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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 >> Rok Building Ltd v Celtic Composting Systems Ltd (No. 2) [2010] EWHC 66 (TCC) (22 January 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2010/66.html Cite as: 130 Con LR 74, [2010] EWHC 66 (TCC) |
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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 :
____________________
ROK BUILDING LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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CELTIC COMPOSTING SYSTEMS LIMITED (NO. 2) |
Defendant |
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Akenhead:
Introduction
"26. The Adjudicator may open up, review and revise any certificate, decision, direction, instruction, notice, opinion, requirement or valuation made in relation to the Contract.
28. The Adjudicator may, within 5 days of delivery of the decision to the Parties, correct his decision so as to remove any error arising from an accidental error or omission or to clarify or remove any ambiguity."
The Factual Background in this Case
Date 2009 | Certif-icate No | Gross certified £ | 1)Retention 3% + 2)Liquidated damages | Net Certified £ | Balance due/owing £ |
12/3 | 11 | 2,074,607.92 | 1) 62,238.24 | 2,012,369.68 | 95,954.54 |
April | 12 | 2,245,928.44 | 1) 67,377.85 | 2,178,550.59 | 166,180.91 |
5/5 | 13 | 2,242,444.52 | 1) 67,273.34 | 2,175,171.18 | [3,379.41] |
18/6 | 14 | 2,317,104.70 | 1) 69,513.14 | 2,247,591.56 | 72,420.38 |
21/8 | 15 | 2,330,856.84 | 1) 69,925.71 2) 79,500 | 2,181,431.13 | [66,160.43] |
15/10 | 16 | 2,511,610.11 | 1) 75,348.30 2) 133,000 | 2,303,261.81 | 121,830.68 |
It seems to be the case that liquidated damages were also deducted from Certificate No 12 but, as this is certificate has not been exhibited, I cannot determine precisely how much, although the Adjudicator found that Celtic had withheld £45,500 for liquidated damages against it.
"(i) whether Completion of the works has been achieved and if so the date of Completion
(ii) Whether the first moiety of retention of 1.5% has fallen due for payment and if so when and
(iii) The amount of LAD's Celtic are entitled to deduct from interim payment certificates 12 and 15 and subsequent payment certificates together with a decision as to the amount to be paid by Celtic in respect of LAD's wrongfully deducted and payment certificates 12 and 15."
The Second Adjudication
"a. Completion of the Works was achieved on 8 June 2009 and a certificate of Completion is deemed to have been issued on the relevant date in accordance with clause 30.2 of the Contract; and that
b. The first moiety of retention is due and the sum of £34,962.86 should be paid by Celtic to Rok forthwith, together with interest for late payment in the sum of £519.65 to the date of this decision; and that
c. The amount of LADs (delay damages) that Celtic are entitled to the deduct from interim payment certificate 12, certificate 15 and subsequent payment certificates is £47,000.00; and that
d. Celtic shall forthwith pay the sum of £32,500.00 to Rok in respect of LADs wrongfully deducted from payment certificates 12 and 15 together with interest for late payment in the sum of £483.05 (being £287.16 plus £195.89); and that
e. Celtic shall pay interest on any sum awarded or paid late at the rate of 2% per annum above the average base rate…as calculated above to the date of my decision and which will continue to accrue at a daily rate of £4.62 until judgement or sooner payment; and that
f. Celtic shall forthwith pay the Adjudicator's costs and expenses."
(a) At Paragraphs 1 to 6, the Adjudicator summarised the parties, the nature of the project, the contract, the adjudication provisions, details of his appointment and the confirmation that no challenges had been made to his jurisdiction. At Paragraph 7, he set out details of the exchanges between the parties and the various extensions of time which were granted or allowed. He confirmed at Paragraph 7.21 that he had reached his decision "having considered all the documents submitted to me during the course of this adjudication". He stated in Paragraph 8 that, whilst Rok had been represented by its solicitors, Celtic had represented itself.
(b) At Paragraph 9 he set out the nature of the dispute (see above) and summarised the "Redress Sought" in the Notice of Adjudication.
(c) It was in Paragraph 11, which runs to 21 pages, that he set out his "issues, analysis and the reasons". He confirmed that the submissions and accompanying documents extended to a total of seven lever arch files. He stated at Paragraph 11.5 that the issue of whether or not Rok achieved Completion pursuant to Clause 11.2(2) or whether Celtic "took over" the Works pursuant to Clause 35.2 and, if so, on what date, was fundamental. He later set out Clause 11.2(2).
(d) As for the witness statements and contemporaneous documents, materially, he said:
"11.14 I have found the witness evidence helpful in varying degrees. It is voluminous and in some places more relevant than others. In this adjudication there has not been an opportunity for the witnesses to be cross-examined and that in my opinion places some limitation on the witness evidence. Much of the witness evidence provided takes the form of a relatively partisan rebuttal of the other party's position.
11.15 However, each party has provided a substantial amount of contemporaneous evidence in support of the statements made and the positions adopted.
11.21 I am faced in the written submissions and evidence before me with completely opposing views as to the achievement of, or proximity to, the achievement of Completion, in particular through the witness evidence of Mr Bunting for Rok and Mr Trickey for Celtic.
11.22 As well as written witness evidence from Mr Bunting and Mr Trickey, I have also been presented with considerable contemporaneous evidence within their statements. It is the contemporaneous evidence which is, in my view, most telling."
(e) He analysed, largely but not entirely from the contemporaneous documents, what happened from 21 May 2009, when Mr Bunting e-mailed Mr Trickey that substantial completion was expected to be substantially complete on 5 June 2009, until August 2009. Mr Bunting's e-mail attached a list of outstanding work activities headed "substantial completion list". Having referred to Mr Trickey's reply of 22 May 2009 (Paragraph 11.25), he said that he was surprised that Mr Trickey did not respond to the schedule "or, if there did remain significant outstanding work or defective work, to expand upon the schedule at the time" (Paragraph 11.26). He referred to an e-mail exchange on 3 June 2009 in which Mr Trickey said that he was "expecting to take control of the site from Monday! As per our discussion" (Paragraph 11.30); the next Monday was 8 June 2009.
(f) At Paragraphs 11.31 to 11.39, the adjudicator refers to a meeting which took place on 5 June 2009 when the parties "walked the site" and considered the state of completion. At Paragraph 11.36, he expressed surprise "that as Project Manager [Mr Trickey] was not more overt in confirming what [various] concerns well and sharing them with Rok". He agreed "that the contemporaneous correspondence and documentation provided would seem to support" the contention that "against a backdrop of acceptance that completion was going to happen and that Celtic were going to take over the works" "no protestations were made [by Celtic] that the works were not complete and/or ready to take over"(Paragraph 11.39). He recorded at Paragraph 11.40 that as "a matter of fact…Rok left site on 8th June 2009".
(g) He then reviewed what was said and done after 8 June 2009. He referred to a letter from Mr Trickey to Mr Bunting on 18 June in which he wrote that Celtic "verbally agreed that [Celtic] would take over the works (35.2), with uncorrected defects (45.1), Monday 8th June 09 on the understanding that you would ensure a number of items would be in place and that snagging would continue through the week ending 12th June 09. This has not happened…" He would not speculate as to whether Celtic's stance had changed by reason of an intimation from Rok's solicitors between 10 and 15 June 2009 about an intention to adjudicate but he did comment that the stance completely changed between 8 and 18 June 2009.
(h) He pointed to some discrepancies between lists of alleged defects and incomplete items of work as relied upon by Mr Trickey in his adjudication statements compared with what he and Celtic were saying in July 2009.
(i) He confirmed that he had reviewed all the witness statements submitted by Celtic, including those of Mr Rowett and Mr Priddle, and indeed commented on all or most of those statements. He referred between Paragraphs 11.75 and 11.79 to evidence that the cost of completing alleged unfinished works and rectifying alleged defects totalled £30,150.90; this was said to have been expended by a company, Blackdown Environmental, from whom a witness, Mr Shepherd, provided a statement. He stated that, in the context of Rok's Sub-Contract being for £2.276 million, "this did not seem like a huge amount" (Paragraph 11.79).
(j) Having reviewed the submissions, he found at Paragraph 11.87 in particular from the contemporaneous evidence provided "that Rok completed its work ready for Celtic to assume responsibility for the site on 8th June 2009" and at Paragraph 11.88:
"There was at that stage still some remedial work for Rok to undertake but it is clear to me that the parties had effectively agreed that Completion would be achieved on 8 June 2009. Any defects remaining were to be completed on a visiting basis, as is quite usual in construction contracts."
At Paragraphs 11.90 and 11.91, he found that the Works were complete in accordance with Clause 11.2(2) on 8 June 2009.
(k) By reference to Certificate No 15, which was the last certificate issued before the initiation of the second adjudication, he decided that half the 3% retention deducted by that certificate should have been released to reflect the fact that completion had taken place on 8 June 2009 (Paragraphs 11.98 to 11.108). He therefore decided that half of the retention, £34,962.86, should be paid by Celtic to Rok to reflect this finding.
(l) He then turned between Paragraphs 11.109 to 11.122 to liquidated damages, which he found had been agreed at £500 per day of culpable delay. He found that a maximum of £47,000 liquidated damages was payable for the 94 days of culpable delay between 6 March (the extended date for completion) and 8 June 2009 (the completion date as found by him). He also found that, by reason of Celtic's deducting £45,500 against Certificate No 12 at a time when liquidated damages leviable were only £13,000, Rok should be entitled to interest on the balance which should have been but was not paid by Celtic.
(k) At Paragraphs 11.123 to 11.129, the Adjudicator addressed the issue of interest and found that the appropriate rate of interest was 2.5%. He found that interest was due in respect of the wrongly withheld first moiety of retention, £34,962.86, from the final date of payment for Certificate No 12 (28 April 2009) until the date of his decision, namely £519.65. In respect of the delay damages wrongly deducted, £32,500, he allowed interest from 28 April 2009 to 4 September 2009 (the final date of payment of Certificate No 15) in the sum of £287.16. Since at least that sum had been withheld, he clearly believed, from 4 September 2009, he allowed interest from that date to the date of his decision in the sum of £195.89.
(l) At Paragraphs 11.130 11.133, he ruled that Celtic should pay his fees in the total sum of £10,912.50 plus VAT.
Gross valuation | 2,330,856.84 |
Less 1.5% retention | 34,962.85 |
Delay damages | 47,000.00 |
2,248,893.99 | |
Less previously certified | 2,247,591.56 |
Balance payable to Rok | £1302.43 |
If this calculation was taken into account, Celtic argued that little or no net some would be due to Rok, let alone interest. Celtic referred to the fact that the original Certificate No 15 had produced a negative balance which had never in fact been paid by Rok. Apart from other minor matters, Celtic asked for clarification as to how Celtic should have to pay all the Adjudicator's expenses and costs when, it is argued, Rok had misled the Adjudicator on the key issue of what had been paid or not paid. Celtic indicated that a final list of ambiguities and accidental errors and omissions would be served by the end of 4 December 2009
"I agree that I am able, within five days from the delivery of my decision, to correct that decision to remove any error arising from an accidental error or omission or to clarify or remove any ambiguity. In all other respects I am functus officio and I am therefore not able to review the decision in substance and/or principle.
I note the parties agree that the two clerical errors highlighted by the Referring Party should be amended. I do agree and apologise for the mistake on my part. I will correct the decision and re-issue it.
In terms of the points raised by the Responding party, these go beyond the terms of clause 28 of the procedure and to the heart of my decision. Given that I am now functus officio I cannot review the substance of that decision. I note that Responding Party intends to furnish me with a fuller submission on 4th December 2009. I will not however be able to deal with this unless the points raised concern mere clerical errors or ambiguities of the type envisaged by the 'slip rule'."
Later that day, that Adjudicator sent the parties his Decision revised to amend the clerical errors.
(a) Paragraph 11.16: the Adjudicator was asked to clarify why he had made no reference to incomplete work, such as the absence of isolation joints, highlighted by Celtic, in the Decision.
(b) Paragraph 11.23: the Adjudicator requested to clarify how Clause 11.2(2) was satisfied when Rok's "own schedule of deliverables" had not been achieved prior to 5 June 2009.
(c) Paragraphs 11.72-11.74: because Rok are responsible for their own sub-contractors' work, if it acknowledges that its subcontractor's work is incomplete, it accepts that its own works are incomplete. The Adjudicator was asked why this was not relevant under Clause 11.2(2) and to clarify the procedural requirements of rectifying defects retrospectively in accordance with the contract.
(d) Paragraph 11.126: it was suggested that he was incorrect in stating that the first moiety of retention was withheld from Payment Certificate No 12. He was asked to clarify this ambiguity.
(e) Paragraph 12.1 (c): it was suggested that this should read: "the amount of LADs…that Celtic are entitled to deduct from interim payment certificate 12 is £13,000 and the amount of LADs…that Celtic are entitled to deduct from interim payment certificate 15 and subsequent payment certificates is £47,000…"
"As I understand slip rule precedent and the express slip rule in this adjudication procedure, I am only able (within 5 days in this case) to clarify any simple mistake or ambiguity, for example an arithmetic mistake or a clerical or typographic error of the type I have already amended. I am not allowed to address matters that would go to the heart of my decision.
I believe I have provided a fully reasoned decision. As I have previously stated, I am now functus officio and I cannot therefore deal with the points raised by Celtic".
These Proceedings
The Law
"It is inherent in the [adjudication] scheme that injustices will occur, because from time to time, adjudicators will make mistakes. Sometimes those mistakes will be glaringly obvious and disastrous in their consequences for the losing parties. The victims of mistakes will usually be able to recoup their losses by subsequent arbitration or litigation, and possibly even by a subsequent adjudication…"
Discussion
Gross valuation | 2,511,610.11 |
Less 1.5% retention | 37,674.15 |
Delay damages | 47,000.00 |
2,426,935.96 | |
Less paid | X |
Balance payable/due | £2,426,935.96 -X |
However, nothing this simple was put before the Adjudicator. I am not in a position to make findings of fact as to what sums have actually been paid by Celtic to Rok. If it is the case as asserted by Mr Murray that some £2.455 million has been paid, the effect of the Adjudicator's second decision is that an error has been made.
(a) He reviewed the evidence and arguments obviously with real care and attention. He, as many arbitrators and judges would do, applied significant weight to the contemporaneous documents and the inferences to be drawn about what the parties said and did or did not say and do at the time. Faced with witness evidence from each party which was diametrically opposed, no proper criticism can be made of him for doing so. In effect, his analysis showed, rightly or wrongly, that Rok was working towards completing in the first week of June 2009, that Celtic did not clearly or otherwise suggest that the works were not close, and getting closer, to completion by that time, that Rok left the site on 8 June 2009 with the knowledge of Celtic, that no protests were made in the week before that completion was about to happen and that therefore it is more likely than not that not only did Celtic agree that the works were complete but also that the works were complete for contractual purposes as well on 8 June 2009. Because it is not the court's function, generally, to review the factual basis for adjudicators' decisions, I can not say that his decision was obviously right on the facts but I can say that it was not obviously wrong and that it was not a decision on the facts which no adjudicator acting fairly and reasonably could not have reached.
(b) It is an almost pointless exercise for Celtic to seek to argue that the weight of the evidence was such that no reasonable adjudicator could have reached a decision that the works were complete on 8 June 2009. The fact that Celtic produced some arguably "independent" factual evidence which supported its position is neither here nor there. I would comment only that, for instance, Mr Priddle's evidence was on its face of minimal relevance, as the Adjudicator himself found.
(c) The fact that no meeting was held is not obvious evidence that the Adjudicator failed to comply with the rules of natural justice. He was not obliged under the agreed adjudication rules to have a meeting, although he had the power to do so. There appears to have been no objection taken when the idea of having a meeting was dropped. It is not obvious than in the time available serious and effective examination could have been effected on some 12 factual witnesses. In any event, much of the contemporaneous documentation would tell its own story by way of a cross check on the contents of the various statements.
(d) The production by Rok with its Reply of a Scott Schedule did not give rise to any breach of the rules of natural justice. All that Rok was doing was setting out in a schedule for each of the principal defects or incomplete works relied upon and put forward by Celtic itself and putting its comments against each such item. It would if anything had been a breach of the rules of natural justice if the Adjudicator had refused to allow Rok to respond to these assertions by Celtic.
(e) I do not see that Rok misrepresented anything material to the Adjudicator, and certainly not anything which was not capable of being rebutted in a simple and comprehensible form by Celtic. If Rok was misrepresenting the accounting position or balance between the parties, it was open to Celtic to rebut it by reference to what had been paid by it. There is no charge of fraud made by Mr Murray but even if there had been it would not affect the enforceability of this decision because the issue was capable of being fairly and squarely raised by him in the adjudication. It is difficult to suggest that the Adjudicator acted unfairly even if there was a misrepresentation if he failed to appreciate that such a misrepresentation had been made.
(a) The parties agreed by Clause 28 of the Adjudication Procedure that the Adjudicator had a discretion ("may") to correct this decision either "to remove any error arising from an accidental error or omission" or "to clarify or remove any ambiguity". He does not have a right to correct so as wholly to reconsider and re-draft substantive parts of his decision and in effect to change his mind on material points of principle. The first steps must involve the determination of whether there is either an "accidental" error or omission or an "ambiguity".
(b) It must be the Adjudicator who is, and was here, best placed to determine whether there really is an "accidental" error or omission.
(c) I do not consider that there was any "ambiguity" in his decision and, indeed, Mr Murray, to be fair, has not argued that there was any ambiguity which is material to this case. It is unnecessary therefore for me to consider the second part of Clause 28.
(d) In so far as the Adjudicator was invited in effect to revisit his decision on the facts, the law or the merits, there was nothing obviously accidental in what the Adjudicator had decided.
(e) Instead of pointing out in simple terms that the Adjudicator had, or may have, got the results wrong, mathematically or taking into account what had been paid overall by December 2009, Mr Murray chose to put before the Adjudicator on 2 December 2009 a complicated calculation which was related to a "Revised" Certificate No 15 which took no account of the fact that in the first adjudication decision an additional sum of £204,465.14 had been found to be due to Rok. I am not at all surprised that even an experienced adjudicator, such as Mr Holder, found that calculation less than comprehensible. Mr Murray has argued that a revised Certificate 16A issued after the Decision was issued made the position clear but the information in that revised Certificate was not put clearly to the Adjudicator at a time when he might have done something about it. For the reasons indicated in the earlier judgement, Celtic can not avoid payment pursuant to a valid adjudication decision by revising certificates after the decision is issued.
(f) I consider that the Adjudicator was right, and certainly not arguably wrong, to reject the suggestion that he could, let alone should, correct his decision to reflect the contents of Celtic's e-mails of 2 and 4 December 2009. It is simply not arguable to say that he acted unfairly or contrary to the rules of natural justice in refusing to correct as requested by Celtic.
Decision
Costs