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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> SW Global Resourcing Ltd v Morris & Spottiswood Ltd [2012] ScotCS CSOH_200 (28 December 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2012/2012CSOH200.html Cite as: [2012] ScotCS CSOH_200, [2012] CSOH 200 |
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OUTER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION
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CA77/12
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OPINION OF LORD HODGE
in the cause
SW GLOBAL RESOURCING LIMITED
Pursuer;
against
MORRIS & SPOTTISWOOD LIMITED
Defender:
________________
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Pursuer: Walker; Brodies LLP
Defender: Howie QC; MacRoberts LLP
28 December 2012
[1] Morris
& Spottiswood Ltd ("M&S") was the main contractor in a contract with
Historic Scotland to carry out building works at Stirling Castle. SW Global
Resourcing Ltd ("SW") was a sub-contractor. The sub-contract was formed by
correspondence and a purchase order. The parties agreed that it was a
construction contract within the meaning of Part II of the Housing Grants,
Construction and Regeneration Act 1996.
[2] On
21 November 2011 SW referred to adjudication a dispute about its claim for
disruption costs and loss and expense incurred in the proper execution of the
works. In its notice of referral SW sought an order that M&S pay it
£272,677.77. On 23 November 2011 Mr John N. Bell was appointed as
the adjudicator.
[3] M&S
challenged Mr Bell's jurisdiction on the ground that the issue which had
been referred to him had already been decided by Ms Janey Milligan in an
earlier adjudication. Mr Bell rejected that challenge in a decision dated
2 December 2011 in which he held that the dispute which Mrs Milligan
determined related to an interim application in respect of loss and expense.
[4] In a
decision dated 10 January 2012 Mr Bell awarded SW £73,303.16 in
relation to its claim for loss and expense together with interest on that sum
from 18 July 2011 at 2% above the Bank of England base rate until payment.
[5] In this
action SW seeks payment of the sums which Mr Bell found due. M&S in
its defences seeks to have Mr Bell's decision reduced by way of exception
and alleges that the decision was a nullity based on five inter-related grounds
of challenge. In a debate Mr Howie QC for M&S sought a decree setting
aside Mr Bell's decision and Mr Walker for SW sought decree de
plano.
M&S's grounds of challenge
[6] Mr Howie
advanced several grounds of challenge which overlapped. He addressed me on
passages in Mr Bell's decision and mounted his inter-related challenges on
each passage. That was helpful in presenting the relevant documents to me. But
in what follows I try to separate out the strands of his argument so that I can
state my reasons on each ground in an orderly manner.
(i) Breach of natural justice and apparent bias
[7] SW and M&S
were not in agreement on whether they had incorporated the terms and conditions
of the main contract (GC/Works/1) into the sub-contract and made submissions on
that issue. SW contended that the main contract terms were not incorporated
while M&S contended that they were. This dispute focused on a provision in
the sub-contract order (para 4) which stated that "so far as applicable to
the sub-contract works" SW would comply with the provisions of the main
contract as though they had been incorporated into the sub-contract.
[8] Mr Bell
referred to this dispute in section 7 of his decision and held that
clauses 46.1 and 46.2 of the main contract, which gave a contractual right
to claim prolongation and disruption costs, were available to SW in the
sub-contract as the legal basis of its claim for loss and expense. He held
however (in para 7.8) that clause 46.3 of the main contract, which
obliged the contractor to give immediate notice of circumstances that were
likely to disrupt the regular progress of the works, was not incorporated into
the sub-contract "because there is no benchmark (contract period) to measure
against and serve notice."
[9] Mr Howie
submitted that this amounted to a breach of natural justice as neither party
had advanced a proposition of the partial incorporation of clause 46. SW's
position had been that the provision did not apply while M&S had submitted
that clause 46 applied and that SW had not given the notices which
clause 46.3 stipulated as a pre-condition of the claim for prolongation
costs. There was no basis for the suggestion that Mr Bell was dealing
with a case of partial incorporation.
[10] Mr Howie
also attacked as a breach of natural justice and an instance of apparent bias
Mr Bell's statement in para 8.3 of his decision:
"I consider that the Referring Party has entitlement to costs which arise out of their claim of loss and expense and irrespective of the extent (or otherwise) of the records provided in this adjudication. I cannot find the value to be nil and must use my knowledge and experience as a Quantity Surveyor (41 years) to evaluate the loss and expense claim on a fair and reasonable basis using the records provided."
This, Mr Howie submitted, amounted to an admission by Mr Bell that even if SW had not produced sufficient documentary evidence to discharge the burden on it to establish its claim for loss and expense, he was determined to find in its favour. That amounted to apparent bias. If the passage was not so construed, it involved the adjudicator using his own knowledge and experience to fill in the holes in SW's case without first giving M&S an opportunity to comment.
[11] In my view
Mr Bell did not breach natural justice in deciding that clauses 46.1
and 46.2 of the main contract were incorporated into the sub-contract but that
clause 46.3 was not. As Lord Hamilton stated in Babcock Rosyth Defence Ltd v
Grootcon (UK) Ltd 1998 SLT 1143 at 1149C,
"When parties make reference to a set of conditions designed primarily for use in another contract but do not expressly adapt those conditions to meet the circumstances of their own relationship, it is often difficult to determine with confidence the contractual effect."
In this case, Mr Bell was faced with M&S's assertion that the main contract conditions applied and SW's argument that they did not. The circumstances are very different from those which arose in Strathclyde Regional Council v City of Glasgow District Council 1992 SLT 51 in which the judge was criticised for deciding the case on a basis that the parties had not placed before him: judex non reddit plus quam quod petens ipse requirit". Rather in this case Mr Bell used his own knowledge and experience in assessing the parties' contentions and reached a conclusion some way between their respective positions. I agree with Mr Walker's submission that his so doing without inviting further comments from the parties is not obviously unfair: see Costain Ltd v Strathclyde Regional Council 2004 SLT 102, Lord Drummond Young's sixth proposition in para 20 of his opinion, Paton, Petitioners [2011] CSOH 40, Lord Bannatyne's fifth proposition in para 72, and Carillion Construction Ltd v Devonport Royal Dockyard [2006] BLR 15 (CA), Chadwick LJ at para 85.
[12] Further,
SW's answers to M&S's response to the notice of referral (pro 6/39) while
asserting that there had been no incorporation of the main contract terms,
referred to case law on the partial incorporation of contractual terms.
M&S's further submissions (Pro 6/40) referred to that case law and the email
from SW's solicitors to Mr Bell (6/42) addressed specifically the
incorporation of clause 46. In my view Mr Bell was entitled to deal
with the issue of the partial incorporation of clause 46 of the main
contract without inviting further comment.
[13] I do not
infer any unfairness or apparent bias from what Mr Bell stated in
para 8.3 of his decision. It is important to observe that SW had sought a
sum substantially larger than that which he awarded and that he excluded
several claims, including a claim for disruption, on the basis of a lack of
adequate records. I agree with Mr Walker that in para 8.3 Mr Bell
was stating that he was prepared to use the records which SW provided in
assessing its claim, notwithstanding his concerns about the quality of some of
the documents, and that he would bring to bear his knowledge and experience in
making that assessment. In RGB Ltd v SGL Carbon Fibres Ltd [2010] BLR 631 Lord Menzies at para 28 and in Atholl Developments (Slackbuie)
Ltd, Petrs [2010] CSOH 94 Lord Glennie at para 17 referred to the
presumption of regularity or of propriety which an adjudicator enjoys. It is
presumed that he has looked at the relevant documents and given them
appropriate consideration within the tight time constraints under which he works.
In the face of that presumption I do not infer any irregularity from this
statement.
(ii) Failure to exhaust remit
[14] Mr Howie
submitted that Mr Bell had failed to exhaust his remit in two respects.
First, he had not addressed M&S's argument that SW had failed to comply
with the terms of clause 46.3 of the main contract by giving the required
notices. As I have interpreted Mr Bell's decision as determining that
that clause did not form part of the sub-contract, that submission fails.
[15] The other
ground needs more explanation. In sections 8 and 9 of his decision
Mr Barr considered SW's claim for loss and expense. He held that SW was
entitled to pursue the claim either in implement of the sub-contract, which I
interpret as being a reference to the incorporated clauses 46.1 and 46.2
of the main contract, or as damages for breach of contract. He determined that
the initial period of the sub-contract was 34 weeks and that 80 weeks was a
reasonable period for SW to have completed the contract in the light of the
events which had occurred. The difference between the two periods was 46 weeks
and he held that to be the period of prolongation for which SW could claim
additional preliminaries (para 9.4.3).
[16] Mr Howie
contended that in so deciding Mr Bell had failed to consider M&S's
submission that SW had been culpable in delaying the sub-contract by 26.14
weeks by its failure to provide the contractually specified stone paving
materials to the site.
[17] Mr Bell
had before him M&S's contentions on that matter in its reply to referral
notice and also SW's riposte in its answers to the response. M&S's assertion
of culpable delay was, as Mr Walker submitted, a rather skeletal
submission with very limited documentary evidence in support (Appendices K and
L to the reply to the referral notice). Mr Bell did not uphold the
submissions of either M&S or SW about the initial contract period but held
it to be 34 weeks. He accepted SW's contention that a reasonable period
for the completion of the contract was 80 weeks. In my view it is
implicit in that acceptance that he did not accept that SW had culpably delayed
the completion of the sub-contract. While it may be that SW delayed in the
provision of the correct stone paving, it is not clear that any such delay was
part of the critical path in the context of delay events that SW attributed to
M&S. The period of delay that M&S asserted fell within the longer
period of delay that SW claimed had been caused by M&S (see Pro 6/36 App 9
and 6/35 App L). Mr Bell suggested that M&S had offered "no apparent
challenge to the 80 week period". I interpret that as a rejection of M&S's
claim and do not accept that Mr Bell failed to address the culpable delay
contention that M&S advanced. In any event, the presumption of regularity,
to which I have referred, causes me to reject this ground of challenge.
(iii) Ultra vires
[18] M&S in
its note of argument submitted that Mr Bell acted ultra vires either
because he treated himself as bound by Mrs Milligan's decision that a
reasonable time for the sub-contract works was 80 weeks or used that
decision to alter the onus of proof.
[19] I do not
interpret what Mr Bell stated in para 8.1(b) of his decision is
consistent with either of those submissions. In his discussion he referred to
the previous adjudicator having "noted" a reasonable period to complete the
works was 80 weeks. He did not profess to be bound by Mrs Milligan's
decision. It is true that SW argued that Mrs Milligan had decided the
point and that her view was binding. But Mr Bell did not accept that
submission. In my view, reading para 8.1(b) as a whole, what Mr Bell
said was that SW had asserted an 80 week period, that Mrs Milligan
had been satisfied that that was supported by the information presented, and,
crucially, in the current adjudication M&S had offered no apparent
challenge to SW's assertion.
[20] Mr Howie
also submitted that, if that interpretation were correct, Mr Bell had
breached the rules of natural justice in deciding that 80 weeks was a
reasonable period to carry out the works because he ignored M&S's
submission to the contrary. Mr Bell stated in the final sub-paragraph of
para 8.1(b) of his decision:
"I also note that although [M&S] states that Mrs Milligan's decisions did not decide that 80 weeks was a reasonable period to carry out the works they offer no apparent challenge to the 80 week period being wrong".
Mr Howie submitted that in so deciding Mr Bell overlooked M&S's challenge that 26.14 weeks delay were the fault of SW and that oversight vitiated his decision.
[21] I am not persuaded
by this submission. Mr Bell had before him the material which SW had
presented to Mrs Milligan and which it provided to him. That material was
its claim for extension of time dated 30 March 2011 and supplementary appendices
sent by letter dated 15 April 2011 which supported SW's assertion in its
referral notice of a reasonable period of 80 weeks. In that claim SW
asserted 8 events that disrupted and prolonged the contract works and presented
a bar chart (appendix 9 Part iii)) summarising the delaying effect of the
events.
[22] M&S's
refutation of SW's claim was confined to two appendices (Appendices K and L) of
its reply to the referral notice. It is clear that Mr Bell considered
appendix K. That appendix was concerned principally with the submission
that SW had a fixed contract period of 47.86 weeks but also sought to assert
the proposition that SW had caused a delay of 26.14 weeks. The only other
material relating to delay by SW was appendix L, which as Mr Walker
observed, was supported by only two emails which were said to vouch the start
and end points of the 26.14 week period. I do not construe Mr Bell's
statement that there was "no apparent challenge" as vouching that he had overlooked
the assertion of the 26.14 week delay and so failed to exhaust his
jurisdiction. I construe it as a rejection of the insubstantial material by
which M&S advanced its assertion of culpable delay by SW. He could no
doubt have stated his reasons more fully. But in my view he has done enough to
indicate his rejection of the assertion of SW's culpable delay of 26.14 weeks.
[23] I observe
for completeness that M&S's submission in appendix L that Mrs Milligan
had found SW responsible for delay of that extent is not supported by her
decision. See paras 9.18 to 9.23 of her decision in which she discusses
M&S's withholding notice. While it is correct, as Mr Howie asserted,
that Mrs Milligan did not state that there was no delay attributable to
SW, she rejected the only period that M&S had asserted before her. M&S
repeated that assertion in its submissions before Mr Bell but gave him no
evidential basis on which to find a shorter period than 26.14 weeks. This is part
of the context in which Mr Bell concluded that there was no apparent
challenge.
[24] At the
continued hearing on this application I was furnished with an affidavit by Alastair
Kettles and a report by Ms Jennifer Willis on the expression "reasonable
period to carry out the works." Although it is not central to my determination
as I have construed Mr Bell's decision as a rejection of M&S's
insubstantial challenge, I am satisfied, as Ms Willis suggested, that the
expression refers to the period that the sub-contractor took to complete the
works less any period of delay to the critical path that that sub-contractor caused.
I am not persuaded by Mr Kettles' suggestion that the expression meant the
result of adding the delays caused by persons other than the sub-contractor to
the original contractual period but before deducting any delays attributable to
the culpability of the sub-contractor. That would remove any content from the
qualification "reasonable".
(iv) Wednesbury unreasonableness and internal contradictions
[25] Mr Howie
accepted that it was unusual to challenge the decision of an adjudicator on the
ground of unreasonableness as the process of adjudication leads only to an
interim resolution of disputes and the adjudicator may make glaringly obvious
errors of law and fact within his jurisdiction. He submitted that an exception
arose where an adjudicator reached a decision which involved internal
contradictions in his reasoning. Logical inconsistencies in an adjudicator's
decision provided a ground for review. While the presumption of regularity and
propriety prevented most Wednesbury challenges, such a presumption had
to give way to demonstrable irrationality.
[26] In support
of his contention he referred to Lord Reed's opinion in Ballast plc v The
Burrell Company (Construction Management) Ltd 2002 SLT 1039, at paras 34-39
in which he suggested that an adjudicator's decision might be open to judicial
review on Wednesbury grounds. In his summary in para 39 Lord Reed stated:
"I have come to the conclusion that the scheme should be interpreted as requiring the parties to comply with an adjudicator's decision, notwithstanding his failure to comply with express or implied requirements of the scheme, unless the decision is a nullity; and it will be a nullity if the adjudicator has acted ultra vires (using the expression in a broad sense to cover the various types of error and impropriety which can vitiate a decision), for example because he had no jurisdiction to determine the dispute referred to him, or because he acted unfairly in the procedure which he followed, or because he erred in law in a manner which resulted in his failing to exercise his jurisdiction or acted beyond his jurisdiction."
[27] M&S
alleged that in several matters Mr Bell had acted irrationally. It
characterised his acceptance of SW's assertion of a the 80 week period,
which I have discussed in paragraphs [15] - [17] and [20] - [24] above,
as irrational. It submitted that he had acted irrationally and inconsistently
(a) in holding that clause 46.3 of the main contract had not been
incorporated into the sub-contract because there was no contract period as a
benchmark against which to measure prolongation (para 7.8 of his decision)
to allow notices to be served and (b) in his subsequent finding by analysing
M&S's programme that the maximum duration of the works was 34 weeks (para
8.1(b)). .
[28] Mr Howie
also submitted that there was a clear contradiction in Mr Bell's treatment
of SW's claim for head office overheads and that amounted to irrationality. In
para 9.6 of his decision Mr Bell stated
"Overheads are usually calculated as a function of turnover ie an amount (percentage) to be added to the net cost of work (eg labour, material and plant) to ensure return of the cost of overheads.
I consider if any amount is due for head office overheads the amount should be calculated by applying the overhead percentage to the amount of the loss and expense claim."
Mr Howie contrasted that statement, which treated overheads as cost-related, with Mr Bell's later statement (para 9.8.12) that
"My opinion on the use of a formula allocation (Section 13) to calculate recovery of head office overheads is given in para 9.6 of this decision, however I do not consider that return for head office overheads is linked to the additional value generated by the cost of the other items in the loss and expense claim and accordingly an amount should be included in the calculation of the claim."
Mr Howie submitted that, while the court was reluctant to scrutinise closely the interim decisions of adjudicators, a blatant internal contradiction was a species of Wednesbury unreasonableness to which it would have regard.
[29] Similarly
in the appendix to his decision, in which he set out the calculation of the
amount that he decided M&S was due to pay SW, there was a clear error as
the percentage uplift for head office overheads had been included first in his
calculation of weekly costs and then applied again to the total of the
prolongation costs.
[30] I am not
persuaded that there is substance in these challenges. Where the court does
not overturn an adjudicator's decision when he has been shown to have made
factual or legal errors, it must take more than internal contradictions to
justify intervention. In my view in the context of adjudications, where the
adjudicator is asked to make interim decisions under tight time constraints,
the Wednesbury ground of review will be applied, if at all, only where
the mistake has the hallmarks of irrationality of which Lord Diplock spoke
in CCSU v Minister for the Civil Service [1985] 1 AC 374, at 410.
Mr Howie's complaints do not approach that standard. The apparent
contradiction between paras 9.6 and 9.8.12 may be no more than an
infelicity of the wording of the latter. Mr Bell used a percentage mark
up for head office overheads in his calculation of what SW was entitled to
receive. The double-counting of the mark up for the head office overheads is
no more than an error in calculation which can be corrected in any final
determination of the parties' contractual rights.
[31] I am also
not persuaded that Mr Bell was inconsistent in his treatment of the absence
of a benchmark (paragraph [27] above). There was no obvious benchmark in
the sub-contract and the time attributed to the sub-contract was a matter of
dispute that Mr Bell had to resolve.
[32] Accordingly,
this ground of challenge fails.
(v) Lack of adequate reasoning
[33] Mr Howie
submitted that Mr Bell had failed to give any reasons for his acceptance
of SW's contention that 80 weeks was a reasonable time for SW to have
completed the sub-contract. I do not agree. The parties to the adjudication
had presented him with the material to make the determination. He accepted
SW's submission as to the effect of the eight delay events on which it founded
and rejected M&S's claims of culpable delay as insubstantial.
Summary
[34] An
adjudicator's decision is only an interim decision. The court is not concerned
whether he has made errors of fact or law but only with the question whether he
has acted unfairly or acted ultra vires. It is hostile to technical
arguments to postpone the enforcement of his decision (Carillion
Construction Ltd v Devonport at paras 85 - 87). I am not
persuaded that M&S's criticisms have substance in this case.
Conclusion
[35] I am
satisfied that M&S's challenges to the adjudicator's decision fail. There
is no other defence to the enforcement of his decision.
[36] I therefore
repel M&S's fourth plea in law, uphold SW's four pleas in law and grant
decree de plano in terms of the first and second conclusions of the
summons.