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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Centrica Plc & Anor v Premier Power Ltd [2007] EWCA Civ 1225 (27 November 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2007/1225.html Cite as: [2007] EWCA Civ 1225 |
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And A3/2007/0341 |
COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION, COMMERCIAL COURT
Mrs Justice Gloster DBE
Royal Courts of Justice Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
Vice President of the Court of Appeal, Civil Division
LORD JUSTICE LONGMORE
and
LORD JUSTICE HUGHES
____________________
Centrica plc and Anr |
Respondent |
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- and - |
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Premier Power Limited |
Appellant |
____________________
Mr J Sumption QC, Mr John McCaughran QC and Mr Sa'ad Hossain (instructed by Messrs Ashurst ) for the Respondent
Hearing dates : 5th, 6th November 2007
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Waller :
". . . .
NOW THIS AGREEMENT WITNESSETH that British Gas hereby agrees to supply and the Customer hereby agrees to take and pay for gas and to pay transmission charges in accordance with and subject to the Special Conditions below and the provisions of the Annexes to this Agreement.
. . .
2.1. The Customer shall pay to British Gas:
(a) a commodity charge for gas supplied under this Agreement (referred to as the Modified Reference Price) and
(b) A charge for the costs of connection to the national transmission system of British Gas and gas transportation along the Pipeline (referred to as the Transmission Charges).
. . .
2.6. The Transmission Charges shall be calculated and paid in accordance with Annex 5 and General Condition 4.
. . .
4. Payment:
(1) British Gas will render invoices promptly for Transmission Charges (except BG Unpredictable Operating Costs Payable by the Customer) and for gas supplied hereunder following the period of supply which will, wherever reasonably possible, correspond to a period of one Month. The invoices shall include, but need not be limited to, the following information:-
(i) The Transmission Charges relating to that Month.
(ii) The period of supply.
(iii) The number of therms supplied.
(iv) The Calorific Value expressed in megajoules per cubic metre and in British Thermal Units per cubic foot.
(v) The price or prices of gas in pence per therm for the period of supply.
(vi) The total amount payable to British Gas."
Annex 5 – Transmission Charges
"Part 1 – Preliminary
1. Transmission Charges shall be paid by the Customer monthly in arrears during that part of the Supply Period commencing on the Substantial Completion Date, save only the BG Unpredictable Operating Costs Payable by the Customer which shall be paid by the Customer in arrears in accordance with General Conditions 4(2) and 4(3) in Annex 3 to this Agreement.
. . .
3. BG Unpredictable Operating Costs shall be calculated without variation in accordance with relevant expenditure incurred from time to time by British Gas.
4. Transmission Charges shall be paid whether or not gas is actually supplied and/or consumed pursuant to this Agreement and whether or not any right of interruption is exercised pursuant to this Agreement.
. . . .
Part 2 – Calculation
The actual monthly charge shall be calculated in accordance with the following formulae . . . . . .
. . .
Part 3 – Definitions of Words and Expressions
"6. "BGE Charge for Operational Costs" means in respect of any Month the charges payable by British Gas or any Affiliate thereof (as defined in General Condition 14(4) in Annex 3 to this Agreement) to BGE in that Month representing the share of British Gas of the costs of operating the BGE Pipeline and shall include any charges of whatever nature payable by British Gas in respect of transportation of gas through the BGE Pipeline.
. . .
11. "BG Unpredictable Operating Costs" means all costs and expenses reasonably and properly incurred by British Gas or any Affiliate thereof (as defined in General Condition 14(4) in Annex 3 to this Agreement) in operating, repairing or maintaining the Pipeline and any land or substrata on, in, under or over which it is laid other than the BG Predictable Operating Costs and excluding any such costs or expenses relating to the BGE Pipeline. The Customer shall be entitled on reasonable prior notice to inspect those records of British Gas reasonably sufficient to verify the foregoing."
The Matrix or Landscape
"51. Mr. McCaughran on a number of occasions submitted that "the purpose" of the provisions relating to the Transmission Charges was to allow the seller to recover "costs of and associated with the transportation of gas to Ballylumford". I accept that Clause 2.1(b) of the GSA envisaged that the buyer would pay "a charge for the costs of … gas transportation along the Pipeline" (my emphasis), which suggests that such charge will cover all the costs of transportation. I also accept that the legitimate factual matrix evidence of the commercial background to the GSA shows that the commercial object, or aim, of the transaction at that time was that the buyer should pay all the costs of and associated with the transportation of the gas along the Pipeline to Ballylumford, and that, in effect, the seller, then British Gas, would be able to pass through all its costs, or its Affiliate's costs, of operating the Pipeline to the buyer. I also accept that, on the commercial state of play at the time of the conclusion of the GSA, the provisions of Annex 5 were designed to ensure that the buyer would pay for all of the costs of and associated with the transportation of the gas, and that they were not designed to ensure that the transportation costs were to be shared between the buyer and the seller.
52. The factual matrix evidence that shows this was the following. The GSA was, as I have already said, based upon the standard form of LTI contract in use in 1992, namely LTI3. Under this form of contract, all purchasers of gas from British Gas paid the same commodity prices. The provisions of Annex 5 were specifically negotiated to cover the additional costs of transporting the gas from Great Britain to Ballylumford. The Transmission Charges were not designed to provide a subsidy to PPL in relation to the commodity prices. As Mr. Richard Souchard, one of PPL's witnesses, who had been UK Downstream Asset Manager within BG Group Plc with responsibility for PPL, said: "The transmission charging formula was there specifically to ensure that the costs of capital and the costs of operation of the pipeline were recovered". The AMC formula contained in Annex 5 provides for the recovery of a variety of different heads of cost, both capital and operational. They go together to form the Base Monthly Charge or "BMC". In addition, Annex 5 provided for the payment of BGUOC. The "basket" of recoverable costs provided for in Annex 5 represented all of the costs of and associated with the transportation of the gas from Great Britain to Ballylumford. It is correct, as Mr. Onions submitted, that the recoverable capital costs were subject to a cap in the region of £127.5 million (index linked). However, in reality, on the basis of the evidence before me, at the time of the inception of the GSA, there was no significant risk that British Gas or PTL would fail to recover the capital costs of the project.
53. However, the reality was that the GSA, as Mr. Onions pointed out, closely defines what may be recovered as "Transmission Charges" and reflects an understandable commercial deal entered into in 1992, when the Pipeline was to be constructed, to enable recovery of the costs of constructing, operating, repairing or maintaining the Pipeline as specific Transmission Charges to be paid by the buyer, PPL, to the seller, in respect of the seller's operation, or its Affiliate's operation, of the Pipeline. This was in fact reflected in the extension letter, under which PPL had to continue to pay the Transmission Charges for a further period after the end of the gas supply period to enable the recovery of the costs of construction and operation for the 15 year period. This was also accepted by Mrs. Griffith. In my judgment there is no evidence, that can be properly characterised as factual matrix evidence, that provides any support for the contention that it was irrelevant for the purposes of BGUOC whether the seller, or its Affiliate, was the operator of the Pipeline, or supports the proposition that the seller could recover costs which he had to pay by way of third party payments to the actual operator of the Pipeline, in circumstances where neither the seller, nor its Affiliate, was the operator of the Pipeline. Some of the Claimants' factual witnesses gave evidence to the effect that they had such a subjective belief. But subjective belief is not within the ambit of legitimately available factual matrix material: see per Jonathan Parker J in Philip Collins Ltd v Davis (supra) at 823. The clear inference that in my judgment can be drawn from the words used in the GSA and the surrounding circumstances in 1992 was that the purpose of the Transmission Charges was to enable the seller to recover the capital costs of the construction of the Pipeline and the seller's costs of operating it. Indeed, even the Claimants' witness, Mrs. Valerie Griffith, Commercial Manager within BGTL responsible for managing the GSA, accepted that the charges were designed for this purpose. She said: "That is all that was contemplated at the time, the initial PTL pipeline." "
"82. In my judgment, and despite Mr. Onions' skilful and superficially persuasive arguments, the simple reality is that, as result of Postalisation, the seller cannot charge the buyer in respect of the costs of gas transportation along the Pipeline; the seller is required, as a result of the modifications to the operator and supply licence and the Transportation Code, to pay a postalised tariff to the operator (PTL). Thus prior to postalisation, BGTL was liable to pay to PTL, pursuant to the Transportation Code, Licence Charges, which included the AMC (which itself included two elements of operational cost) and Licensee Unpredictable Operating Costs). As part of the measures taken upon the introduction of postalisation, BGTL's Supply Licence has been modified, so that it is no longer required to pay the AMC, together with Licence Charges but is, instead, required to pay the postalisation charges. The Transportation Code has been similarly amended so as to require shippers, including BGTL, to pay the postalisation charges. Absent variation, the result would be that the seller would end up shouldering a large proportion of the transportation costs, which commercially would be a wholly different bargain from the one which the parties entered into in 1992, or indeed, 1997. The result in my judgment is that, in reality, because of Regulatory Action BGTL/Centrica can no longer exercise their right to be paid "a charge for the costs of … gas transportation along the Pipeline" as provided in clause 2.1(b) of the GSA, as calculated in accordance with the provisions of Annex 5, because the nature of the costs which they have in fact incurred are materially different. It follows that I accept Mr. McCaughran's submission that the recovery of Transmission Charges by the seller, and the payment of such charges, are a "transaction" "contemplated" by the GSA, within the meaning of the Regulatory Action definition, and that the transactions thereby contemplated are not limited to the sale and transportation of gas."
Construction and MPPs
"The fact that a particular construction leads to a very unreasonable result must be a relevant consideration. The more unreasonable the result, the more unlikely it is that the parties can have intended it, and if they do intend it the more necessary it is that they shall make that intention abundantly clear."
"I readily accept Mr Eder's submission that the starting point of the process of interpretation must be the language of the contract. But Mr Eder went further and said that, if the meaning of the words is clear, as he submitted it is, the purpose of the contractual provisions cannot be allowed to influence the Court's interpretation. That involved approaching the process of interpretation in the fashion of a black-letter man. The argument assumes that interpretation is a purely linguistic or semantic process until an ambiguity is revealed. That is wrong. Dictionaries never solve concrete problems of construction. The meaning of words cannot be ascertained divorced from their context. And part of the contextual scene is the purpose of the provision . . ."
Variation
"Annex 5
6.(a) Notwithstanding anything else contained or referred to in this Agreement or elsewhere and notwithstanding any prior agreement or understandings between the parties hereto and notwithstanding any representations made by or to either of them or by or to any third party with the intention or expectation that either party hereto would act thereon, all Transmission Charges have been calculated on the basis of those assumptions set out in Part 5 of this Annex.
(b) If any of the assumptions in paragraph (A) of Part 5 shall at any time during the currency of this Agreement prove incorrect for whatever reason, British Gas shall be entitled from time to time to vary the Transmission Charges by such amount or amounts and generally in such manner as it may consider reasonably appropriate to reflect the circumstances at the date of variation. Any such variation may have retrospective effect. "
Part 5 - Assumptions
5. That no Regulatory Action will occur and there will be no changes in and no introduction of any legislation, statutory instrument, order or code of practice (whether or not having statutory effect) regulating or in any way affecting the planning, design, construction, laying, burying, testing, commissioning, certification, approval or operation of the Pipeline or any part thereof which would or might affect the total cost of its construction (including the Capital Costs) or any of the costs of operating the Pipeline or any part thereof or any component of any of the costs referred to in this paragraph: provided that (for the avoidance of doubt) this paragraph shall not of itself entitle British Gas to vary the Transmission Charges by reason only of anything relating to the supply of gas through the Pipeline to any person in Northern Ireland other than the customer."
" "Regulatory Action" means any order of a court of competent jurisdiction or any order, decision or conclusive view made, given or expressed (save as a direct and necessary consequence of Wilful Default (as defined in General Condition 10(11)) of British Gas) by a competent governmental or regulatory authority or agency or an enactment of a legislative body:
(a) which materially prohibits or restricts any or all of the transactions contemplated hereby or requires the Substantial Completion Date or the Start Date to be delayed beyond the dates referred to in Special Condition 6; or
(b) which prohibits or restricts or materially affects the design or construction or laying or commissioning of the Pipeline; or
(c) which would materially prohibit or restrict the operation of the power station at the Premises; or
(d) in consequence of which, either of the Parties would incur fines or a liability in damages were this Agreement to be performed in accordance with its terms."
Conclusion
Lord Justice Longmore :
"Now this Agreement witnesseth that British Gas hereby agrees to supply and the customer hereby agrees to take and pay for gas and to pay transmission charges in accordance with and subject to the Special Conditions below and the provisions of the Annexes to this Agreement."
The special conditions are then immediately set out and, after the conditions precedent to the agreement coming into force have been set out in clause 1, the next clause (clause 2) sets out the price to be paid:-
"The customer shall pay to British Gas
(a) a commodity charge for gas supplied under this Agreement (referred to as the Modified Reference Price) and
(b) a charge for the costs of connection to the national transmission system of British Gas and gas transportation along the pipeline (referred to as the Transmission Charges)"
Clauses 2.2 to 2.5 deal with Modified Reference Price and clause 2.6 concludes the clause by stating
"The Transmission Charge shall be calculated and paid in accordance with Annex 5 and General Condition 4."
"BG Unpredictable Operating Costs shall be calculated without variation in accordance with the relevant expenditure incurred from time to time by British Gas."
It is, however, then the definition of BGUOC on which Lord Grabiner relies to assert that because postalisation charges are not costs or expenses incurred in operating, maintaining and repairing the pipeline, those charges cannot be recoverable. He further submits that PPL are entirely happy to continue to pay the Actual Monthly Charge as previously calculated and the BGUOC as previously calculated on the basis the PPL are prepared to continue to treat PTL as an affiliate of BGTL/Centrica although they are not in fact such an affiliate. Then PTL's costs of operating the pipeline will still be recoverable; but PPL are not prepared to pay postalisation charges.
Lord Justice Hughes :
"all costs and expenses reasonably and properly incurred by British Gas….in operating, repairing or maintaining the pipeline…"