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England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions >> CJP Builders Ltd v William Verry Ltd [2008] EWHC 2025 (TCC) (15 August 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2008/2025.html Cite as: [2008] BLR 545, [2008] TCLR 10, [2008] CILL 2609, [2008] EWHC 2025 (TCC) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
CJP BUILDERS LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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WILLIAM VERRY LIMITED |
Defendant |
____________________
6th Floor, 12-14 New Fetter Lane, London EC4A 1AG
Telephone No: 020 7936 6000. Fax No: 020 7427 0093
MR. A. HICKEY (instructed by Driver Consult Ltd.) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 1 August 2008
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MR. JUSTICE AKENHEAD :
Introduction
The Two Sets of Proceedings
The Sub Contract
"DOM/2 1981 Edition incorporating Amendment 1 (1987), Amendments 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6 (1989), Amendments 7 (1992) and 8 (1999)".
"1. Invitation to tender dated 19 and 22 January 2007 pages 1-6 inclusive [enclosed] 2. Pre Order Meeting Minutes dated 31 May 2007 - pages 1-17 inclusive, including Schedule of Attendances - pages 1-3 inclusive [enclosed] 3. Schedule of Amendments to the Domestic Sub-contract conditions DOM/2 Pages 1-7 [enclosed] 4. Preliminaries - pages 1.1-1.23 [enclosed] ... 6. Contract Sum Analysis – pages 1 and 2 inclusive [enclosed] … 9. Valuation Schedule - in 1 No page [enclosed]...
15. Verry Construction Standard Conditions Sub-contractors - Title Pages [2 No] accompanying pages 1-12 [enclosed]"
I will consider each of these documents below.
"Main Contract conditions: as detailed within Main Contract Preliminaries. Sub-contract Conditions: as enclosed. See Schedule of sub-contract amendments and Main Contract Preliminaries".
It appears that no such Verry Schedule of the sub-contract amendments was attached or enclosed with this letter, certainly not in the form annexed to the Order.
"The minutes of this meeting will be attached to the Sub-contract Order and will form an integral part of the Order and will take precedence over any Sub-contractor conditions".
This was mirrored in paragraph 15.00 which was entitled "Verry Construction Subcontractors and the Clients Conditions":
"The following documents will supersede and take precedence over the Sub-contractors terms and conditions:
The Minutes of this Pre-Contract Meeting
Verry Construction sub-contract Conditions The Main Contract Conditions If the subcontractor issues an Acknowledgment of Order that is at variance with any of the above Contract Documents, then the minutes of the Pre-Contract Meeting will take precedence in all respects".
It was argued by CJP that these references to "sub-contractor's" terms and conditions meant sub-contract conditions. Given that, elsewhere in the Pre-Order Meeting Minutes, there is reference to the form of sub-contract I can see no force in that argument. Given that this is a pro-forma, these references simply refer to what would happen if there were any conditions or terms, in standard form or otherwise, put forward by the sub-contractor in the various sub-contract documents which form part of any given Verry order.
"The Articles, Agreement and the Sub-contract Conditions shall have effect as modified by the Schedule of Amendment ...."
"Delete definition of 'Appendix' all references in Contract to 'Appendix' shall be deemed to refer to Pre-Order Meeting Minutes."
" Clause 38
Settlement of Disputes
Insert new clauses as follows:
Clause 38.1
Either Party shall be entitled to refer any dispute or difference to adjudication in accordance with the Housing, Grants, Construction and Regeneration Act 1996 and any such adjudication shall be undertaken in accordance with the Main Contract."
Clause 38.2
The Adjudicator is named in Article 3.1 of the Sub-contract. Clause 38.3
Subject to the above, any dispute or difference which arises between the Parties shall be resolved in accordance with the dispute resolution forum stipulated in the Main Contract".
Several matters need to be noted. There was no Adjudicator named anywhere in the Sub-contract documents notwithstanding Clause 38.2. Secondly there was no suggestion that Clause 38A of the DOM/2 Conditions (for which see below) was to be deleted.
"1. Clause 38A applies, where pursuant to Article 3, either Party refers a dispute or difference arising under this Sub-Contract to adjudication."
2. The Adjudicator to decide the dispute or difference shall be either an individual agreed by the Parties or, on the application via the company party, an individual to be nominated as the Adjudicator by the person named in the Appendix part 8 ("the Nominator") … 4.1. When pursuant to Article 3 a Party requires a dispute or difference to be referred to adjudication, then that Party shall give notice to the other Party of his intention to refer the dispute or difference, briefly identified in the notice, to adjudication. Within seven days from the date of such notice or the execution of the JCT Adjudication Agreement by the Adjudicator if later the Party giving the notice of intention shall refer the dispute or difference to the Adjudicator for his decision ('the referral' ); and shall include within that referral particulars of the dispute or difference together with the summary of the contentions on which he relies, the statement of the relief or remedy which is sought and any material he wishes the Adjudicator to consider. The referral and its accompanying documentation shall be copied simultaneously to the other Party ...
5.1.1 The Adjudicator shall immediately upon receipt of the referral in its accompanying documentation confirm that receipt to the Parties.
5.1.2. The Party not making the referral may, by the same means stated in the Clause 38A.4.2, send to the Adjudicator within seven days of the date of a referral with the copy to the other Party, a written statement of the contentions on which he relies and any material he wishes the Adjudicator to consider.
5.1.3. The Adjudicator shall within 28 days of his receipt of the referral and its accompanying documentation under clause 38A.4.1 and acting as an Adjudicator for the purposes of s 108 of the Housing Grants, Construction and Regeneration Act 1996 and not as an expert or an arbitrator reach his decision and forthwith send that decision in writing to the Parties. Provided that the Party who has made the referral may consent to allowing the Adjudicator to extend the period of 28 days by up to 14 days; by agreement between the Parties after the referral has been made a longer period than 28 days may be notified jointly by the Parties to the Adjudicator within which to reach his decision …
5.1.5. In reaching his decision the Adjudicator shall act impartially, set his own procedure and at his absolute discretion may, take the initiative in ascertaining the facts and the law as he considers necessary in respect of the referral which may include the following:
1. using his own knowledge and/or experience;
2. opening up, reviewing and revising any direction, opinion, decision, requirement or notice issue given or made under the Sub-Contract as if no such direction, opinion, decision, requirement or notice had been given or made;
3. requiring from the Parties further information than that contained in the notice of referral and its accompanying documentation or in any written statement provided by the Parties including the results of any tests that have been made or of any opening up …
5. visiting the site of the Works or any workshop where work is being or has been prepared for this Sub-Contract.
6. obtaining such information as he considers necessary from any employee or representative of the Parties ..."
The History of the Adjudication
"We have proposed three names of adjudicators and request your comments on the proposed names, should we not hear from you by 4 p.m. on Tuesday, 29 April 2008 we propose to make an application to the RICS for a nomination of an Adjudicator."
" We confirm receipt of your letter dated 25 April 2008 giving notice of CJP's intention to refer a dispute to the RICS for a nomination of an Adjudicator.
We do not accept or agree that a dispute has arisen between CJP ... and Verry such that the RICS should be asked to appoint an Adjudicator.
However, your letter is clear that you intend requesting of same; we, therefore, state our objection for good reasoning to the appointment of the names you have requested to preside over the matter...
We, therefore, request that should you continue with this notice to refer, you do so on the understanding that the appointment of an Adjudicator is by the independent service of the RICS only, and not one of your preferred named party as stated."
This letter was copied to the RICS.
"The Responding Party is invited to serve its Response to comply with the Clause 38A timetable."
"28. Verry failed to issue either a payment notice or withholding notice in respect of Valuation No 15 as required by Clause 21.3.2 and 21.3.3 of the DOM/2 conditions incorporated in the Sub-Contract. Further, by the final date of payment on 18th April 2008, Verry had made no payment to CJP, in breach of the Sub-Contract payment conditions...
30. Verry has failed to make payment in respect of Valuation No 15 in accordance with the payment provisions contained in the Contract and has failed to give notice as required by the Contract of any withholding, which Verry was obliged to do (see Clause 21.3.3…) if it intended to withhold payment from CJP. Verry is not entitled to withhold any sums against Valuation No 15."
The "Redress" sought was that Verry pay the outstanding balance resulting from Valuation No. 15.
"We are in receipt of your Adjudicator's Notice Nr. 1 and note your invitation for Verry to serve its Response in accordance with the Clause 38 timetable. Unfortunately this will not be possible albeit Verry will be in a position to serve its Response by 5.00 p.m. on 19 May 2008. Of course Verry will agree to any commensurate extension of time that you might require to reach your decision. Whilst writing, Verry notes that the Referral fails to mention that the Sub-Contract Works are seriously defective such that Verry's position in these proceedings is that, as a result of the extensive nature of the defective works, the Sub-Contract Works have been overvalued such that CJP has been overpaid and thus suspended the performance of its obligations under the Sub-Contract works without good cause. Verry will address this issue fully within its Response but due to the fact that the defects issue is fundamental to Verry's Response we have decided to bring this matter to your attention at an early stage."
"[The Adjudicator] is content that the Response is served on Monday 19th on the basis:
1. The 19th becomes day 7 of the adjudication.
2. The unilateral right of CJP to extend time by 14 days is preserved.
3. The date for decision becomes 19th + 21 days + BH = 10th June.
4. If there is to be a Reply to Response the 21 days runs from the service date of that Reply to Response.
5. Wm Verry has foreshadowed defects as part of its Response. Please forthwith indicate to CJP the essence of the complaints (if not already done so) to enable CJP to immediately begin an inquiry without waiting for Wm Verry's Response."
"The Adjudicator has no power to go behind the Clause 38 contractual adjudication rules. Wm Verry is obliged to enter its Response as per the timetable in the contract.
The Respondent has asked for relief from the DOM/2 timetable. At the moment it stands thus:
1. The Referral was served Friday 2nd.
2. The Response is due "within 7 days of the date of Referral" = 9th.
3. If the date is to move from 9th to 19th then the Parties themselves have to agree.
4. [The Adjudicator] is content if CJP agrees to 19th ..."
"With regard to the date for service of the Response we note CJP's reference to clause 38A.5.2 of DOM/2 but we are concerned that Verry will not be in a position to respond before close of business on Monday 19 May 2008 as previously advised to you.
Verry enquire to what extent CJP has any reasonable objection to not agreeing the extension of the period for service of the Response as this will allow all issues to be dealt with in a cost-effective and sensible manner and, in this regard, Verry confirms that it is quite prepared to agree to an extension of the period in which you are to reach your decision to accommodate its requests for further time to serve its Response.
If CJP refuses to agree to such an extension then Verry would respectfully refer to you Clause 38A.5.5 of DOM/2 which allows you, as the Adjudicator, to set your own procedure and, at your absolute discretion, enable you to take the initiative in ascertaining the facts and the law. In particular, Clause 38A.5.3 of DOM/2 empowers to request from the party's further information to that contained in the referral and we would urge you to utilize these powers to ensure that you would provide both parties with fair opportunity to put its case. Whilst writing Verry would also state that due to the nature of the defects Verry's feel that in order to fully represent their case a site visit would be essential, and respectfully ask that suitable dates for all parties is arranged."
"… I ... find it remarkable that the Responding Party considers that it should simply be granted a 10 day extension of time without any justification. It remains the Referring Party's position that the Response may be served on Monday, 12 May to take account of the bank holidays.
With regard to the unspecified allegation of defects, I confirm that the only lists of defects received by the Referring Party has been a faxed list from Zurich Insurance which on examination contains historical defects which have already been corrected. There is no dispute in respect of any defects not notified ...
… Although I am awaiting my client's instructions on the site visit it is clear that there would be difficulty with such a site visit if the works are not in the state they were when the Referring Party left site ..."
"We thank you for extending the time until Monday 12 May 2008, but would ask you to consider extending the time for our submission of the Response until close of business on Wednesday 14 May 2008, as I am away on Monday 12th.
We shall in any case submit our Response on Wednesday 14 May 2008, and would expect the Adjudicators to take the Response into consideration, if this were not the case we do not see how any decision that went against Verry would be enforceable ..."
CJP's solicitors responded several hours later:
"... I can confirm agreement to extend time to 4 p.m. on Tuesday 13 May with service of the Response but no more."
"I have just been informed by my IT department that essential work will be carried out during the day tomorrow on our servers and individual laptops such that we will not be in a position to serve Verry's Response by 4 p.m. tomorrow. I would therefore request that your client agrees some further dates for service of Verry's Response such that this will now be served by 5 p.m. on Wednesday 14 May 2008. I am sure that this will cause no difficulty for the Adjudicator and Verry of course will agree to a commensurate extension to the period in which the Adjudicator is to reach his Decision should this be necessary."
"... I would agree an extension until 12 noon on Wednesday [14 May 2008] to take account of your apparent problem so that my client and the Adjudicator can have a copy of the Response considered during the course of Wednesday."
"Therefore unless you have received a Response I would invite you to proceed to decide this adjudication based on the Referral and to disregard any Response subsequently received."
"I ... confirm that a Response has not been received from the Responding Party in accordance with the extension granted. I note that the Responding Party has decided to ignore the time limit set on production of the Response and suggests that it will seek to serve the Response 'later today', it has clearly not been the Responding Party intention to comply with the procedure clearly set out in the contract. Without prejudice to the contention set out in my previous e-mail, I would refer the Responding Party to the note attached to all e-mails from this office and to the terms of Clause 38A.4.2 regarding service of documents.
I would invite you to draw the appropriate adverse inference in the Responding Party's conduct of this adjudication to date. I would repeat my request that you disregard any submission now received and proceed to make your decision based on the Referral."
"I would submit that if you are minding to allow the Response then before any site visit can take place CJP must be entitled to reply to the allegations made. To this effect if your mind is to direct that the Response be allowed then my client will wish to submit a Reply to Response …"
"Richard Bailey for CJP seeks "a direction" that the Adjudicator will proceed to "make your decision based on the Referral" (only). The reason is understood by the Adjudicator to be that the Response was not served in accordance with the DOM/2 adjudication rules being the timetable as extended by consent.
Here is a re-cap:
1 ... the Response is contractually due 9th May. Verry sought relief to serve 19th.
2: The Adjudicator explained that he had no power vested in him to give relief from that date; relief had to be via Party & Party agreement. …
6: Verry sought agreement of CJP to serve by 5 p.m. Wed 14th May. CJP said noon 14th.
7: Service of the Response was eventually made via e-mail by 6 p.m. It was late.
8: CJP refuses to give relief. The Adjudicator has no power to give relief. The Response is therefore out of time.
9: The Direction sought by CJP is that the Adjudicator proceeds to decide the dispute in the Notice of Adjudication by way of a Referral only. The Adjudicator has no power to "give a Direction". He is simply not entitled to take into account materials that are out of time. The Adjudicator is fettered by the rules which in the case of the timetabling for entering a Response he regards as mandatory.
10: Note: the Adjudicator observed in his e-mail 7th May that if Verry could not meet the contractual time deadline it was open to Verry to begin its own adjudication for the alleged defect. On 8th May the Adjudicator urged Verry to ensure CJP was sufficiently aware of the Defects list since it may well be that a dispute is yet to crystallise in that regard.
11: For the avoidance of doubt the Adjudicator is now obliged to proceed on the material served in the Referral together with the Notice of Intention to Adjudicate."
"... Verry would respectfully submit that if you do proceed without considering the Response as you have intimated you intend to, then this will be a serious breach of the principles of natural justice and would render any Decision you reach unenforceable. Accordingly, Verry request that you reconsider your position in the light of the following."
"It is a fact that service of the Response was later than the time agreed by the Referring Party. The Adjudicator has no discretionary power to defeat the new deadline. It was an inter partes waiver of the DOM/2 Rules. CJP will recognise all the risks inherent in insisting that Verry had to comply. Verry has to appeal to CJP for relief.
It is a short point that could be forthwith taken in the TCC. Alternatively [The Adjudicator] will make himself available to accept the Verry Referral in a concurrent adjudication."
"It has come to our attention that CJP has misled you as to the procedural rules governing these proceedings. Whilst CJP has continually referred the rules in DOM/2 as setting the timetable, it is apparent that, in fact, the TeCSA Adjudication Rules apply by virtue of amended Clause 38 of DOM/2 [see Referral Tab 1 page 36] which provides as follows: 'Either Parties shall be entitled to refer any dispute or difference to adjudication in accordance with the Housing, Grants, Construction and Regeneration Act 1996 and any such adjudication shall be undertaken in accordance with the Main Contract'. Amended Article 3 of the Main Contract (copy attached) provides as follows: 'Any dispute which by virtue of Part II of the Housing, Grants, Construction and Regeneration Act 1996 is to be referred to adjudication shall be referred to adjudication in accordance with the Technology and Construction Solicitors Association Adjudication Rules ... current at the time of reference, which are incorporated herein by reference. The decision of the adjudicator shall be binding on the Parties until the dispute is finally determined by a court or judge thereof, and a court or judge thereof shall also have jurisdiction to open up, review, revise, end, replace and quash in whole or in part a decision of the Adjudicator'. Accordingly, Verry contends that you are not bound by the timetable set out in Clause 38A of DOM/2 but, by virtue of paragraph 20 of the TeCSA Rules (copy attached), you are to establish the procedure and timetable for the adjudication. Verry contends that, in accordance with the above, you are not fettered by the DOM/2 provisions and are at liberty to set whatever procedure and timetable you see fit. Of course should you now permit Verry's Response Verry is content to agree a suitable period in which CJP is to Reply should it wish to do so".
"Notwithstanding the Adjudicator's earlier request for comment from CJP to Gary Kitt's e-mail 12.28 here is the over-view of the Adjudicator since it may assist both Parties.
1: All that is before the Adjudicator is the Referral. As it stands no further help is needed to decide whether the Application No 15 is payable.
2: There is no justification in the Adjudicator re-valuing the Application.
3: If Verry says that its letter of 6th May foreshadowing its Response is now to stand as its Response, please say so. The Adjudicator will likely conclude that its bare allegations are not made out and as such the allegations of defects will fail. For the avoidance of doubt the Adjudicator will not visit the site to enquire into an unparticularised allegation of defects."
"For the avoidance of doubt, the Adjudicator indicates that if DOM/2 Rules apply to this Adjudication (as argued prior to 19th May) he is bound by the time provision in DOM/2 for service of Response by 09 May 2008. He was then bound by the relief given by CJP to noon on Wednesday 14 May 2008. Service at 5.30 p.m. was out of time. Note this please: If the Adjudicator has discretion i.e. not fettered by the Rules, he would have allowed in the e-mail service at 5.30 p.m. via those discretionary powers, provided the hard copy which was not received by CJP until Monday 19th May contained NO additional material such that service 5-days after the e-mail version that causes real prejudice."
" The main contract refers to the "TeCSA Rules".
The "Pre-Contract Meeting Minutes" indicates at 3.09 of "Schedule of Sub-Contract Amendments": Not Applicable.
But when the Order comes along Verry brings in 7 pages of Sub-Contract Amendments.
There is conflict within the documents said to apply by the Order. The conflict is that the 'Minutes' say there will be no amendment. Given that the work began onsite 09 July 2007 the intentions of the Parties appear to be that the contract is to be as the 'Pre-Contract Meeting Minutes' since the attempt to bring in the 7-pages of amendments is after the formation of the Contract. Thus the "TeCSA Rules" do not apply.
If that is wrong, the alternative position is that the 7-pages of amendments apply. Fenwick Elliott points out that DOM/2 is thereby amended at clause 1.3: ...
Clause 1.3 characterises the Pre-Order Meeting Minutes as the "Appendix" to DOM/2. If there was a conflict between what the Appendix says and what DOM/2 Conditions says, the Appendix shall prevail (See Clauses 2.2 of DOM/2). In those circumstances the attempted changes to Clause 38 conditions are ousted by the Appendix (being the "Pre-Order Meeting Minutes"), which says there are no amendments to DOM/2. So, for that reason the Amended clause 38 does not bite. The "TeCSA Rules" do not apply."
"… absent a rejection by Verry of the CJP Application/Valuation No. 15, the Application will stand as "The Amount Due" (DECISION). Further there is no evidence that Verry made any calculation of sums due for Valuation 15 and it is decided that no Valuation was made by Verry.
The Adjudicator also decides that it was then open to Verry to withhold monies from "The Amount (otherwise) Due" provided a 'Withholding Notice' was served in accordance with DOM/2 Clause 21.3.3 (DECISION).
No Withholding Notice was served in time or at all [DECISION].
Therefore the "Amount Due" is £94,692.40 excluding any VAT (DECISION)."
"On 16th June the site visit took place. By now the defective Works allegations had been canvassed by Verry in the Referral and answered by CJP in its Response. It appeared from those answers in evidence taken at the site visit that Verry was in difficulty making out much of its complaint, not least because key senior management personnel at Verry were no longer in its employ and were not at this meeting. Verry's Managing Director explained to the Adjudicator that the dispute had 'moved on' because bolts (to support brick, block and stonework brackets) were hopelessly installed but only discovered on 19 May 2008. Verry addressed this aspect of their case and although the other allegations of 'defects' were not dropped it was indicated by the Adjudicator that the evidence in CJP was here and now on site more convincing ... It is fair to say that the site visit, inspection and discussions were providing a bleak indication of its [Verry's] success at least as at 16 June 2008. Verry was asked to say if it would be providing a "Reply to Response". Driver Consult said it would say so by close of 16th. But nothing was heard that day, or next ...
Instead the Adjudication took another turn. Verry (via Driver Consult) said it wanted to stop Adjudication No. 2 all together. It wrote on 18 June 2008 that it had "taken stock of whether it was sensible and cost-effective to proceed with Adjudication No. 2", it intended to "obtain clarification from the Court on a number of issues touching and concerning the contract and disputes and Adjudications No. 1 and No. 2" and "we hereby withdraw our Notice of Adjudication and Referral and Adjudication No. 2".
Verry pressed for Adjudicator to resign (on 19th) and pointed to authorities. Absent Party and Party agreement, it appeared to the Adjudicator that it is not open to a Referring Party to unilaterally pause or postpone an excellent Adjudication "To take stock". … It would be bizarre if the Referring Party could hop-on and hop-off the Adjudication, but as it alone saw fit.
The Adjudicator was not persuaded to stop. At 0932 on 20 August 2008 [presumably 20 June 2008] the Adjudicator e-mailed the Parties and said he had a duty to continue to now publish an Award. The proceedings would continue ex-parte from 4 p.m. that day 20th. Verry said no more."
Verry elected not to submit a Reply and so far as can be ascertained took no further part in the adjudication.
(a) The Adjudicator formed the view that he had no discretion to extend the seven day time for the Response.
(b) He accepted that, if he had a discretion, he would have allowed the extension of time until the time on 14 May 2008 when the Response was substantially served by e-mail.
(c) There was no objection to an appointment of an adjudicator being nominated by the RICS. Indeed if anything, nomination by the RICS was encouraged by Verry's consultants.
(d) The Parties proceeded in fact upon the basis that Clause 38A applied until the afternoon of 19 May 2008 when Verry's solicitors suggested a contractual argument by which it could be said that the TeCSA Rules applied which meant that the Adjudicator was not bound by the timetable.
(e) It is impossible for me on the evidence to determine whether or not the Adjudicator in the second adjudication would have reached a different decision if Verry and its consultants had continued to take an active part in the adjudication from about its mid point in terms of time. I simply do not have enough evidence to determine that.
The Adjudicator's Jurisdiction-Discussion
"If any conflict appears between the DOM/2 Conditions and Appendix, then the Appendix shall prevail. If any conflict appears between the terms of Sub-Contract DOM/2 and the Numbered Documents, the terms of Sub-Contract DOM/2 shall prevail. If any conflict appears between the provisions of the Main Contract and the terms of Sub-Contract Documents, the terms of the Sub-Contract Documents shall prevail."
The Schedule of Amendment deletes the ordinary DOM/2 definition of "Appendix" and states that "all references in Contract to 'Appendix' shall be deemed to refer to Pre-Order Meeting Minutes". Thus the reference in Clause 2.2 in the first sentence should therefore read:
"If any conflict appears between the DOM/2 Conditions and the Pre-Order Meeting Minutes, then the Pre-Order Meeting Minutes shall prevail."
Did the Adjudicator Decide the Right Dispute?
Breach of Natural Justice-Discussion
(a) There is nothing in Clause 38A.2.5.1 which, in any express prescriptive language bars the Adjudicator from doing so.
(b) Clause 38A.2.5.5 makes it clear that the Adjudicator shall "set his own procedure". It gives him an "absolute discretion" in taking the initiative in ascertaining the facts and the law as he considers necessary. One would have expected that, if he can set his own procedure and has an absolute discretion, he can grant appropriate extensions of time.
(c) Clause 38A.2.5.1 is not written in prescriptive terms: it identifies that Verry (in this case) may send within seven days of the date of a referral a Response. Whilst it is true that it is not stated elsewhere in Clause 38A that the Responding Party may serve its Response at a time later than that seven day period, there is nothing which says it cannot if the Adjudicator agrees.
(d) One needs to consider clauses such as those in Clause 38A with some common sense. Whilst one bears in mind that the timetable (in the absence of the referring party's agreement to a further 14 days or the parties' mutual agreement otherwise) is 28 days from the referral, one needs to consider what might sensibly happen as a matter of business common sense if there was some event beyond the control of the Responding Party which prevented the service of the Response on time. For instance, if all the fax and e-mail lines went down so that there was a delay in transmission by one minute or one hour in the service of the Response or a key member of the Responding Party's legal or clients team was struck down with illness, it would be surprising if the Adjudicator could not, within reason and the constraints of the timetable, extend time for the service of the Response.
(e) Clause 38A.2.5.5 gives the Adjudicator an absolute discretion of which the following eight sub-sub-sub-paragraphs are only examples. Obviously, given the 28 day (or other reliable) deadline, the discretion would have to be but can be exercised in a way so as to enable the timetable to be complied with.
(f) One of the entitlements of parties to an adjudication is a right to be heard, that being the rule of natural justice "Audi Alterem Partes". There is thus a reasonable expectation of parties to an adjudication that, within reason and within the constraints of the overall requirement to secure the giving of a decision within the requisite time period, each party's submissions and evidence will be considered by the Adjudicator. It is a draconian arrangement (which the parties are of course free expressly to agree) that a party is denied its right to be heard unless it has been given a fair and clear opportunity to put its case. Very clear wording would be required to ensure that such a right was to be denied.
"From this and other cases, I conclude as follows in relation to breaches of natural justice in adjudication cases:
(a) it must first be established that the adjudicator failed to apply the rules of natural justice;
(b) any breach of the rules must be more than peripheral; they must be material breaches;
(c) breaches of the rules will be material in cases where the adjudicator has failed to bring to the attention of the parties a point or issue which they ought to be given the opportunity to comment upon if it is one which is either decisive or of considerable potential importance to the outcome of the resolution of the dispute and is not peripheral or irrelevant.
(d) whether the issue is decisive or of considerable potential importance or is peripheral or irrelevant obviously involves a question of degree which must be assessed by any judge in the case such as this.
(e) it is only if the adjudicator goes off on a frolic of his own, that is wishing to decide a case upon a factual or legal basis which has not been argued or put forward by either side, without giving the parties an opportunity to comment or, where relevant put in further evidence, that the type of breach of the rules of natural justice with which the case can be Balfour Beatty Construction Company Limited v The London Borough of Lambeth was concerned comes into play. It follows that, if either party has argued a particular point and the other party does not come back on the point, there is no breach of the rules of natural justice in relation to thereto."
The Cantillon case was concerned with an allegation that the adjudicator had made his decision upon the factual or legal basis not argued or put forward by either side without giving the parties opportunity to comment or address. That is not the case here.
(a) In itself, the failure to disregard the whole of Verry's response both as to argument and as to evidence was and must have been material. There comes a point when a breach of the rules of natural justice is so pervasive that the only proper conclusion to come to is that the breach is material.
(b) It is not necessary for the Court to go so far as having to investigate the facts to determine whether the adjudicator would have reached a different decision in substance if he had considered the Response. All one need say (and I do) is that there was a real possibility that the adjudicator could have reached a different decision. I am satisfied that there is a real (as opposed to fanciful) possibility in this case.
(c) Because Verry decided to stop participating in the second adjudication part way through, there is no telling what the adjudicator would have decided if Verry had pressed its case with force and logic throughout the remainder of the adjudication.
Verry's Claims for Declaration
"21.1. The first and interim payments and the Final Payment shall subject to Clause 32 be made to the Sub-Contractor in accordance with the provisions of Clause 21. 21.2.1 The first payment shall be due on the date specified in the Pre-Order Meeting Minutes.
21.2.2 Interim payments shall be due at intervals not exceeding one month calculated from the date when the first payment was due.
21.2.3 The final date for payments for the first and interim payments shall be not later than 28 days after the date when they became due.
21.3.1 Subject to any agreement between the Sub-Contractor and the Contractor as to stage payments then subject to any decision of the Adjudicator under Clause 38A … the amount of the first and each interim payment of the Sub-Contractor shall be the Contractor's gross valuation as referred to in Clause 21.4 less ...
21.3.2 Not later than five days after the date on which any interim payment becomes due Contractor shall give a written notice to the Sub-Contractor which will specify:
1. The amount of the interim payment which is proposed to be made in respect for Sub-Contract Works and the basis on which such amount was calculated;
2. By way of deduction from such amount, the amount of any payment proposed to be made from the Sub-Contractor to the Contractor and the basis on which such amount was calculated.
3. Notwithstanding that the Contractor does not serve a written notice pursuant to this Clause 21.3.2 the Sub-Contractor shall only be entitled to payment of sums properly due in respect of the Sub-Contractor Works.
21.3.3 Not later than three days before the final date for payment of any interim payment, the Contractor may give a written notice to the Sub-Contractor which will specify any amount proposed to be withheld and/or deducted from the amount under Clause 21.3.1, the ground or grounds for such withholding and/or deduction and the amount of the withholding and/or deduction attributable to each ground. If no notice is given, the Contractors will pay the amount stated in his notice under Clause 21.3.1 by the final date for payment of it. Notwithstanding that the Contractor does not serve a written notice pursuant to this Clause 21.3.3 the Sub-Contractor shall only be entitled to payment of sums properly due in respect of the Sub-Contract Works".
(a) There is nothing in the Sub-Contract which states that. There are some standard forms which do provide expressly that, if there is no equivalent to that referred to in Clause 21.3.2, the Sub-Contractor or Main Contractor's applied for value stands and is deemed to be the amount due. There would need to be clear wording to secure that state of affairs. There is not.
(b) By way of analogy the Scheme for Construction Contracts (England & Wales) Regulations Part 2, Paragraph 2 provides, by way of default mechanism, for interim payment on a basis equivalent to "an amount equal to the value of any work performed in accordance with the relevant construction contract during the period from the commencement of the contract to the end of the relevant period..." That basis is a value based basis. The Scheme recognises that this is an appropriate basis which one can properly presume complies with the parent Act.
(c) In effect Clause 21.3 provides for the Contractor to value each application as it comes in. However the default mechanism is agreed to be that the subcontractor "shall only be entitled to payment of sums properly due in respect of the Sub-Contract Works".
This expression is sufficiently clear and comprehensible. Clause 21.4 requires the gross valuation to be made by the Contractor to relate to "the total value of the Sub-Contract Work on-site properly executed by the Sub-Contractor". Thus, the amount to which the Sub-Contractor is entitled and the maximum which it can expect on an interim valuation is the value of Sub-Contract Work properly executed (plus any further allowances for materials and goods on and offsite together with certain other sums referred to in Clause 21.4). Thus, whilst the amount due will represent the value of work executed in terms of quantities by reference to the Sub-Contract rates and prices, interim payment is only due in respect of work properly done. Therefore, if work has been improperly done then the Main Contractor (Verry in this case) is not obliged to pay to that extent. I will not at this stage seek to identify how the value of Sub-Contract Works improperly executed should be valued.
Decision