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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions >> Hallamshire Construction Plc v South Holland District Council [2004] EWHC 8 (TCC) (16 January 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2004/8.html Cite as: [2004] EWHC 8 (TCC) |
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Queen's Bench Division
Technology and Construction Court
B e f o r e :
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Hallamshire Construction PLC | ||
Claimant | ||
and | ||
South Holland District Council | ||
Defendant |
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For the purposes of paragraph 5.12 of 52PD-19 (Practice Direction - Appeals),
this written judgment is to be taken as replacing an official recording and approved transcript of the judgment.
Mr Nicholas Dennys QC appeared for the claimant instructed by Browne Jacobson,
44 Castle Gate, Nottingham NG1 7BJ, DX: 718130 Nottingham 27 (Ref: RDEAO1/STHWO1/JMW/0283230001)
Mr Mark Raeside QC appeared for the defendant instructed by Hannah & Mould,
3 Grosvenor Gardens, London SW1W OBD (Ref: TM)
Date of hearing:10 December 2003
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Crown Copyright ©
Subject matter
Appeal on a question of law from an award of an arbitrator in a dispute arising out of a JCT form of contract. The appeal concerned these questions: whether an Architect's Instruction issued under the contract had contractual effect; the meaning of the phrase "all costs in connection with this variation to be agreed by [the quantity surveyor]"; and as to whether this process of agreement involved the identification of an offer relating to the entirety of the works which had been accepted or whether agreement could be achieved by piecemeal agreement of bill items.
Decision
The arbitrator correctly concluded that the AI in question had contractual effect and that the process of agreement it provided for was not of the kind involved when a new contract is being negotiated and finalised but was of the piecemeal kind required by the contractual procedures for ordering variations and pricing them.
This judgment was made in writing and was handed down by the court. For the purposes of paragraph 5.12 of 52PD-19 (Practice Direction - Appeals), this written judgment is to be taken as replacing an official recording and approved transcript of the judgment.
1. Introduction
1 The cases, in chronological order, are: How Engineering & Services Ltd v Lindner Ceiling and Floors plc, unreported, 17 May 1995, Judge Thornton QC; Panatown Ltd v Alfred McAlpine Ltd 58 Con LR 46, Judge Thornton QC; Vatcroft (Contractors) Ltd v Seeboard plc 78 BLR 138, Judge LLoyd QC; Taylor Woodrow Civil Engineering Ltd v Hutchinson Development Ltd (1999) ADRLJ 83, Clarke J; Fence Gate Limited v MEL Construction Limited 62 Con LR 41, Judge Thornton QC, Robin Ellis Ltd v Vinexsa International Ltd [2003] EWHC 1352 TCC 13 June 2003, Judge Thornton QC and Cantrell v Wright & Fuller Ltd [2003] EWHC 1545 (TCC), 90 ConLR.
"Draft Interim for Phase 2 Variation:Please complete the Phase 2 Fit Out Works for this contract in accordance with the following documentation currently being prepared for imminent issue:
1 Bills of Quantities previously prepared by Jackson Coles and priced be Hallamshire Construction and now being revised to produce reduced costs.2 Drawings and Specifications previously prepared by Sansone Hall Architects, WS Atkins, Malcolm Chard Associates and Sandy Brown Associates and now being revised to reflect the amended items of the Bills of Quantities.
All Terms and Conditions to be as existing Contract dated 11 June 1997 between South Holland District Council and Hallamshire Construction with the following exceptions:
1. Contract Completion Date to be revised to Sunday 30 November 1997.2. Contractors compound to be removed and Double Street to reopen on 31 October 1997.
(Note: Road alignment works to Double Street to be the subject of a separate variation)
Jackson Coles have agreed a full and final settlement of any and all claims in connection with prolongation/disruption, etc, up to and including the date of this Instruction and the Contractor has agreed that no further claims will be made in connection with the items previously noted as being responsible for delay in the Contractor's Progress Reports tabled at the monthly Project Meetings.
All costs in connection with this variation to be agreed at fair and reasonable costs by Jackson Coles."
"the rates and prices in Bill A that were not changed in Bill B were agreed by offer and acceptance ... the rates and prices, other than mark up, in Bill B that are different to those in Bill A, by revision of Bill A, were agreed orally by negotiation in August 1997 and at the latest in November by conduct thereafter."
"the percentage mark up for overheads and profit was agreed, by offer and acceptance, on receipt by the claimant of a copy of the Final Account in November/December 1999."
"I hereby award and declare that:1 The rates and prices in Bill A that were not revised in Bill B were agreed by the parties on the basis of offer and acceptance. They were agreed orally in August 1997 or at the latest in November 1997 when evidence of their inclusion in Bill B was communicated to the claimant by provision of typed Bill B.2 Those rates and prices in Bill B that were different to those in Bill A, by revision of Bill A, were agreed by involvement an negotiation in August 1997 and at the latest in November 1997 by conduct thereafter.3 The parties agreed to the percentage addition for overheads and profit to the rates and prices in Bill B, by offer in August 1997, and acceptance on a date in November or December 1999, upon receipt by the claimant of the Final Account showing the adjustments to uplift that percentage."
2. The appeal
"Whether the Parties ever (and if so, when and in what circumstances) agreed a bill of quantities, whether in whole, or in part, for the purpose of valuation of the work carried out by the Claimant under architect's instructions 51 and 52."
"it was an agreed variation under an existing contract not necessarily requiring the rigour applied to the formation of contracts by case law. On the agreed facts there was negotiation and acceptance of the last draft of the AI [51]. That acceptance by Mr Turner on behalf of the claimant was a final and unqualified expression of assent to the terms of the counteroffer made by Mr Love to the first draft of a variation to an existing contract. Terms were agreed one of which expressly set out that:
'All terms and Conditions to be as existing Contract dated 11 June 1997 between South Holland District Council and Hallamshire Construction with the following exceptions' (Exceptions were listed …)"²
² Award: pages 14 – 15, lines 647 – 657.
"applying the basic principles of offer and acceptance, there was no agreement as to the cost of the work to be undertaken since neither party accepted an offer made by the other."
That question arises both in relation to the contractual nature of AI 51 and as to the finding that the contract rates and prices were agreed.
3. The contentions of the parties on the appeal
"all costs in connection with this variation to be agreed at fair and reasonable costs by Jackson Coles."
This wording, according to the claimant, envisaged a process of offer and acceptance based on a complete bible of work items and prices that had previously been finalised by a process of revision of the bills and drawings. Until that revision process had been completed and the resulting bible had been accepted a whole, there was no possibility of a contractual obligation covering phase 2.
4. The question of law answered
1. Did Al 51 have contractual effect under the contract dated 11 June 1997 as an AI instructing a variation?
2. Did AI 51 require Jackson Coles to agree the bills of quantities as a composite whole or could the necessary agreement of the prices in the bills of quantities be achieved piecemeal?