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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions >> Kew Holdings Ltd v Donald Insall Associates Ltd [2020] EWHC 1862 (TCC) (15 July 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2020/1862.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 1862 (TCC), [2020] Costs LR 1049, 192 Con LR 118, [2020] BLR 578 |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT (QBD)
Fetter Lane, London, EC4Y 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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KEW HOLDINGS LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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DONALD INSALL ASSOCIATES LIMITED |
Defendant |
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Paul Cowan (instructed by Kennedys Law LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 10th June 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
"Covid-19 Protocol: This judgment was handed down by the judge remotely by circulation to the parties' representatives by email and release to Bailii. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be Wednesday 15th July 2020 at 10:30am"
Mrs Justice O'Farrell:
i) an order striking out the claim for non-compliance with the order dated 5 February 2019;ii) alternatively, a stay of proceedings pending the Claimant's payment in satisfaction of the judgment dated 5 February 2019; and
iii) an order for security for costs.
Background
The application
i) pursuant to CPR 3.4(2)(b) and/or (c) and/or the Court's inherent jurisdiction, the Claimant's claim shall be struck out unless the claimant pays the Defendant the sums ordered by this Court on 5 February 2019 within seven days;ii) alternatively, pursuant to CPR 3.1(2)(f) and/or the Court's inherent jurisdiction these proceedings shall be stayed unless and until the claimant pays the Defendant the sums ordered by this Court on 5 February 2019 within seven days;
iii) further or alternatively, pursuant to CPR 25.12 and/or CPR 3.1(5), the Claimant shall pay into Court within fourteen days the sum of £700,0000 or such other sum as the Court shall determine as security for the Defendant's costs in these proceedings, failing which the Claimant's claim shall be struck out.
Application to stay proceedings
"(i) The Court undoubtedly has the power and discretion to stay any proceedings if justice requires it.
(ii) In exercising that power and discretion, the Court must very much have in mind a party's right to access to justice and to issue and pursue proceedings.
(iii) The power is one that is to be used sparingly and in exceptional circumstances.
(iv) Those circumstances include bad faith and where the claimant has acted or is acting particularly oppressively or unreasonably."
Application to strike out
"The court may strike out a statement of case if it appears to the court:
(b) that the statement of case is an abuse of the court's process or is otherwise likely to obstruct the just disposal of the proceedings; or
(c) that there has been a failure to comply with a rule, practice direction or court order."
"[107] Both the HGCRA and the Amended Act create a hierarchy of obligations, as discussed earlier. The immediate statutory obligation is to pay the notified sum as set out in section 111. As required by section 108 of the Amended Act, the contract also contains an adjudication regime for the resolution of all disputes, including any disputes about the true value of work done under clause 4.7. As a matter of statutory construction and under the terms of this contract, the adjudication provisions are subordinate to the payment provisions in section 111. Section 111 (unlike the adjudication provisions of the Act) is of direct effect. It requires payment of a specific sum within a short period of time. The Act has created both the prompt payment regime and the adjudication regime. The Act cannot sensibly be construed as permitting the adjudication regime to trump the prompt payment regime. Therefore, both the Act and the contract must be construed as prohibiting the employer from embarking upon an adjudication to obtain a re-valuation of the work before he has complied with his immediate payment obligation.
[108] One important policy of the HGCRA and the Amended Act is to promote cashflow in the construction industry. In other words, there should be prompt payment followed by any necessary financial adjustments. See Melville Dundas Ltd (in receivership) and others v George Wimpey UK Ltd and another [2007] UKHL 18; [2007] 1 WLR 1136 at [65]; the DTI paper 'Fair Construction Contracts' referred to in Melville Dundas at [65]; the subsequent DTI paper 'Improving Payment Practices in the Construction Industry' (2007), upon which Mr Speaight relies. If the statutory provisions are ambiguous (and I do not think that they are), a purposive approach to interpretation supports my conclusion in the previous paragraph."
"[21] Pausing for air at this stage, it seems to me consistent with the policy underlying the adjudication regime that a defendant who has discharged his immediate obligation should generally be entitled to rely upon a subsequent true value adjudication and that a defendant who has not done so should not be entitled to do so. In answer to the question whether a person who has not discharged his immediate obligation should be entitled to rely upon a later true value decision by way of set-off or counterclaim in order to resist the enforcement of his immediate obligation I would give a policy-based answer that, in my view, he should not be entitled to do so since that would enable a defendant who has failed to implement the Payment or Payless Notice provisions to string the claimant along while he goes about getting the true value adjudication decision rather than discharging his immediate obligation and then returning if and when he has obtained his true value decision. In my judgment, the passages I have cited from Harding (at first instance and in the Court of Appeal) are at least consistent with and provide support for the policy-based approach I have outlined. Adopting a phrase from [141] of the judgment of Coulson J in Grove at first instance "the second adjudication cannot act as some sort of Trojan horse to avoid paying the sum stated as due".
[35] In my judgment, it should now be taken as established that an employer who is subject to an immediate obligation to discharge the order of an adjudicator based upon the failure of the employer to serve either a Payment Notice or a Pay Less Notice must discharge that immediate obligation before he will be entitled to rely upon a subsequent decision in a true value adjudication. Both policy and authority support this conclusion and that it should apply equally to interim and final applications for payment.
[37] The decisions of Coulson J and the Court of Appeal in Grove are clear and unequivocal in stating that the employer must make payment in accordance with the contract or in accordance with section 111 of the Amended Act before it can commence a 'true value' adjudication. That does not mean that the Court will always restrain the commencement or progress of a true value adjudication commenced before the employer has discharged his immediate obligation: see the decision of the Court of Appeal in Harding. It is not necessary for me to decide whether or in what circumstances the Court may restrain the subsequent true value adjudication and, in these circumstances, it would be positively unhelpful for me to suggest examples or criteria and I do not do so."
"Where
(a) the court has struck out a claimant's statement of case;
(b) the claimant has been ordered to pay costs to the defendant; and
(c) before the claimant pays those costs, the claimant starts another claim against the same defendant, arising out of facts which are the same or substantially the same as those relating to the claim in which the statement of case was struck out,
the court may, on the application of the defendant, stay that other claim until the costs of the first claim have been paid."
Security for costs
"The court may make an order for security for costs under rule 25.12 if
(a) it is satisfied, having regard to all the circumstances of the case, that it is just to make such an order; and
(b)(i) one or more of the conditions in paragraph (2) applies "
"(a) the claimant is
(i) resident out of the jurisdiction; but
(ii) not resident in a Brussels Contracting State, a State bound by the Lugano Convention, a State bound by the 2005 Hague Convention or a Regulation State, as defined in section 1(3) of the Civil Jurisdiction and Judgments Act 1982;
(c) the claimant is a company and there is reason to believe that it will be unable to pay the defendant's costs if ordered to do so "
i) whether the Property provides adequate security against which judgment could be enforced;ii) whether the offer of a personal guarantee from Mr Brothers would be adequate security; and
iii) whether an order for security would risk stifling the claim.
Conclusion
i) The Defendant's application to strike out the claim is dismissed.ii) These proceedings shall be stayed, pending payment by the Claimant of the sums ordered by the Court on 5 February 2019, or as further ordered.
iii) The Claimant shall pay into Court within fourteen days the sum of £600,000 as security for the Defendant's costs in these proceedings.
iv) These proceedings shall be stayed, pending payment by the Claimant of the sum ordered to be paid into court as security for costs, or as further ordered.
v) The Court will determine any issues of costs not agreed by the parties on paper, following short written submissions to be filed by 4pm on 16 July 2020 or by way of a remote hearing.