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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 >> Williams (t/a Sanclair Construction) v Noor (t/a India Kitchen) [2007] EWHC 3467 (TCC) (29 November 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2007/3467.html Cite as: [2007] EWHC 3467 (TCC) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
CARDIFF DISTRICT REGISTRY
TECHNOLOGY & CONSTRUCTION COURT
2 PARK STREET, CARDIFF CF10 1ET |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
MRS SANDRA WILLIAMS trading as SANCLAIR CONSTRUCTION | Claimant | |
-and- | ||
ABDUL NOOR trading as INDIA KITCHEN | Defendant |
____________________
ANDREW GREEN (instructed by the Thomas Simon) appeared for the Defendant.
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Introduction
(i) Mr Noor shall, by 4pm on 31 August 2007, pay Sanclair the sum of £32,952.54 inclusive of £25,243.52 VAT;
(ii) Sanclair shall send Mr Noor a VAT receipt for £25,243.52, within 7 days of receipt of that payment; and
(iii) Mr Noor shall, by 4pm on 31 August 2007, pay to the adjudicator the sum of £18,741.96 being the total of Mr Baldwin's fees and expenses, inclusive of VAT.
(i) they had sought public funding for Mr Noor to contest the proceedings; and
(ii) there was a potential issue as to whether the Claimant (Mrs Sandra Williams) was the contracting party under the underlying building contract, and consequently as to whether she was the correct person to pursue the adjudication and this claim, because Sanclair Construction was the trading name for Mr Cliff Williams (Mrs Sandra Williams' husband) and he was both the contracting party and the party to the adjudication.
The Applications
(i) The Claimant's application issued 23 November to amend the claim, notably to include a claim for Mr Baldwin's fees. Mr Noor consented to the amendment, and at the hearing I gave permission to amend the Claim Form and Particulars of Claim, dispensing with re-service. I deal with the claim for adjudicator's fees etc below (Paragraphs 81-83).
(ii) The Defendant's application issued on 30 October for relief from sanction and for permission to amend. The application for relief from sanction was misconceived, as the Order of 16 October provided for no sanction in default. I gave Mr Noor permission to apply in respect of the payment in once his enquiries were complete and, although his application was late (so he needed an appropriate extension of time to make it), he did not require relief from any sanction. As explained above, Mr Noor's substantive application was to (a) substitute Mr Williams for Mrs Williams, as Claimant: (b) amend his Defence and Counterclaim to raise substantive issues in respect of the Decision: and (c) vary the Order of 16 October to delete the requirement for the payment in, on the basis that in defending the claim he has a real prospect of success. I deal with that issue - the merits of any defence - in the context of the Claimant's application for summary judgment below (Paragraphs 21 and following). For the reason given below, at the hearing before me Mr Noor did not pursue this application to join Mr Williams as a party and for permission to amend.
(iii) The Claimant's application issued 24 October for judgment in default, on the basis of the Claimant's failure to make the payment in ordered by the court on 16 October. Again, in considering whether judgment should be entered in default, one important matter which the Court must take into account is the merits of any defence to the claim, which I deal with below (again, see Paragraphs 21 and following below).
(iv) The Claimant's application of 25 September 2007 for summary judgment under CPR Part 24 to enforce the Decision. This was the main substantive application before me, and I propose to deal it with first, before returning to any remaining issues from the other applications.
Enforcement of Adjudicator's Decisions: The Statutory Provisions and General Principles
"(1) Any party to a construction contract ('the referring party') may give written notice ('the notice of adjudication') of his intention to refer any dispute under the contract to adjudication.
(2) The notice of adjudication shall be given to every other party to the contract.
(3) The notice of adjudication shall set out briefly
(a) the nature and a brief description of the dispute and the parties involved,
(b) details of where and when the dispute has arisen,
(c) the nature of the redress which is sought, and
(d) the names and addresses of the parties to the contract (including, where appropriate, the addresses which the parties have specified for the giving of notices)."
"The decision of the adjudicator shall be binding on the parties, and they shall comply with it until the dispute is finally determined by legal proceedings, by arbitration… or by agreement between the parties that the Decision is binding on the parties."
That provision is a vital component of the statutory scheme. It requires the parties to comply with an adjudicator's decision. It provides that an adjudicator's decision shall be binding on the parties and enforceable unless and until the dispute is finally resolved by proceedings or agreement. The force of this provision was underlined by this Court in a line of early decisions. For example, in Macob Civil Engineering Limited v Morrison Construction Limited [1999] BLR 93, (1999) 64 Const LR 1, [1999] Adj LR 02/12 at Paragraph 14 the Principal Judge of this Court Dyson J (as he then was) said, of adjudication:
"The intention of Parliament in enacting the Act was plain. It was to introduce a speedy mechanism for settling disputes in construction contracts on a provisional interim basis, and requiring the decisions of adjudicators to be enforced pending final determination of disputes by arbitration, litigation or agreement… Crucially, [Parliament] has made it clear that decisions of adjudicators are binding and are to be complied with until the dispute is resolved."
This passage has been cited with approval by the Court of Appeal (see, e.g., Pegram Shoplifters Limited v Tally Weijl (UK) Limited [2003] EWCA 1750, [2004] 1 All ER 818 at Paragraph 5, per May LJ: and Carillion Construction Limited v Devonport Royal Dockyard Limited [2005] EWCA Civ 1358 at Paragraph 26, per Chadwick LJ): and, with other similar sentiments expressed by this Court in other early cases under the 1996 Act, it illustrates the correct general approach to the relevant provisions. The Courts have repeatedly stressed the importance of enforcing adjudicators' decisions, even if they result from errors of procedure, fact or law.
"1. The adjudication procedure does not involve the final determination of anybody's rights (unless all the parties so wish).
2. The Court of Appeal has repeatedly emphasised that adjudicators' decisions must be enforced, even if they result from errors of procedure, fact or law…
3. Where an adjudicator has acted in excess of his jurisdiction with in serious breach of the rules of natural justice, the court will not enforce his decision….
4. Judges must be astute to examine technical defences with a degree of scepticism consonant with a policy of the 1996 Act. Errors of law, fact and procedure by an adjudicator must be examined critically before the Court accepts that such errors constitute excess of jurisdiction or serious breaches of the rules of natural justice…"
The Potential Defences to the Application
(i) Lack of jurisdiction in the adjudicator: In Paragraph 8 of his proposed Amended Defence and Counterclaim, Mr Noor challenges the decision of the adjudicator on the ground that he lacked jurisdiction to make the Decision that he did (see Paragraphs 22-23 below).
(ii) The Invalidity of the Adjudication: This is merely a different ground on which Mr Noor submits Mr Baldwin acted without jurisdiction, but it demands separate consideration. Mr Noor submits that the party to the adjudication was Mr Cliff Williams, rather than the contracting party to in the building contract was Mrs Sandra Williams (trading as Sanclair Construction). Not only had the adjudicator no jurisdiction to consider disputes between Mr Williams and Mr Noor, but (i) there were no such disputes, and (ii) because she was not a party to the adjudication, Mrs Williams does not have the benefit of any adjudication award which she can enforce. On this basis, Mr Noor submits that the claim against him should be struck out (Paragraphs 24-72).
(iii) The Invalidity of the Notice of Adjudication: Mr Norr submits that the notice of Adjudication was invalid because (a) it was made in the name of Mr Williams (and not Mrs Williams, the contracting party), and (b) it failed to comply with the mandatory requirements of Paragraph 1(3) of the Scheme (quoted at Paragraph 16 above) (Paragraphs 73-76). If the notice were invalid, again the adjudicator would be without jurisdiction and his Decision invalid.
(iv) Business Names Act 1985: Nr Norr submits that, in breach of Section 4 of the Business Names Act 1985, Mrs Williams did not set out in correspondence, invoices, receipts etc the proprietor of Sanclair Construction, as a result of which he has suffered some financial loss. As a consequence, the claim should be dismissed under Section 5 of the 1985 Act (Paragraphs 77-80).
I shall deal with these is turn.
Lack of Jurisdiction in the Adjudicator
The Invalidity of the Adjudication I: Introduction
The Invalidity of the Adjudication II: The Facts
"If any dispute arises under this Contract either Party may refer it to adjudication in accordance with Clause 7.2 [of the Conditions]."
By Clause 7.2 of the Conditions:
"If a dispute or difference arises under the Contract with either party wishes to refer to adjudication, the Scheme shall apply except that for the purposes of the Scheme the Adjudicator shall be the person (if any) and the nominating body shall be that stated in the Contract Particulars."
By Clause 1.1, "the Scheme" is defined as Part 1 of the Schedule to 1998 Regulations (see above, Paragraph 16): and "Party" is defined as "either the Employer or the Contractor", and "Parties" as "the Employer and the Contractor together". On the first page of the Articles, "the Employer" is "Abdul Noor trading as India Kitchen": and "the Contractor" is "Sanclair Construction": and by Article 6 of the Agreement, the Principal Contractor is said to be "Sanclair Construction". Similarly, the interim payment certificates appear to have been made in exactly the same names.
"4. The Claimant in this matter, Sanclair Construction ("Sanclair"), was et up in 1997. At the time that the contract ("the Contract") the subject of the adjudication to which these proceedings relate was entered into, it was owned by [my] wife, although I ran and managed the business.
5….
6. [Mr Noor] has made great play of the fact that he dealt with me throughout the term of the Contract and also that I signed documents on behalf of Sanclair. I did so on behalf of Sanclair and was duly authorised to do so at all times. However, at all such times I was an employee of Sanclair.
7. The fact that Sanclair was owned by my wife at the time that the Contract was entered into is evidenced by the attached bank statement and Inland Revenue Registration card…"
"We hereby formally notify you of our requirement to refer the disputes matters on the above contract to adjudication under Clause 7.2. of the Contract, namely
Failure to certify payment by the due date, failure to make payment by the final date of payment of all sums due (Clause 4.7 and 6.8)
Failure of the Contract Administrator to issue information for the proper carrying out of the Works (Clause 2.4)
Please advise us of the proposed adjudicator, together with, profession, relevant experience and suitable qualifications to act in this capacity for our agreement."
The letter was presumably signed by Mr Williams because, although I have not seen a signed copy, "C J Williams" is typed at the foot of the letter.
"On the 15 June 2006 our client employed Sanclair Construction Limited ("the Company") as the Contractor to undertake and complete the works… in respect of the restaurant and Car Park at Lower Nantgarw."
That letter indicates that Lewis Webb had served a notice on "the Company" under Clause 6.4 of the Contract because "the Company" had without reasonable cause suspended the Works: and that "the Company" had replied to the effect that they would not be returning to site. On any view, that letter is wrong - because, whoever the Contractor might have been, it was never a limited company. What is clear from that letter is that the precise identity of the contracting party was less important to Mr Noor than the substantive issue which had arisen between him and the Contractor, which required resolution. In any event, there is no suggestion in that letter that Mr Williams was the Contractor.
This is the first occasion on which the term "Cliff Williams trading as Sanclair Construction" appears in the documents. The letter asks Mr Smeaton to send a draft letter addressed to Mr Baldwin setting out the disputes he was to consider for signature by Mr Noor.
That heading appears to have been used by Mr Smeaton throughout his dealings with Mr Baldwin (see, e.g., his letter dated 4 July which covered the statement of case or formal Referral Letter)
"As you are aware, I have been appointed by Mr Williams to act on his behalf in the above dispute…."
As I have indicated, under Mr Baldwin's directions of 15 June, that letter was to stand as the Notice of Adjudication. Mr Green for Mr Noor relies heavily upon this letter, to which I shall return in due course.
"I therefore reiterate that my appointment was simply accepted by Mr Noor and Mr Webb by the standard of work Mr Noor witnessed [on another contract being performed by Sanclair]" (emphasis added).
Mr Green also relies upon that document, and particularly that passage, to which again I shall return in due course.
"[Sanclair] is a building and electrical contracting firm based in Talbot Green, Mid Glamorgan. Sanclair appears to be the trading name of Mr Cliff Williams who is a sole trader."
In the Decision, there is no other reference as to who might be behind that trading name.
The Invalidity of the Adjudication III: The Parties' Contentions
The Invalidity of the Notice of Adjudication IV: The Law
"It appears to me clear that, when, in their letter of June 29…, the sellers' solicitors said that "proceedings have been taken in the wrong name…" they correctly stated the position. They did not say "by the wrong party" and rightly so for, as Mr Parker the sellers' solicitor accepted in evidence, and the notice of arbitration and subsequent documents clearly show, it was 'fairly obvious' that the party was intended to be the contracting party…"
"For my part, it seemed that the question whether the arbitration proceedings were validly commenced was to be decided by the proper construction of the notice of July 1979 which contains the terms of the agreement to refer the named disputes for settlement by an arbitrator. That agreement would have to be construed by reference to the terms therein stated and the surrounding circumstances known to the parties…. Evidence as to the uncommunicated intentions of the solicitor acting for [the purchaser] and as to the nature or origin of the mistake made by him, or as to what the solicitor for [the seller] thought was the intention of the claimants, would for this purpose be of no assistance or relevance."
"The time has long passed when agreements, even those under seal, were isolated from the matrix of facts in which they were set and interpreted purely on internal linguistic considerations… We must… enquire beyond the language and see what the circumstances were with reference to which the words were sued, and the object, appearing from those circumstances, which the person using them had in view."
Those sentiments are no less true now, even after more recent decisions such as West Bromwich Building Society v Wilkinson [2005] UKHL 44, [2005] 1WLR 2303.
"I find it impossible to contemplate that the law could justify any other answer."
"The Defendant company can at no time have believed that a party other than the named party to the subcontract had commenced adjudication proceedings against it" (Paragraph 18).
HH Judge Wilcox found that the proper description of the referring party was indeed Total M and E Services Limited, i.e. the company which was the party to the underlying contract and the claimant in the enforcement proceedings. He said (at Paragraph 23):
"This is a clear case of misdescription where the Claimant and Defendant at all stages were aware of the true identities of the contracting parties and no one could be misled. Where there are similar company names, as for instance in a group of companies or where there are subsidiaries with overlapping management systems and some common directors a precise description of the referring Party could be critical."
The Invalidity of the Notice of Adjudication V: This Case
A. The letter of 28 June from Mr Smeaton to the adjudicator (referred to in Paragraphs 41-43 above). That letter was (he submits) the Notice of Adjudication, and it was clear that Mr Smeaton wrote it on behalf of Mr Williams trading as Sanclair Construction. That is clear from both the letter heading, and the text of the letter I have quoted above. The adjudication was therefore commenced and pursued, not by Mrs Williams, but by Mr Williams in his personal capacity. That letter was the rock upon which Mr Green's submission was based, the other matters being relied upon by way of general support.
B. The letter of 4 July from Mr Smeaton to the adjudicator covering the referral letter (the statement of case), which again in its heading refers to Mr Williams trading as Sanclair being the party to the adjudication.
C. The evidence of Mr Williams in the adjudication, particularly the reference on page 7 of his statement of 30 July 2007 to "my appointment" by Mr Noor in respect of the contract.
D. Paragraph 2 of the Decision, in which the adjudicator says that, "Sanclair appears to be the trading name of Mr Cliff Williams who is a sole trader".
E. The proceedings which have been issued by the adjudicator against Mr Noor and "Cliff Williams t/a Sanclair Construction", for his unpaid adjudicators' fees and expenses.
F. The fact that Mr Williams signed the contract, and played a very active part in the execution of the contract works almost to the exclusion of Mrs Williams.
A. The letter of 28 June from Mr Smeaton to the adjudicator
(i) The letter has to be seen in proper context. A binding adjudication agreement was reached between Mr Noor, Sanclair and Mr Baldwin by 15 June 2007 (see Paragraphs 37-38 above). Mr Baldwin directed that the parties agree the matters in dispute for him to decide (which were to be put into a letter from Sanclair, which was to stand as the Notice of Adjudication) because that would then trigger the tight adjudication timetable required by the Scheme: but for the reasons I have given, although no doubt the document that was eventually sent on 28 June was an important document in the adjudication process, it did not set that process going. The adjudication was contractually "under way" by 15 June.
(ii) As at 15 June, there was no reference in any document to Sanclair being the trading name of Mr Williams. As at 15 June, Mr Noor had not taken interest in who precisely the contracting party might be, i.e. who owned the business which traded as "Sanclair Construction". He thought it was Mr Williams: but he now accepts that he was mistaken - it was Mrs Williams. He takes no further point on that and does not, for example, seek to set aside that contract in any way. Any attempt to do so would be futile. In the 15 June agreement, it is clear that the parties to the adjudication were the parties to the underlying building contract, and "Sanclair" in the context of the agreement to adjudicate meant the same as "Sanclair" in the building contract. "Sanclair" with whom Mr Noor entered into the tripartite adjudication agreement on 15 June was Mrs Williams, just as much as the "Sanclair" with whom he entered the substantive building contract was Mrs Williams. Mr Noor can at no time have believed that a party other than the named party to the underlying party had commenced adjudication proceedings against him.
(iii) The 15 June agreement was 13 days before the 28 June 2007 letter upon which Mr Noor relies. The very first reference to "Mr Williams trading as Sanclair Construction" was in the letter of 26 June from Mr Noor's solicitors, which was 11 days after Mr Baldwin's appointment as adjudicator. By the time Mr Smeaton had sent the letter of 28 June, the adjudication agreement had already been entered into and however he described or named one of the parties could not have affected the legal position. This is fatal to Mr Green's reliance on the 28 June letter.
(iv) In construing the adjudication agreement, I cannot take into account the intentions of the parties, except as these were evinced. However, from his actions it is clear beyond doubt that Mr Noor intended the adjudication to be between the parties to the underlying contract. He would have been foolish to have intended otherwise, bearing in mind the very substantial counterclaims he pursued in the adjudication. But is clear from his Defence in this claim, that he was of the firm view that the parties to the adjudication were in fact the same as the parties to the underlying contract (see Paragraph 11 above). That was also the view of Mrs Williams. In her Particulars of Claim (which are supported in the usual way by a statement of truth) she avers both that (i) she entered into the building contract (Paragraph 2), and (ii) the 28 June letter (referred to in the pleading as dated 27 June 2007) was served by or on behalf of her (Paragraph 6) and the adjudication was between her and Mr Noor (Paragraph 7). The adjudication agreement as I have construed it therefore corresponds with the patent intentions of the parties.
(v) In any event, as I have indicated, so long as the parties to the adjudication and underlying contract were the same, neither party (or indeed their advisers) seemed concerned about precision in names used in correspondence. In their letter of 28 March, Mr Noor's solicitors stated that the Contractor was a limited company, "Sanclair Construction Limited" (Paragraph 36 above). Correspondence was sent by Mr Noor (or by the Contract Administrator) was variously sent to Mr Williams, Mrs Williams, and both. Payments were made by Mr Noor to Mr Williams in cash, but also to Mrs Williams' bank account. With respect to them, neither party appears to have been particularly experienced in contractual mechanics, procedure or paperwork, concentrating more on substantive matters than matters of form. In construing the adjudication agreement, that is something which I can properly - and do - take into account
(vi) Although the letter of 28 June (and the letter of 4 July covering the Referral Letter) referred to Mr Williams trading as Sanclair Construction, the Adjudicator's Decision referred to the relevant party simply as "Sanclair Construction". I return to the Mr Green's reliance on the Decision below (Paragraphs 65-67), but even in Paragraph 2 of the Decision, the adjudicator merely indicated that "Sanclair appears to be the trading name of Mr Cliff Williams who is a sole trader". That is not a firm assertion: there is no other reference as to who might be behind the Sanclair name: and it is clearly not relevant to the issues before Mr Baldwin. The letters of 28 June and 4 July did not affect the mind of the adjudicator at all in respect of the issues which he had to decide. He clearly proceeded on the same basis as the parties, i.e. that the parties to the adjudication before him were the parties to the underlying building contract.
B. The letter of 4 July from Mr Smeaton to the adjudicator covering the referral letter (the statement of case)
C. The evidence of Mr Williams in the adjudication, particularly the reference on page 7 of his statement of 30 July 2007 to "my appointment" by Mr Noor in respect of the contract
(i) As Mr Kearney pointed out, this was a statement used in the adjudication: but has the final rubric of a CPR Part 35 expert's report. That indicates that (a) with respect to him, Mr Williams is fairly unsophisticated in these matters, and (b) the purpose of the statement was to show the adjudicator that Mr Williams was an experienced builder and therefore his evidence should be given some weight - hence the focus of the statement on Mr Williams and the part that he played in this (and other Sanclair) building projects. As I have indicated above, Mr Williams was the "person-in-charge" for the purposes of Clause 3.2 of the Conditions (see paragraph 30 above).
(ii) In any event, at most in this statement Mr Williams may suggest that he was the contracting party in the building contract (which Mr Noor now accepts he was not) - he does not suggest that he was the party to the adjudication. He certainly does not suggest that the Contractor and the party to the adjudication were different persons.
D. Paragraph 2 of the Decision, in which the adjudicator says that, "Sanclair appears to be the trading name of Mr Cliff Williams who is a sole trader"
E. The proceedings which have been issued by the adjudicator against Mr Noor and "Cliff Williams t/a Sanclair Construction", for his unpaid adjudicators' fees and expenses
F. The fact that Mr Williams signed the contract, and played a very active part in the execution of the contract works almost to the exclusion of Mrs Williams
The Invalidity of the Notice of Adjudication
(i) The 1996 Act itself makes no such requirement. Any requirement stems from the Scheme, which forms part of the 1998 Regulations (which are of course made under the 1996 Act). The Scheme deals with practical matters, rather than matters of principle.
(ii) The main practical purpose of Paragraph 1(3) is to ensure that, when a reference is made to an appointing body, that body has sufficient information to be able to appoint adjudicator. There are cases (such as this) where an appointment is made by agreement between the parties.
(iii) I have stressed the nature and purpose of the adjudication scheme of the 1996 Act. It is contrary to that purpose to construe the terms of the Scheme in a legalistic manner. The purpose would be undermined if a party, who might have obtained an unfavourable adjudicator's decision, could take advantage of a failure to identify a contracting party in the notice of adjudication in circumstances in which (a) the name and address of the contracting parties was clear, and (b) no party was prejudiced by the failure. The robust nature of 1996 Act adjudication is contraindicative of a construction that makes such matters as this set out in the Scheme mandatory rather than merely directory.
(iv) There is authority of this Court to the effect that the requirements of Paragraph 1(3) of the Scheme are directory and not mandatory (see Aveat Heating Limited v Jerram Falkus Construction Limited [2007] EWHC 131 (TCC), HH Judge Havery QC). Whilst that authority is not binding on me, it is persuasive: and, for the reasons given by Judge Havery in that case (and those which I give above) I consider it is correct.
Business Names Act 1985
"A person to whom this Act applies shall… state in legible characters on all business letters, written orders for goods or services to be supplied to the business, invoices and receipts issued in the course of the business and written demands for payment of debts arising in the course of business… in the case of an individual, his name…and… an address in Great Britain at which service of any document relating in any way to the business will be effective."
"Any legal proceedings brought by a person whom this Act applies to enforce a right arising out of a contract made in the course of a business in respect of which he was, as the time the contract was made, in breach of subsection (1) or (2) of Section 4 shall be dismissed if the defendant… to the proceedings shows:
(a) that he has a claim against the plaintiff… arising out of that contract which he has been unable to pursue by reason of the latter's breach of Section 4(1) or (2) or
(b) that he has suffered some financial loss in connection with the contract by reason of the plaintiff's… breach of Section 4(1) or (2)."
(i) Whilst the letter of 28 June was sent by Mr Smeaton (and therefore there was no obligation under the 1985 Act to provide the name and address of the proprietor of Sanclair), I accept that there were a number of contractual documents that, by virtue of Section 4 of that Act, ought to have had on their face details of the proprietor of the business. Insofar as they did not, Mrs Williams was in breach of Section 4.
(ii) However, Mr Noor suffered no financial loss as the result of that breach. I have found that the party to the adjudication was Mrs Williams, i.e. the contracting party under the building contract. Therefore, no costs have been wasted in relation to the adjudication (as they would have been if Mr Williams had been the party to it). Those costs may be related to the underlying contract, but they do not amount to "financial loss" of Mr Noor, nor were they caused by any breach by Mrs Williams. These costs would have been incurred in any event, irrespective of any breach of the 1985 Act by Mrs Williams. This is fatal to this claim.
(iii) In any event even if it were not, there is a discretion in the Court as to whether to allow such proceedings to continue, even in the face of a breach that causes financial loss. In the light my findings, it is unnecessary to consider this in detail. However, if it had been necessary for me to consider the exercise of that discretion, given all the circumstances of this case as set out above and in particular
(a) the policy approach to the enforcement of adjudicators' decisions and the other policy considerations identified by Jackson J in Carillion (see Paragraph 18 above)
(b) the costs incurred by each side in these proceedings to date (which would largely be wasted if the proceedings are dismissed)
(c) the absence of any intention on Mrs Williams' part to mislead
(d) the absence of any profit or benefit accruing to Mrs Williams by the breach
(e) the absence of any prejudice to Mr Noor resulting from the breach and
(f) the late stage at which this point has been taken on behalf of Mr Noor
had it been necessary, I would have exercised my discretion in favour of allowing Mrs Williams to prosecute this claim.
The Claim for the Adjudicator's Fees and Expenses
Conclusion
(i) a declaration that the parties in the adjudication before Mr Baldwin were (1) Mrs Sandra Williams trading as Sanclair Construction (Referring Party) and (2) Mr Abdul Noor trading as India Kitchen (Responding Party):
(ii) summary judgment in favour of the Claimant in the sum of £32,952.54 plus interest to date, payable to the Claimant by 4pm on 7 December 2007
(iii) summary judgment in favour of the Claimant in the sum of £18,741.96, payable into Court by 4pm on 7 December 2007
(iv) an order that the Defendant pays the Claimant's costs of this claim.
His Honour Judge Gary Hickinbottom
29 November 2007