BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions >> Bellway Homes Ltd v Seymour (Civil Engineering Contractors) Ltd [2013] EWHC 1890 (TCC) (04 July 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2013/1890.html Cite as: [2013] TCLR 8, [2013] EWHC 1890 (TCC) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
BELLWAY HOMES LIMTED |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
SEYMOUR (CIVIL ENGINEERING CONTRACTORS) LIMITED |
Defendant |
____________________
Sean Brannigan QC (instructed by Pinsent Masons LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 24 June 2013
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Akenhead:
Introduction
The History
"The grounds for our withholding payment are firstly that [there] do exist a substantial number of defects in the works which presently remain unresolved. These items are more particularly described in the Schedule enclosed herewith, and in respect of each item, we have provided an indication as to the estimated cost we would be likely to incur in engaging a third party contractor to attend to these unresolved defects should that prove necessary in due course. The sum of these estimated remedial costs amounts to £177,750 excluding VAT.
Secondly, as you well know, we have by letter of claim dated 16 November 2010 advised you of our intention to issue formal litigation proceedings against your Company for the recovery of certain of the monies previously paid to you in consequence of the decision of Mr Dancaster…The value of our intended claim, as detailed in Appendix V to our letter of 16 November 2010 totals £518,060.03, plus interest which continues to accrue.
Clearly this sum alone eclipses the value of retention held in relation to the Project, even before it is aggregated with the monies we intend to withhold by reason of the unresolved defects.
Accordingly, we confirm it is our intention to make payment of £NIL in respect of your recent application for retention release…"
The attached schedule was a letter dated 20 May 2011 from Bellway to North Tyneside Council which set out some 60 items of work or defect that might remain to be carried out with handwritten costings which excluding extras came to £176,750.
The Proceedings
The Offers
"…this letter contains an offer to settle that is intended to have the consequences of Part 36 of the Civil Procedure Rules.
Seymour as the claimant in respect of its counterclaim is prepared to accept a payment of £1.00…from Bellway on the following basis:
1. The sum of £1 is to be paid by Bellway in full and final settlement of all claims and counter claims by Bellway and Seymour in the Proceedings including interest and VAT (if any).
2. For the avoidance of any doubt Seymour will rectify item no.8 ("Block paving to roundabout Chevron blocks is badly stained") identified at Attachment 8 to the Reply and Defence to Counterclaim at its own cost and as soon as reasonably practicable.
3. This offer is open for acceptance for 21 days (the "Relevant Period") from the date of service of this letter on the terms set out in Part 36. Thereafter the offer will continue to remain open for acceptance on the terms set out in Part 36…
7. If the offer to settle is accepted within the Relevant Period Seymour will be entitled to its costs of the Proceedings up to the date on which the notice of acceptance is served, such costs will be subject to detailed assessment on the standard basis by the court if not agreed, and to be paid by Bellway…"
"3. We observe that your letter maintains the approach adopted by your clients at the Mediation, which in essence was to elide the issue of your client's entitlement to payment of the balance of the retention moneys with the substantive dispute between the parties, in an attempt to engineer for your client an advantageous costs position.
4. As you are very well aware, there exists no serious dispute between the parties with regard to the issue of retention. The additional costs generated as a result of your client's decision to include this head of claim within its Counterclaim in the Proceedings are correspondingly modest and pale into insignificance when set against the costs incurred to date in connection with the dispute the subject matter of our client's Claim. Furthermore, upon imminent completion by your client of the ongoing remedial works at the Shiremoor Bypass, no further costs will be incurred in relation to the retention issue, nor will any such costs be incurred the trial…
6. We therefore consider the position adopted by your client to be contrived, and transparently so, such that the Court in exercise of its discretion would, we feel, have little difficulty in dismissing any suggestion to the effect that your client should be entitled to its costs of both claim and counterclaim in the manner stated in terms of paragraph 7 of your letter of 18 October.
7. We perceive, and believe the Court would perceive, that in reality your letter contains not one but two offers, namely:
7.1 An offer by your client to accept the sum of £158,632 (inclusive of interest) in settlement of its Counterclaim; and
7.2 An offer by your client to pay the sum of £158,631 (inclusive of interest) against our client's Claim…
11. Accordingly, if it is genuinely your client's intention to make a Part 36-compliant or other offer of settlement against the Claim which is capable of acceptance by our client, we invite your client now to do so. As it is, we cannot sensibly seek our client's instructions as to the merits of any commercial settlement offer given the manner in which your letter of 18 October 2012 has been framed…"
This was responded to by Seymour's solicitors on 22 November 2012 saying that the offer was compliant and denying that their client's position was contrived.
"…It cannot seriously be doubted that the existence of these defects entitles our client to exercise set off as against the retention moneys claimed by your client.
Further, while it is common ground that a large number of defects cited by your client within its Statement of Case has since been attended to by your client, there remains, of course, the question of our client's Claim for recovery of sums overpaid to your client in respect of its claim for delay-related costs. Our client is entitled also to exercise set-off in this regard…
…our client is concerned that the satellite dispute which supposedly exists in relation to the retention monies has been set up by your client in an attempt to obscure the substantive issue which exists between the parties in relation to our client's Claim for reimbursement of delay costs.
It is clear that the costs which have been incurred in these proceedings relate to the Claim brought by our client and not to your client's Counterclaim (which essentially concerns the retention). In order to bring greater transparency to these proceedings moving forwards towards trial, our client has therefore resolved to release to your client the retention monies claimed.
For the avoidance of doubt, our client in so doing is not conceding that it does not have a right (indeed a continuing right) to exercise set-off as against these monies, is it is simply that our client has elected to waive that right in order to achieve additional clarity and transparency moving forwards.
For the further avoidance of doubt, our client intends to release the full amount of the retention fund (totalling £146,955.07) and does not propose to retain or continue to set-off any sum on account of the estimated cost to our client of attending to the small number of outstanding defects for which it maintains your client is responsible. Nor does our client intend pursuing a claim for recovery of these rectification costs at trial; frankly, the sums in question are such that the cost which would be involved in resolving liability for those items, were they to be held over to trial, does not justify our client incurring this expenditure.
Accordingly, our client does not require your client to return to site to attend to the disputed items; our client requires only that your client return to site within the period indicated in the RDCC in order to attend to the two outstanding items (being item nos. 8 and 43) for which your client has admitted responsibility. Should your client fail to resolve the acknowledged defects within this period, our client would seek judgment at trial upon your client's admission of responsibility for those items…."
The retention money was paid by Bellway to Seymour within a few days.
The Arguments
A. If (a) until about September 2012 the best evidence suggests that Bellway was entitled to hold onto retention but that thereafter there was at best a de minimis entitlement to do so, (b) and therefore, given the eventual settlement, Bellway was entitled to a hold on to the retention plus eventual settlement figure up until then but not thereafter, would it not be fair that (i) Bellway should have its costs up to, say, about the date of the October offer, but (ii) if arguably however, Bellway should have accepted the October offer given the state of the account overall at that stage, should it pay Seymour's costs thereafter?
B. What impact should there be on any order for costs in favour of Bellway given that it recovered albeit by settlement between one third and one quarter of what it was claiming? Should there be a proportionate reduction?
Such submissions were received and considered.
The Law and Practice
"(1). This rule applies upon judgment being entered:
(a) a claimant fails to obtain a judgment more advantageous than a defendants part 36 offer, or
(b) judgment against the Defendant is at least as advantageous to the claimant as the proposals contained in a claimants Part 36 offer.
(1A) For the purposes of paragraph (1) in relation to any money claim or money element of a claim "more advantageous" means better in money terms by any amount, however small, and "at least as advantageous" shall be construed accordingly.
(2) Subject to paragraph (6), where rule 36.14(1)(a) applies, the court will, unless it considers it unjust to do so, order that the defendant is entitled to-
(a) his costs from the date on which the relevant period expired; and
(b) interest on those costs.
(4) In considering whether it would be unjust to make the orders referred to in paragraphs (2) and (3), the court will take into account all the circumstances of the case including –
(a) the terms of any Part 36 offer;
(b) the stage in the proceedings when any Part 36 offer was made, including in particular how long before the trial started the offer was made;
(c) the information available to the parties at the time when the part 36 offer was made; and
(d) the conduct of the parties with regard to the giving or refusing to give information for the purposes of enabling the offer to be made or evaluated"
"a) The question is not whether it was reasonable for the claimant to refuse the offer. Rather, the question is whether, having regard to all the circumstances and looking at the matter as it affects both parties, an order that the claimant should pay the costs would be unjust: see Matthews v Metal Improvements Co. Inc [2007] EWCA Civ 215, per Stanley Burnton J (sitting as an additional judge of the Court of Appeal) at paragraph 32.
b) Each case will turn on its own circumstances, but the court should be trying to assess "who in reality is the unsuccessful party and who has been responsible for the fact that costs have been incurred which should not have been.": see Factortame v Secretary of State [2002] EWCA Civ 22 , per Walker LJ at paragraph 27.
c) The court is not constrained by the list of potentially relevant factors in Part 36.14(4) to have regard only to the circumstances of the making of the offer or the provision or otherwise of relevant information in relation to it. There is no limit to the types of circumstances which may, in a particular case make it unjust that the ordinary consequences set out in Part 36.14 should follow: see Lilleyman v Lilleyman (judgment on costs) [2012] EWHC 1056 (Ch) at paragraph 16.
d) Nonetheless, the court does not have an unfettered discretion to depart from the ordinary cost consequences set out in Part 36.14. The burden on a claimant who has failed to beat the defendant's Part 36 offer to show injustice is a formidable obstacle to the obtaining of a different costs order. If that were not so, then the salutary purpose of Part 36, in promoting compromise and the avoidance of unnecessary expenditure of costs and court time, would be undermined."
Discussion
(a) Seymour should pay Bellway its costs on a standard basis up to and including 30 September 2012. This reflects the fact that the eventual settlement figure reflects the fact that it was entitled through an initial Pre-Action Protocol process to issue and pursue proceedings to recover a not insignificant element of overpayment resulting from the adjudication decision. The state of the account up to about that time would have demonstrated a net sum due to it.
(b) Bellway should pay Seymour's costs from 30 September 2012 up to 31 January 2013 to reflect not only that the state of the account between them was such that Bellway was entitled to nothing by reason of its continued and unjustified withholding of the retention but also its unwillingness effectively to engage in a settlement process which reflected settlement of its Claim at a level which was actually or virtually equivalent to the amount of the retention money.
(c) Thereafter, each party should pay its own costs. This reflects the almost complete pointlessness of the litigation proceeding when, although the net state of the account was in favour of Bellway, it should have been recognising that it would settle much earlier at the figure which it did settle for, namely £146,953; however it wanted more until close to the 12th hour. Seymour did not help the process very much because it reiterated at least twice in April 2013 that it insisted on being paid its costs at least up until the expiry of its 18 October 2012 offer. That this litigation was during this period pointless is reflected by the fact that there was in reality little between the parties as to the settlement figure excluding the costs and that costs way over the probable true value of the Claim were being expended during this period. Whilst one can understand that both parties had possibly respectable arguments about the costs consequences, it took until June 2013 for there to be acceptance of (relatively) a very modest settlement figure and for costs to be left for the decision of the Court. There is no good reason either available or proffered to the Court why the parties took over four months to get to the position that they eventually (and extremely belatedly) reached on or about 7 June 2013. If the parties were (as seems likely) simply engaging in some form of brinkmanship, then neither of them should expect to gain some costs advantage out of it. The fact that when the arithmetic is done at the end Seymour was the net winner by £2 is a factor but is balanced by the fact that Seymour did not withdraw its insistence during much of this period on being paid its costs at least up until 8 November 2012.
"(i) In commercial litigation where each party has claims and asserts that a balance is owing in its own favour, the party which ends up receiving payment should generally be characterised as the overall winner of the entire action.
(ii) In considering how to exercise its discretion the court should take as its starting point the general rule that the successful party is entitled to an order for costs.
(iii) The judge must then consider what departures are required from that starting point, having regard to all the circumstances of the case.
(iv) Where the circumstances of the case require an issue-based costs order, that is what the judge should make. However, the judge should hesitate before doing so, because of the practical difficulties which this causes and because of the steer given by rule 44.3(7).
(v) In many cases the judge can and should reflect the relative success of the parties on different issues by making a proportionate costs order.
(vi) In considering the circumstances of the case the judge will have regard not only to any part 36 offers made but also to each party's approach to negotiations (insofar as admissible) and general conduct of the litigation.
(vii) If (a) one party makes an order offer under part 36 or an admissible offer within rule 44.3(4)(c) which is nearly but not quite sufficient, and (b) the other party rejects that offer outright without any attempt to negotiate, then it might be appropriate to penalise the second party in costs.
(viii) In assessing a proportionate costs order the judge should consider what costs are referable to each issue and what costs are common to several issues. It will often be reasonable for the overall winner to recover not only the costs specific to the issues which he has won but also the common costs."
In Brit Inns Ltd and others v BDW Trading Ltd [2012] EWHC 2489 (TCC), Mr Justice Coulson set out at Paragraph 45 some other helpful principles, having considered various cases including the Multiplex case:
"Accordingly, when dealing with costs in a case like this, the following principles apply:
(a) In a commercial case, the successful party will usually be the party that recovers money from the other (Multiplex and Gibbon);
(b) The only certain way for a defendant to shift its potential costs liability is to make a Part 36 offer which it then betters at trial (Gibbon and Fox);
(c) The pursuit of exaggerated claims may deprive the claimant of some or all of its costs (Islam and Fulham Leisure), but it is usually only where the exaggeration is deliberate that the claimant has been ordered to pay the defendant's costs (Painting and Ford);
(d) In general terms, for costs to be shifted as a result of conduct, so that the claimant who recovers something at trial still has to pay the defendant's costs, there needs to be more or less total failure on the issues that went to trial (Hullock) or a failure to accept a Part 44 offer that would have put the claimant in a better position than going on (Fulham Leisure).
Conclusion