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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 >> Jawaby Property Investment Ltd v The Interiors Group Ltd & Anor [2016] EWHC 557 (TCC) (16 March 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2016/557.html Cite as: [2016] EWHC 557 (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 :
____________________
JAWABY PROPERTY INVESTMENT LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) THE INTERIORS GROUP LIMITED (2) ANDREW STEPHAN GEORGE BLACK |
First Defendant Second Defendant |
____________________
Mr James Bowling (instructed by Fenwick Elliott LLP) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 9th March 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
The Hon. Mrs Justice Carr DBE :
Introduction
a) A valuation sent by TIG by email for Valuation 7 on 7th January 2016 ("the Valuation") was not a valid Interim Application within the meaning of Clause 4.8.1 of the Contract;
b) Alternatively, if, contrary to JPIL's case, the Valuation was a valid Interim Application, then an email and attachments sent by Ashford Property Services Limited ("APS"), JPIL's Agent under the Contract, on 18th January 2016 ("the 18th January email") constituted a valid Pay Less Notice as required under clause 4.9 of the Contract and was served not later than 5 days before the final date for payment.
a) For JPIL : statements from Mr Jonathan Bowley of JPIL's solicitors, Eversheds LLP ("Eversheds"), and Mr Christopher Millican of APS;
b) For TIG : a statement from Mr Black.
The Contract
"Any notice, approval, request or other communication to be given by either Party under this Contract shall be sufficiently served if sent by hand, by fax or by post to the registered office, or if there is none then the last known address of the Party to be served…"
"Contractor's Interim Applications and Due Dates
4.8.1 In relation to each Interim Application, the Contractor shall make an application to the Employer (an 'Interim Application') in accordance with the following provisions of this clause 4.8, stating the sum that the Contractor considers to be due to him and the basis on which that sum has been calculated…
4.8.3 Where Alternative B applies, for the period up to practical completion of the Works, Interim Applications shall be made as at the monthly dates specified in the Contract Particulars for Alternative B up to the date of practical completion or the specified date within one month thereafter. Subsequent Interim Applications shall be made at intervals of 2 months (unless otherwise agreed), the last such application being made upon the expiry of the Rectification Period or, if later, the issue of the Notice of Completion of Making Good (or, where there are Sections, the last such period or notice). The due date in each case shall be the later of the specified date and the date of receipt by the Employer of the Interim Application.
4.8.4 Interim Applications may be made before, on or after completion of the relevant stage or the monthly date and shall be accompanied by such further information as may be specified in the Employer's Requirements.
Interim Payments – final date and amount
4.9.1 The final date for payment of an Interim Payment shall be 30 days from its due date.
4.9.2 Not later than 5 days after the due date the Employer shall give a notice (a "Payment Notice") to the Contractor in accordance with clause 4.10.1 and, subject to any Pay Less Notice given by the Employer under clause 4.9.4, the amount of the Interim Payment to be made by the Employer on or before the final date for payment shall be the sum stated as due in the Payment Notice.
4.9.3 If the Payment Notice is not given in accordance with clause 4.9.2, the amount of the Interim Payment to be made by the Employer shall, subject to any Pay Less Notice under clause 4.9.4, be the sum stated as due in the Interim Application.
4.9.4 If the Employer intends to pay less than the sum stated as due from him in the Payment Notice or Interim Application, as the case may be, he shall not later than 5 days before the final date for payment give the Contractor notice of that intention in accordance with clause 4.10.2 (a "Pay Less Notice"). Where a Pay Less Notice is given, the payment to be made on or before the final date for payment shall not be less than the amount stated as due in the notice.
4.9.5 If the Employer fails to pay a sum, or any part of it due to the Contractor under these Conditions by the final date for its payment, the Employer shall, in addition to any unpaid amount that should properly have been paid, pay the Contractor simple interest on that amount at the Interest Rate for the period from the final date for payment until payment is made. Interest under this clause 4.9.5 shall be a debt due to the Contractor from the Employer.
4.9.6 Acceptance of a payment of interest under clause 4.9.5 shall not in any circumstances be construed as a waiver of the Contractor's right to proper payment of the principal amount due, to suspend performance under clause 4.11 or to terminate his employment under section 8.
Payment Notices, Pay Less Notices and general provisions
4.10.1 Each Payment Notice under this Contract shall specify the sum that the Party giving the notice considers to be or have been due at the due date in respect of the relevant payment and the basis on which that sum has been calculated.
.2 A Pay Less Notice:
.1 (where it is to be given by the Employer) shall specify both the sum that he considers to be due to the Contractor at the date the notice is given and the basis on which that sum has been calculated.
.2 (where it is to be given by the Contractor) shall specify both the sum that he considers to be due to the Employer at the date the notice is given and the basis on which that sum has been calculated.
.3 A Payment Notice or a Pay Less Notice to be given by the Employer may be given on his behalf by the Employer's Agent or by any other person who the Employer notifies the Contractor as being authorised to do so.
.4 In relation to the requirements for the giving of notices under section 4 and the submission of a Final Statement, it is immaterial that the amount then considered to be due may be zero.
.5 Notwithstanding his fiduciary interest in the Retention as stated in clause 4.16 the Employer is entitled to exercise any rights under this Contract of withholding or deduction from sums due or to become due to the Contractor, whether or not any Retention is included in any such sum under clause 4.18."
a) TIG is to make monthly an Interim Application for Payment, here on the 8th of each month;
b) Whichever was the later of the monthly "specified date" or the actual date of receipt of the Interim Application was called the "due date" by reference to which time for other steps was fixed;
c) The final date for payment was 30 days after the due date;
d) Not later than 5 days after the due date JPIL was to give a Payment Notice stating the sum that TIG considered to be due. If no such notice was given, then the interim payment was to be the amount in TIG's Interim Application, subject to any Pay Less Notice given by JPIL;
e) A Pay Less Notice was to be given not later than 5 days before the final date for payment.
"INTERIM PAYMENTS
*Application by Contractor: If made under Conditions of Contract clause 4.9 include details of amounts considered due together with all supporting information."
"LABOUR AND EQUIPMENT RETURNS
* Provide for verification at the beginning of each week in respect
of each of the previous seven days.
* Records must show:
- The number and description of craftsmen, labourers and
other persons directly or indirectly employed on or in
connection with the Works or Services, including those
employed by subcontractors.
- The number, type and capacity of all mechanical, electrical
and power-operated equipment employed in connection
with the Works or Services."
"Within 7 business days after receipt by Eversheds of the following documents from the Contractor…
3.3.1 a statutory declaration sworn by a Director of the Contractor stating that a Default has occurred and has continued for a period of 7 days after receipt by the Employer of a notice specifying the Default and requiring its remedy and stating the amount due for payment and unpaid from the Employer to the Contractor under the Contract (having regard to any Pay Less Notice) and, where no Payment Notice has been issued pursuant to the Contract, a statement to that effect; and
3.3.2 either (i) a certified copy of the Payment Notice issued pursuant to the Contract in respect of that amount…or, where no Payment Notice has been issued, a certified copy of the relevant Interim Application issued by the Contractor pursuant to the Contract in respect of that amount…or (ii) a certified copy of any decision of an adjudicator or judgement of any court evidencing a sum due to the Contractor and in each case together with a certified copy of any Pay Less Notice Eversheds shall, and the Employer irrevocably instructs, directs and authorities Eversheds to pay from the funds deposited in the Escrow Account to the Contract the amount of the relevant sum demanded to the extent that there are sufficient funds standing to the credit of the Escrow Account at such time."
"Default" was defined as "a failure by the Employer to pay the whole or any part of any sum properly due under the terms of the Contract by or on the final date for payment thereof."
The relevant chronology of events
Valuations 1 to 6
Pay Less Notices
The Valuation
"Please can you issue me your valuation tomorrow morning so that I can review it prior to our meeting on Monday."
"Please see our initial assessment for Valuation 007, this is based upon Progress update and onsite review carried out earlier this week.
If you could kindly confirm a time for Monday's meeting, I can ensure that it does not clash with prior diarised meetings."
"Please find attached our Certificate for Payment No 7 in the amount of £-124,604.00. VAT is not applicable in relation to this Certificate for Payment.
As the "Payment now due to the contractor exclusive of VAT" is a negative figure, there is no payment due and therefore no need for you to raise a corresponding invoice."
"We have not yet been issued copies of the mutual "hand mark-up" as prepared/noted by Rachel from the Valuation 007 as undertaken on Monday 11th Jan 2016?
…
This Certificate effectively states that your previous Valuation 006 was incorrect and you have at some stage mis-valued the work, if we have a negative figure? Can you please explain your logic with this?
At worst the Valuation should be £0 i.e. no value/no progress since the last valuation, yet whilst we were on site we have ceilings on Level 6 being completed (Chris was also onsite for clarity and would have noted this)."
"Please find attached the marked-up record of our site walk round last week, and the corresponding excel valuation assessment.
The progress is as agreed on site and variations are included as discussed on site….The Materials on Site included in last month's assessment was £244,785; this month is £158,187, a difference of £86,598.
Since I do not receive a build-up for the windows claimed by TIG, I carry out a pro-rata reconciliation of the progress on site against the build-up of costs included in the post-tender figure included in the contract sum. A copy of my reconciliation is included in the assessment (as was last month's). I mistakenly included Levels 5 and 9 in last month's assessment, and this is corrected in this month's resulting in reduction of £85,172 against the windows element."
The Law
"In the UK (unlike other jurisdictions with mandatory construction adjudication, such as Malaysia) the employer's failure to serve a payless notice within a short period challenging the payee's notice can have draconian consequences. A failure to serve a notice in time will usually mean a full liability to pay. That is what the run of recent TCC cases on this topic, including ISG v Seevic College [2014] EWHC 4007 (TCC) and Galliford Try Building Ltd v Estura Ltd [2015] EWHC 412 (TCC) , are all about. But it seems to me that, if contractors want the benefit of these provisions, they are obliged, in return, to set out their interim payment claims with proper clarity. If the employer is to be put at risk that a failure to serve a payless notice at the appropriate time during the payment period will render him liable in full for the amount claimed, he must be given reasonable notice that the payment period has been triggered in the first place."
"I consider that the document relied upon as an Interim Application under clause 4.11.1 must be in substance, form and intent an Interim Application stating the sum considered by the Contractor as due at the relevant due date and it must be free from ambiguity. In this context, the Interim Application should be considered in the same light as a certificate. If there are to be potentially serious consequences flowing from it being an Interim Application, it must be clear that it is what it purports to be so that the parties know what to do about it and when."
"…A document which has to be handled in commerce must be in a form which leaves no reasonable doubt about its nature…I think that a certificate of this sort must, to satisfy the contract, be unambiguous and readily understandable…"
"(i) It is not enough that the common assumption upon which the estoppel is based is merely understood by the parties in the same way. It must be expressly shared between them.
(ii) The expression of the common assumption by the party alleged to be estopped must be such that he may properly be said to have assumed some element of responsibility for it, in the sense of conveying to the other party an understanding that he expected the other party to rely on it.
(iii) The person alleging the estoppel must in fact have relied upon the common assumption, to a sufficient extent, rather than merely forming his own independent view of the matter.
(iv)That reliance must have occurred in connection with some subsequent mutual dealing between the parties.
(v) Some detriment must thereby have been suffered by the person alleging the estoppel, or benefit thereby have been conferred upon the person alleged to be estopped, sufficient to make it unjust or unconscionable for the latter to assert the true legal (or factual) position."
"If the defendant, as he did, led the plaintiffs to believe that he would not insist on the stipulation as to time, and that, if they carried out the work, he would accept it, and they did it, he could not afterwards set up the stipulation as to the time against them. Whether it be called wavier or forbearance on his part, or an agreed variation nor substituted performance, does not matter. It is a kind of estoppel. By his conduct he evinced an intention to affect their legal relations. He made, in effect, a promise not to insist on his strict legal rights. That promise was intended to be acted on, and was in fact acted on. He cannot afterwards go back on it."
"... I do not consider that that, by itself, amounted to any form of implied representation that it would waive a similar irregularity in the future: one swallow does not make a summer."
Was the Valuation a valid Interim Application?
a) The email of 7th January 2016, being an email only, did not comply with the requirements for service prescribed by Clause 1.7 (as substituted by amendments to the standard form); and/or
b) The terms of the email were insufficient to constitute an Interim Application under Clause 4.8.1.
a) The Valuation did not describe itself as an Interim Application. It did not mention Clause 4.8.1. It did not apply for anything;
b) In breach of the express terms of Clause 4.8.1 the Valuation did not state that TIG considered that a sum to be due to it;
c) It was described as an "initial" assessment, indicating a degree of provisionality;
d) The attachment did not contain all the information which would support the claim. It contained no more than a set of percentages. There were no supporting documents, such as invoices from suppliers and the like, or applications or build-ups from sub-contractors;
e) There is insufficient to satisfy the contractual requirement to show the basis on which the valuation had been calculated.
a) Firstly, the Valuation was sent in response to a request from APS on (Tuesday) 5th January 2016 for a valuation to be issued the next day;
b) TIG did not meet that deadline request, only sending the Valuation across on (Thursday) 7th January 2016;
c) Critically, and unlike any previous valuation, the Valuation was described only as TIG's "initial" assessment. This made it clear that the Valuation was not TIG's firm or final assessment. Thus it was not (and cannot objectively be construed as) a statement by TIG of what it considered was due to it for the purpose of Clause 4.8.1 of the Contract but rather only of what it considered it might be due, subject to further consideration. When pressed by the Court as to the import of the phrase, TIG's contention was that the word "initial" meant that it was TIG's "first" valuation, intended to "get the ball rolling" for valuation purposes. Again, this is a very far cry from a statement by TIG of the sum that it considered to be due to it for the purpose of clause 4.8.1 of the Contract and such as to carry the draconian consequences of the payment regime that follows;
d) The impression of provisionality (and haste) is reinforced not only by the error in the summary sheet (where the sheet incorrectly described the gross total as being for Valuation 6 not 7) but more significantly by the fact that the Valuation did not value the works beyond 5th (or 7th) January. The attachment to the mail was entitled : "Copy of Section Split Valuation (007) to 05 Jan." The summary sheet stated that the valuation was for works carried out up to and including 7th January. The difference in the dates of 5th and 7th January is apt without more to lead to confusion. But the real significance is that, whichever date is adopted, the valuation, unlike all previous valuations, did not go up to and include valuation of the works up to the due date (of 8th January).
Did the 18th January email and attached documents Certificate a valid Pay Less Notice?
a) to provide APS' mark-up of the Valuation, which both parties were aware was not a Payment Certificate. The parties were clear as to the difference between the two types of document (see APS' email to TIG of 13th October 2015 regarding its mark-up on Valuation 4). Equally, the required breakdown of the Payment Certificate cannot have been intended to be also a Pay Less Notice. They are, as TIG points out, different documents under different clauses with different effects; and
b) to provide an explanation of the Certificate of Payment of 15th January 2016.
Conclusion