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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 >> Kitt & Anor v The Laundry Building Ltd & Anor [2014] EWHC 4250 (TCC) (17 December 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2014/4250.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 4250 (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 :
____________________
GARY KITT and EC HARRIS LLP |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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THE LAUNDRY BUILDING LIMITED |
Defendant and Part 20 Claimant |
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- and - |
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ETCETERA CONSTRUCTION SERVICES LIMITED |
Part 20 Defendant |
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Thomas Crangle (instructed by Weightmans LLP) for the Defendant and Part 20 Claimant
Robert Sliwinski (instructed by CJ Hough & Co Ltd) for the Part 20 Defendant
Hearing date: 5 December 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Akenhead:
The Background
"7…ETC accepts the… Extension of Time award against ETC's first application for an extension (4 weeks and 3 days) and the weekly value for loss and expense. ETC does not give the adjudicator jurisdiction in this adjudication to open up the extension of time award or the agreed weekly value for loss and expense.
8. TLB has not accepted the CA's or ETC's assessment of the delays and pursues ETC for liquidated damages.
9. ETC considers that the Final Account for the Contract Works is £1,223,749.53. ETC has been paid the net sum of £936,000.00 which leaves £287,749.53 plus VAT at the appropriate rate for payment.
Matters to be decided
10. ETC requires the following decisions:-
Issue 1
11. A decision that ETC's final account should be valued at £1,223,749.53. Or such other sum as the adjudicator may decide, plus VAT at the appropriate rate. Details of the various sums that make up the final account will be particularised in the Referral. Final account item Nos. 8, 10, 13, 15, 17, 17a, 27, 28, 30, 31, 34, 39, 41 to 48 inclusive, 52, 54, 59, 62, 66, 71, 82, 95, 96, 98, 100, 108, 109, 116, 117, 121, 142, 143, 149, 151, 152, 159, 164, & 178 are not required to be opened up by the adjudicator as ETC accepts the CA's values for these items. Item No. 161 is not to [be] opened up for the extension of time already granted and item No. 163 is not to be opened up for the agreed weekly value for loss and expense.
Issue 2
12. A decision that TLB shall forthwith pay ETC the balance due on its final account of £287,749.53 or such other sum is the adjudicator may decide plus VAT at the appropriate rate;
Issue 3
13….interest
Issue 4
14. A decision that TLB shall pay the adjudicator's reasonable fees and expenses."
"1. Hourly rate of £295 per hour in respect of all time spent upon, or in connection with, the adjudication…
4. Once I have reached my Decision, I will render an account for my fees and expenses, and this account will be due for payment upon presentation;
8. All payments shall become due on presentation of invoice, thereafter interest shall be payable at 8% per annum above the Bank of England base rates every day the amount remains outstanding;
9. The parties are and remain jointly and severally liable for all fees and expenses incurred.
10. Notwithstanding that the appointment is a personal one of Gary Kitt, the invoice for payment shall be issued by, and payment shall be made to, EC Harris LLP…".
"At first blush, the Notice refers for determination the full value of the ETC final account. However, that this is not so, is demonstrated by the following:
1. Whilst ETC says that the adjudicator is required to decide whether its second application for an extension of time is justified (Notice, paragraph 7), it asserts that it "does not give the adjudicator jurisdiction in this adjudication to open up the extension of time award or the agreed weekly value for loss and expense". (TLB denies that it has made any binding agreement on weekly loss and expense and denies that any extension of time has been awarded or that any contractual application for any extension of time has been received); and
2. Further, whilst ETC says that it requires a decision that it is entitled to the full value it claims for the final account (Notice, paragraph 11), it also asserts that the adjudicator must not open up numerous final account items in reaching his decision.
There are only 2 possible analysis [sic] of the Notice, as regards the scope of the dispute referred, as follows:
1. As TLB considers to be the case, ETC has referred to questions of:
(a) ETC's entitlement to its alleged second extension of time [in which case the position and merits of the first extension [of] time will need to be considered in this adjudication - for the avoidance of doubt TLB confirm that it considers that no extension of time has been awarded and it considers that no contractual application has been received],
(b) ETC's related claim for loss and expense, and
(c) the aspects of the ETC final account claims other than the Final Account items listed at paragraph 11 of the Notice.
If that is correct, there will be limits on the declarations and relief that can be sought in relation to such claims, including having regard to the payment and payless notices of 20th May 2013.
2. The merits of the entirety of the ETC's claims to be paid its full most recently submitted final account value has been referred. In which case, there would need to be considered by you the merits of both parties' positions on:
(a) all aspects of the Final Account items submitted, and
(b) each of the heads of claim of TLB that are set out in its payless notice dated 20th May 2013.
This is because for you it arrived at a determination that the final account value is in the order of that claimed by ETC you would have to reach the conclusion, for example, that the substantial claims for the defects referenced in that payless notice are without merit. It is to be noted that ETC does not seek declarations that its claims for measured works, variations and loss and expense are at the values it attributed to those items in its final account. Rather, it seeks a declaration that, on a final account basis, it's claims total the aggregate of those submitted claim heads and that it should be decided that it be paid by reference to that value on a final account basis.
We would trust that you will agree that the scope of the adjudication is as per above paragraph 1. If, however, you were to consider that the scope is as per above paragraph 2, then we confirm that we would continue to participate in the adjudication and compile our Response accordingly. However, this would need to be on the basis that TLB does so under protest and strictly without prejudice to its position on the jurisdiction that the Notice confers been limited as per paragraph 1.
ETC is adopting a "cake and eat it" approach in its notice. On the one hand it wishes to have all claims determined and decisions as to their payment but on the other it seeks that in doing so TLB should be shut out from defending itself to its full availability in relation to those claims (whether by raising for your consideration defences as to the correct quantum of individual claim items and/or defences by way of cross and counter claims). That is not possible as a Responding party has an unfettered ability to elect how to defend itself in response to a notice and ETC "telling" the adjudicator that he must not consider legitimate defences is of no legal effect.
Indeed, the decision in Cantillon ltd v Urvasco Ltd [2008] EWHC 282 (TCC) makes clear that "whatever dispute is referred to the Adjudicator, it includes and allows for any ground open to the responding party which would amount in law or in fact to a defence of the claim with which it is dealing". It therefore follows that TLB shall be at liberty to raise such matters as it considers relevant, in law or in fact, to the assessment of whether the final account should be valued at £1,223,749.53…"
"I am clear that ECS is seeking both the valuation of its final account and the payment of any sums that I find due. In my opinion, my jurisdiction therefore covers valuation of all of the items comprising ECS' final account and I understand ECS' position to be that in respect of those items referred to at paragraph 11 of the Notice of Adjudication ECS accepts the CA's current valuation. It is not for me to comment as to how TLB wishes to respond to the Referral and I now direct that [TLB] provides its Response to the Referral together with a summary of the contentions on which it relies, a statement of the relief or remedy which is sought and any material it wishes me to consider…"
The Referral had been served on 3 July 2013 and provided little more information than was in the Notice of Adjudication, albeit it attached various Appendices which provided more detail of its claims; it did however make clear that it was proceeding on the basis that only the CA's figures where ETC disagreed with them were to be considered anew by the adjudicator.
"For clarity ETC confirms that it does not give the Adjudicator jurisdiction to decide matters that the CA has valued when that valuation is accepted by ETC. If the Employer wishes to contest the valuations made by his own CA then he should do so in a separate adjudication."
It went on to address the cross claims and contra charges, denying them, albeit in some detail.
"…We thank TLB for introducing these items [in the Rejoinder] and giving us the opportunity to put our position on these to the Adjudicator.
With regard to [TLB's] continual reference to snagging, defects, outstanding items and contra charges, ETC remind TLB that the defects liability period has not yet expired and that ETC has confirmed on many occasions that we are prepared to attend to genuine defects and complete any agreed an outstanding works once they have been identified by the CA.
We confirm that we have not responded at this stage in detail to TLB's claims and contra charges as we do not feel that they should be included within this adjudication."
The Surrejoinder then went on to look at three items in some detail relating to the Kitchen Extracts, O&M Manuals and the Panel Board, attaching a number of contemporaneous documents.
"In addition, ETC sought an order for payment and interest based on my valuation of its final account and I have formed the view that to order of payment I could not simply decide upon and declare the value of certain Variations only. I have therefore approached this adjudication by reviewing the value of each other Variation items where the parties are not in agreement."
In relation to TLB's set off for defective and outstanding works and contra charges, he referred to the fact that ETC had not commented on a number of the items raised by TLB or provided alternative valuations (Paragraph 16) continuing at Paragraph 17:
"It is my understanding of the law that it is open to a defendant to raise any defence to a claim when it is referred to Adjudication. In the same way, the claiming party is not limited to the arguments, contentions and evidence put forward before the dispute crystallised. I, as Adjudicator, have to resolve the referred dispute which is essentially the challenged claim but I'm able to consider any argument, evidence or other material for or against the claim in resolving the dispute. For this reason I believe that it is necessary for me to decide on TLB's defences of set off for liquidated damages and outstanding defective works. As regards works not carried out I believe it to be uncontroversial that I need to deal with these issues in resolving what is essentially a final account dispute."
"The value of the omission is agreed to be £1.680.00 and as regards the addition ETC has not provided me with any evidence to persuade me to depart from TLB's £nil valuation."
This comment was repeated in effect in respect of most of the 45 items which ETC had sought to prevent the adjudicator looking at and where it had put in no evidence. There were some other items where the adjudicator accepted either what TLB or ETC had been asserting. His valuation of the final account was £1,014,407.70.
The Hearing
The Law and Discussion
"23. In Cantillon Ltd v Urvasco Ltd [2008] BLR 250, the Court recognised the following:
"54. It is, I believe, accepted by both parties, correctly in my view, that whatever dispute is referred to the Adjudicator, it includes and allows for any ground open to the responding party which would amount in law or in fact to a defence of the claim with which it is dealing. Authority for that proposition includes KNS Industrial Services (Birmingham) Ltd -v- Sindall Ltd 75 Con LR 71."
24. In Quartzelec Ltd v Honeywell Control Systems Ltd [2009] BLR 328, HHJ Stephen Davies addressed a case in which the adjudicator refused to consider a particular defence. Materially so far as the current case is concerned, he said, having referred to Paragraphs 54 and 55 of my judgement in the Cantillon case as follows:
"30. I respectfully agree with what is said by Akenhead J. Where the dispute referred to adjudication by a claimant is one which involves a claim to be paid money, it is difficult to see why a respondent should not be entitled to raise any defence open to him to defend himself against that claim, regardless of whether or not it was raised as a discrete ground of defence in the run-up to the adjudication, and subject to any considerations of natural justice. The adjudicator has jurisdiction to, and should, consider any such defence. That may result in him accepting or rejecting the defence, in whole or in part. It may be the case that one ground for rejecting a defence not previously raised is that it cannot properly be advanced in the absence of a withholding notice. It may be the case that another ground for rejecting a defence not previously raised is that the failure to raise it at an earlier stage is fatal to the adjudicator's assessment of the genuineness of that defence. But it does not seem to me that a decision to either such effect is a decision by the adjudicator as to his jurisdiction to consider the defence; instead it is a decision within his jurisdiction about the merits of that defence.
31. I consider, therefore, that Ms. McCredie was right to submit that if the adjudicator had considered the defence and decided, even if wrongly, that it could not succeed in the absence of a withholding notice, that would be a decision within his jurisdiction and would not be one which this court could review on an enforcement hearing. This is consistent with the judgment of Lord MacFayden in SL Timber Systems Limited v Carillion Construction Limited [2001] BLR 516, to which she referred me, at paragraph 23. However the corollary of that, in my judgment, is that since the adjudicator has jurisdiction to consider such defences, he ought to do so, and if he does not do so then he does not properly perform the task which he has been appointed to do. In those circumstances, he also does not in my judgment act in accordance with natural justice, because he has not heard the respondent on all of the defences which he seeks and is entitled to put forward.
32. Ms. McCredie submitted that in paragraph 54 of his judgment Akenhead J. was saying no more than that where a defence was properly open to a respondent, then the adjudicator ought to consider it. I do not accept this. Apart from the objection that such a reading would deprive the paragraph of any meaningful content, it is wholly inconsistent with paragraph 55, where Akenhead J. says in terms that 'it is open to any defendant to raise any defence to the claim when it is referred to adjudication or arbitration' (emphasis added)…"
25. Ms Rawley for the Contractor in this case also argued that it was open to the Court to infer from what was put before the Adjudicator and what was said or not said in the Adjudicator's decision that the Adjudicator had not considered or addressed the defences properly put forward by a defending party. I agree that the Court can so infer; indeed, it may be a rare case (CJP Builders Ltd v William Verry Ltd [2008] BLR 545 being one) that the Adjudicator will admit that he or she has not considered a proper defence. Accordingly, where the breach of natural justice complained of is a failure to consider defences properly put forward, the Court will often have to infer whether there has been such a failure.
26. In the context of this case, I draw the following conclusions:
(a) The Adjudicator must consider defences properly put forward by a defending party in adjudication.
(b) However, it is within an adjudicator's jurisdiction to decide what evidence is admissible and, indeed, what evidence is helpful and unhelpful in the determination of the dispute or disputes referred to that adjudicator. If, within jurisdiction, the adjudicator decides that certain evidence is inadmissible, that will rarely (if ever) amount to a breach of the rules of natural justice. The position is analogous to a court case in which the Court decides that certain evidence is either inadmissible or of such little weight and value that it can effectively be ignored: it would be difficult for a challenge to such a decision on fairness grounds to be mounted.
(c) Even if the adjudicator's decision (within jurisdiction) to disregard evidence as inadmissible or of little or no weight was wrong in fact or in law, that decision is not in consequence impugnable as a breach of the rules of natural justice.
(d) One will need in most and possibly all "natural justice" cases to distinguish between a failure by an adjudicator in the decision to consider and address a substantive (factual or legal) defence and an actual or apparent failure or omission to address all aspects of the evidence which go to support that defence. It is necessary to bear in mind that adjudication involves, usually, the exchange of evidence and argument over a short period of time and the production of a decision within a short time span thereafter. It is simply not practicable, usually, for every aspect of the evidence to be meticulously considered, weighed up and rejected or accepted in whole or in part. Primarily, the adjudicator, needs to address the substantive issues, whether factual or legal, but does not need (as a matter of fairness) to address each and every aspect of the evidence. The adjudicator should not be considered to be in breach of the rules of natural justice if the decision does not address each aspect of the evidence adduced by the parties."
(a) It is clear that the CA had issued a valuation in or about March 2013 which was more favourable to ETC than the client, TLB, considered appropriate. Simply on the basis of that valuation several hundred thousand pounds were due to ETC.
(b) By letters dated 20 March and 20 May 2013, TLB spelt out what it considered the state of account between the parties was. Allowing for differences on the final accountand for various set-offs, there was on that basis a net sum due to TLB. These letters purported to be the "payment" and "payless" notices required by statute to permit it to challenge a certificate or valuation of payment and raise set-offs and cross-claims.
(c) There was therefore a dispute between the parties as to the overall state of account both on the final account as claimed by ETC and certified by CA and on the set-offs raised by TLB. Whilst it could be said that the CA's view of what was due was evidence in favour of ETC, there is and was no suggestion that the CA's view was in some way conclusive.
(d) It could be said that ETC's Notice of Adjudication was seeking to say that it wanted payment based on what it said was due to it (where this differed from the CA) but on what the CA said was due where it did not want to challenge it. It sought to prevent the adjudicator from reviewing and TLB from challenging those items in the latter category by saying that they were not "required to be opened up" as ETC accepted them.
(e) Put another way, although ETC must be taken to have known that TLB did not accept the values put on this latter category of items by the CA, ETC was trying to prevent TLB from mounting that defence by notifying it and the adjudicator to be appointed that his jurisdiction was limited.
(a) It was accepted by Mr Sliwinski, properly, that there was in effect a tripartite contract between the parties to the adjudication and the adjudicator in respect of the latter's fees. It follows from this that it must be taken to have been agreed between the parties that, if the decision required one rather than the other party to pay his fees, that party would pay those fees. Although both parties are jointly and severally liable to the adjudicator in respect of those fees, and, therefore, the adjudicator could sue either party for those fees, in logic, and in law, it must follow that, where the adjudicator has felt it necessary to sue the party which has not been ordered to pay his fees by virtue of the decision, that party must have a legal entitlement pursuant to the tripartite agreement, contractually, to recover what it has been required to pay the adjudicator. I accept in the alternative that there is an entitlement at common law, where two parties owe a common liability and the party who is not primarily liable to pay discharges that liability, whereby the paying party can be reimbursed by way of an entitlement in effect to restitution or to avoid unjust enrichment (see Niru Battery Manufacturing Co v Milestone Trading Ltd (No 2) [2004] EWCA Civ 487 Paras 66-72) and Goff & Jones Unjust Enrichment 8th edition Paras 19-20-1). An alternative basis arises under the Civil Liability (Contribution) Act 1978. His argument about joint and several liability, such as it is, falls away.
(b) Mr Sliwinski argued that his client had a set off relating to various claims in an arbitration between ETC and TLB. Although pleaded in the broadest and blandest terms as a defence, no particulars are given in the Part 20 Defence. ETC put in no evidence on this application. To mount this defence, there would have had to be some evidence, supported by a statement of truth, to the effect that there remained a good claim by it against TLB. No arguable case has been established by ETC to support this defence.
Decision