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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 >> Thameside Construction Company Ltd v Stevens & Anor [2013] EWHC 2071 (TCC) (17 July 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2013/2071.html Cite as: [2013] EWHC 2071 (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 :
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THAMESIDE CONSTRUCTION COMPANY LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) MR J STEVENS (2) MRS J L STEVENS |
Defendants |
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James Bowling (instructed by Charles Russell LLP) for the Defendants
Hearing date: 9 July 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Akenhead:
Introduction
The Background
The Adjudication
"…it is agreed that [Thameside] issued Interim Application No 16 on 21 June 2012. For all intents and purposes, this was submitted for the purposes of agreeing the final account. As at that date, it is accepted that [the Stevens] had paid… £1,101,597.02…However, this does not address the question of whether practical completion was achieved. [The Stevens aver] that the adjudicator has not been asked in the Notice of Adjudication to determine the question of practical completion and is therefore falls outside the jurisdiction of this adjudication."
"10. Accordingly the contractual context of this adjudication is something of a muddle, there being no Practical Completion Certificate to trigger subsequent events under the Contract, but at the same time much of the contractual regime as to matters such as defects having been broadly followed.
11. In the Referral I am asked to award [Thameside] the sum of £190,102.89 plus interest, paragraph 7.4 thereof noting that the 'value of the adjusted Contract Sum is in dispute and, therefore, the Adjudicator is respectfully to decide the same.' At the same time I am not asked to determine when and whether practical completion has taken place. The Stevens specifically say I have no jurisdiction to determine the same, yet they make a claim to £60,000 liquidated damages, the parameters of which would be set by a completion certificate. In turn [Thameside] make no extension of time claim in their Referral, but in defence of the liquidated damages claim seek to demonstrate they would be entitled to such an extension in Mr Gradwell's evidence in the Response.
12. It seems to me that the only practical way to deal with this is to approach it on the basis that this is an application for a further interim certificate, leaving over any issues as to precisely when practical completion occurred, as to extension of time and therefore liquidated damages to another day. At the same time I shall bear in mind that the parties do in fact mutually intend (or indeed wish) this to act as a Final Account and have themselves approached it on this basis following in broad terms the 6 month for submission of full information by the contractor and 3 months for response envisaged by the contract. Equally it seems to me that I should acknowledge that practical completion has occurred, occupation itself now being a matter of history. As the Stevens write in the Response of Application 16: 'For all intents and purposes, this was submitted for the purpose of agreeing the final account.'
[The footnote to Paragraph 12 stated:
"(I would, in any event, be doubtful of any, or any substantial, entitlement to Liquidated Damages. Against an August 2011 completion date, part possession occurred in October 2011 and full possession in December 2011/March 2012. In the course of the Works there were regular instructions and changes which have disrupted progress, albeit I accept [Thameside] no doubt suffered some of their own difficulties with sub-contractors etc. Nonetheless I think it likely that on a full analysis [Thameside] would be entitled to some, if not a full extension, at least to the 23rd December and later, if in fact practical completion occurred at a later date.)
[17. He accepted the argument of Mr and Mrs Stevens that no withholding notices were required on their part]
[18 – 29. He reviewed the parties' positions on the final account and variation account figures.]
30. As the Final Account summary shows, this results in a balance due to Thameside of £88,606.22 for which I shall make an order for immediate payment on grounds this decision is the equivalent of an interim certificate. I shall make no order for any interest in addition, the payment mechanism having broken down as I have described. However, this sum should be paid within the contractual time period of 14 days, after which contractual interest under clause 4.8 flows…
32. Accordingly in answer to the prayer for relief at paragraph 13 of the Referral:
a. The amount due to the Referring Party is £88,606.22 plus VAT;
b. The Responding Party shall pay to the Referring Party the sum of £88,606.22 plus VAT within 14 days;
c. No interest will be awarded, save that interest under clause 4.8 will be payable if the principal sum is not paid within 14 days of this decision…"
33. In addition [Mr and Mrs Stevens] asked I should make a number of declarations. In respect of these and using the paragraph numbers in the Response:
a. 13.2.1 – [Thameside] is entitled to £88,606.22 plus VAT.
b. 13.2.2 – [Mr and Mrs Stevens are] entitled to set off to the extent I have allowed my calculations.
c. 13.2.3 - [Mr and Mrs Stevens are] entitled to succeed to the extent I have allowed in my calculations, but a balance is payable by [them] to [Thameside]…
"ACCORDINGLY I Decide and Direct
1. That the Responding Party pays to the Referring Party the sum of £88,606.22 plus VAT within 14 days;
2. That in the event the sum is not paid within 14 days, interest accrues thereafter in accordance with clause 4.8 of the contract;
3. That (subject to the joint and several liability of the parties) each party shall pay 50% of my fees and expenses within 14 days of receipt of invoice."
The Proceedings
The Law
"I derive two principles of law from the authorities, which are relevant for present purposes.
a. Where it follows logically from an adjudicator's decision that the employer is entitled to recover a specific sum by way of liquidated and ascertained damages, then the employer may set off that sum against monies payable to the contractor pursuant to the adjudicator's decision, provided that the employer has given proper notice (insofar as required).
b. Where the entitlement to liquidated and ascertained damages has not been determined either expressly or impliedly by the adjudicator's decision, then the question whether the employer is entitled to set off liquidated and ascertained damages against sums awarded by the adjudicator will depend upon the terms of the contract and the circumstances of the case."
He went on to address particular issues in the case:
54. In the present case, for the reasons set out in paragraph 5 of this judgment, the adjudicator has not reached any definitive conclusion as to the total extension of time which is due to Balfour Beatty. No specific entitlement to liquidated and ascertained damages follows logically from the adjudicator's decision. It is strongly disputed between the parties whether any liquidated and ascertained damages are due and payable. Paragraph 10 of Appendix A to Schedule 23 of the Contract requires both parties to give effect forthwith to the adjudicator's decision. The effect of paragraph 13 of Appendix A is that Balfour Beatty is entitled to the relief and remedies set out in the adjudicator's decision and, moreover, is entitled to summary enforcement of such relief and remedies. These contractual provisions are consistent with the provisions of Part 2 of the Construction Act and with the Parliamentary intention referred to in the authorities.
55. On the basis of these contractual provisions, in my judgment, Serco is obliged to pay to Balfour Beatty the sum awarded by the adjudicator. Serco is not entitled to set off the liquidated and ascertained damages which it claims. In these circumstances, it is not necessary to address the question whether the letters upon which Serco relies constitute effective withholding notices under s.111 of the Construction Act. Since Serco has refused to make payment, Balfour Beatty is entitled to summary judgment enforcing the adjudicator's decision.
"17. It is now well established law and practice in the context of construction adjudications that valid adjudicators' decisions are to be enforced in effect without set off or cross claims. So far as set offs or cross claims are concerned, the logic is that these are to be raised in the adjudication and the adjudicator either allows or disallows them; it is not then appropriate that the losing party raises on enforcement proceedings either the same set offs or cross claims (which have already been adjudicated upon) or new ones which could have been but were not raised. The policy of the HGCRA is that decisions are binding. This is wholly and clearly reflected in the contract terms set out above. Mr Justice Ramsey reviewed a number of authorities in this area in William Verry Ltd v London Borough of Camden [2006] EWHC 761 (TCC), and said at Paragraph 43:
"In such circumstances, should the sums found due in adjudication decision number 3 give way to the disputed valuation in the final certificate? In my judgment, they should not for the following reasons: First, for the reasons set out above, I consider that the binding nature of the adjudicator's decision and the agreement of the parties to comply with that decision means that, prima facie, the adjudicator's decision should be enforced.
Secondly, if payment of an adjudication decision on the sum due on an interim certificate had to be subject to the view of the Contract Administrator/Quantity Surveyor in a subsequent certificate, then the intention of parliament and the purpose of adjudication would be defeated. Each successive certificate would defeat the decision by an adjudicator on the previous certificate."
The logic of the second point in the dictum set out above is that the adjudicator's decision, if it requires payment, should be enforced and it is not subject to the diktat, approval or further certification under the construction contract…
20. One can draw from the David McLean decision the propositions that the Court must interpret adjudicators' decisions not only from the words used by the adjudicator but also in the context of the dispute which was referred to adjudication. There may be disputes between the parties as to whether money should be paid or should have been paid but there may also be disputes, as in the David McLean case, as to the true value of elements in a previous valuation. Put another way, the crystallised dispute may involve or require a declaration as to what the true value is or a directive decision that money be paid. This issue in any given case will depend on the facts of the case and the wording used in any given adjudicator's decision."
The adjudicator's decision was enforced.
"36. Since it is the decision of the adjudicator that is binding on the parties, not his reasoning, one must consider what is meant by "the decision of the adjudicator". In most cases the adjudicator will determine that a sum of money is due from one party to the other and the decision will therefore consist of a declaration that the particular sum is due, together with related declarations in relation to the amount of interest and questions of costs. In that type of decision, it is clear beyond doubt that the adjudicator's conclusion that A owes (and must pay) £X to B is binding until finally determined by litigation or arbitration.
37. However, suppose that the adjudicator's reason for deciding that the sum owed to B is £X is that he has decided that B was entitled to an extension of time of Y weeks with a weekly prolongation cost of £Z. In this situation, I find it difficult to see how it could be said that the amount of the extension of time to which B was found to be entitled was not also part of the decision and therefore not binding as between A and B (subject, of course, to B having the right to argue in a subsequent adjudication that he is entitled to a further extension of time on the grounds not put before the adjudicator in the first adjudication). In my judgment, in that situation an adjudicator's conclusion on the amount of the extension of time attributable to the stated events would also be binding on the parties (until finally determined otherwise).
38. Accordingly, I consider that an adjudicator's decision consists of (a) the actual award (i.e. that A is to pay £X to B) and (b) any other finding in relation to the rights of the parties that forms an essential component of or basis for that award (for example, in a decision awarding prolongation costs arising out of particular events, the amount of the extension of time to which the referring party was entitled in respect of those events)."
"11. In general, an unsuccessful party to an adjudication cannot seek to avoid the result of that adjudication by relying on the right to set-off any other claims: see VHE Construction PLC v RBSTB Trust Co Ltd [2000] BLR 187. It has often been said that, where there are subsequent cross-claims, the right course is for the losing party to comply with the adjudicator's decision and not withhold payment on the ground of his anticipated recovery in a further claim: see Interserve Industrial Services Ltd v Cleveland Bridge UK Ltd [2006] EWHC 741 (TCC) and Hart v Smith [2009] EWHC 2223 (TCC)…
12. Possible exceptions to this general approach were summarised by Jackson J (as he then was) in Balfour Beatty Construction v Serco Ltd [2004] EWHC 3336 (TCC), when he said at paragraph 53…[see above]
13. In similar vein, in William Verry Ltd v The Mayor of Burgesses of the London Borough of Camden [2006] EWHC 761 (TCC), Ramsey J said that the right to set-off was generally excluded. As to the particular issue of whether liquidated damages could be deducted when the adjudicator's decision deals with extensions of time, but does not deal with the consequential effect of an undisputed or undisputable claim for liquidated damages, he said that that raised "a distinct question of the manner and extent of compliance with the adjudicator's decision. It does not, in my judgment, raise a question as to the ability to set-off sums generally against an adjudicator's decision."
14. The first possible exception to the general rule turns on the proper construction of the terms of the contract. There will be some cases, such as Parsons Plastics Ltd v Purac Ltd [2002] BLR 334, where the contractual right to set-off may trump the enforcement of an adjudicator's decision. However, such cases will be relatively rare and will depend upon the precise construction of the relevant set-off provision. Clear words permitting the set-off against a sum otherwise due will usually be required. The more common analysis is that set out by the Court of Appeal in Ferson Contractors Ltd v Levolux AT Ltd [2003] BLR 118, where Mantell LJ said that the contract had to be construed so as to give effect to the intention of Parliament, rather than to defeat it, and that if the set-off provision offended the requirement for immediate enforcement of the adjudicator's decision, it should be struck down. He distinguished Parsons on the basis that it was not concerned with section 108 of the 1996 Act and was instead concerned with a rather different ad hoc adjudication procedure.
15. The second exception has arisen out of the proper interpretation of the adjudicator's decision. If the adjudicator has decided that a certain sum must be paid by X to Y, often forthwith, it is difficult to see that there could be any room for an effective withholding notice from X, or an allowable set-off of X's cross-claims against the sum found due to Y by the adjudicator. But if the adjudicator's decision is instead in the nature of a declaration as to the proper operation of the contractual payment machinery, and the adjudicator identifies a sum which he says should be the subject of that machinery then, if a withholding notice can legitimately be served in accordance with those contractual payment provisions, the set-off may give rise to an arguable defence."
In relation to the latter point he moved on to consider the Shimizu, Conor and R&C cases. He went on to consider the adjudicator's decision:
"20. First, as a matter of law, my starting point must be that the right to make such a set-off has been generally excluded, because anything else would be contrary to the 1996 Act and the underlying purpose of construction adjudication. It would, in my view, be contrary to the 1996 Act if, at least in general terms, the effect of an adjudicator's decision could be avoided altogether by the subsequent service of a withholding notice. It would allow the unsuccessful party a defence to the claim merely because the adjudicator gave that party time to pay the sum due, rather than ordering payment forthwith. That is, to say the least, counter-intuitive; it would mean that the unsuccessful party was taking undue advantage of the adjudicator's decision to allow them some time to pay. In reaching that general conclusion I am, I think, doing no more than echoing what Mantell LJ said in Ferson, what Jackson J said in Balfour Beatty, and what Ramsey J said in William Verry.
21. Secondly, reading the adjudicator's decision as a whole as I must, I am firmly of the view that the adjudicator was not giving some kind of declaratory relief as to how the payment mechanism under the sub-contract might operate. He was not providing a declaration as to what sum was payable under the contract mechanism. He was not identifying a sum which he intended to 'plug in' to the contract machinery. Instead, in my view, the adjudicator was deciding a one-off claim in a one-off way. His decision makes plain that he intended the sum of £167,531.05 to be paid by no later than 14 days after his decision, namely by 5 June. On a proper reading of that decision, the adjudicator did not intend that there was to be any set-off or cross-claim in respect of that award. He was, as I have said, merely giving Vertase time to pay."
(a) The first exercise should be to interpret or construe what the adjudicator has decided. In that context, one can look at the dispute as it was referred to him or her. That can involve looking at the Notice of Adjudication, the Referral Notice, the Response and other "pleading" type documents. One can have regard to the underlying construction contract. Primarily, one needs to look at the decision itself.
(b) In looking at what the adjudicator decided, one can distinguish between the decisive and directive parts of the decision on the one hand and the reasoning on the other, although the decisive and directive parts need to be construed to include other findings which form an essential component of or basis for the decision (see Hyder).
(c) The general position is that adjudicators' decisions which direct that one or other party is to pay money are to be honoured and that no set-off or withholding against payment of that amount should be permitted.
(d) There are limited exceptions. If there is a specified contractual right to set-off which does not offend against the statutory requirement for immediate enforcement of an adjudicator's decision, that is an exception albeit that it will be a relatively rare one. Where an adjudicator is simply declaring that an overall amount is due or is due for certification, rather than directing that a balance should actually be paid, it may well be that a legitimate set-off or withholding may be justified when that amount falls due for payment or certification in the future. (See Squibb).
(e) Where otherwise it can be determined from the adjudicator's decision that the adjudicator is permitting a further set-off to be made against the sum otherwise decided as payable, that may well be sufficient to allow the set-off to be made (see Balfour Beatty).
Discussion
Decision