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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions >> Advance JV & Ors v Enisca Ltd [2022] EWHC 1152 (TCC) (16 May 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2022/1152.html Cite as: 202 Con LR 219, [2022] EWHC 1152 (TCC) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
TECHNOLOGY & CONSTRUCTION COURT (QBD)
Fetter Lane London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
ADVANCE JV (A JOINT VENTURE BETWEEN (1) BALFOUR BEATTY GROUP LIMITED AND (2) MWH TREATMENT LIMITED) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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ENISCA LIMITED |
Defendant |
____________________
for the Claimant
Mr Alexander Nissen QC (instructed by Quigg Golden Solicitors) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 3 May 2022
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Covid-19 Protocol: This judgment is to be handed down by the judge remotely by circulation to the parties' representatives by email. The date for hand-down is deemed to be Monday 16 May, 2022.
Mrs Justice Joanna Smith:
THE CONTRACT
"The Contractor certifies a payment within three weeks of each assessment date. The first payment is the amount due. Other payments are the change in the amount due since the last payment certificate. A payment is made by the Subcontractor to the Contractor if the change reduces the amount due. Other payments are made by the Contractor to the Subcontractor. Payments are in the currency of this subcontract unless otherwise stated in this subcontract."
"The date upon which each payment becomes due and the final date for payment of payments becoming due are as provided in Option Y(UK)2."
"The date on which a payment becomes due is twenty-one days after the assessment date. The final date for payment is twenty-one days or a different period for payment if stated in the Subcontract Data after the date on which payment becomes due. The Contractor's certificate is the notice of payment to the Subcontractor specifying the amount due at the payment due date (the notified sum) and stating the basis on which the amount was calculated."
"If either Party intends to pay less than the notified sum, he notifies the other Party not later than seven days (the prescribed period) before the final date for payment by stating the amount considered to be due and the basis on which that sum is calculated. A Party does not withhold payment of an amount due under this contract unless he has notified his intention to pay less than the notified sum as required by this subcontract."
i) Enisca may make an application for payment on or before the assessment date;
ii) Advance is required to assess the amount due for payment at each assessment date (the payment due date) and certify a payment by issuing a Contractor payment certificate within three weeks of the assessment date;
iii) Payment becomes due twenty-one days after the assessment date;
iv) Either party intending to pay less than the notified sum (in this case Advance) must notify the other party within the contractual window, i.e. not later than seven days before the final date for payment.
RELEVANT CHRONOLOGY OF EVENTS
i) 12 November 2021 – Contractor certifies and due date for payment. No certificate was provided;
ii) 26 November 2021 – the latest date for provision of a Pay Less Notice;
iii) 3 December 2021 – final date for payment.
"Dear Sirs,
Please find attached the Advance Assessment of the Enisca AFP 25[3].
Due to the assessment resulting in a negative payment value (due to a previous on account overpayment), Advance have adjusted the figures below to show a Zero Payment to prevent any credit notes needing to be made.
Advance Assessment of PWDD[4]: £2,097,662.60
Less 5% Retention: (£104,883.13)
Cumulative Payment due: £1,992,779.47
Less Paid to date: £2,157,068.49
Payment Amount Due: (£164,288.02)"
"Dear Sirs,
Project No SCADV35615
Sub Contract Order No: SCADV35615-049
REF: WITHHOLDING/PAYLESS NOTICE
We refer to your application number 17, relating to period ending 26th March 2021.
Please be advised that, in accordance with the subcontract terms and conditions between us, we give notice of our assessment of your application number 17 as follows:
i)Application paid in full
ii) Your application has been amended in accordance with the attached detail;
- Advance Assessment of PWDD: £2,097,662.60
- Less 5% Retention: -£104,883.13
- Payment due: £1,992,779.47
- Less Paid to date: £2,157,068.49
- Payment amount due in period: -£164,288.02…"
…
iii) Cumulative Payment value excluding VAT and before retention is: £2,157,067.49."
"In accordance with section 109 & 110 of the Housing Grants Construction Regeneration Act 1996, as amended by the local Democracy Economic Development and Construction Act 2009 we confirm the following payment to yourselves:
…
ii. Your application No 25 has been amended from your cumulative to date applied value of £4,956,438.53 to £2,097,662.60 as detailed above and on the assessment".
THE STATUTORY PROVISIONS
"Dates for payment
110.—(1) Every construction contract shall—
(a) provide an adequate mechanism for determining what payments
become due under the contract, and when, and
(b) provide for a ?nal date for payment in relation to any sum which
becomes due.
The parties are free to agree how long the period is to be between the date on which a sum becomes due and the ?nal date for payment.
(1A) The requirement in subsection (1)(a) to provide an adequate mechanism for determining what payments become due under the contract, or when, is not satis?ed where a construction contract makes payment conditional on—
(a) the performance of obligations under another contract, or
(b) a decision by any person as to whether obligations under another
contract have been performed.
(1B) In subsection (1A)(a) and (b) the references to obligations do not include obligations to make payments (but see section 113).
(1C) Subsection (1A) does not apply where—
(a) the construction contract is an agreement between the parties for the carrying out of construction operations by another person, whether under sub-contract or otherwise, and
(b) the obligations referred to in that subsection are obligations on that other person to carry out those operations.
(1D) The requirement in subsection (1)(a) to provide an adequate mechanism for determining when payments become due under the contract is not satis?ed where a construction contract provides for the date on which a payment becomes due to be determined by reference to the giving to the person to whom the payment is due of a notice which relates to what payments are due under the contract.
(3) If or to the extent that a contract does not contain such provision as is mentioned in subsection (1), the relevant provisions of the Scheme for Construction Contracts apply.
Payment notices: contractual requirements
110A.—(1) A construction contract shall, in relation to every payment provided for by the contract—
(a) require the payer or a speci?ed person to give a notice complying with subsection (2) to the payee not later than ?ve days after the payment due date, or
(b) require the payee to give a notice complying with subsection (3) to the payer or a speci?ed person not later than ?ve days after the payment due date.
(2) A notice complies with this subsection if it speci?es—
(a) in a case where the notice is given by the payer—
(i) the sum that the payer considers to be or to have been due at the
payment due date in respect of the payment, and
(ii) the basis on which that sum is calculated;
(b) in a case where the notice is given by a speci?ed person—
(i) the sum that the payer or the speci?ed person considers to be or
to have been due at the payment due date in respect of the payment, and
(ii) the basis on which that sum is calculated.
(3) A notice complies with this subsection if it speci?es—
(a) the sum that the payee considers to be or to have been due at the payment due date in respect of the payment, and
(b) the basis on which that sum is calculated.
(4) For the purposes of this section, it is immaterial that the sum referred to in subsection (2)(a) or (b) or (3)(a) may be zero.
(5) If or to the extent that a contract does not comply with subsection (1), the relevant provisions of the Scheme for Construction Contracts apply.
(6) In this and the following sections, in relation to any payment provided for by a construction contract—
"payee" means the person to whom the payment is due;
"payer" means the person from whom the payment is due;
"payment due date" means the date provided for by the contract as the date on which the payment is due;
"speci?ed person" means a person speci?ed in or determined in accordance with the provisions of the contract.
Payment notices: payee's notice in default of payer's notice
110B.—(1) This section applies in a case where, in relation to any payment provided for by a construction contract—
(a) the contract requires the payer or a speci?ed person to give the payee a notice complying with section 110A(2) not later than ?ve days after the payment due date, but
(b) notice is not given as so required.
(2) Subject to subsection (4), the payee may give to the payer a notice complying with section 110A(3) at any time after the date on which the notice referred to in subsection (1)(a) was required by the contract to be given.
(3) Where pursuant to subsection (2) the payee gives a notice complying with section 110A(3), the ?nal date for payment of the sum speci?ed in the notice shall for all purposes be regarded as postponed by the same number of days as the number of days after the date referred to in subsection (2) that the notice was given.
(4) If—
(a) the contract permits or requires the payee, before the date on which the notice referred to in subsection (1)(a) is required by the contract to be given, to notify the payer or a speci?ed person of—
(i) the sum that the payee considers will become due on the payment due date in respect of the payment, and
(ii) the basis on which that sum is calculated, and
(b) the payee gives such noti?cation in accordance with the contract, that noti?cation is to be regarded as a notice complying with section 110A(3) given pursuant to subsection (2) (and the payee may not give another such notice pursuant to that subsection).
Requirement to pay noti?ed sum
111.—(1) Subject as follows, where a payment is provided for by a construction contract, the payer must pay the noti?ed sum (to the extent not already paid) on or before the ?nal date for payment.
(2) For the purposes of this section, the "noti?ed sum" in relation to any payment provided for by a construction contract means—
(a) in a case where a notice complying with section 110A(2) has been given pursuant to and in accordance with a requirement of the contract, the amount speci?ed in that notice;
(b) in a case where a notice complying with section 110A(3) has been given pursuant to and in accordance with a requirement of the contract, the amount speci?ed in that notice;
(c) in a case where a notice complying with section 110A(3) has been given pursuant to and in accordance with section 110B(2), the amount speci?ed in that notice.
(3) The payer or a speci?ed person may in accordance with this section give to the payee a notice of the payer's intention to pay less than the noti?ed sum.
(4) A notice under subsection (3) must specify—
(a) the sum that the payer considers to be due on the date the notice is served, and
(b) the basis on which that sum is calculated.
It is immaterial for the purposes of this subsection that the sum referred to in paragraph (a) or (b) may be zero.
(5) A notice under subsection (3)—
(a) must be given not later than the prescribed period before the ?nal date for payment, and
(b) in a case referred to in subsection (2)(b) or (c), may not be given before the notice by reference to which the noti?ed sum is determined.
(6) Where a notice is given under subsection (3), subsection (1) applies only in respect of the sum speci?ed pursuant to subsection (4)(a).
(7) In subsection (5), "prescribed period" means—
(a) such period as the parties may agree, or
(b) in the absence of such agreement, the period provided by the Scheme for Construction Contracts.
(8) Subsection (9) applies where in respect of a payment—
(a) a notice complying with section 110A(2) has been given pursuant to and in accordance with a requirement of the contract (and no notice under subsection (3) is given), or
(b) a notice under subsection (3) is given in accordance with this section, but on the matter being referred to adjudication the adjudicator decides that more than the sum speci?ed in the notice should be paid.
(9) In a case where this subsection applies, the decision of the adjudicator referred to in subsection (8) shall be construed as requiring payment of the additional amount not later than—
(a) seven days from the date of the decision, or
(b) the date which apart from the notice would have been the ?nal date for payment, whichever is the later.
(10) Subsection (1) does not apply in relation to a payment provided for by a construction contract where—
(a) the contract provides that, if the payee becomes insolvent the payer need not pay any sum due in respect of the payment, and
(b) the payee has become insolvent after the prescribed period referred to in subsection (5)(a).
(11) Subsections (2) to (5) of section 113 apply for the purposes of subsection (10) of this section as they apply for the purposes of that section.
"…to require an employer at periodic intervals to pay "the notified sum" by the final date for payment, irrespective of whether or not that sum in fact represents a correct valuation of the work to date. If an employer fails to give relevant notice, irrespective of whether this is by mistake, administrative oversight or any other reason, then a sum for which the contractor has applied becomes immediately contractually payable, even if it is wrong in valuation terms."
"[47]The dispute or difference referred in the First Adjudication concerned the true valuation of the BHL's entitlement in respect of Interim Application 22. The Notice of Adjudication expressly sought declarations and payment based on "the true value of BHL's Application for Payment Number 22 dated 16 July 2021". On its face, Interim Application 22 was for payment in respect of work for the valuation period up to 31 July 2021. The net sum claimed by BHL was calculated by reference to the line items and figures in Interim Application 22. ESG's identification of the dispute was set out in its response in which it defined the relief it sought based on the true valuation of Interim Application 22.
[48] In contrast, the dispute or difference referred in the Second Adjudication was whether ESG had served a valid Pay Less Notice in response to Interim Application 23; if not, whether BHL was entitled to payment of the sum claimed as 'the notified sum'. The Notice of Adjudication expressly sought declarations and payment based on Application for Payment Number 23 dated 17 August 2021. On its face, although the line items and figures in Interim Application were substantially the same as those in Interim Application 22, Interim Application 23 was for payment in respect of work for a different valuation period, that is, up to 31 August 2021. In its response, and subsequent submissions, ESG focused on the issue as to whether it had served a valid Payment Notice or Pay Less Notice in response to Interim Application 23 and the main relief sought was a declaration as to the validity of its Pay Less Notice.
[49]Thus, on analysis, the dispute or difference the subject of the First Adjudication was not the same or substantially the same as the dispute or difference in the Second Adjudication."
THE LAW ON INTERPRETATION OF NOTICES
i) In considering the true construction of a contractual notice (including notices under the payment regime in the Act – see Grove Developments per Coulson J at [21]-[22] and S&T in the Court of Appeal at [58] per Sir Rupert Jackson), the question is not how its recipient in fact understood it. Instead "the construction of the notices must be approached objectively. The issue is how a reasonable recipient would have understood the notices", i.e. a reasonable recipient "circumstanced as the actual parties were" (see Mannai at 767 G-H and 768B-C per Lord Steyn).
ii) The notice must be construed taking into account the "relevant objective contextual scene", i.e. the court must consider "what meanings the language read against the contextual scene will let in" (see Mannai at 767H and 768A-B). This means that, amongst other things, the reasonable recipient will be credited with knowledge of the relevant contract (see Mannai at 768B-C).
iii) The purpose of the notice will be relevant to its construction and validity (Mannai at 768E).
iv) The court will be "unimpressed by nice points of textual analysis or arguments which seek to condemn the notice on an artificial or contrived basis" (Thomas Vale per HHJ Kirkham at [43]; Grove at [26]). Instead, as Sir Peter Coulson says in paragraph 3.36 of his book on Construction Adjudication (4th ed. 2018), focusing specifically on Pay Less Notices:
"The courts will take a commonsense, practical view of the contents of a payless notice and will not adopt an unnecessarily restrictive interpretation of such a notice…It is thought that, provided that the notice makes tolerably clear what is being held and why, the court will not strive to intervene or endeavour to find reasons that would render such a notice invalid or ineffective".
v) There is no principled reason for adopting a different approach to construction in respect of different kinds of payment notices (for example because some may give rise to more draconian consequences than others) as that would be contrary to the guidance in Mannai (see Grove at [27]). However:
"the particularly adverse consequences for an employer that follow from, say, a contractor's unanswered application/payment notice are relevant to the test of the reasonable recipient".
vi) To qualify as a valid notice, any payment notice must comply with the statutory (and, if more restrictive, the contractual) requirements in substance and form (Henia per Akenhead J at [17]). Payment notices and Pay Less Notices must clearly set out the sum which is due and/or to be deducted and the basis on which the sum is calculated. Beyond that, the question of whether a notice is or is not a valid notice is "a question of fact and degree" (Grove at [29] and S&T at [53]).
vii) Over and above the question of whether a notice has achieved the required degree of specificity, will be the additional question of whether the document that is alleged to constitute a valid notice was in fact intended to be such and whether it is "free from ambiguity" (Henia at [17] and Grove at [42]). The sender's intention is a matter to be assessed objectively taking into account the context. (Jawaby at [43], [59] and [63]).
viii) Although in Grove, Coulson J observed that payment notices must make plain what they are, there is no requirement for a particular type of notice, such as a Pay Less Notice, to have that title or to make specific reference to the contractual clause in order to be valid: "[t]he question is whether, viewed objectively, it had the requisite intention to fulfil that function" (Surrey & Sussex at [65]).
ix) One way of testing the validity or otherwise of a Pay Less Notice will be to see whether it "provided an adequate agenda for an adjudication as to the true value of the Works…" (Henia at [32] and Grove at [26]).
DISCUSSION
i) Looked at objectively, the use of the words "Application No 25" and the acronym "AFP25" point clearly to an intention that the Pay Less Notice was to relate to Application 25, as does the fact that it was provided under cover of the Payment Certificate for Application 25 which identified the assessment date of 19 November 2021 and described the Payless Notice as "Application 25 – Payless Notice". I am inclined to agree with Mr Nissen that it is somewhat surprising that Advance's evidence in support of its Part 8 claim neither referred to, nor exhibited, the Payment Certificate.
ii) There is nothing expressly on the face of the Pay Less Notice (or anywhere else) which points to it being a response to Application 24 or AFP24, still less anything which indicates that it is intended to be responding to a valuation provided as at the assessment date for Application 24 of 22 October 2021. On the contrary, it is clear from the Pay Less Notice that it was comparing Advance's own assessment of the sum due with Enisca's valuation as at the assessment date of 19 November 2021, i.e. the assessment date for Application 25.
iii) Whilst it may be argued that the provision of the Pay Less Notice one day before the end of the period for service of a pay less notice in respect of Application 24 pursuant to the Contract supports an intention that it be referable to Application 24, I consider this factor to be no more than neutral in circumstances where the Pay Less Notice was also within the (overlapping) period for service of a pay less notice under Application 25.
iv) If the Pay Less Notice was intended to remedy the failure to serve a payment certificate in relation to Application 24, it did not make that clear.
v) In the circumstances, I agree with Mr Nissen that the Pay Less Notice was not in substance or form a Pay Less Notice relating to Application 24. On its face it was in substance and form a response to Application 25. It did not give notice of an intention to pay less than the notified sum in Application 24.
vi) I also consider that there is some force in Mr Nissen's submission that, having regard to the background context evidenced in Mr Hampsey's statement (which was not challenged by Advance), it is plain that in the recent past, pay less notices have always been served alongside payment certificates, and were referable to those certificates. This was the case for the four payment certificates provided prior to the Payment Certificate of 25 November 2021 (i.e. those provided in respect of Applications 14, 15, 16 and 17). The Pay Less Notice was no different in also being attached to the Payment Certificate and there was no indication that it was intended to be regarded as something else. The reasonable recipient would be aware of the history and there would have been nothing to alert her to the fact that a different approach was being taken in this instance or that it was intended that the Pay Less Notice should be responsive to Application 24.
vii) Viewed objectively, I do not consider that the reasonable recipient in Enisca's shoes would have understood that the Pay Less Notice was intended to be responsive to Application 24. There was nothing on the face of the Pay Less Notice or the Payment Certificate to which it was attached to indicate that that was intended to be the case.
viii) Mr Stansfield argued that in view of the contents of the Pay Less Notice, Advance's gross valuation of £2.1 million, and the sum already paid to Enisca, a reasonable recipient would not consider that Advance intended to accept Enisca's gross valuation of about £5.13 million in Application 24 and pay over £2.7 million to Enisca in respect of that Interim Application; on the contrary, a reasonable recipient would consider that Advance did not intend to make any payment. However, whilst I accept that these figures might have given a reasonable recipient pause for thought as to the purpose of the Pay Less Notice, in my judgment, in light of the clear form and substance of that Notice and the absence of any suggestion that it was designed to plug the gap left by the failure to issue a payment certificate in relation to Application 24, the reasonable recipient would have taken it at face value. As it happens, and although not strictly relevant to the exercise with which I am concerned, it would appear from Mr Hampsey's evidence that this is exactly how Enisca did in fact take it.
ix) Even if the Pay Less Notice had been intended to respond to Application 24, I cannot see that it was either clear or unambiguous in that intention for all the reasons I have already identified. Furthermore, having regard to the alternative test articulated in Henia by Akenhead J, I agree with Mr Nissen that the Pay Less Notice could not have provided an agenda for an adjudication in respect of the sum due on 12 November 2021 because there was a mismatch: the Pay Less Notice was responsive to a different application, assessed upon a different date and due for payment on a later date.
x) I do not consider the arguments raised by Enisca to be either artificial or contrived; nor are they "unduly technical" as Mr Stansfield contends. In my judgment they go well beyond setting out the basis for the calculation in a different document (Grove) or the application of fine textual analysis to the wording used in the notice (Thames Vale). True it is that the court must take a practical and pragmatic approach, but in circumstances where I have found that the Pay Less Notice was not in substance, form or intent a response to Application 24, and further that a reasonable recipient would not have understood it to be such a response, the right course must be to dismiss Advance's claim and to refuse to make the declaration sought.
Note 1 It appears to be uncontroversial that the reference in 50.1 to “the Project Manager” must be an error – it should say “Contractor”. [Back] Note 2 It appears to be common ground that Application 24 was in respect of payment cycle 28 in circumstances where no applications had been made in some earlier cycles. However, nothing turns on the point. [Back]