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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions >> Airwave Solutions Ltd v Secretary of State for the Home Department & Anor [2024] EWHC 3059 (TCC) (28 November 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2024/3059.html Cite as: [2024] EWHC 3059 (TCC) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
TECHNOLOGY & CONSTRUCTION COURT (KBD)
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
Airwave Solutions Limited |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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The Secretary of State for the Home Department & another |
Defendant |
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Joseph Barrett KC, Stephen Kosmin and Benjamin Tankel (instructed by TLT LLP) for the Defendants
Hearing date: 6 November 2024
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Crown Copyright ©
Sir Vivian Ramsey:
Introduction
Background
"15. The Defendants make various prejudicial and highly contentious allegations in relation to Motorola's conduct in performing and exiting the Lot 2 ESN Contract (paragraphs 2(3), 2(4), 2(9), 2(16), 2(18), 2(31), 20(8), 20(9), 27(4), 36). The allegations should be withdrawn. They are of no legal relevance to the Claim and they have been raised in breach of a settlement agreement relating to a dispute which is outside the scope of the Claim. For completeness and the avoidance of doubt, they are denied.
16. The Defence identifies no basis as to how or why these allegations in relation to the performance and termination of the Lot 2 ESN Contract are of any relevance to the issues in the Claim, which concern the Defendants' procurement law obligations.
17. The Defendants are in any event precluded by contract from making such allegations in the Claim. A number of disputes arose between Motorola and the First Defendant, relating to dissatisfaction on the part of each party regarding performance and delivery by the other under the Lot 2 ESN Contract ("the Lot 2 Dispute"). Those parties settled their differences about the Lot 2 Dispute and agreed terms for the full and final settlement of the Lot 2 Dispute, including the early termination of the Lot 2 ESN Contract and any payments due to Motorola as a result, and they recorded the terms of settlement, on a binding basis, in the Lot 2 Settlement Agreement and Release dated 19 December 2022 (the "Lot 2 Settlement Agreement"). The Lot 2 Settlement Agreement relevantly includes the following terms:
a. Clause 6.3 provides […]
b. Dispute is defined as: […]
c. Reserved Claims is defined as: […]
18. In accordance with the Lot 2 Settlement Agreement, the Claimant makes no allegations against the Defendants in the Claim in relation to issues covered by the Lot 2 Dispute (but reserves the right to do so, and to take any other measures it deems appropriate, if the Defendants pursue their equivalent allegations in breach of the Lot 2 Settlement Agreement).
19. Without prejudice to the general objections set out above, the Claimant denies that the Defendants' allegations, either overt or oblique, in relation to Motorola and the legality of its performance of and exit from the Lot 2 ESN Contract (paragraphs 2(3), 2(4), 2(9), 2(16), 2(18), 2(31), 20(8), 20(9), 27(4), 36) are justified."
(1) Determined and dismissed by way of a preliminary issue pursuant to the Court's general case management powers in CPR r 3.1 (in particular sub-paragraphs (i), (j), (k), (l) or (m));
(2) Struck out on pursuant to CPR r 3.4(2); further or alternatively
(3) Summarily dismissed on the grounds that the Defendants have no real prospect of succeeding on those issues, and there is no other compelling reason why those issues should be disposed of at trial, pursuant to CPR r 24.3." ("the Lot 2 Application")
The Lot 2 Application
The Claimant's Submissions
"Whether the allegations in paragraphs 2(9), 2(31), 27(4)(d), [18], 36, 41A(2)(i),
82(4)(a) and 86(7) of the Amended Defence (identified in para 1 of the draft order)
are precluded by the Settlement Agreement. In particular:
(i) [Redacted];
(ii) [Redacted];
(iii) What are the consequences for these parts of the Amended Defence."
(i) The Defendants' pleaded allegations that MSUK breached the Lot 2 Contract are in breach of Clauses 6.1 and/or 6.3 of the Settlement Agreement.
(ii) Airwave is entitled to enforce the Settlement Agreement [Redacted] In any event, to avoid a sterile debate about this point, MSUK has assigned its rights under Clause 6 of the Settlement Agreement to Airwave by an Assignment Agreement made on 25 October 2024, which entitled Airwave to enforce the agreement by that further route.
(iii) The Defendants now appear to be suggesting that some principle of public law exists which prevents the Court giving effect to the Settlement Agreement, though they have not identified this principle or clearly articulated this argument, and the Claimant is not aware of any such principle but if the Defendants persist in this point, the Claimant will contend that no such principle applies.
The Defendants' Submissions
"(ii) the Home Office has not shown the existence of an unforeseeable event giving rise to the existence of extreme urgency….the risk of delay to the ESN is foreseeable and has been for some time; and
(iii) the circumstances invoked to justify extreme urgency are attributable to the Home Office, so reliance on Regulation 32(2)(c) is excluded by Regulation 32(4)."
a. [Redacted]
b. If so, what are the implications of that breach for: (i) the Claimant's alleged entitlement to seek to enforce the terms of the Lot 2 Settlement Agreement, and/or (ii) any relief to which the Claimant might be entitled if it established a breach of the Lot 2 Settlement Agreement by the Defendants?
c. [Redacted]
d. [Redacted]
e. [Redacted]
f. If (quod non) the Lot 2 Settlement Agreement had the effect contended for by the Claimant, do each of the relevant pleas within paragraphs 2(9), 2(31), 27(4)(d), 36, 41A(2)(i), 82(4)(a) and 86(7) of the Amended Defence breach the Lot 2 Settlement Agreement?
g. If (quod non) the Lot 2 Settlement Agreement had the effect contended for by the Claimant, is the Claimant entitled to the remedy of specific performance i.e. that the relevant parts of these paragraphs of the Amended Defence are struck out?
The basis on which a preliminary issue might be ordered
"8.1.3. At the first CMC the Court will expect to be addressed on whether or not there are matters which should be taken by way of Preliminary Issues in advance of the main trial….
8.2.1 The Significance of the Preliminary Issues
The court would expect that any issue proposed as a suitable PI would, if decided in a particular way, be capable of:
· resolving the whole proceedings or a significant element of the proceedings; or
· significantly reducing the scope, and therefore the costs, of the main trial; or
· significantly improving the possibility of a settlement of the whole proceedings.
8.6.1 If a party wishes to seek a PI hearing, either at the first CMC or thereafter, that party must circulate a precise draft of the proposed preliminary issues to the other parties and to the Court well in advance of the relevant hearing.
8.7.1 When considering whether or not to order a PI hearing, the Court will take into account the effect of any possible appeal against the PI judgment, and the concomitant delay caused."
(1) The general approach to the hearing of preliminary issues was summarised in McLoughlin v Grovers (A Firm) [2001] EWCA Civ 1743 at paragraph 66 as follows:
"(a) Only issues which are decisive or potentially decisive should be identified.
(b) The questions should usually be questions of law.
(c) They should be decided on the basis of a schedule of agreed or assumed facts.
(d) They should be triable without significant delay, making full allowance for the implications of a possible appeal.
(e) Any order should be made by the court following a case management conference."
(2) In Steele v Steele [2001] CP Rep 106, Neuberger J (as he then was) identified a non-exhaustive list of questions for the Court in deciding whether to order a Preliminary Issue Trial:
"The first question the court should ask itself is whether the determination of the preliminary issue would dispose of the case or at least one aspect of the case…The second question…is whether the determination of the preliminary issue could significantly cut down the cost and time involved in pre-trial preparation or in connection with the trial itself…Thirdly, if, as here, the preliminary issue is an issue of law, the court should ask itself how much effort, if any, will be involved in identifying the relevant facts for the purpose of the preliminary issue. The greater the effort, self-evidently the more questionable the value of ordering a preliminary issue…Fourthly, if the preliminary issue is an issue of law, to what extent is it to be determined on agreed facts? …Fifthly, where the facts are not agreed, the court should ask itself to what extent that impinges on the value of a preliminary issue.…That, indeed, is effectively a sixth factor which the court should at least take into account when considering whether or not to order or to determine a preliminary issue, namely whether the determination of a preliminary issue may unreasonably fetter either or both parties or, indeed, the court, in achieving a just result which is, of course, at the end of the day what is required of the court at the trial.…Seventhly, the court should ask itself to what extent there is a risk of the determination of the preliminary issue increasing costs and/or delaying the trial. Plainly, the greater the delay caused by the preliminary issue and the greater any possibility of increase in cost as a result of the preliminary issue, the less desirable it is to order a preliminary issue. However, in this connection, I consider that the court can take into account the possibility that the determination of the preliminary issue may result in a settlement of some sort. In other cases the court may well decide that, although the determination of a preliminary issue would not result in a settlement, it will result in a substantial cutting down of costs and time.…Eighthly, the court should ask itself to what extent the determination of the preliminary issue may be irrelevant. Clearly, the more likely it is that the issue will have to be determined by the court, the more appropriate it can be said to be to have it as a preliminary issue…Ninthly, the court should ask itself to what extent is there a risk that the determination of a preliminary issue could lead to an application for the pleadings being amended so as to avoid the consequences of the determination…Tenthly, the court should ask itself whether, taking into account all the previous points, it is just to order a preliminary issue."
(3) In Rossetti Marketing Limited and another v Diamond Sofa Company Limited [2012] EWCA Civ 1021 at paragraph 1, Lord Neuberger MR (as he then was) stated:
"This…represents yet another cautionary tale about the dangers of preliminary issues. In particular, it demonstrates that (i) while often attractive prospectively, the siren song of agreeing or ordering preliminary issues should normally be resisted, (ii) if there are nonetheless to be preliminary issues, it is vital that the issues themselves, and the agreed facts or assumptions on which they are based, are simply, clearly and precisely formulated, and (iii) once formulated, the issues should be answered in a clear and precise way."
Discussion
The alternative of strike out or summary judgment
"Alternatively, if the Defendants were now to contend that paragraphs 82(4)(a) and 86(7) are not intended to allege a breach of the Lot 2 Contract after all (contrary to their own previous submissions mentioned above), then they are inadequately particularised, incoherent and make no sense and therefore fall to be struck out for that alternative reason under CPR r 3.4(2)."
"69 As an alternative and independent ground, the Lot 2 Application also seeks to strike out the Defendants' allegations of breach of the Lot 2 Contract on the basis they are inadequately particularised and incoherent.
70 The Claimant denied from the outset that these allegations had any legal relevance to the claims: original Reply, e.g. para 15. That is not least because these allegations are inadequately particularised, and the Amended Defence fails properly to plead any link between the allegations of breach and the PCR.
71 As the Defendants' case has been tested through the disclosure process, it has become increasingly clear that the paragraphs of the Amended Defence which appear to make vague allegations of breach do not provide a coherent or sufficiently particularised basis for their claimed relevance.
72 The Lot 2 Application initially sought strike out of paragraphs in the Amended Defence (paras 84(2)(a) and 86(7)) on the ground they are inadequately particularised and incoherent: as set out in Vernon 3, para 24. The Claimant will advance that same argument for striking out all the parts of the Amended Defence identified in the Lot 2 Application, as an alternative to reliance on the Settlement Agreement.
73 In summary, [the Claimant] will argue as follows as part of the Lot 2 Application (though the Court is not asked to decide this point at the 6 November hearing)…".
The Amendment Application
Conclusion
(1) The Defendants shall by 15 November 2024 provide a further draft Re-Amended Defence setting out the full extent of the amendments sought;
(2) The Claimant, by 22 November 2024, may provide a draft Re-Amended Reply setting out draft replies to the amendments sought by the Defendants and shall make any application in respect of any other draft amendments to the Amended Reply which it seeks permission to make, in particular, pursuant to its reservation in paragraph 18 of the Amended Reply.
(3) The parties shall serve submissions in relation to the amendments in sub-paragraphs (1) and (2) above, by 29 November 2024.
(4) The Claimant shall, to the extent that, as part of its Lot 2 Application, it seeks to strike out any parts of the pleadings on the grounds that they are "inadequately particularised, incoherent and make no sense", serve any further submissions in support with its submissions in sub-paragraph (3) above, by 29 November 2024.
(5) The parties shall serve submissions in reply to the submissions in sub-paragraphs (3) and (4), by 6 December 2024.
(6) A hearing shall take place on a date to be fixed.