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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> SSP Health Ltd v The National Health Service Litigation Authority (Primary Care Appeals Service) & Ors [2020] EWCA Civ 1574 (25 November 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2020/1574.html Cite as: [2020] EWCA Civ 1574, [2021] PTSR 958 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION (ADMINISTRATIVE COURT)
MRS JUSTICE COCKERILL DBE
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE ROSE
and
LORD JUSTICE STUART-SMITH
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SSP HEALTH LIMITED |
Appellant |
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- and – |
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(1) THE NATIONAL HEALTH SERVICE LITIGATION AUTHORITY (PRIMARY CARE APPEALS SERVICE) (2) NATIONAL HEALTH SERVICE COMMISSIONING BOARD (3) THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR HEALTH |
Respondents |
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Fenella Morris QC and Tom Cross (instructed by Browne Jacobson LLP) for the Second Respondent
Hearing date: 12 November 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Stuart-Smith :
Introduction
i) "A determination of a reference … may contain such directions (including directions as to payment) as the [adjudicator] considers appropriate to resolve the matter in dispute": s. 9(11) of the Act; and
ii) The adjudicator "may by the determination in relation to an NHS contract vary the terms of the arrangement or bring it to an end (but this does not affect the generality of the power of determination under subsection (6))": s. 9(12) of the Act.
i) First, whether the Learned Judge was right to conclude that the Adjudicator was acting on the basis that she had power to make an award of interest but declined to do so in the circumstances; and
ii) Second, whether the Learned Judge should have remitted the case to the adjudicator, either (a) on the grounds that the Adjudicator had (contrary to the conclusion of the Learned Judge) acted on the basis that she did not have power to make an award of interest or (b) on the grounds that, having a power, she should have made an award.
The Background to the Appeal
"97. The Applicant is entitled to interest on the global figure [of losses claimed] at the rate of 6% per annum.
…
99. The respondent is indebted to the Applicant in the sum of £587,808.
100. The Applicant is entitled to interest on this figure at the rate of 6% per annum.
Calculation
13 February 2014 to 2 May 2018 = 4 years and 79 days
= £35,268.48 per annum
= £96.62 per day
X 1539 days
= £148,698.18 in interest"
"5.41 I note that in addition to the payment of Additional Payments, the Contractor is also claiming interest at the rate of 6% on the total sum of the Additional Payments across the 20 contracts, with the total interest claimed being £148,698.18. The Contractor had not provided a calculation or the sum for the interest claimed under this Contract.
5.42 I note that the Contractor had not submitted the basis for its entitlement to interest or the basis of the rate of interest charge.
5.43 I note that the Contract is silent in relation to entitlement to interest in the event of late payment of any sums due under the Contract. There is no contractual right for the Contractor to claim interest.
5.44 Clause 2.1 of the Contract states that "The Provider is a Health Service Body for the purposes of Section 9 of the Act. Accordingly, this is an NHS Contract." I am not persuaded that this Contract is a contract at law and that interest is payable.
5.45 I do not determine that interest is payable as claimed by the Contractor."
"What is in dispute is whether [the NHSLA] is entitled to award statutory (or other) interest on awards made in exercise of its jurisdiction under section 9(6) and (8) of the NHS Act 2006 to resolve disputes arising under NHS Contracts."
"If the Court is persuaded by [SSP's] arguments the [NHSLA] considers that the appropriate remedy would be a declaration by the Court that the [NHSLA] has a power in general to award interest on damages and an order that the Defendant must decide whether interest should be awarded in respect of the 20 cases that are the subject of this appeal, and if so in what amount."
"50. The first false premise is that the arbitrator's conclusion on interest was one which rested on a decision that she had no power to award interest. That is not, in my judgment, a fair reading of the Adjudication. It was common ground as between the Claimant and the Interested Parties that the Adjudicator, in fact and in law, had power to award interest. While it may be said to appear from the Defendant's submissions (written by solicitors for the Defendant and not by the Adjudicator) that the Defendant's position is that it does not have power to order interest in relation to an NHS Contract, that was a position which was set out at a later stage in the documents in this Judicial Review. It does not appear to have been the view of the Adjudicator.
51. From her reasons which I have set out above, I conclude that she took the view that such interest was capable of being awarded even though she was dealing with an NHS Contract and not a contract at law. Her decision does not say, (as it would do if she considered that she had no such power), that the question did not arise because she had no power. What she did was to look at the submission made, which appears to have been a bold submission for six per cent interest with no calculation or basis underpinning it. She concluded she was not prepared to award interest in those circumstances.
52. That is an entirely appropriate exercise of her discretion. It involved no error of law or principle. It does not come within a country mile of being amenable to an unreasonableness challenge (none was ever posited). This approach is perfectly reflected in the reasoning of the Adjudicator which runs in essence thus:
1) The claim was a large claim (nearly £150,000) unsupported by either a calculation or a breakdown by contract.
2) No explanation was given of the basis for:
a) the alleged entitlement interest, or
b) the basis of the rate of the interest charge
3) The Adjudicator cannot fill the gap in this case by the obvious means of scrutinising the contract. Any claim for interest appears not to be contractual.
4) Given Clause 2.1 of the Contract, there is a question as to how interest would arise. (That is a question not answered by the submissions. The case now made for the basis of interest was not put to the Adjudicator).
5) Result: request to interest not granted. The Adjudicator does not say that she determines the interest could not arise under this arrangement."
"… There would however be the possibility of interest to be awarded on an equitable basis if applicable. I conclude that interest could be awarded on this basis and indeed the contrary was not urged by either of the Interested Parties. However, I would note here that where one is outside the realm of contractual or statutory regimes which fix an interest rate, interest falls generally to be awarded on the basis of the principle that it is to compensate a party for being kept out of its money."
"The guidance to be derived from these cases includes the following:
(1) Interest is awarded to compensate claimant's for being kept out of money which ought to have been paid to them rather than as compensation for damage done or to deprive defendants of profit they may have made from the use of the money.
(2) This is a question to be approached broadly. The court will consider the position of persons with the claimants' general attributes, but will not have regard to claimants' particular attributes or any special position in which they may have been.
(3) In relation to commercial claimant's the general presumption will be that they would have borrowed less and so the court will have regard to the rate at which persons with the general attributes of the claimant could have borrowed. This is likely to be a percentage over base rate and may be higher for small businesses than for first class borrowers.
(4) In relation to personal injury claimant's the general presumption will be that the appropriate rate of interest is the investment rate.
(5) Many claimant's will not fall clearly into a category of those who would have borrowed or those who would have put money on deposit and a fair rate for them may often fall somewhere between those two rates."
The Appeal
i) Ground 1 is that the Learned Judge erred in deciding that the words of the adjudication meant that the Adjudicator made the Adjudication decision on the basis that she knew she had a power to award interest: the Learned Judge should have held that the Adjudicator made her decision on the basis that she had no such power;
ii) Ground 2 is that the Learned Judge was wrong to conclude that the Adjudicator had made a lawful discretionary decision not to award interest: the Learned Judge should have held that the Adjudicator had made no such decision because (a) the Adjudication contained no such decision, (b) no reasons were given for such a decision;
iii) Ground 3 is that the Learned Judge erred in refusing to grant a declaration confirming that the Adjudicator was entitled to reconsider the question of interest on the damages found due and owing over a period of 5 years because, on the basis that (as the Learned Judge found) there was a power to award interest, that was the agreed position between SSP and the NHSLA.
Discussion
Lady Justice Rose
Lord Justice Lewison