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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> COD Hyde Ltd v Space Change Management Ltd [2016] EWHC 820 (Ch) (14 April 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2016/820.html Cite as: [2016] BLR 373, [2016] EWHC 820 (Ch), [2016] CILL 3817, [2016] TCLR 5 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
COMPANIES COURT
IN THE MATTER OF COD HYDE LTD
AND IN THE MATTER OF THE INSOLVENCY ACT 1986
Rolls Building Fetter Lane London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
COD HYDE LIMITED |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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SPACE CHANGE MANAGEMENT LIMITED |
Respondent |
____________________
Luke Wygas (instructed by Blake Turner and Co.) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 7th April 2016
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Warren :
Introduction
The Contract
i) The final date for payment is 14 days from its due date. The due date is ascertained in accordance with clause 4.8.ii) No later than 5 days after the due date, the Employer shall give notice (a "Payment Notice") to the Contractor and, subject to any "Pay Less Notice" (see below) given by the Employer, 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 in the Payment Notice.
iii) If the Employer does not give a Payment Notice, then the sum due, subject to any Pay Less Notice, is the sum stated to be due in the Interim Application.
iv) The Employer gets a second bite at the cherry. If it intends to pay less than the sum stated as due from it in the Payment Notice or Interim Application, it can, no later than 5 days before the final date for payment, give the Contractor notice of that intention. 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 in the notice.
v) Under clause 4.10, a Pay Less Notice given by the Employer must specify both the sum which the Contractor considers to be due at the date of the notice and the basis on which that sum is calculated.
i) The Employer may employ and pay other persons to carry out and complete the Works.ii) The Contractor shall take various steps to enable such other persons to complete their allotted task.
iii) It is provided in clause 8.7.3 that
".3 no further sum shall become due to the Contractor under this Contract other than any amount that may become due to him under clause 8.7.5 or 8.8.2 and the Employer need not pay any sum that has already become due either:.1 insofar as the Employer has given or gives a Pay Less Notice under clause 4.9.4; or.2 if the Contractor, after the last date upon which such notice could have been given by the Employer in respect of that sum, has become insolvent within the meaning of clauses 8.1.1 to 8.1.3."
"If the Contractor does not procure execution and delivery of the bond, then, notwithstanding any other term of this Contract, the Employer may deduct £[SUM] from the Contract Sum or the sums that would otherwise be due to the Contractor under this Contract, until the Contractor procures such execution and delivery."
The Statutory Demand ("the SD")
The facts
"Unless and until our employment has been terminated, we have a right to the opportunity to carry out and complete the Works, and you have no right to replace us with other contractors without our agreement or appropriate instruction. Our right to carry out and complete the Works is obvious and fundamental and your actions in employing others evince a clear intention on your part not to be bound by the contract and are a repudiation of the contract which is accepted."
"dissatisfaction in the way the Works were not being progressed sufficiently. This is well recorded at Formal Monthly Site Progress Meetings as well as in general correspondence. … [The Contractor was] unable to maintain progress against their issued programme/Cash Flow Forecasts and were requested in a number occasions to issue "recovery programmes". These were issued but again [the Contractor] failed to maintain their progress accordingly.
….
This has left [the Employer] in the unenviable position where termination of the Contract is the only way forward with the specific defaults by the Contractor as stated above."
"Please note that the [Contractor] is not in default, having first suspended the performance of all its obligations following its notice to do, and subsequently having accepted your repudiatory act. The contract has been terminated due to your default."
i) The Contractor claims to have been entitled to suspend works and then accept the Employer's alleged repudiatory breach when it had to employ another contractor.ii) In contrast, the Employer considers the Contractor
"to have been in serious breach of contract by its failure to progress the works, culminating in your client's unjustified suspension of the works. Contrary to your client, our client has given proper notice of its intention to terminate the contract, in its letter to your client dated 29 February 2016…. Our client's termination will entitle our client to damages in an amount which is likely to exceed the (grossly inflated) sum sought by your client in its Statutory Demand….For this reason alone it is quite clear that there is a substantial dispute as to whether (and to which party) any payment is due, and that a Winding up Petition would therefore be entirely inappropriate and an abuse of process."
Discussion
Conclusion and disposition