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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 >> ISG Retail Ltd v FK Construction Ltd [2023] EWHC 2012 (TCC) (02 August 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2023/2012.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 2012 (TCC) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
KING'S BENCH DIVISION
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
Sitting as a Judge of the High Court
____________________
ISG RETAIL LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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FK CONSTRUCTION LIMITED |
Defendant |
____________________
ALEXANDER HICKEY KC and MEK MESFIN (instructed by Addleshaw Goddard LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 22 June, 14 July and 31 July 2023
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
This judgment was handed down by the judge remotely by circulation to the parties' representatives by email and release to The National Archives. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be Wednesday 02 August 2023 at 10:30am.
ADRIAN WILLIAMSON KC:
"16. The adjudicator is requested to decide that:
16.1. ISG failed to issue a valid payment notice and/or pay less notice in respect of
Application Nr 16;
16.2. ISG is to pay FK the sum of £1,691,679.94 plus VAT as applicable or such
other sum as the Adjudicator decides…"
"7. On 27 September 2022 FK submitted its application for payment number 16 ("Application Nr16") in the gross sum of £4,590,478.67 which after the deduction of retention and previously certified amounts gave an amount due of £1,691,679.94 plus VAT. The dispute concerns the amount that ISG should have paid to FK as a result of ISG failing to issue either a payment notice or an effective pay less notice in response to Application Nr 16.
8. ISG did not issue a payment notice against Application Nr 16 but purported to issue a pay less notice on 28 October 2022.
9. ISG's purported pay less notice in respect of Application Nr 16 was not effective as it was not issued within the prescribed period as it was issued after the final date for payment, being 23 October 2022. ISG was therefore required to pay to FK the amount stated as due in Application Nr 16.
10. Under Section 110B (4) of the Housing Grants Construction and Regeneration Act 1996 as amended ("the Act") as ISG did not give a payment notice then Application Nr 16 is to be regarded as a notice under section 110A (3) of the Act given pursuant to section 110A (2) of the Act (ie it is regarded as a payee notice to establish the notified sum). The notified sum was therefore the amount stated as due on Application Nr 16 ie £1,691,679.94. ISG is required to pay the notified sum as it did not give an effective pay less notice."
"61. I find that on a proper interpretation of the provisions of clause 2 of the Sub-Contract that FK's AFP No. 16 is a valid application that constitutes a valid payee's notice in default of payer's notice and is to be regarded as a notice compliant with the Act and thereby constituting the notified sum relevant to FK's AFP No. 16.
Summary
62. It is not in issue that ISG did not issue a payment notice in respect of FK's AFP No. 16. I find ISG also did not issue a valid pay less notice in respect of FK's AFP No. 16.
63. I find FK's AFP No. 16 is to be regarded as a notice complying with s110A(3) given pursuant to section 110A(2) of the Act and I find ISG is to pay FK the ("notified") sum of £1,691,679.94, plus VAT within seven (7) days of the date of this Decision.
64. In summary, I find FK has succeeded in its case against ISG."
"1. The gross valuation of FK's Works at 28th February 2023 is £3,736,679.72.
2. FK is entitled to an extension of time of 188 days."
"1. A declaration that the Decision is to be enforced and FK is not entitled to recover more than the sum of £3,736,679.72 being the gross valuation decided by Mr Molloy in the Adjudication;
2. A declaration that FK is to repay sums received over and above the £3,736,679.72 gross valuation decided by Mr Molloy in the Adjudication."
a. HT-2022-000424 ("the Shawyer Proceedings"). This was a notified sum dispute on Project Barberry; and
b. HT-2022-000430 ("the Triathlon Proceedings"). This also concerned a notified sum dispute, but on a different project, Project Triathlon.
"10. The question for me, therefore, is whether AFP 14 was, by virtue of the provisions of s.110B(4), to be regarded as a notice complying with s.110A(3).
11. Although in their evidence and skeleton arguments, various other issues were canvassed by the parties, leading counsel for the parties narrowed the question before me, essentially, to one of statutory interpretation, namely whether AFP was submitted "in accordance with the contract" as required by s.110B(4)(b) of the Act.
12. As to that, Mr Brannigan KC, who appeared for ISG, made the simple submission that AFP 14 was, by virtue of being sent a day late, not "in accordance with the contract." Mr Hickey KC and Mr Mesfin, who appeared for FK, argued that AFP 14 was saved by the provisions of cl.2(6), which allowed a late application of payment, nonetheless, to be treated as valid…
14. In my view, this clause, although it allows a late application for payment to be treated as valid, does not render it an application "in accordance with the contract" for the following reasons:
(1) the application is still late and therefore not in accordance with the contract. Indeed, cl.2(6) refers in terms to lateness;
(2) the application is by definition "submitted after the date required for its submission," i.e., it is not in accordance with the contract."
"10.1. ISG accepts that the Wood Decision was a valid, temporarily binding adjudicator's decision, and was properly enforced by the Smith Order on 5 May 2023.
10.2. However, matters then moved on because, subsequent to the Smith Order, the Court held on 14 June 2023 in the Shawyer Judgment that FK could not rely upon a late AFP (AFP 14) as a default payee notice under s.110B(4) of the Act
10.3. The Shawyer Judgment was a final determination of that issue of law within Part 8 proceedings.
10.4. The Wood Decision, which was enforced by the Smith Order, was also a notified sum dispute in which FK again relied upon a late AFP as a default payee notice under s.110B(4) of the Act (AFP 16).
10.5. There is no material difference of principle or law between the late AFP in the Shawyer Judgment (AFP 14) and the late AFP that underpins the Wood Decision and the Smith Order (AFP 16).
10.6. In light of the Shawyer Judgment, the fundamental premise upon which the Wood Decision and the Smith Order were made – namely, there had been a valid AFP – has thus been shown to be wrong."
"23. In my view, it is a necessary legal consequence of the Scheme implied by the 1996 Act into the parties' contractual relationship that Aspect must have a directly enforceable right to recover any overpayment to which the adjudicator's decision can be shown to have led, once there has been a final determination of the dispute…
24. I emphasise that, on whatever basis the right arises, the same restitutionary considerations underlie it. If and to the extent that the basis on which the payment was made falls away as a result of the court's determination, an overpayment is, retrospectively, established. Either by contractual implication or, if not, then by virtue of an independent restitutionary obligation, repayment must to that extent be required… Whether by way of further implication or to give effect to an additional restitutionary right existing independently as a matter of law, the court must have power to order the payee to pay appropriate interest in respect of the overpayment. This conclusion follows from the fact that, once it is determined by a court or arbitration tribunal that an adjudicator's decision involved the payment of more than was actually due in accordance with the parties' substantive rights, the adjudicator's decision ceases, retrospectively, to bind."
"85 I therefore decide that;
1. ISG has failed to issue a valid payment notice and/or pay less notice in
respect of Application Nr 13 (AFP 13);
2. ISG is to pay FK the sum of £1,558,641.17 plus VAT as applicable subject to the operative part of Mr Shawyer's decision at paragraph 7.4 and/or the operative part of Mr Wood's decision at C. (page 13) not being complied with and, if not paid, subsequently declared unenforceable by the English Courts or the Parties agreeing that each aforementioned decision is not binding on them."
" Thank you for the various proposed corrections. I have seen that FK in their Note ask me to "reconsider the Judgment so as to avoid falling into error", and have addressed extensive written submissions to this end.
Although FK do not refer to the relevant jurisprudence in their Note of today's date, I have refreshed my memory as to the approach taken by the courts as summarised by Fraser, J, as he then was, in Gosvenor London Ltd v Aygun Aluminium UK Ltd [2018] EWHC 227 (TCC); [2018] Bus LR 1439, TCC, at paras 46–52, and have also looked at the White Book para 40.2.4.
I note in particular his observation that:
"Very careful consideration must be given to such applications, and litigants should not be given the ability to have a second bite at the cherry. The distribution of a draft judgment under CPR Part 40 should not be seen (as it seems to be, by many legal advisers currently) simply as an open invitation to embark upon an additional round of the litigation, remedying lacunae in their own evidence and raising further arguments. If a matter could have been raised at the first hearing, then it should be."
However, in view of the application made by FK, and mindful of the approach taken in Gosvenor (see Judgment at para 45), I propose to take the following course;
1. The Judgment will not be handed down on Wednesday 26th July, as originally proposed.
2. ISG are to serve any submissions in response to the FK Note of 24th July by 1630 on Thursday 27th July.
3. There is to be a further hearing to enable the parties to make oral submissions as to the need for me to reconsider, or otherwise, the draft Judgment…
I have, of course, not reached any conclusions as to the matters set out in FK's Note, and the above procedure will allow both parties to ventilate matters as they see fit."
"1. The threshold criteria for reopening a draft Judgment.
2. Where the points raised in FK 's Note of Corrections etc were dealt with in the skeleton argument for the hearing on 14 July and/or in oral argument."
(as noted above, item 1 in this email was largely agreed between the parties).
a. I overlooked the fact that ISG were still seeking to enforce the Molloy Decision, which placed a cap upon what ISG could recover in respect of the Wood Decision;
b. FK were entitled to a determination of the "true value" of their work to date, in consequence of which the Wood Overpayment was not in fact an overpayment at all or, at least, not to the extent alleged by ISG;
c. I had not taken into account various contentions set out in FK's Defence, which had been served following the amendments made by ISG and referred to above;
d. In the passage dealing with estoppel (see paragraph 20 above) I had confused ISG's estoppel case before Mr Wood with that advanced by FK before him;
e. I had not given proper effect to the Ribbands Decision.
a. The Wood Decision has rendered enforcement of the Molloy Decision otiose. In my draft Judgment, for this reason, I made little reference to the Molloy Decision, but have added a small amount of text into the final Judgment to explain this;
b. This argument falls outside the proper scope of the present proceedings. For the reasons set out at paragraphs 14 to 17 above, ISG are entitled to recover the Wood Overpayment because the temporarily binding effect of his incorrect decision must yield to the final effect of the (ex hypothesi) correct Judgment. All the other disputes between the parties fall outside the four corners of the present proceedings;
c. It is not appropriate to invite the Court, after receipt of a draft Judgment, to work its way through a 64 paragraph Defence to seek to find possible grounds to refuse Summary Judgment;
d. Having been referred to the Wood Decision (see paragraph 56 thereof in particular, which in turn refers to paragraph 46 of FK's Reply in the Adjudication), I ama satisfied that there was no confusion. The estoppel case advanced before Mr Wood was raised by ISG. FK did not put forward an estoppel case, but simply set out an argument as to the proper construction of clause 2 of the Sub-Contract. On this FK succeeded before Mr Wood, but I held in my Judgment in the Shawyer Proceedings that this was incorrect;
e. I have dealt with the Ribbands decision at paragraphs 21-23 above.
Note 1 FK are seeking permission to appeal against my Judgment of 14th June 2023 but, for present purposes, this Judgment must be assumed to be final and correct. [Back]