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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions >> Horne v Magna Design Building Ltd [2014] EWHC 3380 (TCC) (17 October 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2014/3380.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 3380 (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 :
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ROLAND HORNE |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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MAGNA DESIGN BUILDING LIMITED |
First Defendant |
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- and - |
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MARCUS BUILD DÉCOR LIMITED |
Second Defendant |
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Mr Postlethwaite, director, for the Defendants
Hearing date: 13 October 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Akenhead:
The Background
"1.1 Dispute over outstanding payment of £16,214.88 which [Magna] is due under contract for works completed…and invoiced to [Mr Horne]…
Roland Horne sent a letter to [Magna] accusing [it] of not commencing with work 'regularly and diligently' and to return to site within 7 days or terminate the contract as per Clause 6.4.1 JCT Minor Works contract terms. [Magna] maintains that it did commence with work regularly and diligently, remained in communication during this period and was awaiting confirmation of payment and delivery of items which Roland Horne was aware of, as can be proven by correspondence between the parties.
[Magna] return to site on 23/01/14 and 24/01/14 as requested within the 7 day period so that there were no grounds for Roland Horne to terminate the contract and withhold payment due for works completed and invoiced. Relevant Horne then instructed a solicitor to write a letter to [Magna] on 31/01/14 denying [Magna] return to site within that period, forcing [Magna] to respond and incur unnecessary legal fees…"
The "redress" sought was payment of £16,214.88 said to be "the outstanding amount for works completed and invoiced" by Magna and a request that Mr Horne make a payment of adjudicator's fees.
".2 no further sum shall become due to the Contractor other than any amount that may become due to him under clause 6.7.4…"
Clauses 6.7.3 and 6.7.4 provided:
".3 following the completion of the Works and the making good of defects in the…an account of the following shall within three months thereafter a set out in a certificate issued by the Architect/Contract Administrator or a statement prepared by the employer:
.1 the amount of expenses properly incurred by the Employer pursuant to clause 6.7.1…and of any direct loss and/or damage caused to the Employer and for which the Contractor is liable, whether arising as a result of the termination or otherwise;
.2 the amount of payments made to the Contractor; and
.3 the total amount which would have been payable for the Works in accordance with this Contract;
.4 if the sum of the amounts stated under clause 6.7.3.1 and 6.7.3.2 exceeds the amount stated under clause 6.7.3.3, the difference shall be a debt payable either Contractor to the Employer or, if that sum is less, by the Employer to the Contractor."
The Adjudicator's Decision
"the validity of [Mr Horne's] purported termination of [Magna's] employment under the Contract; and
the extent, if any, to which [Magna] is entitled to payment of what it says is an outstanding invoiced a balance of £16,214.88."
"38. In view of what I say at Paragraph 7 to 12 of Section D above, it would not be appropriate for me to make any finding in respect of the actual balance due pursuant to Clause 6.7.4
39. However, I am required to establish the amount, if any, of [Magna's] claim to which it is entitled.
40. For that purpose, I find that [Mr Horne's] claim represents, at its least accurate, a close approximation of what, had the matter been referred to me for determination, I would have found to be its proper entitlement.
41. Accordingly, I find that [Magna] has no entitlement to payment of any part of its claim of £16,214.88."
These Proceedings
Discussion
(a) The Notice of Adjudication initiates the adjudication, with the appointment of the adjudicator and thereafter the service of the referral notice following.
(b) Therefore, it is to the Notice of Adjudication that one must initially go to ascertain what dispute is purportedly to be referred to adjudication.
(c) The fact that the Notice of Adjudication identifies a particular dispute is not absolutely determinative of whether there is a different view and whether it is precisely as formulated in the Notice. The particular dispute has to have crystallised before the Notice. Secondly, one can have regard to the preceding communications between the parties to interpret and to determine what the scope of the dispute is.
(d) It is open to a defending party in an adjudication to raise any matter, whether of law or of fact, by way of defence in an adjudication whether it has specifically been raised before or not. It may well be that some of those matters do not amount to a defence in law or in fact; a common example is a set off which, having not been raised before the and therefore not the subject matter of the appropriate contractual or statutory withholding notice requirements, will not be an effective defence. That does not however undermine the adjudicator's jurisdiction as such to address the defence, good or bad though it may be.
"16. It is of course right, as Miss Cheng points out, that Adjudication Decision No. 3 did not require this sum to be repaid by the Claimant to the Defendant but, so it seems to me, that does not prevent the Adjudicator's findings in paragraph 24 of his decision from forming an important and express part of that overall decision. In any event, if I was wrong about that, and his findings were not express, it seems to me that they follow logically from the decision itself. They are, in other words, a necessary and indispensible result of the Adjudicator's overall decision.
17. There are a number of authorities dealing with what might be properly inferred from an adjudicator's decision. The vast majority of them are concerned with claims for liquidated damages in circumstances where an adjudicator has found that a period of delay (for which the contractor claimed an extension of time) was in fact a period of culpable delay for which liquidated damages were appropriate. In Balfour Beatty Construction v Serco Limited [2004] EWHC 3336 TCC, Jackson J (as he then was) reviewed all of those authorities and he derived two principles dealing with what can and cannot be safely inferred from such a decision. He said:
"(a) Where it follows logically from an adjudicator's decision that the employer is entitled to recover a specific sum by way of liquidated and ascertained damages, then the employer may set off that sum against monies payable to the contractor pursuant to the adjudicator's decision, provided that the employer has given proper notice (insofar as required).
(b) Where the entitlement to liquidated and ascertained damages has not been determined either expressly or impliedly by the adjudicator's decision, then the question whether the employer is entitled to set off liquidated and ascertained damages against sums awarded by the adjudicator will depend upon the terms of the contract and the circumstances of the case."
21. The starting point for any consideration of jurisdiction is the Notice of Adjudication: see Jerome Engineering Limited v Lloyd Morris Electrical Limited [2002] CILR 1827. Here, the dispute set out in the Notice of Adjudication was said to be "the proper valuation of Certificate 27". That was the dispute that the Adjudicator decided. He arrived at a figure that was considerably less than the amount shown on the certificate, and that calculation demonstrated that, once allowance had been made for the sums already paid by the Defendant, the Claimant had been overpaid. That was the result of the dispute which the Adjudicator was obliged to decide, and he did not stray beyond his jurisdiction in so doing.
22. Miss Cheng submitted that the Adjudicator had the jurisdiction to reach a nil valuation of Certificate 27, but not the jurisdiction to go on and consider whether any sum was due to the Defendant from the Claimant. As she put it, "Once he got to nil, he could stop." I consider that that argument takes an unrealistic view of the valuation process that the Adjudicator went through. He carried out his detailed valuation. It was only when he totalled up the figures and compared the result with what had been already paid that he would have become aware that the sum due was less than the amount that had already been repaid by the Defendant to the Claimant. He could not do part of that valuation and then stop. It was a composite exercise and had to be completed in full.
23. On this point, Mr Steynor drew my attention to paragraph 15 of the witness statement of Ms Alderson in support of the Defendant's position. That says:
"…Workspace consistently claimed a net sum giving the result of the benefit of the payment made by YJL in compliance with the second adjudication decision. The Adjudicator's third decision, therefore, inevitably required him to take into account that payment made by YJL. If he had not done so, then he would still have concluded that a payment of £77,371.70 was due to Workspace. The Adjudicator was therefore addressing not only the valuation of Certificate 27 but also the balance of the account between the parties. Although he states that he cannot decide that the balance of £48,830.30 plus VAT was due, he has in fact done so in his decision. He clearly found that the payment of £126,192 was made and that the sum of £77,371.70 was due or he could not have deducted it against the negative valuation. There is no basis in his decision for distinguishing between any part of the payment made as a sum due."
I agree with and accept that analysis. It seems to me that the Adjudicator was expressly addressing 'the balance of the account' between the parties.
25. Accordingly, I conclude that the Adjudicator had the necessary jurisdiction to decide that, as a result of his valuation of Certificate 27, the Defendant had overpaid the Claimant and was entitled to a sum in return on the balance of the account between them. He could, therefore, have ordered that this sum be paid by the Claimant to the Defendant."
Costs
I direct that pursuant to CPR PD 39A para 6.1 no official shorthand note shall be taken of this Judgment and that copies of this version as handed down may be treated as authentic.