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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 >> ROK Building Ltd v Celtic Composting Systems Ltd [2009] EWHC 2664 (TCC) (30 October 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2009/2664.html Cite as: [2010] CILL 2797, [2009] EWHC 2664 (TCC), 130 Con LR 61 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
ROK BUILDING LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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CELTIC COMPOSTING SYSTEMS LIMITED |
Defendant |
____________________
Michael Murray, company secretary in person for the Defendant
Hearing date: 22 October 2009
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Akenhead:
Introduction
The contract
"50.1 The Project Manager assesses the amount due at the assessment date…
50.2 The amount due is
- the Price for Work done to Date
- plus other amounts to be paid to the Contractor
- less amounts to be paid by or retained from the Contractor…
50.4 In assessing the amount due, the Project Manager considers any application for payment the Contractor has submitted on or before the assessment date. The Project Manager gives the Contractor details of how the amount due has been assessed.
50.5 The Project Manager corrects any wrongly assessed amount due in a later payment certificate.
51.1 The Project Manager certifies a payment on or before the date on which a payment becomes due.
51.2 Each certified payment is made on or before the final date for payment. If a certified payment is late, or if the payment is late because the Project Manager does not issue a certificate which he should issue, interest is paid on the late payment. Interest is assessed from the date by which the late payment should have been made until the date when the late payment is made, and is included in the first assessment after the late payment is made.
51.3 If an amount due is corrected in a later certificate either
- by the Project Manager in relation to a mistake or a compensation event or
- following a decision of the Adjudicator or the tribunal
interest on the correcting amount is paid. Interest is assessed from the date when the incorrect amount was certified until the date when the correcting amount is certified and is included in the assessment which includes the correcting amount.
51.4 Interest is calculated on a daily basis at the interest rate and is commenced annually."
"The Adjudicator's decision is binding on the Parties unless and until revised by the tribunal and is enforceable as a matter of contractual obligation between the Parties and not as an arbitral award. The adjudicator's decision is final and binding if neither Party has notified the other within the time is required by this contract that he is dissatisfied with a matter decided by the Adjudicator and intends to refer the matter to the tribunal."
Reference to the "tribunal" is to the tribunal for final dispute resolution, arbitration in this case. The adjudication was to be in accordance with the CIC Model Adjudication Procedure 4th Edition which provided by Clauses 4 and 5 as follows:
"4. The Adjudicator's decision shall be binding until the dispute is finally determined by … arbitration… or by agreement.
5. The Parties shall implement the Adjudicator's decision without delay whether or not the dispute is to be referred to… arbitration"
The facts
"12.3 That Rok shall be paid in the additional sum of £204,465.14 plus VAT in relation to interim payment application 13 in respect of the compensation event arising from the flooding on the site…
12.5 That Celtic shall pay interest on the sum awarded in the sum of £1470.47 and which continues to accrue at a daily rate of £14.00 from and including 8 September 2009, until judgement or sooner payment."
12.6 That Rok shall pay 25% of my costs and expenses in the sum of £5371.88 plus VAT; that Celtic shall pay 75% of my costs and expenses in the sum of £16,115.63 plus VAT…"
These Proceedings
The Law
"In such circumstances, should the sums found due in adjudication decision number 3 give way to the disputed valuation in the final certificate? In my judgment, they should not for the following reasons: First, for the reasons set out above, I consider that the binding nature of the adjudicator's decision and the agreement of the parties to comply with that decision means that, prima facie, the adjudicator's decision should be enforced.
Secondly, if payment of an adjudication decision on the sum due on an interim certificate had to be subject to the view of the Contract Administrator/Quantity Surveyor in a subsequent certificate, then the intention of parliament and the purpose of adjudication would be defeated. Each successive certificate would defeat the decision by an adjudicator on the previous certificate."
The logic of the second point in the dictum set out above is that the adjudicator's decision, if it requires payment, should be enforced and it is not subject to the diktat, approval or further certification under the construction contract.
"Giving it a sensible interpretation, and trying to give effect to its purpose and to the aims of adjudication, in my judgement the adjudicator in arriving at his conclusions on the various elements were saying, in effect: "That is what you should have been paid in response to application 19". Indeed, that is precisely how the defendant apparently read the decision, since within a few days after the issue of the decision... certificate 20 was issued… which met the requirements of the decision in relation to payment, i.e. the claimant contractor got the certificate to which it was entitled, in the opinion of the adjudicator. Thus I do not consider that any point arises about the validity of the decision in terms of the dispute or in terms of what it seeking payment…The claimant has to accept the consequences of its own reference on this point."
"A notice of adjudication has to be put in its context. I have done so briefly. I agree with what was said in FastTrack Contractors Ltd v Morrison Construction Ltd [2000] BLR 168. His Honour Judge Thornton QC said:
"During the course of a construction contract, many heads of claims, issues, contentions, and causes of action will arise. Many of these will be collectively, or individually disputed. When a dispute arises, it may cover one, several or many of one, some or all of these matters. At any particular moment in time, it will be a question of fact what is in dispute. Thus, the "dispute" which may be referred to adjudication is all or part of whatever is in dispute at the moment the referring party first intimates an adjudication reference. In other words, the "dispute" is whatever claims, heads of claims, issues or contentions or causes of action that are then in dispute which the referring party has chosen to crystallise into an adjudication reference. A vital and necessary question to be answered, when a jurisdictional challenge is mounted, is: what was actually referred? That requires a careful characterisation of the dispute referred to be made. This exercise will not necessarily be determined solely by the wording of the notice of adjudication since this document, like any commercial document having contractual force, must be construed against the background from which it springs and which will be known to both parties."
When the context is examined, it is plain, in my judgement, that the real dispute was about what payment ought to have been made as a result of application No. 19. That contained various elements-valuations of measured work, valuation and variations, provisional sums, direct loss and expense, etc. Those elements were therefore reflected in the notice of adjudication. The notice was therefore valid in referring the dispute about the payment to be made which could not be decided without considering each such element."
The Adjudicator's decision
"The dispute the Referring Party intends to be referred to adjudication is in relation to Celtic's failure to assess any change to the Completion Date as a result of flooding of the site and in relation to Celtic's inadequate assessment of Rok's financial claim in respect of flooding of the site as manifested in Celtic's valuation of Rok's interim payment application number 13."
In the following paragraph, the adjudicator sets out what the "Reddress Sought" was in the Notice of Adjudication:
"Rok seeks the following decisions:
11.1 A decision that Rok is entitled to a compensation event in respect of flooding on the site.11.2 A decision that Rok shall be paid the additional sum of £759,389.64 plus VAT or such other sum as the Adjudicator considers appropriate in relation to interim payment application 13 in respect of the compensation event arising from the flooding on the site.11.3 A decision that the current Completion Date of 26 January 2009 is extended by 19 weeks or by such other period and to such date as the Adjudicator considers appropriate.11.4 A decision that Celtic shall pay interest on the sum awarded at the contract rate of 2% above the average base rate of [various clearing banks] or interest at such other rate as the Adjudicator considers appropriate together with a decision that Celtic pay Rok continuing interest at the appropriate daily rate until judgement or sooner payment.11.5 A decision that Celtic pay the Adjudicators costs and expenses on this decision and the nomination fee."
"11.228 I agree Rok is entitled to interest on the outstanding balance from the date it fell due to the date of this decision and which shall continue to accrue at the daily rate thereafter.
11.229 The final date for payment of the relevant certificate was 25th May 2009 (paragraph 25 of the Referral).
11.230 Rok is therefore entitled to interest on the balance due of £204,465.14 from the date that balance should have been paid (25th May 2009) to the date of this decision (7th September 2009), a period of 105 days, at a rate of 0.5% plus 2%.
11.231 Therefore, Rok is entitled to a sum in respect of interest to the date of this decision of £1470.47 and which continues to accrue at the daily rate of £14.00 from and including 8 September 2009, until payment is received."
Discussion
(a) The whole issue between the parties arose as a result Celtic's refusal (albeit it believed its stance was justified) to include anything in Certificate No 13 by way of compensation for the flooding event. If and to the extent that Celtic had included in Certificate No 13 compensation for this event, that money would have been paid, subject to retention.
(b) The whole tenor of Rok's Notice of Adjudication was to the effect that substantial amounts should have been but were not included in Certificate No 13. Interest was claimed the certificate on the basis that monies should have been certified and paid.
(c) The "Redress Sought" was that Rok "shall be paid the additional sum". The Reddress was not framed in declaratory terms but in terms of asking for payment.
(d) It is of particular interest that Rok's claim in the adjudication was for a gross sum less retention and plus VAT. This is material because it demonstrates that it was asserting that it should be paid the sum net of the 3% retention which would have been deducted from Certificate No 13 and that VAT was payable on the balance. That is exactly reflected in what the Adjudicator actually did: having found a gross sum due, he deducted 3% retention and required that Rok should be paid the net some plus VAT.
(e) Paragraph 12 of the decision is framed in directive language: it says that Rok "shall be paid"; that "is in relation to interim payment application 13". He is effectively saying that the net sum of £204,465.14, which was part of what was claimed for in that application, should be paid.
(f) His decision on interest is confirmation that he has decided that the next time should have been paid on or by 25 May 2009; this underlines his intent that the net sum (and interest) was to be paid.
Decision