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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions >> C Spencer Ltd v MW High Tech Projects UK Ltd [2021] EWHC 1284 (TCC) (31 March 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2021/1284.html Cite as: [2021] EWHC 1284 (TCC) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT (QBD)
7 Rolls Buildings London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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C. SPENCER LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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MW HIGH TECH PROJECTS UK LIMITED |
Defendant |
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2nd Floor, Quality House, 6-9 Quality Court, Chancery Lane, London WC2A 1HP.
Telephone No: 020 7067 2900. DX 410 LDE
Email: [email protected]
Web: www.martenwalshcherer.com
MR. J. ACTON DAVIS, QC for the Defendant
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Crown Copyright ©
MR. JUSTICE WAKSMAN :
INTRODUCTION
i) The adjudicator was invalidly appointed because of a failure by CSL to adhere to the contractual provisions governing notification and appointment.
ii) The adjudicator impermissibly valued at zero, four separate counterclaims raised by MW, all of which in fact concerned or arguably concerned excluded operations within the meaning of section 105(2)(c) of the Housing Grants Construction and Regeneration Act 1996 as amended, "The Act".
iii) The adjudicator equally impermissibly dealt with the release to CSL of retention monies which themselves covered work which consisted of both included and excluded operations.
CONTRACTUAL BACKGROUND
Clause 38.1: "The contractor will pay the sub-contractor the sub-contract price against completed milestone events".
Clause 38.3: "The sub-contractor shall submit a request for payment at intervals of not less than one calendar month showing the sub-contractor's assessment of the amount to be paid and the total amount previously certified. The sub-contractor's requests for payment shall each state the sum the sub-contractor considers is to be paid".
38.4: "16 days after date of sub-contractor's request for payment in accordance with 38.3 the contract manager shall issue a certificate to the sub-contractor and the contractor for the instalment to which the request for payment relates. The certificate shall show the sum which the contract manager considers to be due at the payment due date, determined in accordance with sub-clause 38.5 and the basis on which it has been calculated. The total certified shall comprise all sums listed in the sub-contractor's statement which in the opinion of the contract manager are properly payable under the sub-contract and shall show separately any elements within the sum certified in respect of nominated sub sub-contractors".
"The contract manager may in any certificate delete, correct or modify any sum previously certified by him as it shall consider proper. If in respect of any sub-contractor's request for payment the contractor or the contract manager on his behalf considers that nothing is due to the sub-contractor, he shall issue a certificate for zero".
Clause 38.5: "In respect of each instalment the contractor shall pay the sub-contractor the amount specified in clause 38.6 or, if applicable, the amount specified in a notice under 38.7".
38.6: "Subject to 38.7 and 41.1(a), the amount to be paid by the contractor is (a) the amount certified for payment in the relevant contract manager's certificate under 38.4 or, (b), if the contractor or contract manager on his behalf omits to issue such a certificate, the amount applied for in the relevant sub-contractor's application under 38.3".
38.7: "If the contractor intends to pay less than the sum due in accordance with 38.4 or 38.6 for any reason, including any sum that may be due from the sub-contractor to the contractor under the sub-contract or any sum not payable in accordance with 41.5, the contractor shall notify the sub-contractor not later than one day before the final date for payment of the amount he considers to be due and the basis on which that sum is calculated".
BACKGROUND TO THE PRESENT DISPUTE
"Application for nomination of adjudicator and notice of adjudication. C. Spencer, referring party, MW, responding party. We act on behalf of C. Spencer Limited. Please find attached the following documents which we are submitting. An application form for nomination of adjudicator with covering letter, the notice of adjudication and relevant excerpts from the contract relating to adjudication. C. Spencer are arranging for electronic payment of the fee today. We confirm the responding party are copied in to this email. Please let us know if you have any questions".
"MW says that as a result of MW's claims against CSL, even when the sum that CSL claimed in the notice is accounted for, that would then produce a negative total figure of £1.498 million, that is putting in the values of the counterclaim. MW's position was somewhat unclear. MW says that I am not empowered to open up many of the figures making up these totals, but while MW appeared to be raising the right of set off as a defence, it (a) appeared to tell me I cannot consider such a defence, and (b) made no submissions in respect of the quantum of that defence, save for the inertia slab counterclaim. This rather unsatisfactorily left MW's position as being where I should have taken MW's position at face value with little or no substantiation provided at all".
"MW's position appeared to be they had substantial set offs as a defence against any payment —" if he was to order that "— as a result of the four heads of the counterclaim but with that point raised, MW says I am not empowered to open up many of the figures. I am not sure how MW believes it can raise such a defence, then tell me I cannot consider this defence".
MW wishes to make it absolutely clear it has not introduced the four claims as a set off or abatement or a counterclaim; indeed, it was very careful not to do this".
"MW's position was on the one hand that they were extant counterclaims that would eclipse the sums sought by CSL, but on the other I did not have jurisdiction to consider those claims. Without substantiation, as CSL has said, I would be left only with MW's say-so. This is not a valid basis on which to counter a monetary award".
"However, it has now been expressly confirmed that MW is not seeking any reliance on the defence of set off to the four claims. That is entirely MW's prerogative and I assume Mr. Anderson of MW's solicitors has received instruction from MW on that point".
"While it is open to MW to defend itself by way of set off and counterclaim and despite the interpretation of the response that that was what MW were saying, I acknowledge MW's clarification it is not pursuing any set off. In that case, therefore, it is not sufficient for MW to raise these points so that I may know they exist in the background but not to properly or at all substantiate them and expect me to somehow account for these matters in my decision. That is not an acceptable approach".
"Given that no set off has been put forward, I do not consider that any jurisdictional points arise and any sum I may decide for CSL is therefore without set off or abatement in respect of the counterclaims".
"Given my findings in respect of issue 1(d) in that these counterclaims are not advanced by MW in this adjudication, I have not considered valuing these counterclaims further".
"However, in correcting notice 35 it was open to MW to address these sums but in the absence of this, all I have are four unsubstantiated figures. So for the purpose of this adjudication, and I quote: 'I have no choice but to value these at nil pounds for the purpose of correcting notice 35 which is the position taken by CSL in the surrejoinder'. If MW was prepared to stand by these counterclaim figures then they have more than a sufficient opportunity to make their case, but MW has expressly elected not to. That is, of course, entirely their prerogative".
"CSL has sought a declaration that the four counterclaims are valued at nil. In the surrejoinder this position has been updated. The value of the four claims as identified is zero pounds for the purpose of ordering any payment to CSL. Given that MW clarified its position it was not advancing these claims in set off, it was not necessary for me to value these claims and so I do not. I have valued these at nil only for the purpose of correcting notice 35".
ANALYSIS
Defence 1.
"The party wishing to refer to arbitration any dispute arising or in connection with a contract may give a notice at any time to that effect to the other party"
and the notice should include various points of detail which are not in issue here.
"When an adjudicator has either been named in the contract or agreed prior to the issue of a notice the party issuing the notice shall at the same time send to the adjudicator a copy of the notice with a request for confirmation that the adjudicator is able and willing to act".
"When an adjudicator has not been so named or agreed, the party issuing the notice may include with the notice the name of one or more persons with their addresses who are willing to act and acceptable to the referring party for selection by the other party. Providing that one of these is acceptable to the other party, the other party shall select and notify the referring party and the selected adjudicator".
"Where an adjudicator is not appointed under 4.1 or 4.2, the party issuing the notice may request ICHEME to nominate an adjudicator. Such request shall be in writing...".
Introduction to defences 2 and 3 - hybrid contracts
"On the face of it, it is very hard to see why a concrete slab lying beneath plant and machinery or steelwork is plant or machinery itself or itself is steelwork to support or provide access to such plant and machinery. The essential object of section 1052(c) is surely plant and machinery. Steelwork is included as an adjunct to that plant and machinery. Other steelwork, for example the steel included incorporated in reinforced concrete structure of a building obviously would not be excluded operations".
Defence 3 - retention
"I did not make a binding decision in respect of completion. My analysis at issue 15 of adjudication 3 was all based on submissions by the parties with no jurisdictional challenge made. However, that I had jurisdiction to consider this point in the initial jurisdiction was conferred by MW by virtue of the fact that it had asked me to find it was entitled to retain the retention for non-completion which in turn would require me to investigate whether CSL had completed the sub-contract works. MW's position as to jurisdiction is directly contrary in this adjudication".
"In adjudication 3, when I referred to substantial completion as my term, I was referring to completion in the sense that the conditions for the CCC TOC were generally met as opposed to a contractual definition of substantial completion".
"To the extent that they may now argue these milestones were not complete, MW accepted they were completed in adjudication 3 and that decision included the above values for those milestones and I am therefore bound by that. In any event, any residual argument as to the non-completion of 75 and 76 was not pursued before me".
"The overall contractual construction certificate which had been sought by CSL on 16th of 2018 should be regarded as valid".
Footnote to defence 3 - interest
"CSL has claimed interest. MW has resisted the same. I am satisfied there is jurisdiction to decide interest. However, in order to decide it was necessary to determine the sum due at notice 35 and whether retention was to be applied, and if so, what sum, which in turn required a determination as to whether takeover had occurred, I am satisfied that these matters enjoy internal jurisdiction. I therefore decide —"
and then he gives the figures. In other words, again one inevitably flowed from the other.
CONCLUSION
This judgment has been approved by Waksman J.