, railways [and so forth]."
CERTIFICATE Opus 2 International Limited hereby certifies that the above is an accurate and complete record of the Judgment or part thereof. Transcribed by Opus 2 International Limited Official Court Reporters and Audio Transcribers 5 New Street Square, London, EC4A 3BF Tel: 020 7831 5627 Fax: 020 7831 7737 [email protected] This transcript has been approved by the Judge |