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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 >> Treasure & Son Ltd v Dawes [2007] EWHC 2420 (TCC) (25 October 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2007/2420.html Cite as: [2007] 44 EG 181, [2007] CILL 2533, [2007] EWHC 2420 (TCC), [2008] BLR 24 |
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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 :
____________________
TREASURE & SON LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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MARTIN DAWES |
Defendant |
____________________
Andrew Singer (instructed by George Davies LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 10 October 2007
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE AKENHEAD:
The Contract
"If any dispute or difference arises under this Contract either Party may refer it to adjudication in accordance with clause 9A."
"9A.1 Clause 9A applies where, pursuant to article 8, either Party refers any dispute or difference arising under this Contract to adjudication.
9A.2 The Adjudicator to decide the dispute or difference shall be either an individual agreed by the Parties or an individual to be nominated as the Adjudicator by the person named in the Appendix ('the nominator') ..
9A.5.3 The Adjudicator shall within 28 days of his receipt of the referral and its accompanying documentation under Clause 9A.4.1 and acting as an Adjudicator for the purposes of S.108 of the Housing Grants, Construction and Regeneration Act 1996 and not as an expert or an arbitrator reach his decision and forthwith send that decision in writing to the Parties. Provided that the Party who has made the referral may consent to allowing the Adjudicator to extend the period of 28 days by up to 14 days; and that by agreement between the Parties after the referral has been made a longer period than 28 days may be notified jointly by the Parties to the Adjudicator within which to reach his decision.
..
9A.7.1 The decision of the Adjudicator shall be binding on the Parties until the dispute or difference is finally determined by arbitration or by legal proceedings or by an agreement in writing between the Parties made after the decision of the Adjudicator has been given.
9A.7.2 The Parties shall, without prejudice to their other rights under this Contract, comply with the decisions of the Adjudicator; and the Employer and the Contractor shall ensure decisions of the Adjudicator are given effect.
9A.7.3 If either Party does not comply with the decision of the Adjudicator the other Party shall be entitled to take legal proceedings to secure such compliance pending any final determination of the referred dispute or difference pursuant to Clause 9A.7.1."
"4.2 The Architect/The Contract Administrator shall issue an Interim Certificate stating the amount due to the Contractor from the Employer specifying to what the amount relates and the basis on which the amount was calculated at the following times:
.1 from the Date of Possession up to one month after the day named in the Certificate of Practical Completion: at the dates stated in the Appendix;
.2 not earlier than one month after the day named in the Certificate of Practical Completion: as and when further amounts are ascertained as payable to the Contractor by the Employer provided always that the Architect/the Contract Administrator shall not be required to issue an Interim Certificate within one calendar month of having issued a previous Interim Certificate .."
"2.8.1 When in the opinion of the Architect/the Contract Administrator Practical Completion of the Works is achieved and the Contractor has complied sufficiently with Clause 5.22, he shall forthwith issue a certificate to that effect. Practical Completion of the Works shall be deemed for all the purposes of this Contract to have taken place on the day named in such certificate.
..
2.9.1 If at any time or times before the date of issue by the Architect/the Contract Administrator or the certificate of Practical Completion the Employer wishes to take possession of any part or parts of the Works and the consent of the Contractor (which consent shall not be unreasonably delayed or withheld) has been obtained, then, notwithstanding anything express or implied elsewhere in this Contract, the Employer may take possession thereof. The Architect/The Contract Administrator shall thereupon issue to the Contractor on behalf of the Employer a written statement identifying the part or parts of the Works taken into possession and giving the date when the Employer took possession (in clauses 2.9, 6.1.3, 6.3.3 and 6.3C.1 referred to as the 'relevant part' and the 'relevant date' respectively).
2.9.2 For the purposes of Clauses 2.10.1 and 4.7.1.2 Practical Completion of the relevant part shall be deemed to have occurred and the Defects Liability Period in respect of the relevant part shall be deemed to have commenced on the relevant date."
The Facts
The Latest Adjudication
"Gentlemen
Adjudication Re: Treasure and Son Limited (Referring Party) v Martin Dawes Esq (Responding Party) Adjudication No. 4
I enclose my Decision dated today.
It is my normal practice to send a VAT invoice upon payment of the balance of my fee, which amounts to £11,841.06 inclusive of VAT, as set out in paragraph 152 of my Decision.
As both representatives are aware I will be away from tomorrow until 29 August. If there are any matters which arise upon receipt of my Decision I will obviously not be able to respond until 30 August at the earliest."
This was followed by the words "Yours faithfully" and Mr Greenwood's signature; under his signature were the words "P. Greenwood Adjudicator".
These Proceedings
The Issues
The Oral Variation Issue
(a) Both parties accept that the original construction contract was a written construction contract for the purposes of the HGCRA 1996.(b) Both parties accept that the dispute referred to the Adjudicator in this case included all the sums which were the subject matter of his decision.
(c) Mr Dawes having served on 5th July 2007 his detailed Response to Treasure's Referral, Treasure served its Reply on 1st August 2007. That Response either was or was incorporated in or accompanied by a witness statement of Mr P Daniels dated 1st August 2007.
(d) Mr Daniels, the Director of Treasure who had been involved in the day-to-day running of the project of Dinmore Manor, stated at Paragraphs 50 to 54 as follows:
"50. In addition Treasure carried out a large amount of work after Practical Completion in December 2004 which it has claimed and has been paid for. Enclosed as Exhibit to Treasure's Response are the various Instructions to Treasure which were issued before Practical Completion in December 2004, but whether the work had to be completed after that date together with instructions issued after December 2004 [sic].51. It is important to understand that, though Practical Completion occurred in December 2004, Treasure remained on site as if Practical Completion had not happened. On behalf of Treasure, I agreed with the Architect and the Quantity Surveyor that the Contract would continue to operate exactly as it had before. This meant that:.1 The outstanding work would be completed;.2 The Architect could continue to issue instructions and Treasure would accept them;.3 Treasure would continue to make applications in exactly the same way as they had been before Practical Completion;.4 The Architect would issue certificates in exactly the same way as they had been issued before Practical Completion; and.5 Payment would be made in exactly the same way as it had been made previously.52. This is exactly what happened.53. Once Mr Dawes had taken possession of the Works in December 2004 and March 2005, there was still a very significant amount of work outstanding and we were also still getting instructions from the Architect. These instructions continued for a number of years.54. Since work carried on, this explains why Treasure was on site for approximately two years after Practical Completion. We were still on site after Practical Completion, not because we were carrying out defects outside of the 12 month [Defects, Liability period] but simply because the Architect had continued to instruct further and new work after December 2004 and, further, after December 2005. Treasure ultimately finished all the work under this contract in March 2007."(e) Mr Dawes's solicitors served on 10th August 2007 what they initially termed "Reply to Treasure's Response" but later renamed "Response to the Witness Statement of Paul Daniels For Adjudication". Materially this stated as follows:
"(2) This response is not intended to raise any new issues in this matter and deals only with matters raised in the witness statement of Mr Daniels served within it. Where it raises issues not in Mr Dawes' first response, it does so because these issues are new ones only just raised in Mr Daniels' statement. Mr Dawes's Response to those new and additional issues are made without prejudice to Mr Dawes's assertion that Treasure did not and has not made these new and additional points in its Claim Document and for that reason the Learned Adjudicator should not allow Treasure to make any additional claims and/or amend its first claim."There is no specific comment on Paragraphs 50 to 53. At Paragraph 11 the Response states:"In paragraph 54 Mr Daniels confirms that Treasure was on site for approximately two years after Practical Completion but claims that the works carried out during that period were not defect work. Paragraph 55 and 56 give examples of the work that was carried out, although it was never explained how these works can be considered as falling under 'the Contract' given that Practical Completion of the works under 'the Contract', by Treasures own case, occurred in December 2004."(f) As indicated earlier in this judgment, the claim at least for Head Office Overhead costs related to the post December 2004 period.
(g) In his decision document, the Adjudicator referred expressly to Mr Daniels' statement at Paragraph 51, much of which is quoted verbatim at Paragraph 109 of the Decision. The Adjudicator allowed to Treasure the full amount of the Head Office Overhead claim, £634,368.74 at Paragraph 114 of the Decision. In doing so, he did not spell out that he was deciding the case by reason of the alleged oral variation.
(h) It is thus not clear that either Treasure, Mr Daniels, Mr Dawes (or his solicitors) or the Adjudicator were proceeding consciously on the basis that there had been any variation of the terms of the original Construction Contract. This does not seem obviously to have featured in the Adjudicator's reasoning.
"(1) The provisions of this Part [of the Act] apply only where the construction contract is in writing, and any other agreement between the parties as to any matter is effective for the purposes of this Part only if in writing. .
(2) There is an agreement in writing
(a) if the agreement is made in writing (whether or not it is signed by the parties),
(b) if the agreement is made by exchange of communications in writing, or
(c) if the agreement is evidenced in writing."
"Given it is, I understand, accepted that this is a contractual adjudication as opposed to a statutory adjudication (this being a residential development and excluded by Section 106 of the HGCRA 1996), does it matter that there is an oral variation to the contract, and if so, why? Does an oral variation to such a contract effect or undermine the adjudicator's jurisdiction?"
"The Adjudicator is appointed to decide the dispute which is the subject of the Notice and that Notice determines his jurisdiction. The Adjudicator's jurisdiction does not therefore derive from the further documents .. although those documents are likely to help the Adjudicator to find out what needs to be decided in order to arrive at a conclusion on the dispute."
"An exchange of written submissions in adjudication proceedings, or in arbitral or legal proceedings in which the existence of an agreement otherwise than in writing is alleged by one party against another party and not denied by the other party in his response constitutes as between those parties an agreement in writing to the effect alleged."
"By adding [those] words, Parliament intended to add a reference to other preceding adjudication proceedings. There was no intention by Parliament to provide that submissions made by a party to an unauthorised adjudication should give to the supposed adjudicator a jurisdiction which he did not have when he was appointed."
The No Signature Issue
The Inability to Repay Issue
"... Turnover reduced from £5,679k in 2003 to £4,133k in 2005
- Unexplained jump in gross margin from 22% in 2004 to 30% in 2005
- Company was profitable for 2003, 2004 and 2005. Profit pre tax reduced from £276k to £151k in the years 2003 to 2005.
- Consistent growth in net assets, showing that profits are retained in the currency of the company
- Directors' remuneration does not appear excessive
- Historically financial statements have been filed within the statutory time period of nine months after the year end
- 31 December 2004 and 2005 financial statements were filed in July the following year
- 31 December 2006 financial statements had not been filed as at 13 September 2007
- Treasure had a positive current ratio of 1.80 as at 31 December 2005
- Highly dependent on a limited number of clients at any one time represents significant business risk
- Distributable reserves were in excess of £1 million as at 31 December 2005. This could be extracted from the Company by payment of a dividend
- Theoretically Treasure could apply for voluntary liquidation
Recommendations
- Wait to review the 31 December 2006 financial statements
- Seek court approval to delay payment of the £1.2m or hold in escrow subject to a review of more recent financial information".
" .. it does seem to me that there are a number of clear principles which should always govern the exercise of the court's discretion when it is considering a stay of execution in adjudication enforcement proceedings. Those principles can be set out as follows:
(a) Adjudication (whether pursuant to the 1996 Act or the consequential amendments to the standard forms of building and engineering contracts) is designed to be a quick and inexpensive method of arriving at a temporary result in a construction dispute.
(b) In consequence, adjudicators' decisions are intended to be enforced summarily and the claimant (being the successful party in the adjudication) should not generally be kept out of its money.
(c) In an application to stay the execution of summary judgment arising out of an Adjudicator's decision, the Court must exercise its discretion under Order 47 with considerations (a) and (b) firmly in mind (see AWG).
(d) The probable inability of the claimant to repay the judgment sum (awarded by the Adjudicator and enforced by way of summary judgment) at the end of the substantive trial, or arbitration hearing, may constitute special circumstances within the meaning of Order 47 rule 1(1)(a) rendering it appropriate to grant a stay (see Herschell).
(e) If the claimant is in insolvent liquidation, or there is no dispute on the evidence that the claimant is insolvent, then a stay of execution will usually be granted (see Bouygues and Rainford House).
(f) Even if the evidence of the claimant's present financial position suggested that it is probable that it would be unable to repay the judgment sum when it fell due, that would not usually justify the grant of a stay if:
(i) the claimant's financial position is the same or similar to its financial position at the time that the relevant contract was made (see Herschell); or
(ii) The claimant's financial position is due, either wholly, or in significant part, to the defendant's failure to pay those sums which were awarded by the adjudicator (see Absolute Rentals)."
(a) Treasure is certainly not in insolvent or other liquidation;(b) Treasure is a very long-established company (over 200 years) and has clearly been trading successfully over many years as a builder;
(c) Treasure's last three filed financial accounts show a reasonably substantial turnover and a reasonably comfortably gross profit margin;
(d) Its Balance Sheets over the years 2003, 2004 and 2005 show net assets of £843,000, £1,148,000 and £1,273,000 respectively. Although it is not a very large company, it is certainly not insubstantial;
(e) The evidence in Mr. Davis's report is the product of an understandably "brief review". It confirms in effect both on his limited research to date that a significant element of the sum which is the subject matter of the adjudication decision is or is likely to be owed to Treasure. A sum of something less than £500,000 of the £1,018,821.12 ordered by the Adjudicator to be paid will on his brief analysis effectively remain with Treasure;
(f) I do not find Mr Davis' evidence convincing although, given his brief involvement, I attach no criticism at all of the efforts which he has made;
(g) I do not consider that Chadwick's report, limited as it is, gets anywhere near establishing that there will be an inability on the part of Treasure to repay all or some £600,000 of the sum to be paid to Treasure pursuant to the Adjudicator's decision. His thesis is predicated upon the basis that, lawfully, the directors of Treasure could distribute company reserves and/or pay substantial dividends out so that what is left in the company would be insufficient to repay all or any significant part of the sum ordered to be paid by the Adjudicator;
(h) This risk or possibility does not begin to give rise to some probable inability to repay. There is no evidence of any sort from which it would be proper to infer that the Directors would go down this route. Chadwicks cannot point to anything in the filed financial accounts which demonstrates that there is a past history of the Directors doing any such thing. Secondly, it might well be difficult for the Directors to divest the company of substantial sums lawfully, certainly, if the primary intent was to evade any liability to repay. Thirdly, based on the most recently filed company accounts, there is no reason to suppose that there is any probability that Treasure would not be in a position to repay such sums as an arbitrator might order them to repay to Mr Dawes. Fourthly, the filed company accounts do not take into account the sums that may have been payable by Mr Dawes in 2005 but which were not paid. As Mr Davis infers some £500,000 was payable at least for the period 2005 to early 2007 which Mr. Dawes has not paid. If one takes that into account, and it is legitimate to do so, one finds a better financial position than the most recent accounts indicate.
Conclusion