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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 >> South East Water Ltd v Elster Water Metering Ltd [2024] EWHC 620 (TCC) (21 March 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2024/620.html Cite as: [2024] EWHC 620 (TCC) |
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BUSINESS & PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT (KBD)
London |
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B e f o r e :
SITTING AS A JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
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SOUTH EAST WATER LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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ELSTER WATER METERING LIMITED |
Defendant |
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Richard Power and Sam Hussaini
(instructed by Dentons UK and Middle East LLP, London EC4M) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 20-21 February 2024
Draft judgment circulated: 14 March 2024
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Crown Copyright ©
Remote hand-down: This judgment was handed down remotely at 10am on 21 March 2024 by circulation to the parties or their representatives by email and by release to The National Archives.
His Honour Judge Stephen Davies:
Section | Paragraphs | |
A | Introduction and summary of decision | 1- 11 |
B | The parties | 12 - 13 |
C | Procedural history | 14 - 19 |
D | The statements of case | 20 - 28 |
E | The framework agreement | 29 - 108 |
(i) | The genesis of the framework agreement | 30 - 42 |
(ii) | The genesis of what became Sched. 11 | 43 - 64 |
(iii) | The terms of the framework agreement | 65 - 92 |
(iv) | The proper interpretation and effect of Sched. 11 | 93 - 105 |
(v) | The variation and supplemental deed | 106 – 108 |
F | The Unfair Contract Terms Act 1977 | 109 - 127 |
G | The individual particulars of loss and the extent to which they are reasonably arguable in the light of the proper effect of Sched. 11 and clause 9.4 | 128 - 134 |
Introduction and summary of decision
The parties
Procedural history
The statements of case
"(i) Costs of exchanging those Products that have been supplied since 24/03/2016 and have since failed: £7,400,000
(ii) Costs incurred in testing these Products: £50,000
(iii) Costs incurred in manually reading these Products (meters) after they lost AMR (incurred to date, continuing): £1,932,000
(iv) Costs of dealing with customers owing to faulty meter readings In these Products, including costs of investigating erroneous AMR readings in these Products: £259,000
(v) Loss of revenue owing to faulty AMR readings in these Products: £3,500,000
(vi) Anticipated costs of replacing other Products supplied after 24/03/2016 based on above percentage failure rates: £6,000,046
GRAND TOTAL: £19,141,046".
The framework agreement
The genesis of the framework agreement
a. first, it is described as "a warranty as proposed in the table below" (emphasis added; the reference to this being something which is proposed does not appear in Sched. 11 itself);
b. second, it only included two worked examples, whereas Sched. 11 included another worked example;
c. third, it included the words "we are happy to discuss extended warranty subject to an additional charge", which words also did not carry through to Sched. 11;
d. finally, whilst both the letter and Sched. 11 concluded with 9 conditions to which the warranty was made subject, in the letter this section was headed "below conditions already stated in the original commercial response - warranty in respect of Goods & Services and Defects Liability, to be subject to", which text did not appear in Sched. 11.
The genesis of what became Sched. 11
a. The onus of proof is on the party [seeking to rely on UCTA] to prove that (i) the term is written; (ii) the term is a term of business; (iii) the term is part of the other party's standard terms of business; and (iv) that the other is dealing on those written standard terms of business (paragraph 18).
b. The third requirement that the term is part of the other party's standard terms of business means that it has to be shown that that other party habitually uses those terms of business. It is not enough that he sometimes does and sometimes does not (paragraph 20).
c. "A party who wishes to contend that it is arguable that a deal is on standard business terms must, in my view, produce some evidence that it is likely to have been so done. This cannot be difficult in a proper case since anonymised requests about prospective terms of business can be made and participants in the credit market may well have knowledge of how particular lenders go about their business. It cannot be right that any defaulting borrower can just assert that business is being done on standard terms and that the lender then has to disclose the terms of other (how many other?) transactions he has entered into before he is entitled to summary judgment" (paragraph 33).
The terms of the framework agreement
Sched. 1
Sched 2
Sched. 11
Year of Failure |
AMR Transponder (Inc Battery) |
Meter |
1 | FOC plus £40 | FOC plus £40 |
2 | FOC plus £40 | FOC |
3 to 5 | FOC | Nothing |
6 to 15 | Discounted replacements | Nothing |
"Discounted replacement formulae = purchase price prevailing at time of failure multiplied by (15 minus number of years since shipment date) divided by 15 years."
"AMR device fails to transmit in year 8 due to a premature battery failure ~ the Supplier will supply complete 'Elster meter & AMR device at the following price: (15 – 8) / 15 = 47% discount of purchase price (at the time)".
The proper interpretation and effect of Sched. 11
The variation and supplemental deed
The Unfair Contract Terms Act 1977
The individual particulars of loss and the extent to which they are reasonably arguable in the light of the proper effect of Sched. 11 and clause 9.4
Note 1 He refers in his evidence to submissions from other tenderers. [Back]