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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Nobiskrug GmbH v Valla Yachts Ltd [2019] EWHC 1219 (Comm) (14 May 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2019/1219.html Cite as: [2019] EWHC 1219 (Comm) |
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IN THE BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
COMMERCIAL COURT (QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION)
IN THE MATTER OF THE ARBITRATION ACT 1996
AND IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION CLAIM
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(Sitting as a High Court Judge)
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NOBISKRUG GMBH |
Claimant/ Builder (Claimant in the arbitration) |
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- and – |
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VALLA YACHTS LIMITED |
Defendant/ Purchaser (Respondent in the arbitration) |
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Andrew Rigney QC and N G Casey (instructed by Wikborg Rein) for the Defendant/Purchaser
Hearing date: 7 March 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
Sir Ross Cranston:
Introduction
The construction agreement
(a) "Approved contracts" as defined in the Agreement were those listed in Appendices 9a and 9b of the Agreement, and those approved under the procedure set out in clause 5.(b) "Sub-Contracted Works" were defined as any and all materials and supplies required to construct, complete and deliver the yacht in accordance with the Specification but excluding those under the Fixed Price Package, Engineering Services and Construction Hours (all defined terms).
(c) "Sub-Contracted Works Costs" were the aggregate of the fixed prices payable for the Sub-Contracted Works, as specified in the Approved Contracts.
(d) "Suppliers" were defined as those suppliers nominated by Valla Yachts and thereafter appointed by Nobiskrug to supply the Sub-Contracted Works.
(e) "Works" were defined as "all work by the Builder or the Suppliers necessary to design, engineer, construct, outfit, complete and deliver the Yacht in accordance with the Agreement."
"5.1.2 Following the Kiel Completion Date, the Builder's responsibility for the remaining Sub-Contracted Works shall be limited to the co-ordination and project management of those works (including without limitation, weight management) and the supervision of the Suppliers and, subject to the foregoing, not for the due performance of the Suppliers of their obligations under the Sub-Contracted Works nor for the conformity of such works to the requirements of the Specification."
Clause 5.3 provided in material part, that:
"The Builder shall perform all works necessary to manage, coordinate and integrate the Sub-Contracted Works and will do such further acts and take such additional steps as are necessary in connection with or arise from the performance and management of all work and activities involved in and associated with the construction, outfitting, launch, trials, completion and delivery of the Yacht."
There was a target delivery date in clause 9.1of 8 October 2015.
Suppliers' demands for payments
"the parties would jointly appoint an independent expert to review the Ismotec claim and determine the cause and amount due Ismotec and the responsible party…Should that not occur for any reason or should the issue remain unresolved, the Purchaser intends to submit the issue of responsibility for these costs to arbitration under the [Agreement]...": para [115](see also para [146]).
The Award
"43…Although the 'Contract Price' in the Approved Contracts is a specified sum of money, the Approved Contracts themselves anticipate the possibility that the 'Contract Price' might be changed by express written agreement between the Builder and the Supplier…[U]nless the "Contract Price" is changed by express written agreement between the Builder and the Supplier, the fixed price for which the Purchaser is liable to the Builder remains the monetary sum stipulated in the Approved Contract. It is important to keep this well in mind."
"46…a Purchaser is liable (and is only liable) in respect of Additional Supplier Costs if the originally agreed 'fixed price' under an Approved Contract has been amended with (a) the express consent in writing of the Supplier and the Builder (by way of an amendment to the relevant Approved Contract), and (b) the Builder and the Purchaser by way of a Change Order, Material Package Agreement or other written agreement ('Change Order/MPA')."
"50(1) The Purchaser is not entitled to recover payments made to Suppliers on a purely voluntary basis unless it can establish that the Builder was obliged to make the payment under an Approved Contract;
(2) Where payments were made by the Purchaser subject to a reservation of rights, the Purchaser is entitled to recover those amounts, unless the Builder can demonstrate (a) the express consent in writing of the Supplier and the Builder... and (b) an agreed Change Order/MPA concluded between the Builder and the Purchaser."
"92 [Nobiskrug] at times effectively abandoned its project management responsibilities to the Purchaser. Thus, and by way of example…
(2) But as the problems with Ismotec and Muehlhan increased and the amount of their financial claims grew larger, the Builder's position changed and it began to pass any demands for additional money to the Purchaser;
(3) By that stage, however, large sums were at stake. Ismotec was demanding an additional €3,000,000 and the relationship between it and the Parties had already deteriorated to the extent that Ismotec was threatening to stop work. That placed the Purchaser in an extremely difficult position as Ismotec was a critical supplier under the Project being responsible for the electric cabling;
(4) The Builder also failed to investigate the claims advanced so that the Purchaser could form a proper assessment of whether or not the sums were due and failed to manage the resolution of Ismotec's and Muehlhan's claims effectively so as to minimize any disruption caused to the Project. Again, and by way of example only:
a. As regards the Ismotec claims, the Builder initially agreed to appoint an independent expert to investigate the claims and report on liability. This did not happen. It then proposed arbitration, but took no positive steps to refer the dispute to a competent tribunal.
b. Turning to the Muehlhan claims, Mr Liedtke [of Valla Yachts] explained that he had failed to identify the cause of the repairs that Muehlhan had to perform despite spending a lot of time investigating them…However, given that earlier in the year, the Builder had paid some €1,044,905.80 to Muehlhan cover the costs of repairs, the Builder should have been on notice that further claims were at least possible, if not likely, and that further monitoring was required. And if the Builder really had not expected additional claims from Muehlhan by that stage, that represented a further failure of project management."
"107…provided that the Purchaser can show that the project management failures we have found were an effective cause of any particular item of Supplier Costs claimed. We shall return to consider this question below as necessary when considering the individual Supplier Costs claims." (See also para 103.)
"[145] That, however, is not the end of the matter here. The Purchaser [Valla Yachts] contends that the payments were made on the express basis that liability for those sums would be resolved 'by some form of dispute mechanism'. If that is correct, and if the Purchaser can demonstrate that the payments to Ismotec were made under a reservation of rights, it is entitled to recover them."
"227 In the circumstances, the Purchaser can only recover the sums paid to W Sander Handel if it can establish that the Builder was obliged to make the payment as part of the 'fixed price' payable under the relevant Approved Contract. Otherwise, the Purchaser's payment was a voluntary payment. Since we were unpersuaded by either of Mr Kloosterman's [from Valla Yachts] explanations for the over-run, we conclude that the Purchaser has failed to do so."
The appeal
"In relation to payments made by the Purchaser to third party Suppliers, whether, where the Purchaser has failed to establish that the Builder was under a liability to make payment to the Suppliers, the Purchaser is entitled to recover those sums from the Builder in restitution, solely on the basis that it made those payments subject to a reservation of rights."