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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 >> RMP Construction Services Ltd v Chalcroft Ltd [2015] EWHC 3737 (TCC) (21 December 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2015/3737.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 3737 (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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RMP CONSTRUCTION SERVICES LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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CHALCROFT LIMITED |
Defendant |
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Mr Ben Pilling QC and Mr Alexander Wright (instructed by DAC Beachcroft) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 14 December 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Stuart-Smith :
Introduction
The Factual Background
Preliminary
The 5 December 2014 Emails
"It is my intention to place the order for the agreed value as attached £509,162.71 (which includes 3% discount as agreed), I will raise the LOI for this value on Monday, as it shall take me some time to pull together, I would like to see some meaningful works happen next week if possible.
Can you advise on a short term programme to attach the works hard prior to Christmas, can you liaise to make sure we get some good work in prior to the Christmas break."
"RMP provided its tender on 21 November 2014(15:19). Negotiations then took place between the parties and on 5 December 2014, Chalcroft accepted RMP's offer by way of email at 16:45. This confirms the agreed value for the Works at £509,162.71. No terms were agreed between the parties, save for the scope of the Works and the contract sum."
The Letter of Intent
"Further to our recent discussions, we are pleased to confirm it it our intention to place the Groundwork's package with your company. Please accept this as a letter of intent to the value of £509,162.71 & VAT for the initial works, in lieu of the full order.
Please accept this letter as your instruction to proceed with the necessary procurement, mobilisation and carrying out of the works on the basis set out in the terms and conditions of this letter up to a total financial commitment as stated above, or any other such amount as we may agree upon in writing . . We shall be under no obligation to you, either as to the making of any further payment, or as to any other matter, until agreement and execution of the Contract and all security required by the Contract.
The works are to be carried out under a standard JCT 2011 Design & Build Contract Without Quantities. Items of note at this stage are:
- LAD's have been set at £10,000/week.
- Retention Indemnity Letter replaces % held retention.
- Commencement date is 8th December 2014.
The sum stated above is to include but not be limited to the following general items/attendances: -
- Payment will be made 42 days from the date of the main valuation; these will be carried out in accordance with the attached Valuation Schedule. Please ensure you forward applications in accordance with the schedule (to follow).
- Programme full dates to be confirmed.
All other dates will be confirmed within our formal order ."
The Letter of Intent as Varied
The Sub-contract Order
"You will note that Sheet 4 of 4 requires completion by yourselves (Insurance details) and return to our Kings Lynn office within 14 days of receipt. Upon receipt Chalcroft will complete with a signature and return the top sheet for your retention."
"Please supply all labour, plant and materials necessary to carry out the groundworks all as detailed in the attached/referred to information for the Lump Sum of £747,693.83 incl 3% discount."
"The following information is given from the main contract, and shall apply to this sub-contract which is placed under the general terms and conditions of the JCT standard form of sub-contractor (DSC/C) as adjusted or amended by the following:
Main Contract Form JCT Design and Build 2011
Main Contract Commencement Date 20th October 2014
Main Contract Completion Date 8 May 2015
Liquidated and ascertained damages £10,000.00 per week
Period of Interim Certificates Monthly
Valuation Dates 20/04/15; 18/05/15
Period of honouring sub-contract payments 28 days from the date of valuation"
"I will take a look at this as this is totally different to our original bill and at a glance discount has been taken off lump sum variations which wasn't agreed at any point."
Summary on alternative contractual routes
i) It is reasonably arguable that the parties proceeded on the basis of the promised Letter of Intent and subsequently on the basis of the Letter of Intent plus the emails of the 18 December 2014. Under either of these routes, the Scheme would have applied with no specified nominating body, so that the procedural route to adjudication would have been the same as if the 5 December 2014 email formed the basis of the contract. For the reasons set out in [17] the Scheme provisions for payment apply so that there should have been no substantive difference in the Adjudicator's decision on the absence of a valid pay less notice;ii) It is (just) reasonably arguable that RMP accepted the April 2015 sub-contract order by conduct. The Scheme would have applied with no specified nominating body, so that the procedural route to adjudication would have been the same as if the 5 December 2014 email formed the basis of the contract. It is reasonably arguable that, if operative, the sub-contract order makes provision for payment which means that the Adjudicator's substantive decision was wrong.
The Application and Adjudication
Should the adjudicator's decision be enforced?
" it is necessary first to distinguish between a case where a contract is relied upon but is incorrectly identified in one or more particular respects, and a case where it can be said that the contract relied upon never existed or that the dispute being referred did not arise under the contract relied upon.
23 The first of these alternatives can be addressed shortly. The jurisdiction to refer is dependent upon the existence of a construction contract and a dispute arising under it. It is not dependent upon identifying each and every term with complete accuracy so that the process of referral becomes a formalistic obstacle course akin to 18th century forms of action, where one slip may put a party literally out of court. Bearing in mind the intention that the adjudication system should provide quick and effective remedies for contracting parties, equally accessible to those who are legally represented and to those who are not, an approach which deprived adjudicators of jurisdiction where a dispute has been referred that has arisen under a construction contract because of any error in its characterisation, would as a matter of legal policy be unacceptable.
24 Taking the second alternative, a situation could arise where the referral asserts that a dispute has arisen under Contract A, but it is shown that Contract A does not exist and there was no contract. This, in essence, was Kilker's primary position in the present case and I have rejected it on the facts, although it is common ground (and I agree) that if there is no construction contract, there is no jurisdiction under s. 108(1) of the Act. There is, however, an intermediate position between there being no contract at all and there being a contract which is alleged but mis-described in some respect or respects by the Claimant, so that it can be said that the contract as described is not the contract under which the dispute arose but is (or would be) another contract altogether.
25 It is in this intermediate case that Mr Selby's submission about approbating and reprobating requires closer attention. He founds it upon the decision of the Court of Appeal in Banque Des Marchands de Moscou v Kindersley [1951] Ch 112 where Lord Evershed MR (with whom Singleton and Jenkins LJJ agreed) said:
"The phrases "approbating and reprobating" or "blowing hot and blowing cold" are expressive and useful, but if they are used to signify a valid answer to a claim or allegation they must be defined. Otherwise the claim or allegation would be liable to be rejected on the mere ground that the conduct of the party making it was regarded by the court as unmeritorious. From the authorities cited to us it seems to me to be clear that these phrases must be taken to express, first, that the party in question is to be treated as having made an election from which he cannot resile, and, second, that he will not be regarded, at least in a case such as the present, as having so elected unless he has taken a benefit under or arising out of the course of conduct which he has first pursued and with which his present action is inconsistent."
"Whether the Redworth Construction decision was rightly decided or not on this point, one needs to examine in any event with care whether a materially different case on jurisdiction is being mounted in the court proceedings compared with that raised before the adjudicator. It must also be relevant to consider whether at least in a clear case the adjudicator with the correct and full information before him would have reached the same conclusion that he did. It will also be relevant to consider whether the adjudicator in fact and in reality actually did have jurisdiction. If he or she did have jurisdiction to decide the dispute referred to adjudication, and if he or she with the full information available would have inevitably concluded that there was jurisdiction, I can not see why the adjudication decision should not be enforced in those circumstances."
"28 I respectfully agree with the reasoning of Akenhead J in these passages. At least in a case where there can be no doubt that the adjudicator, if properly informed, should and would have concluded that he had jurisdiction and the proper basis of jurisdiction does not make a difference to the substantive outcome, the Court should not shut out a Claimant who comes to the court to enforce the adjudicator's decision. There are two reasons for this conclusion, one based on principle and one on pragmatism. In principle, if the adjudicator as a matter of fact had jurisdiction and came to an unimpeachable substantive conclusion which is not affected by the correctly-understood route to jurisdiction, the Claimant has not secured a benefit by his choice of the wrong route to that end since the outcome is unaffected. One of the pre-requisites identified by Lord Evershed MR is therefore lacking. The pragmatic reason is that to hold otherwise would encourage the taking of points which, while technically fascinating, are entirely lacking in merit and inimical to the spirit of the adjudication scheme as a whole."
"1. A decision of an adjudicator whose validity is challenged as to its factual or legal conclusions or as to procedural error remains a decision that is both enforceable and should be enforced.
2. A decision that is erroneous, even if the error is disclosed by the reasons, will still not ordinarily be capable of being challenged and should, ordinarily, still be enforced.
3. A decision may be challenged on the ground that the adjudicator was not empowered by the HGCRA to make the decision because there was no underlying construction contract between the parties or because he had gone outside his terms of reference.
"
"1. The adjudication procedure does not involve the final determination of anybody's rights (unless all parties so wish).
2. The Court of Appeal has repeatedly emphasised that adjudicator's decisions must be enforced, even if they result from errors of procedure, fact or law; ...
3. Where an adjudicator has acted in excess of his jurisdiction or in serious breach of the rules of natural justice, the court will not enforce his decision:
4. Judges must be astute to examine technical defences with a degree of scepticism consonant with the policy of the 1996 Act. Errors of law, fact or procedure by an adjudicator must be examined critically before the court accepts that such errors constitute excessive jurisdiction or serious breaches of the rules of natural justice: see Pegram Shopfitters "
"It is important that the enforcement of an adjudicator's decision by summary judgment should not be prevented by arguments that the adjudicator has made errors of law in reaching his decision, unless the adjudicator has purported to decide matters that are not referred to him. He must decide as a matter of construction of the referral, and therefore as a matter of law, what the dispute is that he has to decide. If he erroneously decides that the dispute referred to him is wider than it is, then, in so far as he has exceeded his jurisdiction, his decision cannot be enforced. But in the present case there was entire agreement as to the scope of the dispute, and the Adjudicator's decision, albeit he may have made errors of law as to the relevant contractual provisions, is still binding and enforceable until the matter is corrected in the final determination."
"The fact that adjudication under the Scheme and adjudication under a JCT Prime Cost Contract would be similar procedures does not overcome the twin difficulties that [the adjudicator] was appointed under the Scheme, and that a sufficiently secure identification of the contractual terms was intrinsically necessary to the proper performance of his adjudication task."
Conclusion