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 £5, 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 >> Glendalough Associated SA v Harris Calnan Construction Co Ltd [2013] EWHC 3142 (TCC) (21 October 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2013/3142.html Cite as: [2014] CILL 3441, [2013] 3 EGLR 115, [2013] EWHC 3142 (TCC), [2014] WLR 1751, [2013] WLR(D) 397, [2014] 1 WLR 1751 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [View ICLR summary: [2013] WLR(D) 397] [Buy ICLR report: [2014] 1 WLR 1751] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
Rolls Building, 7 Rolls Buildings London EC4A 1NL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
Glendalough Associated SA |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
Harris Calnan Construction Co Ltd |
Defendant |
____________________
Miss Anna Laney (instructed by Silver Shemmings LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 14th October 2013
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr. Justice Edwards-Stuart:
Introduction
i) A declaration that the adjudicator has no jurisdiction in relation to the adjudication purportedly referred on 23 August 2013 and must resign.ii) Further or alternatively, an injunction restraining HCL from continuing with the adjudication.
iii) Further or in the further alternative, a declaration that any decision reached by the adjudicator is a nullity and unenforceable.
Glendalough's objections to the jurisdiction of the adjudicator
"We seek a Decision from the Adjudicator that:
i. the Employer is not entitled to deduct liquidated damages from amounts otherwise due to us;
ii. the Employer is not entitled to payment from us for liquidated damages;
iii. the Employer shall pay us the sum of £245,278 forthwith and without set off or such other sum as the Adjudicator shall decide;
iv. the Employer shall pay us interest in such sums as the Adjudicator shall decide;
v. the Employer should pay all of the Adjudicator's fees and expenses in this matter, or such other apportionment as the Adjudicator shall decide."
"By an agreement [Glendalough] employed [HCL] to carry out the construction of a Residential Block and B1 Studios at 121-127 Church Walk, London."
"As regards the Referral, it appears that [HCL] has not complied with the Scheme for Construction Contracts in that it has not provided copies of documents upon which it wishes to rely including the construction contract in accordance with section 7(2).
In view of the above, Glendalough must reserve its position fully as to whether the proper procedure as to the service of the Referral and appointment of the Adjudicator has been followed in accordance with the Scheme for Construction Contracts.
As regard the contents of the Referral, this fails to set out any details in support of [HCL's] purported case for the return of the deducted liquidated damages to enable Glendalough to understand the case that it has to meet and to respond to the same in its defence. As such [HCL's] referral is embarrassing and provides no evidence or material upon which you could find other than that its case is not proved.
By copy of this e-mail we therefore invite [HCL] to avoid wasting further time and costs on this purported adjudication and to withdraw its current Notice of Dispute and Referral and bring these proceedings to an end."
"However, what [HCL] failed to do, is to provide any explanation or support for its contention that RPC was wrong to advise Glendalough that it was entitled to make such a deduction. [HCL] has not even provided, with the Referral, the Contract or the RPC letter referred to (together with any other documents upon which it seeks to rely), in breach of section 7 of the Scheme for Construction Contracts.
…
In the meantime all of Glendalough's rights remain reserved."
"[The adjudicator] has clarified the timing of his appointment and therefore Glendalough is satisfied that he was appointed prior to service of the Referral as required by the Scheme for Construction Contracts."
Stephenson Harwood then repeated its contention that to continue the adjudication on the current basis would be to breach the requirements of the Scheme and be manifestly unfair to Glendalough. Later the same day Stephenson Harwood sent a further email to the adjudicator which began as follows:
"To avoid any misunderstanding, Glendalough does not contest your appointment. Glendalough does, however, maintain that [HCL]:
1. has failed to comply with Section 7(2) of the Scheme for Construction Contracts; and
2. has failed to provide any detail in its Referral to enable Glendalough to understand the case that it has to meet and to respond other than by way of a general denial.
In Glendalough's respectful submission, the above failures have deprived you of jurisdiction to determine this dispute (which for the avoidance of doubt Glendalough does not give you jurisdiction to decide) and/or constitute a breach of Natural Justice which will render any decision by you, invalid.
Further and/or in the alternative, the lack of explanation and particularisation by [HCL] of its case, means in Glendalough's respectful submission, that in the face of a general denial from Glendalough, that you are unable to reach any finding other than that [HCL] has not proved its case. This will lead to the incurrence of unnecessary expense and wasted time.
Lastly, if in spite of the above, you decide to proceed with this Adjudication, then Glendalough will reluctantly participate in the process, whilst reserving all of its rights to challenge the enforcement of any decision on the grounds of a lack of jurisdiction and/or a failure to comply with Natural Justice."
"3. Save for the further details set out in paragraph 4 below, paragraph 2.1 is admitted.
4. The form of Contract was the JCT Standard Form of Building Contract Revision 2 2009 with Quantities. Completion was to take place in stages; Section 1 being the 'Main Building' and Section 2 being 'External Works'. The completion date for both sections was 8 July 2011 (the 'Original Completion Date').
Section 107 of the Housing Grants, Construction and Regeneration Act 1996
"107(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 the 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) Reference in this part to anything being written or in writing includes its being recorded by any means."
"[LRP's] agents instructed MM to proceed with the services under a contractually binding letter of intent …"
"… appeared designed to prevent the responding party, who has accepted the adjudicator's jurisdiction notwithstanding the absence of a clear contract in writing, from going back on his concession."
"By an agreement [Glendalough] employed [HCL] to carry out the construction of a Residential Block and B1 Studios at 121-127 Church Walk, London."
Since it is the usual practice for lawyers to refer to "an agreement in writing" when referring to a written contract, the absence of either any date of the alleged agreement or any reference to writing suggests that what was being alleged - at least on one reading of the document - was an agreement otherwise than in writing.
"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 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 of 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 Grovedeck Ltd v Capital Demolition Ltd [2000] BLR 181. Dealing with section 107(5) Judge Peter Bowsher QC sitting in the Technology and Construction Court said, at page 185, paragraph 30:
'Disputes as to the terms, express 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.)
I agree. That is why a record in writing is so essential. The written 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 the agreement which is giving rise to the dispute."
And, at paragraph 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 [sic]." It must be remembered that by virtue of section 107(1) the need for an agreement in writing is the precondition for the application of the other provisions of Part II of the Act, not just the jurisdictional threshold for a reference to adjudication."
"28. On one reading of section 107(5), if one party to an adjudication alleges the existence of an oral agreement and the other does not deny the existence of an oral agreement, then there is an agreement in writing 'to the effect alleged', that is, in the terms alleged by the claimant, even though the other party hotly denies, as he did here, that the agreement was in the terms alleged. Parliament cannot have intended such an unjust result.
29. I think this is a case where it is permissible, following the decision of the House of Lords in Pepper v. Hart [1993] AC 593, to look at Hansard. It appears from the Hansard Report of the proceedings in the House of Lords for 23 July, 1996 that section 107(5) originally contained no reference to adjudication proceedings. The House of Lords accepted a Commons amendment that after the word 'submissions' there should be inserted the words 'in adjudication proceedings or'. If one reads section 107(5) without the words 'in adjudication proceedings or' it is clear that the intention of Parliament was that a contract should be treated as a contract in writing if in arbitral or litigation proceedings before the adjudication proceedings in question an oral contract had been alleged and admitted. I also would read the words 'and not denied' as meaning that the alleged terms of the contract were not denied. By adding the words 'in adjudication proceedings or', Parliament intended to add a reference to other preceding adjudication proceedings. There was no intention by Parliament to provide that submissions made by a party to an unauthorised adjudication should give to the supposed adjudicator a jurisdiction which he did not have when he was appointed.
30. Read in that way, the sub-section has an entirely sensible and practical intention and purpose and I so read it. Disputes as to the terms, express 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, but if in any case such room for dispute has been removed by previous formal and binding legal submissions, then the adjudicator has jurisdiction."
The letter of intent
"We are writing to confirm that it is the intention of [Glendalough] to enter into the contract with [HCL] for the proposed Construction of a Residential Block and B1 Studios act, 121-127 Church Walk, London.
You will be required to enter into a lump sum fixed price contract with the Employer for the works based on your revised tender dated 02 December 2009 incorporating the JCT 2005 Intermediate Form of Contract with Contractors Design and further incorporating post tender adjustments for a lump sum contract in the order of £1.6 million (exclusive of VAT).
The Contract commencement date on site will be 15 March 2010. The total contract period is 65 working weeks and the final contract completion date is therefore 10 June 2011, with completion dates for the sections of work as follows:
...
Please find attached the following documents upon which this letter of intent is based
…
You are hereby authorised to take all necessary action to commence on site and complete the works in accordance with the dates referred to above and in accordance with the drawings and instructions issued by Featherstone Young and Conisbee. You are further authorised to place orders and expend moneys to obtain such goods and services as are necessary for the proper execution and completion of the works. This authorisation is given pending issue of formal contract documents which must be completed and returned upon receipt.
In the unlikely event of the Employer not being able to enter into a contract with you, we agree to reimburse [HCL] the reasonable cost of any works carried out on site based on your tender but exclusive of any loss of profit and overheads all as agreed with Burke Hunter Adams.
It is intended that this letter of intention [sic] will be incorporated into the contract documentation and this letter is issued to enable you to mobilise and start on site by the agreed commencement date prior to the issue of the contract documentation."
"58. I have given this issue careful consideration because I am aware that arrangements similar in form to the letter of 1st November 2002 are very common in the UK construction industry. I am also aware that there is no reported case on whether this type of arrangement complies with s.107(2)(c) of the 1997 Act. For the reasons set out below I consider that it does not.
59. The first question is whether the three numbered paragraphs constitute a binding/enforceable contract at all. On analysis, it is not easy to say that they do. Essentially Hart are saying to Larchpark that if they, Hart, ask Larchpark to carry out work, Larchpark would be paid their reasonable costs for so doing. If it is a framework, it is of the loosest and vaguest kind.
60. Even if these provisions did constitute a binding/enforceable contract, it is clear that the sort of clarity of terms envisaged by s.107(2)(c) and the Court of Appeal in RJT is wholly absent. It is trite law that in order to have a building contract you usually need agreement as to parties, workscope, price and time. There was plainly no agreement as to time, so that the best that could be said was that there would be an implied term to the effect that the work would be concluded within a reasonable time. The agreement as to price was limited to the costs reasonably incurred. There was uncertainty over the identity of the parties because the second letter of 6th December 2002 (para.31 above), which was not relied on as a contract document by the adjudicator, introduces uncertainty as to who the employer actually was. Moreover, contrary to the adjudicator's decision, I consider that the letter of 6th December cannot be ignored because, without it, the cap was £20,000, and both parties are agreed that that was not the basis upon which the work was done by Larchpark. That point alone may be enough to warrant the conclusion that the adjudicator was wrong and that, even on Larchpark's own case, the letter of 1st November did not contain all the terms of the contract.
61. However, the biggest difficulty comes with a consideration of the contract workscope. The workscope, according to the letter, is work which will, or might be, the subject of orders in the future, whether written or oral. That might be sufficient for a binding contract, although I do not think it is and, as I have indicated, enforcement of it would be next to impossible. More importantly, such a definition of workscope is a recipe for confusion and dispute of the very sort which s.107(2)(c) is designed to avoid. This point can be emphasised by reference to Hart's own pleading in this case. In para.3 of the particulars of claim Hart defined the contractual workscope as including:
'The retention and preservation of the front and side facades of the property, the removal of the main part of the building and the construction of the basement and the reconstruction of the building above the new constructed basement area.,
This workscope is plainly not discernible from the letter of 1st November. It is based on subsequent orders, instructions and the like which may, or may not, have been reduced to writing. If the contract document does not even begin to define the contract workscope it seems to me impossible to say that all the terms, or even all the material terms, are set out in writing.
62. The fact that the three paragraphs of the letter of 1st November were designed to be a fall-back position, only relevant at all if no formal/full contract was ever concluded, also militates against the submission that this was a contract in writing containing all the terms that had been agreed by the parties. On the contrary, it seems to me that it was designed to provide a very basic framework that would only be operated if, contrary to all expectations, a formal/full contract was not agreed. By definition, at the time that it was written, it could not allow for or address future events, such as the particular workscope that might be required or ordered. It was a simple fall-back position to regulate the parties' relationship if no formal/full contract was agreed. The three paragraphs in the letter of 1st November were not themselves designed to be a complete record of the parties' proposed agreement. They could not be; if they had been, there would have been no need for a formal/full contract at all.
63. I have acknowledged in para.61 above that, as a matter of strict contractual analysis, it might be said that, just looking at the letter of 1st November, the contract workscope was what Hart asked for as the work on site progressed, and that the remuneration was what the parties agreed was a reasonable figure for Larchpark's costs. On this simple basis, it might be argued that this was (just) enough for the 1996 Act. As I have explained, in my judgment this arrangement, without more, was not only unenforceable in any practical sense, but was insufficient to come within s.107(2)(c). The whole point of that section is to ensure that the swift adjudication process is only operated in circumstances where the underlying contract is clear, so that the adjudication will not become bogged down in allegations about unwritten or unclear contract terms. The rationale of RJT was the importance of clarity in the underlying contract, which could only be provided if all the terms of that contract were in writing, and thus beyond argument.
64. It seems to me that even if, which I do not accept, the three paragraphs of the letter on their own constituted a binding and enforceable contract, such an arrangement, where nothing of any importance was defined in writing, was not a contract for the purposes of s.107(2)(c) of the 1996 Act. To hold otherwise would be contrary to the reasoning of the Court of Appeal in RJT. In consequence, the absence of a contract within the definition of s.107(2)(c) is a second reason why I decline to enforce the adjudicator's award."
"Accordingly, it is now safe to assume that the letter of intent can amount to a contract in writing for the purposes of this 107 and that the only thing that will matter is whether or not the letter of intent expressed all the contractual terms that had been agreed."
"31. Section 107 of the 1996 Act requires all the terms of the construction contract to be in writing or evidenced in writing: see RJT Consulting Engineers v. DM Engineering [2002] BLR 217. The requirement that all the terms of the construction contract have to be in writing has been criticised. The requirement, transferred word for word directly from s.5 of the Arbitration Act 1996, which requires the arbitration agreement and certain other agreements to be in writing, is evidently necessary where the effect of the arbitration agreement is to deprive the court of jurisdiction and other agreements have the effect of varying the non-mandatory provisions of the Arbitration Act 1996. While it is possible to explain the requirement that all the terms of a construction contract have to be in writing in terms of the need to have certainty, it has proved an impracticable requirement which has given rise to a number of challenges to enforcement of adjudicator's decisions. It is now the subject of a draft Bill which will seek to repeal that provision. Until that happens, the law is that the provisions of s.107 fall to be applied.
…
35. It is evident that a full description of all works which PTB were to carry out is not contained in the notes of the meeting. However, the meeting notes envisaged that PTB would be provided with additional information prior to commencement of works and that instructions would be given for additional works. The terms of the agreement do not, in my view, limit the timing or scope of those instructions or the place where the work was to be carried out. Where a contract contains express terms which provide that a party will provide the other party with information about the works and will give instructions for additional works, then, in my judgment, there is no need for the scope of the works to be fully set out in or evidenced in writing in the underlying contract. The relevant contract term is in writing or evidenced in writing and the fact that it envisages performance taking place by further information or instructions, which may be oral or in writing, does not affect the fact that the relevant contract term itself was in writing or evidenced in writing."
Then, at paragraphs 40-41, he said:
"40. Mr Stansfield relied on further documents as evidencing the construction contract, including these works. First, there was the document referred to as PTB rates, application as of January 2008, which contained a breakdown of 'All-in basket scope of works' showing that the rates were to be applied for all work from that date. Secondly, he refers to letters dated 5 and 18 March 2008 by which ROK requested that PTB should include applications for all properties in its applications for the Harlow Decent Homes project. Thirdly, he relies on an exchange of emails in June 2008, which are referred to further below. This led to the process which culminated in the production of the final account document which was attached to the notice of adjudication dated 20 August 2008.
41. The provisions of s.107(4) of the 1996 Act refer to an agreement being evidenced in writing 'if an agreement made otherwise than in writing is recorded by one of the parties.' There is no need for the agreement to be recorded in one document, nor is there a requirement for when the record is to be made. In this case, it is common ground that the meeting notes contain all the provisions except those relating to work scope. I consider that the work scope is dealt with by the instruction of work under the terms which are sufficiently recorded in the signed meeting notes. In any event, the documents relied on by Mr Stansfield record the revised all-in basket rates which formed the basis of the phase 2 claims. Further, the discussions between the parties and the documents produced by PTB sufficiently record the scope of the works to the extent that this might be necessary."
Conclusion