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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> KNN Coburn LLP v GD City Holdings Ltd [2013] EWHC 2879 (QB) (02 October 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2013/2879.html Cite as: [2013] EWHC 2879 (QB), [2013] WLR(D) 369 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
7 Rolls Building Fetter Lane, London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
KNN Coburn LLP |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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GD City Holdings Limited |
Defendant |
____________________
Ms Rebecca Drake (instructed by Fenwick Elliott) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 19 September 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
The Honourable Mr Justice Stuart-Smith:
Introduction
Ground 1: Late Issuing of Decision
The Issue
The Factual Background
i) The construction contract: Appendix 1;ii) Mr Eyre's decision in the previous adjudication, dated 31 December 2012[1]: Appendix 2;
iii) A summary of GD City's Final Account: Appendix 3;
iv) Notice of non-completion under clause 2.29.1 of the contract dated 8 January 2013[2]: Appendix 4;
v) A detailed breakdown of KNN's calculation of liquidated damages: Appendix 5;
vi) A letter dated 8 January 2013 from KNN's solicitors to GD City's solicitors enclosing the notice of non-completion and requesting confirmation that the liquidated damages would be paid and subsequent correspondence: Appendix 6;
vii) A Notice of Adjudication issued on behalf of KNN on 25 January 2013: Appendix 7.
"Under the Scheme I am required to reach a decision in this matter not later than twenty eight days after the referral, excluding bank and public holidays. Taking Friday 1 February 2013 as day zero, I calculate day twenty eight as falling on Friday 1 March 2013.
I shall allow the parties to make the following submissions:
- GD City may submit a response to the referral, by 4.00 pm on Tuesday 12 February 2013;
- KNN Coborn may submit a reply to the response, by 4.00 pm on Tuesday 18 February 2013.
I look forward to receiving the parties' further submissions by the dates set out above."
"Notwithstanding the fact that we consider you do not have jurisdiction in any event, your final determination, without hearing submissions from our client, fundamentally undermines any jurisdiction that you might have and makes any decision unenforceable.
Our client's participation in this purported adjudication is wholly without prejudice to our client's position as set out above and as set out in previous correspondence.
We will be serving a response without prejudice to our client's position however, we expect that this may not be provided to you until close of business on Wednesday of next week 13 February 2013."
"As you will be aware any adjudicator's decision is to be published and communicated to the parties within 28 days of the date of the Referral Notice unless and extension of time is granted, 28 February 2013. You have issued a decision dated 1 March 2013 clearly reached and published on 1 March and therefore one day late."
"I did not receive a full copy of the referral by email on the 31st of January – merely the frontispiece. Proper service of the referral, i.e. with a copy of the contract and supporting documents - as per my directions – was not made until the following day."
"As you are well aware it is my client's view that you did not have jurisdiction in the first place and my client invited you to resign therefore at no time did my client assent in word or deed to your timetable. My client's involvement was and remains on a wholly without prejudice basis and with my client's rights fully reserved."
The Legal Framework
"(1) A party to a construction contract has the right to refer a dispute arising under the contract for adjudication under a procedure complying with this section. For this purpose dispute includes any difference.
(2) The contract shall —
(a) enable a party to give notice at any time of his intention to refer a dispute to adjudication;
(b) provide a timetable with the object of securing the appointment of the adjudicator and referral of the dispute to him within seven days of such notice;
(c) require the adjudicator to reach a decision within 28 days of referral or such longer period as is agreed by the parties after the dispute has been referred …"
"7(1) Where an adjudicator has been selected in accordance with paragraphs 2, 5 or 6, the referring party shall, not later than seven days from the date of the notice of adjudicator, refer the dispute in writing (the 'referral notice') to the adjudicator.
(2) A referral notice shall be accompanied by copies of, or relevant extracts from, the construction contract and such other documents as the referring party intends to rely upon.
(3) The referring party shall, at the same time as he sends to the adjudicator the documents referred to in paragraphs (1) and (2), send copies of those documents to every other party to the dispute."
…
"19(1) The adjudicator shall reach his decision not later than –
(a) twenty eight days after the date of the referral notice mentioned in paragraph 7(1), or
(b) forty two days after the date of the referral notice if the referring party so consents, or
(c) such period exceeding twenty eight days after the referral notice as the parties to the dispute may, after the giving of that notice, agree."
Submissions
Discussion
"55. I consider that it is undesirable that every breach of the terms of the scheme, no matter how trivial, should be seized upon to impeach the process of adjudication. To do so would increase the tendency of parties to take a fine tooth-comb to every aspect of the adjudication in the hope of finding some breach of the Scheme on which to impeach an otherwise valid adjudication decision. I do not consider that that was either intended or the natural effect of a failure to comply with the Scheme. There may, of course, be cases where the documents included with the referral notice are so deficient that it effects the validity of the adjudication process. However, I do not consider that a failure to include the relevant construction contract until a day later can do so or does so on the facts of this case. Nor do I consider that a failure to include the construction contract can be said to amount to such a serious breach of the rules of natural justice that the decision should not be enforced. There is nothing obviously unfair in the documents relied on in relation to the construction contract being received by the adjudicator later than the referral notice: see Carillion v. Devonport [2006] BLR 15 at paragraph 85."
"When the adjudicator asks for more time in circumstances like this, I consider that there is a clear obligation on the part of both parties to the adjudication to respond plainly and promptly to the request. If, in breach of that obligation, one party does not respond at all, there must be a very strong case for saying that they accepted, by their silence, the need for the required extension. The adjudicator can do no more than work out that he needs a short extension, and seek agreement from the parties to such an extension. Common sense, as well as common courtesy, requires a prompt response. If one party does not respond at all to the adjudicator's request, it seems to me that that party runs a very clear risk that his silence will be taken to amount to acquiescence to the requested extension. I consider that that is the only proper inference to be drawn from the information available to me here. From that evidence I consider that, by their silence, Speedwell accepted that the adjudicator's time for completion was extended to 5th April."
Ground 2: A previous Adjudicator (Mr Eyre) had determined the amount of liquidated damages to be paid by GD City to KNN
Ground 3: The Claimant referred a decision to adjudication which had been determined by a previous adjudicator
The issue
The factual background
"It is [GD City's] primary case that it is entitled to an extension of time for the full duration of the extended contract period. Without prejudice to this contention [GD City] would state that KNN are not entitled to recover LAD's from GDC as, as stated above, no valid withholding notice has been issued and no delay analysis has been carried out by KNN. KNN does not have a right to deduct any damages when it has not proved that [GD City] breached its contract and when it has not given the sufficient notices required by statute."
"102. Taking into account concurrency, GD City is entitled to an extension of time for Employer delays of 9 weeks 5 days. Jackson Coles acknowledges that GD City is also entitled to a 3 week extension of time under clause 2.26.3 for adverse weather. If Jackson Coles are correct that there was an overall delay in the project of 33 weeks and 2 days, then GD City is responsible for 20 weeks 2 days of that delay.
…
Liquidated Damages
178. On the basis of my conclusions about GD City's entitlement to extensions of time, KNN have a putative claim for liquidated damages in the sum of £20,000.00.
179. There is a dispute between the parties as to whether the deduction or withholding of liquidated damages requires the giving of a withholding notice. Mr Bailey asserts that a withholding notice is required to withhold or deduct. Mr Pawlowski claims that no withholding notice is required, liquidated damages are automatically to be deducted or withheld, by virtue of clause 4.2 and/or 4.12.
180. Curiously, paragraph 227 of the Jackson Coles Report makes reference to the serving of a withholding notice on 19 April 2011. The GD City Final Statement was submitted on 8 October 2012. It was trite law that a withholding notice, to be effective, cannot be provided in advance of the making of the application. The serving of the withholding notice from 19 April 2011 cannot be effective in relation to Final Statement entitlements.
181. KNN Coburn does not seek to run an alternative case that, if a withholding notice is required, there is any particular document that is relied upon constituting an effective withholding notice.
182. In respect of the essential dispute between the parties, by reference to clause 4.12.9 of the Contract, for the Employer to withhold or deduct the Employer needs to give a written notice to the Contractor specifying the amount proposed to be withheld and/or deducted and the grounds for such withholding and the amount of withholding attributable to each ground.
183. I do not agree with Mr Pawlowski that the withholding or deducting of liquidated damages is automatically to be considered. The lack of any valid notice pursuant to clause 4.12.9 means that I should not take into account the putative liquidated damages claim of £20,000 in calculating whether payment is to be made to GD City. The withholding notice machinery of clause 4.12.9 would be superfluous or redundant if claims for deduction of liquidated damages were automatically considered."
Discussion
Ground 4: Breach of Natural Justice – Mr Bastone did not consider a material line of defence.
The issue
"Notwithstanding any other term of this Agreement, the Contractor's liability in respect of any Employer's Claim shall be limited to the amount actually recovered from any Consultant or Sub Contractor who has carried out work in connection with the Employer's Claim. For the avoidance of doubt, the Contractor's liability in respect of each and every Employer's Claim shall not under any circumstances exceed the amount received (if any) by the Contractor from the relevant Consultant or Sub- Contractor in connection with the relevant Employer's Claim"
Employer's Claim was defined by the Contract as "any claim made by the Employer including without limitation a claim under this Agreement, for breach of this Agreement, tort (including negligence), a breach of statutory duty but not including claims for death or personal injury."
The applicable principles
"22 As a matter of principle, therefore, it seems to me that the law on this topic can be summarised as follows.
22.1 The adjudicator must attempt to answer the question referred to him. The question may consist of a number of separate sub-issues. If the adjudicator has endeavoured generally to address those issues in order to answer the question then, whether right or wrong, his decision is enforceable: ….
22.2 If the adjudicator fails to address the question referred to him because he has taken an erroneously restrictive view of his jurisdiction (and has, for example, failed even to consider the defence to the claim or some fundamental element of it), then that may make his decision unenforceable, either on grounds of jurisdiction or natural justice: … .
22.3 However, for that result to obtain, the adjudicator's failure must be deliberate. If there has simply been an inadvertent failure to consider one of a number of issues embraced by the single dispute that the adjudicator has to decide, then such a failure will not ordinarily render the decision unenforceable: … .
22.4 It goes without saying that any such failure must also be material: … . In other words, the error must be shown to have had a potentially significant effect on the overall result of the adjudication: … .
22.5 A factor which may be relevant to the court's consideration of this topic in any given case is whether or not the claiming party has brought about the adjudicator's error by a misguided attempt to seek a tactical advantage. … ."
Discussion
Conclusion
Note 1 Paragraph 2 of the Referral stated that the annexed decision was dated 21 June 2011, but this appears to have been an error. [Back] Note 2 There is confusion about the date of the notice of non-completion in the Referral: paragraph 22 refers to it as having been sent on 8 January 2012 and, elsewhere, 8 January 2013. The latter date appears to be correct. [Back] Note 3 Which should have been a reference to calendarmonth. [Back]