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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 >> Windglass Windows Ltd v Capital Skyline Construction Ltd & Anor [2009] EWHC 2022 (TCC) (14 July 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2009/2022.html Cite as: [2009] EWHC 2022 (TCC), 126 Con LR 118 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
133-137 Fetter Lane London EC4A 1HD |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
WINDGLASS WINDOWS LTD |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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CAPITAL SKYLINE CONSTRUCTION LTD LONDON AND CITY GROUP HOLDINGS LTD |
Defendants |
____________________
MR. PETER BROGDEN (instructed by Goldkorn Mathias Gentle Page LLP) for the Defendants
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MR. JUSTICE COULSON :
1. Background
2 (1) The amount of any payment by way of instalments or stage or periodic payments in respect of a relevant period shall be the difference between the amount determined in accordance with sub-paragraph (2) and the amount determined in accordance with sub-paragraph (3).
(2) The aggregate of the following amounts –
(a) an amount equal to the value of any work performed in accordance with the relevant construction contract during the period from the commencement of the contract to the end of the relevant period (excluding any amount calculated in accordance with sub-paragraph (b)),
(b) where the contract provides for payment for materials, an amount equal to the value of any materials manufactured on site or brought onto site for the purposes of the works during the period from the commencement of the contract to the end of the relevant period, and
(c) Any other amount or sum which the contract specifies shall be payable during or in respect of the period from the commencement of the contract to the end of the relevant period.
(3) The aggregate of any sums which have been paid or are due for payment by way of instalments, stage or period payments during the period from the commencement of the contract to the end of the relevant period …
4. Any payment of a kind mentioned in paragraph 2 above shall become due on whichever of the following dates occurs later –
(a) the expiry of 7 days following the relevant period mentioned in paragraph 2(1) above, or
(b) the making of a claim by the payee.
5. The final payment payable under a relevant construction contract, namely the payment of an amount equal to the difference (if any) between –
(a) the contract price, and
(b) the aggregate of any instalment or stage or period payments which have become due under the contract,
shall become due on the expiry of –
(a) 30 days days following completion of the work, or
(b) the making of a claim by the payee,
whichever is the later …
8(2) The final date for the making of any payment of a kind mentioned in paragraphs 2, 5, 6 or 7, shall be 17days from the date that payment becomes due.
9. A party to a construction contract shall, not later than 5 days after the date on which any payment –
(a) becomes due from him, or
(b) would have become due, if –
(i) the other party had carried out his obligations under the contract, and
(ii) no set-off or abatement was permitted by reference to any sumclaimed to be due under one or more other contracts,
give notice to the other party to the contract specifying the amount (if any) of the payment he has made or proposes to make, specifying to what the payment relates and the basis on which that amount is calculated.
10. Any notice of intention to withhold payment mentioned in section 111 of the Act shall be given not later than the prescribed period, which is to say not later than 7 days before the final date for payment determined either in accordance with the construction contract, or where no such provision is made in the contract, in accordance with paragraph 8 above.
(a) The due dates for payment and the final dates for payment were those set out in paragraph 3 above.
(b) Capital had failed to issue any effective notices of payment and/or withholding notices under the scheme, so they were not entitled to raise any set-off or cross-claim either for defects or delay.
(c) Windglass were entitled to the sums sought, less a 10% reduction to reflect "final snagging and review".
2. The Claim against Capital
2.1 The Starting Point
85. The objective which underlies the Act and the statutory scheme requires the courts to respect and enforce the adjudicator's decision unless it is plain that the question which he has decided was not the question referred to or the manner in which he has gone about his task is obviously unfair. It should be only in rare circumstances that the court will interfere with the decision of an adjudicator …
86. … Parliament may be taken to have recognised that in the absence of an interim solution, the contractor or a sub-contractor or his sub-contractors will be driven into insolvency through a wrongful withholding of payments properly due. The statutory scheme provides a means of meeting the legitimate cash flow requirements of contractors and their subcontractors. The need to have the right answer has been subordinated to the need to have an answer quickly. The scheme was not enacted in order to provide definitive answers to complex questions …"
2.2 The Law relating to Withholding Notices
110. Dates for payment
(1) Every construction contract shall
(a) Provide an adequate mechanism for determining what payments become due under the contract and when.
(b) Provide or a final date for payment in relation to any sum which becomes due. The parties are free to agree how long the period is to be between the date on which the sum becomes due and the final date for payment.
(2) Every construction contract shall provide for the giving of notice by a party not later than 5 days after the date on which payment becomes due from him under the contract or would have become due if
(a) The other party had carried out his obligations under the contract and
(b) No set-off or abatement was permitted by reference to any sum claimed to be due under one or more other contracts
specifying the amount if any of the payment made or proposed to be made and the basis on which that amount was calculated.
(3) If or to the extent that a contract does not contain such provision as is mentioned in subsection (1) and (2) the relevant provisions of the scheme for construction contracts apply.
111. Notice of intention to withhold payment.
(1) A party to a construction contract may not withhold payment under the final notice of payment of a sum due under the contract unless he has given an effective notice of intention to withhold payment. The notice mentioned in section 110(2) may suffice as a notice of intention to withhold payment if it complies with the requirements of this section.
(2) To be effective, such a notice must specify
(a) The amount proposed to be withheld and the ground for withholding payment or
(b) If there is more than one ground, each ground and the amount attributable to it and must be given not later than the prescribed period before the final date for payment.
(3) The parties are free to agree what that prescribed period is to be. In the absence of such agreement, the period shall be that provided by the scheme for construction contracts.
(a) To be effective a withholding notice must be in writing: Strathmore Building Services v Colin Greig [2001] 17 Const LJ 72.
(b) To be effective a withholding notice must be issued a requisite time before the final date for payment: VHE v RBSTB [2000] BLR 187.
(c) The courts will take a practical view of the contents of a withholding notice and will not allow complaints as to form which might be described as artificial and contrived: Thomas Vale Construction v Brookside Syston Ltd [2006] EWHC 3637.
2.3 The Withholding Notices and the Adjudicator's Decision
"We refer to the above valuation and attach hereto your original copy.
Our financial director has returned this application and is not willing to process this amount due to insufficient supporting information.
Please note that our company policy is such that each sub-contractor valuation must be presented in a standard format, copy attached, and authorised by the appropriate site manager before your application can be processed.
Could you kindly re-present your application with the correct supporting information and our office will process it immediately".
"8.3.4.7 In my finding the Capital letters of both dates do not meet the requirements of HGCRA Section 111(1) in that they do not seek to propose the ground(s) for withholding. The responding party has refused to process the application because the Capital valuation process has not been adhered to. I have already stated to the parties my finding in this regard where there is no express contractual requirement for WWL to present their valuation in the prescribed format.
8.3.4.8 In respect of Capital's compliance with Section 110, in the absence of any detailed comments on the amounts to be paid to WWL by implication, Capital could not have issued the required Section 110 notices for each payment.
Adjudicator's conclusions and findings
8.3.4.9 In my finding I am persuaded that based upon the materials placed before me, Capital have not issued effective Notices of Payment and/or Withholding under Section 110 and 111 of the Scheme".
2.4 Discussion
(a) Effective withholding notices were needed if the sums otherwise due by way of interim payment were to be reduced or not paid at all by reason of the cross-claim for defects and delay;
(b) There were no such withholding notices;
(c) The cross-claim for defects and delay could not be raised as a defence to the claim for interim payments in the absence of valid withholding notices.
The First Defendant in this instance acted sensibly. It knew it had a substantial counterclaim but believed it also had good grounds to forestall a payment application that was not in a format previously agreed. It withheld payment on the latter grounds, then defended the adjudication on the substantial grounds with the help of legal advisers. The First Defendant submits that the notice should act as a 'gateway' by which it gains entitlement to raise any other defence in the adjudication.
25. Whilst there is no doubt that a defendant can raise whatever matters he likes by way of defence for the adjudicator to consider, that general principle does not permit a defendant to rely on a cross-claim which should have been the subject of a withholding notice, but was not. In other words, a defendant cannot avoid the absence of a valid withholding notice if, by reference to the contract and on the facts of the particular dispute, the raising of the cross-claim in question required such a notice. To hold otherwise would be to obviate the need for withholding notices at all: see Harwood Construction Ltd v Lantrode Ltd (Unreported, 24.11.00).
2.5 Summary
3. The Claim against LCGH
3.1 The Guarantee
Sunlight Projects Group Holdings Ltd is the ultimate holding company of Capital Skyline Construction Ltd and we, the undersigned, are authorised to bind Sunlight Projects Group Holdings Ltd in this contract.
In consideration of Windglass Windows Ltd provision of credit trading facilities to cut its Capital Skyline Construction, Sunlight Projects Group Holdings Ltd undertakes to pay all sums due or which become due to Windglass Windows Ltd in respect of contracts entered into prior to the date of any cancellation of this agreement …
3.2 The Issues
(a) They submit that the typed words in the letter are sufficient to serve as a signature, alternatively they say that the signed e-mail was sufficient to act as a signature.
(b) If they are wrong about that, so that the Statute of Frauds prohibition would otherwise apply, they seek to run in the alternative a case that the letter was not a guarantee, but an indemnity, in respect of which the Statute of Frauds point would not apply.
(c) They submit that the argument about the lack of authority would depend on oral evidence, particularly relating to the roles of both Mr. Ford and Mr. Ashby.
(d) They submit that the surety point is potentially important. Both counsel are agreed that, as far as they are aware, there is no authority in which an adjudicator's decision has been held to be binding on a surety. They therefore say that the hearing of any application against LCGH should be adjourned so as to allow sufficient time to allow that potentially important point to be addressed.
3.3 Discussion
4. Conclusions
UPON HEARING Counsel for the Claimant and Counsel for the Defendants
IT IS ORDERED: 1. Judgment for the Claimant against the 1st Defendant in the sum of £185,033.81 inclusive of VAT and interest to today?s date, together with interest at a daily rate of £40.19 hereafter until payment. 2. The 1st Defendant is to pay the Claimant?s costs of the claim summarily assessed in the sum of £5,000 exclusive of VAT. 3. The 1st Defendant is to pay the sums referred to in paragraphs 1 and 2 above by 4pm on 28 July 2009. 4. The Claimant?s claim against the 2nd Defendant is adjourned on the terms set out below. 5. In the event that the 1st Defendant pays the sums referred to under paragraphs 1 and 2 above by 4pm on 28 July 2009, the claim against the 2nd Defendant shall stand dismissed forthwith and without further order, save that there shall be permission to the parties to apply, if so advised, in respect of the costs of the claim. 6. Permission for the Claimant to amend the Claim Form and the Particulars of Claim in respect of its claim against the 2nd Defendant on the following terms:a. The Claimant is to serve a draft Amended Claim Form and Amended Particulars of Claim on the 2nd Defendant by 4pm on 20 July 2009. b. The 2nd Defendant is to provide any objections to the proposed amendments by 24 July 2009.7. The 2nd Defendant is to serve a Defence by 4pm on 4 August 2009. 8. The Claimant is to serve any Reply to the Defence by 4pm on 24 August 2009. 9. Disclosure by way of copy document by 4pm on 28 August 2009. 10. Signed statements of all witnesses of fact and any hearsay notices under CPR 33.2 to be exchanged not later than 4pm on 10 September 2009. Unless otherwise ordered witness statements to stand as evidence in chief of the witness at trial. 11. Trial, time est. 1-day commencing at 10am on 15 September 2009. 12. Permission to apply. 13. The costs of the Claimant?s summary judgment application against the 2nd Defendant are costs in the case.
c. In the event that amendments are agreed / the objections are resolved, the Claimant shall file and serve the Amended Claim Form and Amended Particulars of Claim in the agreed form by 4pm on 28 July 2009.
d. In the event that the form of the amendments cannot be agreed, permission for the Claimant to apply for permission by way of letter enclosing a copy of the proposed amendments.
Coulson J
14 July 2009