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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 >> Stratfield Saye Estate Trustees v AHL Construction Ltd [2004] EWHC 3286 (TCC) (06 December 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2004/3286.html Cite as: [2004] EWHC 3286 (TCC) |
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TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
Strand London WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
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TRUSTEES OF THE STRATFIELD SAYE ESTATE | (CLAIMANT) | |
-v- | ||
AHL CONSTRUCTION LIMITED | (DEFENDANT) |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
(Official Court Reporters)
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MR STUART KENNEDY appeared on behalf of the DEFENDANT
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Crown Copyright ©
Part 1: Introduction
Part 2: The facts
"Heckfield Wood House repairs and improvements, phase 1.
Further to our meeting on site and discussion concerning the above project and your subsequent letter confirming your rates, I am pleased to be able to confirm your appointment to carry out the first phase of the above works. The contract will be a cost plus contract and you will be paid as follows: foreman £31 per hour, mason/carpenter £25 per hour, M and E tradesmen £25 per hour, labourer £20 per hour. Plant will be as follows: pick-up truck driver £30 per hour. Materials, plant, skips and other direct costs, including site accommodation, will be paid at cost plus 10 per cent. You will be expected to keep full timesheets for the labour for each man each day, stipulating the element of work they have been engaged in and materials invoices to support the valuation at the end of each month.
"Water, electricity and telephone are on site but temporary connections will need to be made by yourselves. You are to start on ... and I will meet you there on that day to agree a programme for the first month's work. I enclose a key for the padlock to the gate and fencing. I expect you to have a minimum of three men on site at all times. Please arrange for the following to be put in hand immediately prior to the above date: CIS certificate to be ready for presenting to the Estate, insurance for £2 million public liability and employer's liability, health and safety plan. Please make contact with the scaffolder to arrange for adjustments to the scaffold for access and to replace the decayed ladder on the front elevation. I enclose their details. I look forward to seeing you on Monday 8 September at 9am."
"Thank you for your letter dated 2 September and we note the contents. Our quotation for M and E tradesmen was £30 per hour, not £25 per hour as your letter states. Unfortunately, we cannot reduce this figure so I hope it is acceptable. I would assume that most of the M and E items are in the next phase and they can be competitively quoted for. We look forward to meeting you on Monday."
"I am pleased to be able to tell you that I have now successfully negotiated good terms with another builder. These are Abbot Hill Lyons of Guildford. They have recently competed another project for us near Guildford where they have achieved a very satisfactory standard of work. They are able to start on Monday and I have today confirmed acceptance of their rates and asked them to programme their resources for this date ..."
Part 3: The present proceedings
"(i) That there is no construction contract in writing governing any claim for loss of profit on work not carried out, (ii) that there is no jurisdiction under the HGCRA to decide the disputes raised by the defendant's purported adjudication notice of 28 July 2004."
"(1) There was no concluded contract made between the claimants and the defendant containing terms as to (i) a specified or defined scope of works, (ii) a programme or sequence of work, (iii) a programme or period for a specified scope of work, (iv) a completion date. (2) That there was no concluded contract made between the claimants and the defendant under which the defendant was entitled to (i) carry out and complete a specified scope of work, (ii) a continuous provision of work and/or instructions from the claimants providing continuous work. (3) That there is no construction contract in writing governing any claim for loss of profit on work not carried out. (4) That there is no jurisdiction under the HGCRA to decide the disputes raised by the defendant's purported adjudication notice of 28 July 2004."
"(a) There was a contract between the parties, (b) the contract was in or evidenced in writing, (c) the contract was a construction contract under the Act, (d) the contract incorporated an agreed scope of works, (e) the defendant was under an obligation to complete the works in a reasonable time, namely, by the end of January 2004, (f) the defendant was obliged to provide a minimum of three operatives on site at all times, (g) the claimants were under an obligation to co-operate with the defendant and not to hinder or prevent the defendant from continuing with and completing the phase 1 works, (h) the adjudicator in the third adjudication did have jurisdiction in this matter and his decision is valid and enforceable."
Part 4: Was there a contract for a defined scope of work?
"Scope of works. 2.1: Dismantling and removal of elements still standing which will not form part of the new building. 2.2: Ground floor slabs including DPM and insulation but not batons and timber floor finish. 2.3: First floor joists and herringbone strutting and beams to carry these and possibly some floor covering to be defined later. 2.4: New external walls and structural internal walls (not stud work), repairs to existing walls including replacing decayed lintels and new window/door openings and repairs to stacks. 2.5: Rendering external walls to extent agreed. 2.6: Roof structural timbers and felt batons and slating and lead work. 2.7: Rainwater goods. 2.8: External joinery including doors and windows. 2.9: External decoration. 2.10: Soil drainage but not new treatment plant, surface water drainage including soakaways."
"45. The justification for these decisions [certain overseas authorities which the judge had been discussing] is, in my judgment, to be found in fundamental principles. A contract for the execution of work confers on the contractor not only the duty to carry out the work but the corresponding right to be able to complete the work which it contracted to carry out. To take away or to vary the work is an intrusion into and an infringement of that right and is a breach of contract. (The work has to be defined sufficiently for there to be a right to execute it.) Hence, contracts contain provisions to enable the employer to vary the work in order to achieve lawfully what could be achieved without breaking the contract or by a separate further agreement with the contractor. By entering into a contract with a variations clause such further agreement is obviated as the contractor's consent to changes in the work is in the primary contract. So such clauses enable an owner to remove work from the contractor just as they oblige the contractor to carry out additional work or to make alterations in the work, none of which could be achieved without the consent of the contractor.
"46. Provisions entitling an owner to vary the work have therefore to be construed carefully so as not to deprive the contractor of its contractual right to the opportunity to complete the works and realise such profit as may then be made. They are not in the same category as exemption clauses. They have been common for centuries and do not need to be construed narrowly. In developed forms they now offer contractors opportunities to participate actively in the success of the project and to enhance their returns (for example, by way of value engineering or the application of concepts such as partnering).
"47. However, the cases do show that reasonably clear words are needed in order to remove work from the contractor simply to have it done by somebody else, whether because the prospect of having it completed by the contractor will be more expensive for the employer than having it done by somebody else, although there can well be other reasons such as timing and confidence in the original contractor. The basic bargain struck between the employer and the contractor has to be honoured and an employer who finds that it has entered into what he might regard as a bad bargain is not allowed to escape from it by the use of the omissions clause so as to enable it then to try and get a better bargain by having the work done by somebody else at a lower cost once the contractor is out of the way (or at the same time if the contract permits others to work alongside the contractor)."
Part 5: Was that contract an agreement in writing within the meaning of section 107 of the Construction Act?
"(1) The provisions of this Part apply only where the construction contract is in writing, and any other agreement between the parties as to any matter is effective for the purposes of this Part only if in writing.
"The expressions 'agreement', 'agree', and 'agreed' shall be construed accordingly.
"(2) There is an agreement in writing -- (a) if the agreement is made in writing (whether or not it is signed by the parties), (b) if the agreement is made by exchange of communications in writing, or (c) if the agreement is evidenced in writing.
"(3) Where parties agree otherwise than in writing by reference to terms which are in writing, they make an agreement in writing.
"(4) An agreement is evidenced in writing if an agreement made otherwise than in writing is recorded by one of the parties, or by a third party, with the authority of the parties to the agreement.
"(5) An exchange of written submissions in adjudication proceedings, or in arbitral or legal proceedings in which the existence of an agreement otherwise than in writing is alleged by one party against another party and not denied by the other party in his response constitutes as between those parties an agreement in writing to the effect alleged.
"(6) References in this Part to anything being written or in writing include its being recorded by any means."
"(13) Section 107(2) gives three categories where the agreement is to be treated in writing. The first is where the agreement, whether or not it is signed by the parties, is made in writing. That must mean where the agreement is contained in a written document which stands as a record of the agreement and all that was contained in the agreement. The second category, an exchange of communications in writing, likewise is capable of containing all that needs to be known about the agreement. One is therefore led to believe by what used to be known as the ejusdem generis rule that the third category will be to the same effect, namely, that the evidence in writing is evidence of the whole agreement.
"(14) Subsection (3) is consistent with that view. Where the parties agree by reference to terms which are in writing, the legislature is envisaging that all of the material terms are in writing and that the oral agreement refers to that written record.
"(15) Subsection (4) allows an agreement to be evidenced in writing if it (the agreement) is recorded by one of the parties or by a third party with the authority of the parties to the agreement. What is there contemplated is thus a record (which by subsection 6 can be in writing or a record by any means) of everything which has been said. Again, it is a record of the whole agreement.
"(16) Subsection (5) is a specific provision where there has been an exchange of written submissions in the adjudication proceedings in which the existence of an agreement or otherwise than in writing is alleged by one party and not denied by the other, then that exchange constitutes 'an agreement in writing to the effect alleged.' The last few words are important. The exchange constitutes an agreement in writing which does more than evidence the existence of the agreement, it also evidences the effect of the agreement alleged and that must mean such terms which it may be material to allege for the purpose of that particular adjudication. It is not necessary for me to form a view about Grove Deck Limited v Capital Demolition Limited [2000] BLR 181. Dealing with section 107.5 His Honour Judge Bowsher QC said:
"'Disputes as to the terms expressed and implied of oral construction agreements are surprisingly common and are not readily susceptible of resolution by a summary procedure such as adjudication. It is not surprising that Parliament should have intended that such disputes should not be determined by adjudicators under the act ...' (Emphasis added by me).
"I agree. That is why a record in writing is so essential. The record of the agreement is the foundation from which a dispute may spring but the least the adjudicator has to be certain about is the terms of agreement which is giving rise to the dispute ...
"(19) On the point of construction of section 107, what has to be evidenced in writing is literally the agreement, which means all of it, not part of it. A record of the agreement also suggests a complete agreement, not a partial one. The only exception to the generality of that construction is the instance falling within subsection (5) where the material or relevant parts alleged and not denied in the written submissions in the adjudication proceedings are sufficient. Unfortunately, I do not think subsection (5) can so dominate the interpretation of the section as a whole so as to limit what needs to be evidenced in writing simply to the material terms raised in the arbitration ..."
"(21) I also agreed that the appeal should be allowed. I do so not because the whole agreement was not in writing in any of the forms for which section 107 of the 1996 Act makes provision but because the material terms of the agreement were insufficiently recorded in writing in any of those forms.
"(22) Although clarity of agreement is a necessary adjunct of a statutory scheme for speedy interim adjudication, comprehensiveness for its own sake may not be. What is important is that the terms of the agreement material to the issue or issues giving rise to the reference should be clearly recorded in writing, not that every term, however trivial or unrelated to those issues, should be expressly recorded or incorporated by reference. For example, it would be absurd if a prolongation issue arising out of a written contract were to be denied a reference to adjudication for want of sufficient written specification or scheduling of matters wholly unrelated to the stage or nature of the work giving rise to the reference.
"(23) There may be cases in which there could be dispute as to whether all the terms of the agreement material to the issues in the sought reference are in writing as required by section 107 and it could defeat the purpose of the Act to clog the adjudicative process with jurisdictional wrangling on that account. However, there will be many cases where there can be no sensible challenge to the adequacy of the documentation of the contractual terms bearing on the issue for adjudication or as to the ready implication of terms common in construction contracts.
"(24) Section 107(5) is an illustration of the draftsman's intention not to shut out a reference simply because the written record of an agreement is in some immaterial way incomplete. It provides that an exchange of written submissions in proceedings in which the existence of an agreement otherwise than in writing is alleged by one party and not denied by the other constitutes an agreement in writing 'to the effect alleged.' If the effect of the agreement so alleged contains all the terms material to the issue for adjudication that procedure is available, notwithstanding that the agreement contains other terms not in writing which are immaterial to the issue ..."
Part 6: Is the decision of Mr Wakefield a valid and enforceable adjudicator's award?