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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 >> Beck Interiors Ltd v Russo [2009] EWHC 3861 (TCC) (29 July 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2009/3861.html Cite as: [2009] EWHC 3861 (TCC), [2010] BLR 37, [2009] EWHC B32 (TCC) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
B e f o r e :
____________________
BECK INTERIORS LIMITED | Claimant | |
and | ||
DR MARIO LUCA RUSSO | Defendant |
____________________
44 Carnaby Street, London W1F 9PP
Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE RAMSEY:
Introduction
(a) The guarantee was discharged because the contract was varied in material respects in that Beck granted the company further time to pay and Beck carried out additional work in the form of variations.
(b) The guarantee was given on condition that Beck would return to site on 5 January 2009 to complete the outstanding and defective work at level 50 and Beck failed to comply with that condition.
(c) The Adjudicator's decision is not binding on Dr Russo in relation to his obligations under the guarantee and the sums are not properly due under Clause 13.2 of the Contract and, in any event, the company has an entitlement to cross-claim for damages for defective or incomplete work.
Background
"Mr Kent said that if I was to personally guarantee the payments due to Beck from Medispa, then he would ensure that his workers returned to site on 5 January, in order to complete the works but that, in any event the ground floor would be in a state that I could trade out of over the Christmas period by the end of the day. In the absence of a better offer and in view of my desire to have the ground floor completed as soon as possible, I agreed. Martin Anderson was present during these discussions.
Martin Anderson and I left the site and returned at 3pm. We were asked again to return in two hours time, at 5pm.
When we returned at 5pm, Mr Kent had prepared a personal guarantee for me to sign which I did, but strictly on the basis that Beck returned to site on 5 January in order to complete the defective works. We were asked once again to return in 2 hours time. I asked Mr Kent whether he thought the unit would be ready for hand-over in 2 hours and he said yes."
"I cannot specifically recall speaking with Mr Vaughton on the telephone on 23 December about the guarantee although I note the email that he sent to me on 23 December."
"…the agreement that I reached with Dr Russo on 23 December 2008, as referred to in my email of that date, was that if Dr Russo agreed to provide the personal guarantee, Beck would abandon its existing entitlement to suspend work in respect of Dr Russo MediSpa Limited's previous payment defaults that would have otherwise taken effect on 24th December in the event of continued non-payment. It was that (general) right to suspend work that we gave up as part of the agreement made on 23 December 2008. The date of 5 January 2009 was simply the first working day after the Christmas shut-down in the industry.
On 23 December 2008 Beck was not promising to return on 5 January 2009 in order to complete outstanding works to level 50 (i.e. the ground floor). ..."
"Following our conversation today.
Beck confirms that if we receive the due payment of £17,500 today.
If you agree that we shall receive payment Number three in full inc VAT on or before 7 January 2009.
If you agree that we shall receive payment number four including variations and VAT etc within 14 days of completion for staircase (1st floor fit-out will not be complete).
If you agree that we shall receive all subsequent payments on the dates stipulated in the revised schedule in full including variations and VAT etc.
If we receive prior to Completion and handover today your personal guarantee to underwrite the balance of the payments due on this contract as per the above proposal, by means of signing and handing to us a witnessed and notarized copy of the attached letter, which must be personally addressed by your good self.
We shall handover the ground floor area certified and complete sufficient to trade and shall return on 5 January to complete balance of works as contractually obliged. All other T&C to remain. "
"This letter confirms that I, Dr Mario L Russo, ofhereby personally guarantee payment of all monies that are due or will become due to Beck Interiors Limited, under the contract dated 28th October 2008 entered into between The Rejuvenation Spa Limited and Beck Interiors Limited for the aforementioned project.
The attached schedule hereby sets out all monies due in the sum of £1,040,032.24 plus VAT of which £175,000.00 plus VAT has already been paid. The balance of £865 032.24 plus VAT is the subject of this personal guarantee."
"…to pay all payments listed on Appendix 4- Payment Schedule, attached hereto, up to and including the payment immediately after the date of any cancellation (without any withholding of retention)."
This Application
Discharge of the guarantee
"The true rule in my opinion, is that if there is any agreement between the principals with reference to the contract guaranteed, the surety ought to be consulted, and that if he has not consented to the alteration, although in cases where it is without enquiry evident that the alteration is unsubstantial, or that it cannot be otherwise than beneficial to the surety, the surety may not be discharged; yet, that if it is not self-evident that the alteration is unsubstantial, or one which cannot be prejudicial to the surety, the Court, will not in an action against the surety, go into an enquiry as to the effect of the alteration, or allow the question of whether the surety is discharged or not to be determined by the finding of a jury as to the materiality of the alteration or on the question whether it is to the prejudice of the surety, but will hold that in such a case the surety himself must be the sole judge whether or not he will consent to remain liable, notwithstanding the alteration, and that if he has not consented he will be discharged."
"214. A surety is discharged when the creditor, without the surety's assent by binding agreement, gives time to the debtor. By giving time to the debtor, the creditor deprives the surety of the right to use the name of the creditor to sue the debtor. If this right is suspended for an hour or a day, this discharges the surety: Polak v Everett 1876 1 QBD 669 at 673-674. The Lord Chief Justice Cockburn in Swire v Redman (1876) 1 QBD 536 at 541 said:
"The relation of principal and surety gives to the surety certain rights. Amongst others, the surety has a right at any time to apply to the creditor and pay him off, and then (on giving a proper indemnity for costs) to sue the principal in the creditor's name. We are not aware of any instance in which a surety ever in practice exercised this right; certainly the cases in which a surety uses it must be very rare. Still, the surety has this right. And if the creditor binds himself not to sue the principal debtor for however short a time, he does interfere with the surety's theoretical right to sue in his name during such a period. It has been settled by decisions that there is an equity to say that such interference with the rights of the surety- in the immense majority of cases not damaging him to the extent even of a shilling must operate to deprive the creditor of his right to recourse against the surety, though it may be for thousands of pounds."
215. Time is only given if there is a binding agreement arrived at for good consideration (William Rouse v The Bradford Banking Co Ltd [1894] AC 586 at 594, Lord Herschell LC.)
216. It is immaterial what form the giving of time takes, so long as there is a binding agreement by the creditor to suspend his rights…"
"As set out in paragraph 20 of the particulars of claim, the Claimant agreed to modify the payment schedule of 20 January 2009. Dr Russo's company had already missed one of the payments and of course I was very concerned about that, so there was a meeting … at the meeting Dr Russo asked for a bit more time to make payment number 3 which, by that stage, was overdue. We agreed to that and to the other changes and dates for payments. I did not consult with Dr Russo about how he felt about the changes: he was the one asking for them."
The basis on which the Guarantee was given.
"15. The agreement was made in the course of a telephone conversation that took place on 23rd December 2008 between Lee Vaughton, on behalf of the Claimant, and the Defendant acting both on behalf of himself and on behalf of the employer.
16. The telephone conversation was witnessed by Edward Kent, an employee of the Claimant.
17. By this agreement (inter alia)
(1) the Defendant agreed to enter into a personal guarantee and (in consideration)
(2) the Claimant agreed to modify the terms of appendix 4 payment schedule.
18. The terms of the agreement were confirmed in and/or evidenced by an email from Mr Vaughton to the Defendant dated 23 December 2008 (16:16hours). A copy of the email is appended to this particulars of claim as appendix B. The following documents were attached to that email (also at appendix B):
(1) A revised payment schedule setting out the (modified) dates when payments were to be made by the employer to the Claimant under a building contract in accordance with what had been agreed.
(2) A personal guarantee to be completed by the Defendant;
as had been discussed and agreed between the parties on 23rd December 2008."
"A meeting was arranged for 5th January with Beck so that I could hand back the keys. I met on site, on the day of the proposed hand-over, with Shaun Carvhalo (Project Manager at Beck), and Martin Anderson. Shaun Carvhalo said he could not take the unit back until 23 January. No reason was given; I was absolutely astonished. I said that this was simply unacceptable. I asked what I was expected to do with a defective unit for another 18 days. Shaun Carvhalo simply said take it or leave it. I made it quite clear to Shaun Carvhalo that I gave the personal guarantee to Beck on the basis that Beck returned to work on 5 January. I also said that I did not believe that the guarantee was valid any longer."
"Mr Kent had prepared a personal guarantee for me to sign which I did, but strictly on the basis that Beck returned to site on 5 January in order to complete the defective works."
Adjudication not binding on Dr Russo
"It is contended that it is liable to pay any sum which an arbitrator shall say is the amount of the damages. The guarantee must be expressed in very clear words indeed before I could assent to the construction which might lead to the grossest injustice…If a surety chooses to make himself liable to pay what any person may say is the loss which the creditor has sustained, of course he can do so, and if he has entered into such a contract he must abide by it. But it would be a strong thing to say that he had done so unless you find that he has said so, in so many words. The arbitration is a proceeding to which he is no party; it is a proceeding between the creditor and the person who is alleged to have broken his contract and if the surety is bound by it, any letter which the principal debtor had written, any expression he had used, or any step he had taken in the arbitration, would be binding upon the surety. The principal debtor might entirely neglect to defend the surety properly in the arbitration; he might make admissions of various things which would be binding as against him, but which would not, in the absence of agreement, be binding as against the surety. It would be monstrous that a man, who is not bound by any admission of the principal debtor, should be bound by an agreement between the creditor and the principal debtor as to the mode in which the liability should be ascertained."
"You must find explicit words to make a person liable to pay any amount which may be awarded against a third person, whether it be a jury, a judge or an arbitrator."
"It is well-established that general words in a guarantee, guaranteeing the due performance of all the obligations of the principal debtor do not, of themselves, have the effect of the surety as bound by an arbitration award in an arbitration between the principal debtor and the creditor, even where the arbitration award arises out of an arbitration clause in the contract containing the obligations of the principal debtor guaranteed by the surety. That is established by the case of Re Kitchin [1881] 17 ChD 668, a decision of the Court of Appeal which had stood unchallenged for nearly 100 years and is still cited in leading text books as good authority today. As was pointed out in that case, if the law was otherwise, serious injustice might occur. For example an arbitration award might result from an admission made by the principal debtor in the course of the arbitration without the authority of the surety. Again to take a more extreme example, the principal debtor might take no part in the arbitration whatsoever; he might not even appoint an arbitrator in which event, pursuant to Section 7 of the Arbitration Act of 1950, the creditor's arbitrator would act as sole arbitrator and the case, although it could not go by default, would simply proceed on the basis of the creditor proving his case before the sole arbitrator. It cannot be right that a surety, by general words such as those in the Defendant's guarantee in the present case, should be bound by such an award. In truth, an arbitration clause which provides the machinery for resolving disputes arising between the parties to the contract and special characteristics which distinguishes it from the main obligations of the contract, as can be seen from the leading case of Heyman v Darwin [1942] AC 356. The short answer is that, as a matter of construction, a guarantee containing general words, as in the case of the guarantee of the Defendant, although applicable generally to obligations of the principal debtor arising under the relevant agreement, does not apply to an obligation to honour an arbitration award."
Conclusion