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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 >> Hillcrest Homes Ltd v Beresford and Curbishley Ltd [2014] EWHC 280 (TCC) (07 February 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2014/280.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 280 (TCC), 153 Con LR 179, [2014] CILL 3506 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
MANCHESTER DISTRICT REGISTRY
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
B e f o r e :
____________________
HILLCREST HOMES LIMITED |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
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BERESFORD AND CURBISHLEY LIMITED |
Defendant |
____________________
Mr Patrick Clarke (instructed by Pinsent Masons LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 11 and 16 December 2013
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
JUDGE RAYNOR QC
a. declarations that the decision of the Adjudicator appointed to determine an adjudication commenced by Notice of Adjudication dated 14 November 2012 is unenforceable for reasons stated hereafter; and
b. the Court's final determination that a novation agreement signed by HTA on 26 November 2012 ("the Novation Agreement") is, or is to be treated as, binding upon Hillcrest and B&C; and
c. an order that B&C pay damages for what is alleged to be a breach of contract committed by referring to adjudication disputes which are said to have been outwith the ambit of the adjudication provisions of the Building Contract.
The Factual History
- 6 Design Responsibility
- 6.1 The Contractor shall note that the whole of the works fall within his design responsibility, including work originally commissioned by the Employer, and he will be required to obtain all statutory approvals and meet any additional requirements set out in the Employers' Requirements.
- 6.3 The Contractor shall appoint Consultants and specialist sub-contractors as he requires for the design of the works and shall ensure that a collateral warranty in respect of each is provided to the Employer and potential lender/purchaser.
- 6.5 Appointment of Howard Taylor Associates – Structural Engineers
1.6.5.1 The Employer requests and requires that the pre-tender Structural Engineer, Howard Taylor Associates, should be retained and appointed to the successful Building Contractor to continue and complete any necessary design work required….
1.6.5.3 The Structural Engineer shall be novated to the Contractor in accordance with the draft Novation Agreement included in Appendix F. Novation shall occur on execution of the Building Contract
- 6.5.4 The Contractor shall liaise with Howard Taylor Associates and establish the extent of the works being provided. Any works required by the Contractor in addition [to] that provided as part of the Employer's Requirements shall be identified and notified to the Employer."
"THIS AGREEMENT
Is made the day of 2010
BETWEEN
(1) [ ] whose registered office is situated at [
] ("the Employer"); and
(2) [ ] whose registered office is situated at [
] ("the Contractor"); and
(3) [ ] whose registered office is situate at [
] ("the Consultant")
WHEREAS
A. The Employer has appointed the Consultant to provide (set out type of services being provided e.g. architectural) services ("the Services") by an agreement dated [ ] ("the Appointment").
B. The Employer has appointed the Contractor under a contract ("the Design and Build Contract") of even date herewith to design and construct certain works as therein described ("the Project").
C. The Employer has agreed to assign to the Contractor by way of novation its entire benefit, rights and interest in and under the Appointment and the Consultant has agreed to enter into this Agreement for the purpose of giving its consent to such assignment
IT IS HEREBY AGREED as follows:
- Novation
- 1 The Employer as beneficial owner hereby assigns to the Contractor its entire rights, benefits, liabilities and obligations under and pursuant to the Appointment including but without limitation, its accrued rights, benefits, liabilities and obligations subject to Clause 1.4
- 2 The Consultant undertakes to perform the Appointment and to be bound by its terms in every way as if the Contractor were, and had been from the inception, a party to the Appointment in lieu of the Employer. The Contractor agrees that he will not hereafter terminate the Consultant's engagement under the Appointment without prior written consent of the Employer, such consent not to be reasonably withheld or delayed.
- 3 The Contractor undertakes to perform the Appointment and to be bound by its terms in every way as if the Contractor were, and had been from the inception, a party to the Appointment in lieu of the Employer…."
Action
- 5.5 The design team (Architect, M&E consultant and the
Structural Engineer) are to be novated and collateral warranties
provided. PA
- 5.6 TVP to distribute electronic draft novations and collateral
warranty details to B&C and the design team for consideration and
execution PC/PA
a) Article 7: Adjudication provided "If any dispute or difference arises under this Contract, either party may refer it to adjudication in accordance with clause 9.2" (which provided that if a dispute or difference arose under the Contract which either party wished to refer to adjudication, the provisions of the Scheme for Construction Contracts (England and Wales) Regulations 1998 applied subject to qualifications which are not material for present purposes)
b) Clause 1.1 defined "Contractor's Persons" and "Employer's Persons" as follows:
"Contractor's Persons: the Contractor's employees and agents, all other persons employed or engaged on or in connection with the Works or any part of them and any other person properly on the site in connection therewith, excluding the Employer, Employer's Persons and any Statutory Undertaker
Employer's Persons: all persons employed, engaged or authorised by the Employer, excluding the Contractor, Contractor's Persons, and any Statutory Undertaker but including any such third party as is referred to in clause 3.15.2."
c) It is pertinent to note that Article 8 of the Building Contract (providing for arbitration), which the parties agreed should not apply, is in significantly wider terms than the adjudication provision, providing (subject to exceptions) for reference to arbitration of "any dispute or difference…of any kind whatsoever arising out of or in connection with this Contract".
"deliberating over whether I should provide a collateral warranty for Sleepy Hollow. There was no mention of the requirement to provide a warranty when I first quoted for the job and it only cropped up mid-way through the job…"
He stated that he was reluctant to enter into the warranty agreement but made no mention of the Novation Agreement. However he did not return the same.
"The requirement to appoint the Structural Engineer cannot be concluded and as such Beresford and Curbishley have no contract with HTA. In turn this means that all structural matters remain under the responsibility of the Employer (Hillcrest Homes Limited) and recovery of all costs incurred as a result of inadequacies within the structural design will be sought directly from The Employer"
a) it has been dated 26 October 2012
b) the names of the parties have been completed and
c) neither of the alternative payment clauses in 1.4 has been deleted, but it is not suggested by either party that this is material since no further payment by either B&C or Hillcrest to HTA was contemplated at the time the Building Contract was made.
The Adjudication
- the Responding Party made a negligent misstatement regarding the novation of the consultant structural engineer, Howard Taylor Associates, including the Referring Party to enter into contract; and
- such negligent misstatement was a misrepresentation entitling BCL to recover damages and/or loss and expense; and
- improper pressure has been brought to bear on HTA to agree to sign the purported novation agreement dated 26 October 2012; and
- such purported novation agreement is void; and
- the services of Howard Taylor Associates have not been novated; and
- the costs of the adjudicator shall be borne by the Responding Party."
a) Under the heading "Introduction"
i) it was stated that the dispute concerned Novation;
ii) it was averred that Hillcrest had made a negligent misstatement both verbally and as a term of the contract that HTA had agreed to the novation of its desired services when, in fact, it had not done so until after practical completion in what was referred to as "the purported novation agreement"; and
iii) it was further alleged that HTA was put under improper pressure to sign the purported novation agreement and that in those circumstances the agreement was "void in any event"
b) Under the heading "The Case for [B&C]: Negligent Misstatement", it was contended
i) that the Novation of HTA was a mandatory condition of the Building Contract;
ii) that such novation in accordance with clause 1.6.5.3 of the Employer's Requirements was to occur on execution of the Building Contract;
iii) that such execution occurred in December 2011, which accordingly was the date when Novation should have taken place;
iv) since HTA had not in fact agreed to Novation at the date of the Building Contract, it followed that there was a negligent misstatement upon which B&C had relied when entering into that Contract; and
v) as a result B&C was entitled to recover damages under section 2(1) of the Misrepresentation Act 1967 "and/or loss and expense" (paragraphs 63.2 and 64)
c) Under the heading "The Case for [B&C]: Improper pressure" it was contended that improper pressure had been brought to bear on HTA to agree to sign the purported Novation Agreement and that such purported agreement was void.
d) The "Case for [B&C ]" concluded as follows:
"The Services of Howard Taylor Associates
e) The declaratory decision sought in the Referral Notice was as stated in the Notice of Adjudication.
a) Hillcrest took the single jurisdictional objection that there was no dispute between the parties, crystallised or otherwise (paragraph 7);
b) it was denied in paragraph 11 that HTA did not agree to Novation and averred that from the outset HTA agreed with Hillcrest to be novated, and that this was always common ground;
c) it was accordingly denied that there was any misstatement (negligent or otherwise) and it was also averred that no improper pressure had been applied to HTA, whose services had accordingly been novated;
d) in paragraph 53, it was asserted that given that B&C admitted in the Referral that the Building Contract was executed in or about 2011, "it follows that implied Novation occurred in or about December 2011".
a) B&C asserted (in paragraph 19) that it was its understanding that the quotation from HTA dated 8 July 2010 was accepted by Hillcrest and that the contract between HTA and Hillcrest was "a simple contract" on the terms set out in the said letter;
b) in paragraph 53, Hillcrest's assertion that there had been an implied novation was denied, it being asserted that "Novation cannot be 'implied' when a proposed party to the purported novation states clearly and expressly that it has never agreed to novate its services".
a) Under the heading "Did Hillcrest make a statement as regards the novation of Taylor's [services] contract and in so doing, did it induce [B&C] to enter into the [Construction] Contract?",
he found that as the Building Contract provided specifically for the novation of HTA's services, and as the parties concurred that this was so, "it can be said with conviction that Hillcrest made a statement to this effect", which did, or would have induced B&C to enter into Building Contract (paragraphs 15.6 and 15.7)
b) Under the heading "Did the statement amount to a negligent misstatement thus constituting a misrepresentation and, if so, does it entitle [B&C] to recover damages and/or loss and expense?",
he found that
i) the "Appointment" constituting the services contract between Hillcrest and HTA "did not make provision for novation and therefore Hillcrest was negligent in stating that such contact could or would be novated [and that accordingly] the statement at Employer's Requirements Section 1.6.5.3 amounts to a negligent misstatement and constitutes a misrepresentation".
ii) B&C, having framed its claim under the Misrepresentation Act 1967 as opposed to a claim for damages for breach of contract, was permitted to claim damages for misrepresentation under the relevant provisions of the Act but was not entitled to recover loss and expense, that being a contractual remedy pursuant to clause 4.19 of the Building Contract (paragraph 16.6)
c) Under the heading "Was improper pressure brought on [HTA] to agree to sign the purported Novation Agreement dated 26 October 2012 and, if so, does this render the said Novation Agreement as void?"
i) he concluded that there was insufficient evidence to prove that improper pressure had been so applied;
ii) and stated that had he concluded that it was secured improperly and/or by undue influence then it would have been void but as he had not so concluded "it is potentially valid", a matter he would address in the following section of his Decision.
d) Under the heading "As a fact, have [HTA's] services been novated?"
i) he found that clause 1.1 of the draft Novation Agreement annexed to the Employer's Requirement envisaged an "Appointment" that preceded the appointment of the Contractor; and
ii) that the provision in paragraph 1.6.5.3 of the Employer's Requirements that novation should occur "on execution of the Building Contract" implied the time at which the parties agreed the contract, which he found to be about February 2011, not when it was executed formally in about December 2011; and
iii) that in any event it was apparent that the novation had not occurred by December 2011.
iv) In paragraph 18.7 he concluded
"The Novation Agreement signed and dated 26 October 2012 by [HTA] does not, in my opinion, represent the actual scope of the structural services that comprised the "Appointment" prior to [B&C's] employment or at the time the Contract Documents were executed. I consider [HTA's] statements on both 2 August 2012 and 5 October 2012 that its fee did not include for novation as being a correct reflection of the true position. Therefore the Novation Agreement dated 26 October 2012 does not represent accurately the "Appointment" envisaged pre-Contract and hence is void. As [HTA's] services were required to be novated by a valid deed, as a fact, such services have not been effectively novated."
v) In paragraphs 20 to 24 of his Decision, he made declarations as follows
"Declarations
- Hillcrest made a negligent misstatement with regard to the novation of Howard Taylor Associates services which did, or would have, induced Beresford to enter into the Contract
- The negligent misstatement was a misrepresentation entitling [B&C] to recover damages but not loss and/or expense
- Improper pressure was not brought to bear on [HTA] to agree to sign the purported novation agreement dated 26 October 2012
- The purported novation agreement dated 26 October 2012 is void
- [HTA's] services have not been novated"
Hillcrest's claim for declarations as to the unenforceability of the decision of the Adjudicator
a) the claims for misrepresentation and/or negligent misstatement are outwith the scope of the adjudication provision contained in Article 7 of the Building Contract;
b) in breach of that provision more than one dispute was referred to adjudication, and
c) the Adjudicator's decision on the validity of the Novation Agreement was reached in breach of natural justice.
(A) The claims for misrepresentation and/or negligent misstatement
a) that the decision in Fillite can no longer be regarded as good law, given the decision of the House of Lords in Fiona Trust v Privalov [2007] 4All E.R. 951; and
b) that the issue in question was ultimately which party was responsible for the fulfilment of the obligation to novate, and a key issue in relation to that dispute was whether or not Hillcrest misrepresented the agreement of HTA to novate, and
c) alternatively, that the declarations in paragraphs 20 and 21 of the Decision are severable from those in paragraphs 23 and 24.
- I do not propose to analyse these and other such cases any further because in my opinion the distinctions which they make reflect no credit upon English commercial law. It may be a great disappointment to the judges who explained so carefully the effects of the various linguistic nuances if they could learn that the draftsman of so widely used a standard form as Shelltime 4 obviously regarded the expressions "arising under this charter" in clause 41(b) and "arisen out of this charter" in clause 41(c)(1)(a)(i) as mutually interchangeable. So I applaud the opinion expressed by Longmore LJ in the Court of Appeal (at paragraph 17) that the time has come to draw a line under the authorities to date and make a fresh start. I think that a fresh start is justified by the developments which have occurred in this branch of the law in recent years and in particular by the adoption of the principle of separability by Parliament in section 7 of the 1996 Act. That section was obviously intended to enable the courts to give effect to the reasonable commercial expectations of the parties about the questions which they intended to be decided by arbitration. But section 7 will not achieve its purpose if the courts adopt an approach to construction which is likely in many cases to defeat those expectations. The approach to construction therefore needs to be re-examined.
- In my opinion the construction of an arbitration clause should start from the assumption that the parties, as rational businessmen, are likely to have intended any dispute arising out of the relationship into which they have entered or purported to enter to be decided by the same tribunal. The clause should be construed in accordance with this presumption unless the language makes it clear that certain questions were intended to be excluded from the arbitrator's jurisdiction. As Longmore LJ remarked, at para 17: "if any businessman did want to exclude disputes about the validity of a contract, it would be comparatively easy to say so."
i) of my conclusion that the referral to adjudication of a dispute or disputes outwith the scope of Article 7 does not give rise to a claim for damages for breach of contract;
ii) I have determined that the declarations in paragraphs 23 and 24 of the Decision are unenforceable because of breach of natural justice; and
iii) in any event it is for me finally to determine those matters the subject of Declarations 23 and 24
(B) The submission that more than one dispute was referred to adjudication
i) the dispute as to whether B&C was entitled to damages for negligent misstatement and/or misrepresentation; and
ii) the dispute as to whether the purported novation agreement dated 26 October 2012 was void and whether there had been novation of the services of HTA.
- It is common ground that the effect of clause 8(1) of the Scheme, which provides: "The adjudicator may, with the consent of all the parties to those disputes, adjudicate at the same time on more than one dispute under the same contract", is to confine adjudications under the Scheme to single disputes rather than to a multiplicity of disputes. It was held by His Honour Judge Humphrey Lloyd in Pring & St Hill Ltd v Hafner (in particular I refer to paragraphs 21 to 22 of his judgment) that if an adjudicator were to proceed to embark upon the resolution of more than one dispute in an adjudication governed by the terms of the Scheme, then he would do so without jurisdiction. It seems to me that that must be a logical if harsh result, because if an award were produced under the scheme resolving more than one dispute, it would be impossible, unlike in the case of excess of jurisdiction, to determine by any process of severance which part of the award should be enforced and which part of the award should be discarded. Given that the consent of the parties is a prerequisite to the determination of more than one dispute, it seems to me it must follow that if in truth more than one dispute has been resolved, the award as a whole is unenforceable
(C) Breach of natural justice
(a) It must first be established that the Adjudicator failed to apply the rules of natural justice;
(b) Any breach of the rules must be more than peripheral; they must be material breaches;
(c) Breaches of the rules will be material in cases where the adjudicator has failed to bring to the attention of the parties a point or issue which they ought to be given the opportunity to comment upon if it is one which is either decisive or of considerable potential importance to the outcome of the resolution of the dispute and is not peripheral or irrelevant.
(d) Whether the issue is decisive or of considerable potential importance or is peripheral or irrelevant obviously involves a question of degree which must be assessed by any judge in a case such as this.
(e) It is only if the adjudicator goes off on a frolic of his own, that is wishing to decide a case upon a factual or legal basis which has not been argued or put forward by either side, without giving the parties an opportunity to comment or, where relevant put in further evidence, that the type of breach of the rules of natural justice with which the case of Balfour Beatty Construction Company Ltd -v- The Camden Borough of Lambeth was concerned comes into play . It follows that, if either party has argued a particular point and the other party does not come back on the point, there is no breach of the rules of natural justice in relation thereto.
- But where, as here, an adjudicator considers that the referring party's claims as made cannot be sustained, yet he himself identifies a possible alternative way in which a claim of some sort could be advanced, he will normally be obliged to raise that point with the parties in advance of his decision
The Damages Claim
- The Scheme apparently implicitly confers on the adjudicator a power to apportion his fees and to decide who should pay the apportionment. The adjudicator has done so on the basis of all the work that he carried out. However in the light of my decision it is clear some of that work was unauthorised as it was beyond his jurisdiction and accordingly the Defendant cannot be liable for it. Only the party that sought adjudication is liable for the fees, expenses and costs incurred by asking for a decision which the adjudicator had no authority to make and to which it was not entitled under the contract and which in breach of contract is sought. Section 114(4) of the Act provides
"Where any provisions of the Scheme for Construction Contracts apply by virtue of this Part in default of contractual provision agreed by the parties, they have effect as implied terms of the contract concerned."
Thus the Scheme took effect as implied terms of the sub-contract. The Claimants were only entitled to exercise their right to call for adjudication if it first complied with paragraph 1(3) of the Scheme. They did not do so in part and were thus in breach of contract."
a) the implication is certainly not necessary to give business efficacy to the contract, which works perfectly well absent such implication;
b) nor do I consider the implication of the term to be an obvious inference from the agreement, ie "so obviously a stipulation in the agreement that the parties must have intended it to form part of their contract" (Chitty on Contracts, 31st ed Volume 1, paragraph 13-008). Indeed I consider that the question of whether such a term is to be implied would most likely give rise to serious disagreement since the question of whether a dispute is within the ambit or outwith Article 7 will often give rise to difficult questions, and the party who claims an absence of jurisdiction always has the option of protecting himself by simply taking the jurisdictional point and then playing no part in the adjudication.
a) in paragraph 3 of his further judgment, Judge Lloyd made clear that he was not expressing any final conclusions, since in paragraph 2 he had stated that he proposed to set out the conclusions that he had reached so far but that if they were unacceptable there might have to be further argument;
b) Ramsey J in Linnett was not considering the question of whether the submission of a dispute outwith the scope of Article 7 would give rise to a claim for damages.
Final Determination: Declarations as to the effect of the Novation Agreement
"28. Further or alternatively:
- 1 Even if the Novation Agreement does not accurately represent the terms of Hillcrest's Appointment with HTA envisaged prior to the Contract, that does not render the Novation Agreement void.
- 2 On a proper construction of the Construction Contract and Novation Agreement:
- 2.1 That Agreement is valid and the services of HTA have been novated to B&C with retrospective effect;
- 2.2 B&C is bound to Hillcrest as if B&C were and had been from the inception a party to the Appointment in lieu of Hillcrest and
- 2.3 HTA is not an "Employer's Person" for the purposes of the JCT DB and/or, on a proper construction of the JCT Construction Contract DB, is not to be construed as such and/or
- 2.4 B&C is estopped from denying that it is so bound.
- 3 Alternatively, B&C is in breach of Contract in:
- 3.1 failing to procure the novation of HTA's Appointment upon execution of the Contract and/or
- 3.2 failing to counter-sign the Novation Agreement
and ought not to be permitted to rely on its own said breach to deny the validity of that Agreement and/or the effects pleaded above".
a) that HTA's execution of the Novation Agreement on 26 October 2012 was effective to novate its services to B&C with retrospective effect (in which case the declarations sought in paragraphs 28.2.2 and 28.2.3 of the Particulars of Claim would follow in my judgment); alternatively
b) that B&C was in breach of contract in
i) failing to procure the novation of HTA's appointment on the execution that the Building Contract; and/or
ii) refusing to sign the Novation Agreement
and is not entitled to rely on its own breach to deny the effectiveness of the novation or to excuse its failure to sign the Agreement, the lack of Hillcrest's signature being immaterial since it is common ground that Hillcrest is willing to sign the Deed.
a) Was HTA's execution of the Novation Agreement effective to novate its services to B&C with a retrospective effect?
"It is trite law that novation takes place where the two contracting parties agree that a third, who also agrees, shall stand in the relation of either of them to the other. The question is whether, as a matter of fact, the party contracting with one company accepted the new company as his counterparty in place of the old. (Chitty on Contracts, 31st Ed., (Sweet & Maxwell, 2012, Supplement 31 July 2013), Vol 1, 19-086 and 19-087).
i) Hillcrest and B&C consented to novation of HTA's Appointment, in terms materially identical to those signed by HTA on 26 October 2012, by sub-clause 1.6.5 of the Employer's Requirements and the draft novation agreement incorporated as Appendix F thereto and by the variation of sub-clause 1.4 thereof agreed between them; and
ii) HTA consented to the novation of its appointment on the said terms by signing the Novation Agreement on 26 October 2012, and in those circumstances, all parties having consented to its terms, the Novation Agreement is binding upon Hillcrest and B&C.
i) the latter included the agreement or obligation of HTA to novate (whereas no such agreement or obligation had been undertaken by HTA prior to its execution of the Novation Agreement in October 2012); and
ii) what was contemplated by the Employer's Requirements was novation on the execution of the Building Contract, not novation some 18 months later and after practical completion of the works.
[At the commencement of the trial, Mr Clarke stated that he was not relying on the timing point, but later, following the adjournment of the trial, he made it clear that he was, albeit that the point had not been pleaded. Ms Cheng then stated that Hillcrest did not take a pleading point and was able to deal with the matter but that if B&C succeeded in reliance on this point there would be substantial argument on costs.]
i) In my judgment, on the true construction of the Employer's Requirements, read as they must be as a whole, what was contemplated and required for there to be an effective novation was the execution by all three parties of a Deed in the form included as Appendix F. Clause 1.6.5.3 provided expressly that the novation should be "in accordance with the draft Novation Agreement included in Appendix F". That draft Agreement was a formal document which expressly provided for its execution by all parties as a Deed. I do not believe that what was contemplated was novation absent the execution of the Deed.
ii) In any event the Employer's Requirements, by clause 1.6.5.3, expressly provided for novation to take place on the execution of the Building Contract, as was indeed contemplated by the draft Novation Agreement itself (in Recital B). In my judgment, the answer to Ms Cheng's submission is that B&C, by signing the Building Contract incorporating these Employer's Requirements, never consented to novation taking place at a materially later time, and certainly not after practical completion of the works.
iii) Ms Cheng would no doubt argue that the timing is immaterial given that the Novation Agreement executed by HTA provided by clause 1.2 for novation from the inception of HTA's appointment. However, I disagree. The novation contemplated by the Employer's Requirements and Building Contract incorporating the same, on their proper construction, was a novation happening at the commencement of the works under the Building Contract, so that HTA would be in a contractual relationship with B&C throughout the execution of the works and would therefore know as those works progressed that there would be liability to B&C in the event of breach of their contractual duties. I consider a contractual relationship with rights and obligations throughout the execution of the works to be of material benefit to B&C; that, and not what actually materialised, is what B&C consented to under the Building Contract.
iv) It follows that in my judgment, contrary to Ms Cheng's submission, B&C never consented under the Building Contract to novation being effected by the execution of the Deed in October 2012, and for present purposes, as stated in paragraph 9 above, I must also proceed on the basis that HTA only agreed to execute the Deed on or about 25 October 2012.
i) clause 1.3 of the Novation Agreement (which is relied upon by Ms Cheng in support of her submission that on the proper construction of the Building Contract and/or Novation Agreement, Hillcrest and B&C agreed that the latter would, upon execution of the Contract, be deemed to have been HTA's counter party under the Appointment from inception in place of Hillcrest) is of no effect; and
ii) HTA has throughout been an "employer's person" within the meaning of that clause as defined in clause 1.1 of the Building Contract.
b. Is B&C in breach of contract in refusing to sign the Novation Agreement?
i) had the Employer's Requirements and Building Contract contemplated novation occurring after the execution of the Building Contract, I would not have considered HTA's lack of consent prior to the execution of the Novation Agreement as being material; and
ii) I do not consider the Novation Agreement to be incomplete for lack of definition of the Appointment of HTA: all parties were aware that the appointment was as Structural Engineer pursuant to the acceptance of the fee proposal annexed to the Employer's Requirements.
However these matters are academic in view of my conclusions set out above.