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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 >> McConnell Dowell Constructors (Aust) PTY Ltd v National Grid Gas PLC [2006] EWHC 2551 (TCC) (3 October 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2006/2551.html Cite as: [2006] EWHC 2551 (TCC), [2006] ArbLR 49, [2007] BLR 92 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH
DIVISION
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
B e f o r e :
____________________
McCONNELL DOWELL CONSTRUCTORS | ||
(AUST) PTY LTD | ||
Claimant | ||
v | ||
NATIONAL GRID GAS PLC | ||
(formerly Transco plc) | ||
Defendant |
____________________
Official Court Reporters
Clifford's Inn, Fetter Lane. London EC4A
1LD
Tel: 0207 269 0370 Fax: 0207 405 9884
MR NICHOLAS BAATZ Q.C. (instructed
by Eversheds LLP) appeared on behalf of National Grid Gas.
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE JACKSON:
Part 1 - Introduction
Part 2 - The Facts
"1. The following documents (hereinafter called "the Contract") shall be read as one and shall constitute the entire express agreement between the parties with respect to the Works and shall prevail over and supercede all prior agreements, understandings, statements, commitments and communications between the parties with respect to the Works and neither party shall be bound by any of the foregoing not appearing in or incorporated by specific reference into the Contract.
(a) This Contract Agreement …
(d) The Conditions of Contract are the Core Clauses for Option A: Priced Contract with Activity Schedule and secondary options H, L, M, P, R, Y (UK) 2, Y (UK) 3 and Z1, Z2, Z3 and Z4, as detailed in the Contract Data Part One, together with Appendix 1 …
5. The Contract shall be governed by and construed in accordance with English Law and in the event of any dispute relating thereto the parties hereby submit to the jurisdiction of the Courts of England."
"10.1 The Employer, the Contractor, the Project Manager and the Supervisor shall act as stated in this contract and in a spirit of mutual trust and co-operation. The Adjudicator shall act as stated in this contract and in a spirit of independence.
11.1 In these conditions of contract, terms identified in the Contract Data are in italics and defined terms at capital initials …
51.5 Interest is calculated at the interest rate and is compounded annually …
90.2 If the Contractor is dissatisfied with an action or a failure to take action by the Project Manager, he notifies his dissatisfaction to the Project Manager no later than
- four weeks after he became aware of the action or
- four weeks after he became aware that the action had not been taken.
Within two weeks of such notification of dissatisfaction, the Contractor and the Project Manager attend a meeting to discuss and seek to resolve the matter.
90.3 If either Party is dissatisfied with any other matter, he notifies his dissatisfaction to the Project Manager and to the other Party no later than four weeks after he became aware of the matter. Within two weeks of such notification of dissatisfaction, the Parties and the Project Manager attend a meeting to discuss and seek to resolve the matter.
90.4 The Parties agree that no matter shall be a dispute unless a notice of dissatisfaction has been given and the matter has not been resolved within four weeks. The word "dispute" (which includes a difference) has that meaning.
90.5 Either Party may give notice to the other Party at any time of his intention to refer a dispute to adjudication. The notifying Party refers the dispute to the Adjudicator within seven days of the notice …
90.8 The Adjudicator acts impartially. The Adjudicator may take the initiative in ascertaining the facts and the law.
90.9 The Adjudicator reaches a decision within twenty-eight days of referral or such longer period as is agreed by the Parties after the dispute has been referred. The Adjudicator may extend the period of twenty-eight days by up to fourteen days with the consent of the notifying Party.
90.10 The Adjudicator provides his reasons to the Parties and to the Project Manager with his decision.
90.11 The decision of the Adjudicator is binding until the dispute is finally determined by the tribunal or by agreement …
92.1 The Adjudicator gives his decision on the dispute as independent adjudicator and not as arbitrator. His decision is enforceable as a matter of contractual obligation between the Parties and not as an arbitral award …
93.1 If after the Adjudicator
- notifies his decision or
- fails to do so
within the time provided by this contract a Party is dissatisfied, that Party notifies the other Party of his intention to refer the matter which he disputes to the tribunal. It is not referable to the tribunal unless the dissatisfied Party notifies his intention within four weeks of
- notification of the Adjudicator's decision or
- the time provided by this contract for this notification if the Adjudicator fails to notify his decision within that time
whichever is the earlier. The tribunal proceedings are not started before Completion of the whole of the works or earlier termination.
93.2 The tribunal settles the dispute referred to it. Its powers include the power to review and revise any decision of the Adjudicator and any action or inaction of the Project Manager or the Supervisor related to the dispute. A Party is not limited in the tribunal proceedings to the information, evidence or arguments put to the Adjudicator."
"1 … the Adjudicator is to be agreed between the parties …
9 Disputes and determination
- The person who will choose a new adjudicator if the Parties cannot agree a choice is the - President for the time being of the Institution of Civil Engineers
- The tribunal is arbitration.
10 Optional statements
- The arbitration procedure is the Institution of Civil Engineers Arbitration Procedure (England and Wales) 1997 …"
"1. Preamble
A Under a contract dated 21st August 2001 ("the Contract") the Employer entered into an agreement with the Contractor in which the Contractor was to construct the 1050 mm Samlesbury to Helmshore Pipeline and Associated AGI works (hereinafter called the "Works")
B Disputes have arisen between the Parties regarding the extent to which the Contract Price for the Works and the Date for completion of the Works should be changed to take into account the occurrence of certain facts, matters and events. The Parties have agreed to settle these disputes on the terms set out in this Supplemental Agreement.
C The terms of the Contract shall continue with full force and effect save and except to the extent to which the terms of this Supplemental Agreement modify, alter or vary the terms contained in the Contract.
2. Terms of Supplemental Agreement.
2.1 The total Contract Price shall be adjusted to £30,500,000.00, and the unpaid balance of this sum shall be paid in accordance with the terms set out at ection 3 of the Supplemental Agreement.
2.2 This adjustment to the total Contract Price shall be in full and final settlement of the following:
i. The Contractor's entitlement to adjustment of the total Contract Price in respect of Compensation Events (as defined by clause 60 of the Contract) where such entitlement has accrued or arisen, whether wholly or in part, by virtue of any act, omission, default, instruction, physical condition, weather condition, decision, survey, drawing or diagram inaccuracy, transaction, event or other matter occurring prior to the date of this Supplemental Agreement and regardless of whether such entitlement has been notified orally or in writing or at all, and regardless of whether such entitlement was known or not known to either Party prior to or at the date of this Supplemental Agreement.
ii. The Contractor's entitlement to reimbursement for all additional costs, losses, damages and expenses associated with carrying out the Works, including all damages for prolongation, delay and disruption, whether such entitlement arises under the Contract in tort or otherwise, where such entitlement has accrued or arisen either wholly or in part by virtue of any act, omission, default, instruction, physical condition, weather condition, decision, survey, drawing or diagram inaccuracy, transaction, event or other matter prior to the date of this Supplemental Agreement and regardless of whether such entitlement has been notified orally or in writing or at all, and regardless of whether such entitlement was known or not known to either Party prior to or at the date of this Supplemental Agreement.
iii The Contractor's entitlement to adjustment of the total Contract Price in respect of any Compensation Event (as defined by clause 60 of the Contract) arising from any act, omission, default, instruction, physical condition, weather incident, decision, survey, drawing or diagram inaccuracy, transaction, event or other matter occurring after the date of this Supplemental Agreement where such adjustment would otherwise be £5,000.00 or less.
2.3 In consideration of those matters taken into account at 2.2 (i) and (ii) above, the Date for Completion of the Works shall be:
Mechanical completion: 28th February 2003
Completion of the works: 19th September 2003
2.4 The Contractor hereby warrants that as at the date of this Supplemental Agreement it had no entitlement to any adjustment of the total Contract Price, any entitlement to adjustment to the Date for completion of the Works or entitlement to reimbursement for additional costs, losses, damages and expenses associated with carrying out the Works other than that for which provision is now made in sections 2.2 and 2.3 of this Supplemental Agreement.
2.5 The Contractor hereby irrevocably waives and withdraws all claims against the Employer arising from any act, omission, default, instruction, physical condition, weather condition, decision, survey, drawing or diagram inaccuracy, transaction, event or other matter occurring prior to the date of this Supplemental Agreement."
It is not necessary for me to read out clause 3 of the Supplemental Agreement, which deals with the mechanics of payment.
NGG to adjudication. NGG did not accept that an adjudicator would have jurisdiction. In those circumstances, unsurprisingly, the parties did not agree upon the identity of the adjudicator. Accordingly, McConnell applied to the President of the ICE to appoint an adjudicator. On 8th June 2006 the President of the ICE appointed Mr. A.R. Elven to act as adjudicator.
Part 3 - The Present Proceedings
"(A) That on the true construction of the December Agreement the Claimant cannot recover in respect of any entitlement where such entitlement accrued or arose either wholly or in part by virtue of any event or matter occurring prior to the date of the agreement (12 December 2002).
(B) That each of the items listed in the schedule hereto (save as highlighted in yellow) were matters settled by the 2002 Agreement, and that accordingly the Claimant has no further entitlement in respect thereof.
(C) That in the premises of clause 2.4 of the 2002 Agreement the Claimant's claim in respect of each of the items listed in the schedule hereto and highlighted in yellow is defeated by circuity of action.
(D) That in the premises of clause 2.5 of the 2002 Agreement the Claimant waived its claims in respect of each of the items listed in the schedule hereto and highlighted in yellow.
(E) That Mr. Elven had no jurisdiction to make the purported decision dated 31 July 2006.
(F) That the Defendant is entitled to restitution of any sum recovered by the Claimant in accordance with The Late Payment of Commercial Debts (Interest) Act 1998 and to a set off accordingly."
"1. Whether on the true construction of the 2002 Agreement the Claimant can recover in respect of any entitlement where such entitlement accrued or arose either wholly or in part by virtue of any event or matter occurring prior to the date of the 2002 Agreement (12 December 2002)?
2. Whether the items listed in the schedule to the Defence and Counterclaim (save as highlighted in yellow) were matters settled by the 2002 Agreement?
3. Whether in the premises of clause 2.4 of the 2002 Agreement the Claimant's claim in respect of each of the items listed in the schedule to the Defence and Counterclaim (save as highlighted in yellow) is defeated by circuity of action?
4. Whether in the premises of clause 2.5 of the 2002 Agreement the Defendant waived its claims in respect of each of the items listed in the schedule to the Defence and Counterclaim (save as highlighted in yellow)?
5. Whether interest is recoverable in accordance with The Late Payment of Commercial Debts (Interest) Act 1998 where the contract was made before 7th August 2002?"
NGG also intimated an application to stay the execution of any order that may be made enforcing the adjudicator's award.
Part 4 - McConnell's application for summary judgment
"We, Mecright Ltd, accept the sum of £366,000 in respect of manufacture, supply, delivery and installation … in full and final settlement of all our claims under the above contract but without prejudice to our outstanding obligations."
"12. The issues as presented to me really boil down to whether the question of whether the agreement was entered into under duress is a matter which prevents me from granting the declaration sought. It is common ground that there was an agreement. Equally, the settlement agreement is an agreement which, but for the plea of economic duress, would have the effect of extinguishing all the disputes that then existed on 15th March so that there could be no dispute capable of being referred to adjudication thereafter in relation to valuation.
13. The subcontract incorporated the terms of DOM//1. Clause 38A.1 of DOM//1 applies where a party exercises its right under Article 3 to refer "any dispute or difference arising under this Subcontract to adjudication". In my judgment where parties have reached an agreement which settles their disputes there can thereafter be no dispute about what had been the subject matter of the settlement capable of being referred to adjudication under a provision such as clause 38A.1 or otherwise for the purposes of section 108 of the Housing Grants, Construction and Regeneration Act 1996. The prior disputes have gone, and no longer exist. Therefore, on 3rd July there was no dispute about any of the matters which were the subject of the notice of adjudication (just as there was no dispute about whether the agreement had been entered into under duress). Thus Mecright had no right to apply for adjudication, and the adjudicator had no authority or jurisdiction to deal with the notice of 3rd July.
14. Similarly, although Mr. Bartle reserved the points (but he would have grave difficulty in contending to the contrary) I should make it clear that in my judgment a dispute about a settlement agreement of this kind could not be a dispute under the subcontract since the effect of a settlement agreement is one which replaces the original agreement to the extent to which it applies. Here, the agreement has the effect of replacing Shepherd's obligations to value and to pay Mecright under the sub-contract the value of the work. The only subsisting obligation to pay that apparently was not extinguished was the obligation to release retention as and when the time arose. So there could be no dispute under the subcontract. Indeed, it was also part of Shepherd's case, and in my judgment correctly accepted by Mr. Bartle, that the effect of the settlement agreement is that a dispute about it is outside section 108, since a settlement agreement is not a construction contract within the meaning of section 108. Mr. Darling referred to an extract from a judgment of His Honour Judge MacKay in Lathom Construction Limited v Cross, which is to be found in the Construction Industry Law Letter, where he seemed to be of the same view. A dispute about an agreement which settles a dispute or disputes under a construction contract is not a dispute under that contract. The word "under" in the Act was plainly chosen deliberately. It has been followed in this subcontract. It is not, nor is it accompanied by words such as, "in connection with" or "arising out of", which have a well-established wider reach."
"We were extremely disappointed to receive your notice of adjudication dated 13th July 2001, particularly as you had indicated that you wished to resolve our differences without the need for proceedings. As you are well aware, there are a number of live issues between us, not least your refusal to honour valuation no. 12. However, for purely commercial reasons only, we are prepared to pay you the sum of £43,196.85 in full and final settlement of your claims relating to liquidated and ascertained damages under the contract. The sum is calculated as the difference between your claim for £60,000 offset against outstanding interim certificate no. 12, in the sum of £14,300.55 plus VAT, i.e. £16,803.15.
This payment will not constitute an admission that these sums are due and owing to Larraby Land Limited, nor that Quarmby Construction Company Limited waives its rights to challenge certificates issued by the Architect."
(1) Despite Judge Lloyd's reasoning in Shepherd, section 108 of the Construction Act should not be construed unduly restrictively. Furthermore, Shepherd should be distinguished on its facts from the instant case.
(2) The adjudicator was correct to consider whether the parties' dispute had been compromised by the July correspondence.
(3) Nevertheless, the compromise issue went to the adjudicator's jurisdiction. Therefore, the court had to consider that same issue again, before enforcing the adjudicator's decision.
(4) On the facts, the contractor's present claim for extension of time had not been compromised by the July agreement.
"(6) Total fees shall not exceed £300,000 including VAT before deductions."
"That case is, however, not relevant to this one. First and foremost, the agreement of 20th February 2003 was not a settlement agreement settling all disputes or a stand alone agreement. It was clearly intended to be a variation agreement varying the terms of the underlying contract. It is to be read with and as part of that underlying contract. Furthermore, it does not settle all disputes, it merely provides a new contract sum or cap, albeit that that cap is subject to unspecified deductions. Thus, a dispute as to whether it is enforceable is one arising under the contract since its terms form part of and are to be read with the underlying contract."
(1) The Supplemental Agreement varied the contract sum and the contractual completion dates. (See clauses 2.1 and 2.3 of the Supplemental Agreement).
(2) The Supplemental Agreement defined, as it had to, (a) which matters were covered by the increased contract sum and (b) which matters were not so covered and therefore may be the subject of a claim for additional payment under the terms of the original contract. (See clause 2.2 of the Supplemental Agreement).
(3) Recital C, upon which Mr Baatz placed much emphasis in argument, seems to me to support the proposition that the Supplemental Agreement varies the original contract and is not a stand alone agreement.
(4) The officious by-stander test, which Mr Baatz has invited me to apply, supports this conclusion. The contract and the Supplemental Agreement are mutually intertwined. It would not make commercial sense to have one procedure for resolving disputes under the contract and a different procedure for resolving disputes under the Supplemental Agreement. Suppose that an officious by-stander had been present on 12th December 2002 and had asked whether the dispute resolution machinery of the contract would apply to disputes under the Supplemental Agreement. Both parties would have testily turned round to the officious by-stander and said "Yes, of course".
(5) The reasoning of Mr. Justice Ramsey in L. Brown & Sons Limited v Crosby (Technology and Construction Court, 5th December 2005) strongly supports the above analysis (see in particular paragraph 51 of Mr. Justice Ramsey's judgment).
Part 5 - NGG's application for a stay of execution
"There are special circumstances which render it inexpedient to enforce the judgment."
Part 6 - The cross-applications relating to NGG's counterclaim
"(1) A party to an arbitration agreement against whom legal proceedings are brought (whether by way of claim or counterclaim) in respect of a matter which under the arbitration agreement is to be referred to arbitration may (upon notice to the other parties to the proceedings) apply to the court in which the proceedings have been brought to stay the proceedings so far as they concern that matter.
(2) An application may be made notwithstanding that the matter is to be referred to arbitration only after the exhaustion of other dispute resolution procedures …
(4) On an application under this section, the court shall grant a stay unless satisfied that the arbitration agreement is null and void, inoperative, or incapable of being performed."
This section gives no discretion to the court. The fact that this court is seized of the issues and could offer a speedy resolution of all the matters raised by the counterclaim is nothing to the point. I am bound to respect the dispute resolution machinery which the parties have chosen and have written into their contract.
Part 7 - Conclusion