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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 >> William Verry (Glazing Systems) Ltd v Furlong Homes Ltd [2005] EWHC 138 (TCC) (13 January 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2005/138.html Cite as: [2005] EWHC 138 (TCC) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
HIS HONOUR JUDGE PETER COULSON QC
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
BETWEEN:
____________________
WILLIAM VERRY (GLAZING SYSTEMS) LTD | ||
- v - | ||
FURLONG HOMES LTD |
____________________
(Official Court Reporters)
Edial Farm, Edial, Burntwood, Staffordshire, WS7 0HZ
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
HIS HONOUR JUDGE PETER COULSON QC :
A. BACKGROUND AND RELEVANT DOCUMENTS
"In summary, taking into account our completion date of the 19th December 2003,we calculate our revised completion date as follows:
Items 1 – 7 inclusive + 23 weeks = 27th May 2004
Item 8 – variations + 4 weeks = 24th June 2004
Our revised completion date is therefore the 24th June 2004.
We have not taken into consideration the works we are currently carrying out on site such as retail units, east elevation gutter, door installation etc. which are solely dependant on Furlong Homes Ltd allowing us access to these areas.
Based on the above calculation you will see we are not in fact in delay as you have stated, your claims relating to your level of set-off against our account are therefore unfounded and without substance.
We enclose our Final Account Schedule for your perusal and trust this matter can be settled amicably despite your Company's reluctance to pay our account in line with our discussions in April 2004.
It should be noted however, that the enclosed documentation excludes any loss and expense items incurred as a result of the additional works and resequencing/prolongation of our contract works."
"As far as item 16 and extension of time is concerned, you have provided nothing that would add to the extension of time to the 2nd February 2004 previously granted. You appear to be of the opinion that despite your various breaches previously acknowledged in correspondence and your progress reports, that you are entitled to an extension of time to completion. The works were delayed by you. We have recognised that you are entitled to payment for the period between the 9th December 2003 and the 2nd February 2004."
"In the event that we do not receive payment or payment proposals by the 19th August 2004, or you disagree with our account we will confirm that we are in dispute with you and refer the matter to adjudication and issue a Notice for Adjudication."
"We are disappointed that despite waiting around six weeks for your response to our assessment you continue to issue generalised comments which totally lack any substantiation.We have previously stated that your own assessment is flawed, our own extension of time assessment has merely taken on board the lead-in periods stated within the Contract and the periods for each activity indicated on our November 2003 programme. Indeed until recently we had not even been given access to complete the remainder of our works."
"In conclusion, may we reiterate that we disagree entirely with your own assessment of our account, including your assessment of unsubstantiated Liquidated and Ascertained damages and the value you purport that is outstanding to your Company.You will note our earlier comments that we have only just been given the necessary access to complete our works, so any suggestion that we could have finished earlier is in our view unacceptable… We confirm that a dispute now exists between our respective Companies and this matter will now be dealt with by the Adjudication procedure unless you are prepared to address the matters realistically within the next seven days".
"We are instructed to write to you on behalf of Furlong Homes Ltd of Wellington House, Trust Road, Waltham Cross, Hertfordshire. You confirmed by Recorded Delivery letter that you were in dispute with Furlong with regard to the sum due to you in respect of your final account.You have been sent details of your final account that takes into account variations, loss and expense, common liquidated damages and costs incurred by Furlong. You have also received Furlong's assessment of extension of time that leads to your loss and expense and Furlong's reason for deducting liquidated damages and charging you for direct costs caused by your delay.
Accordingly, by copy of this letter we confirm that the dispute exists and make application to the President and Vice President of the Royal Institute of Chartered Surveyors to refer this dispute to an Adjudicator appointed by them for his decision.
The decision sought will be as follows:-
(1) The Adjudicator will be requested to decide that the extension of time granted by Furlong to the 2nd February 2004 is correct.(2) The Adjudicator will also be requested to decide whether the Final Account figure, inclusive of variations, loss and expense payments and deductions of liquidated damages and direct costs as a consequence of delay is £1,036,088.13 or such other amount that the Adjudicator may decide.(3) The Adjudicator will be requested to decide that William Verry will be responsible for payment of the Adjudicator's fees and expenses.(4) The Adjudicator will be requested to decide that William Verry will be responsible for payment of the application fee to the RICS".
"2.32. Further additional costs have been notified to Furlong since the account statement and Furlong requests that the Adjudicator deals with that within this Adjudication in order to finally conclude the account.2.33 The amounts are included in the summary of the accounts. The Adjudicator has been given jurisdiction to decide on any such other amount confirming requests that these additional costs are taken into account within the Adjudicator's decision."
"The response includes several items that are not part of the dispute and have not previously been seen by Furlong. Your jurisdiction is restricted to the crystallised dispute. Section D paragraph 62 – 132 of the response introduces a new extension of time claim. The headings may be the same but the narrative and dates are new. The crystallised dispute concerns Verry's letter dated 17th November 2003, Furlong's letter dated 11th May 2004, Verry's letter dated 2nd July 2004, Furlong's notes on extension of time and the Verry letter dated the 24th August 2004.Verry had no right to seek decisions from you on this Adjudication that had not been referred to Furlong. Verry are required to respond to the crystallised dispute."
"The case now put forward in Section D of the response is markedly different from that previously put forward in Verry's letter to Furlong dated 2nd July 2004 and has not been seen by Furlong before the issue of the Notice of Adjudication. Subject to any submission from DCL [Driver Consultant Limited, Verry's advisors] on Verry's behalf, I consider myself bound by the decision of His Honour Judge Richard Seymour QC in Edmund Nuttall Limited –v- R G Carter Limited and that I am therefore debarred from considering Verry's claim as now put forward in the response but can only consider the claim as advanced in Verry's letter dated the 2nd July 2004".
"Both the cases considered, and others, relate to the situation where the referring party is seeking to put forward a case which is arguably different from that which had crystallised at the time of the Notice of Adjudication. In this case however, it is the responding party's case which is being considered. The Notice of Adjudication dated 31st August 2004 refers to Furlong's assessment of extension of time and states that "the Adjudicator will be requested to decide that the extension of time granted by Furlong to the 2nd February 2004 is correct". It is therefore Furlong's decision on the extension of time which is being referred to Adjudication, not Verry's response to it. In the Referral under 'Decision sought' paragraph 3.01 states: "The Adjudicator is requested to decide that the extent of time granted to Verry by Furlong was correct based on the information provided. The date is the 2nd February. Alternatively the Adjudicator is requested to decide the appropriate extension of time". The extension of time to the 2nd February was granted in Furlong's letter dated 11th May 2004 i.e. before Verry's letter dated 2nd July and is therefore based on information available to Furlong at that time. Furlong did not modify their position following Verry's letter and rely on their letter and the Notes attached to their letter dated 13th August in support of their case. I am therefore now of the view that Verry are not confined, in responding to Furlong's referral, to the case they put forward in their letter of the 2nd July but are entitled to put forward a fully argued case in response to the Referral."
"If Verry wished to make a new extension of time claim outside of this Adjudication it would be considered by Furlong in the proper way."
"We would point out that whilst you believe that Verry are entitled to respond in any way they choose and are not confined to any previous statements or assessments they may have made, we would expect you to take on board that their response should only be considered to the extent which it is a response to the position we asserted and does not represent a new case. Furthermore, we would expect you to weigh the evidence of the day more heavily than the new case they make now".
B. JURISDICTION
B1. Was Section D of Verry's Response a New Claim?
"The differences between the July claim and the claim brought in the Adjudication are as a result of:-
4.1 The fact that since the claim for extension time had been submitted on the 2nd July Verry had completed its work on site on the 31st July and was therefore in a position to finalise its claim4.2 The fact that Verry expanded its narrative to enable the Adjudicator, who unlike Furlong was not familiar with the project, to understand the factual background to various claims of extension of time
4.3 The facts and basis of Verry's claims for an extension of time did not change between the 2nd July 2004 and the response document of the 24th September 2004 and accordingly was not new."
B2. If Section D was a New Claim, could the Adjudicator take it into account?
"Notwithstanding Furlong's Notice of Adjudication asked you to decide whether the extension of time granted to the 2nd February 2004 was [my emphasis again] correct and the Referral repeated this based on the information provided at the time of the crystallised dispute, we have followed your directions of the 5th October 2004 to resolve entitlement on the basis of Verry's submission on extension of time as if they were the Claimant, which they are not. In so doing that Furlong's initial position in respect of extension of time was totally put aside by you, your letter dated 4th October 2004 refers".
It seems to me clear that by changing the "is" to "was" and by referring to "the information provided at the time" – which was not in fact referred to anywhere in the Notice of Adjudication – Mr Smith was becoming aware of the open-ended nature of his original document.
"However, when a party has had an opportunity to consider the position of the opposite party and to formulate arguments in relation to that position, what constitutes a dispute between the parties is not only a claim which has been rejected, if that is what the dispute is about, but the whole package of arguments advanced and facts relied upon by each side. No doubt for the purposes of a reference to Adjudication under the 1996 Act or equivalent contractual provision, a party can refine its arguments and abandon points not thought to be meritorious without altering fundamentally the nature of the dispute between them. However, what a party cannot do in my judgment is abandon wholesale facts previously relied upon or arguments previously advanced and contend because the claim remains the same as that made previously the dispute is the same."
"In my judgment the approach in Halki is to be preferred [to the restricted approach in Nuttall]. I am guided by the straightforward analysis in that case. In Halki (in the context of the Arbitration Act 1996) the Court of Appeal reminded us that the Courts have generally construed widely the word 'dispute' and they declined in that case to construe the word more narrowly in the context of arbitration.. Whilst I accept that the adjudication process involves short timescales and that there is a risk that the responding party might be ambushed, those are not in my judgment reasons to construe the word dispute more narrowly in the context of adjudication than in other contexts. I bear in mind the practical difficulties faced by an adjudicator whose jurisdiction is challenged on the ground there is no dispute. The Court should not add unnecessarily to those difficulties by giving a narrow meaning to the word dispute which would in turn permit a responding party to introduce uncertainties which might be difficult for an adjudicator to deal with. Otherwise there is the risk that the purpose of the 1997 Act may be defeated."
I respectfully agree with her analysis.
"In my view each case must depend on the circumstances and the context in which the Referral is made. In some cases the issues referred are very specific. In other cases it is clear that the issues are more general and have been so treated by the parties and that there is significantly more room for the case to be developed. The test in each case is first what dispute did the parties agree to refer to the Adjudicator? And, secondly, on what basis? If the basis which is argued in the Adjudication is wholly different to that which a Defendant has had an opportunity to respond in advance of the Adjudication, this may constitute a different dispute not referred to the Adjudicator or, put another way, in so far as the Adjudicator reaches a decision on the new issues it is not responsive to the issues referred to him."
At paragraph 144 he said:
"It is important that a Court should approach the question of what is a dispute with robust common sense which takes into account the nature of the dispute and the manner in which it has been presented to the Adjudicator. I bear in mind that having an award enforced against a party is a serious matter for that party and there are circumstances where there is no alternative to saying that the basis on which the dispute was referred to the Adjudicator was essentially different from than upon which the Adjudicator based his decision."
At paragraph 145 the Judge dealt with his ability or otherwise to reconcile Nuttall with the other cases to which I have referred and at paragraph 149 he concluded that he could not adopt in full the approach taken by His Honour Judge Seymour QC in that case.
At paragraph 146 the Judge said:
"It follows from this that within the limits which I have described an Adjudicator is not confined to considering rigidly only the package of issues, facts and arguments which are referred to him."
"The scheme [that is the Adjudication Scheme] gives the Adjudicator two powers: to take initiative in ascertaining the facts in the law… and to resign if the dispute varies significantly from the dispute referred to him… These powers show that it is possible that a dispute that has been validly referred to Adjudication can in some circumstances, as the details unfold during the Adjudication, become enlarged and change its nature and extent. If this happens it is conceivable that at least some of the matters and issues referred… which are not previously encompassed within a pre-existing dispute could legitimately become incorporated within the dispute that is being referred."
In similar vein, I believe that what happened here was just the sort of dispute development envisaged by His Honour Judge Lloyd QC in K N S –v- Sindall 75 BLR 71 when he said that:
"A party to a dispute who identifies the dispute in simple general terms has to accept that any ground that exists which might justify the action complained of is comprehended within the dispute for which Adjudication is sought".
C. PROCEDURAL IRREGULARITIES
"Both parties have made numerous submissions and have advanced a mass of documentary evidence in the form of witness statements, letters, programmes, progress reports, orders and delivery notes for materials and the like in support of their respective cases. Both parties have relied on this mass of evidence in support of their totally opposed assertions as to the reasons for delay in completion of Verry's work until the 27th July 2004. In the timescale of Adjudication, even with the extension of time granted to me by the parties it has simply not been possible for me to make the full analysis of this mass of evidence which would be appropriate in litigation or arbitration where the analysis would in any case probably have been carried out by experts for both sides. While I have carried out as much analysis as has been possible my decision is therefore based to a large extent on an objective overall view of events, causes and effects."
At paragraph 36 of his Statement, Mr Dove translates this paragraph into a statement by the adjudicator that he did not have sufficient time to carry out a proper analysis, and Mr Dove goes on to say that it is clear that failure was because of the introduction of Section D. On the basis of all the evidence I reject that assertion and therefore this part of Furlong's case.
"The element of serious injustice in the context of Section 68 does not in such a case depend on the Arbitrator having come to the wrong conclusion as a matter of law or fact, but whether he was caused by adopting inappropriate means to reach one conclusion, whereas had he adopted appropriate means he might well have reached another conclusion favourable to the applicant. Thus, where there has been an irregularity of procedure it is enough if it is shown that it caused the Arbitrator to reach a conclusion unfavourable to the applicant which, but for the irregularity he might well never have reached, provided always that the opposite conclusion is at least reasonably arguable. Above all it is not normally appropriate for the Court to try the material issue in order to ascertain whether substantial injustice has been caused. To do so would be an entirely inappropriate inroad into the autonomy of the arbitral process.
has simply not been made out on the facts. The relevant part of the adjudicator's letter of the 18th October 2004 said this:
"I therefore ask Furlong and HCC on their behalf, to consider very carefully whether it is really necessary for the establishment of their case, although accurately the refutation of Verry's case, for the volume of material which DCL has indicated involved, to be copied and sent to them and to me, process which itself would take some time and not inconsiderable costs, followed by the process of analysis and comment by HCC for Furlong. It is possible that DCL, for Verry, will then argue that they have a right to respond to Furlong's submissions on this further evidence. They may well argue as DCL have already done in their letter, that delivery tickets etc. are not necessarily conclusive evidence that delays were due to later deliveries, as they may seek to show that deliveries were postponed because of previous delays, making it undesirable for materials to be delivered until they could be used. I understand that this whole process will take at least until the end of this week, and that it will require at least another week for me to finalise my decision."
As a result of that paragraph, Mr Smith of HCC, chose not to pursue further these outstanding delivery tickets etc, a point that was noted in the adjudicator's letter of the 19th October 2004. It appears that, by this time, the adjudicator had reached the conclusion that he had enough information to resolve the matters that were in dispute in the adjudication. For that reason, it does not seem to me that the adjudicator was saying that the failure to provide the extra documents would be reflected in the Decision: he was merely saying that he had sufficient material to reach his Decision without the further material.
"My task is certainly to arrive at a decision which, so far as practically possible, is soundly based upon evidence so that the parties may accept it as being a reasonable resolution of the dispute."
On all the evidence I have seen, I have no hesitation in concluding that that is precisely what the adjudicator did. His decision is therefore binding on the parties until it is the subject of a final decision by the Court. In those circumstances I grant the declaration sought by Verry.