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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 >> Arcadis UK Ltd v May and Baker Ltd (t/a Sanofi) [2013] EWHC 87 (TCC) (29 January 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2013/87.html Cite as: [2013] EWHC 87 (TCC), [2013] BLR 210 |
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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 :
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ARCADIS UK LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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MAY AND BAKER LIMITED (t/a SANOFI) |
Defendant |
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Hamish Lal, Solicitor-Advocate (instructed by Jones Day) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 22 January 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Akenhead:
The History, Facts and the Background
The First Adjudication
"Issue 1 – Is the Project Manager entitled to reverse his decision that a matter constituted a compensation event and/or his assessment of the effects of a compensation event?
Issue 2 - If it is decided that the Project Manager is entitled to withdraw acceptance of a compensation event, do the works to the Northern Boundary in fact constitute a compensation event?
Issue 3 -- If it is found that the Project Manager is entitled to withdraw acceptance of a compensation event nor [sic] his assessment thereof or that, if he can withdraw it, the works to the Northern Boundaries still form a valid compensation event, then we will ask the Adjudicator to decide the assessment of the resultant change to the Prices and changing the Completion Date that the Project Manager should have accepted and/or assessed."
"…prior to the implementation of the compensation event, the Project Manager may reverse his decision that the matter constituted a compensation event. However, after the compensation event has been implemented, as defined in the Contract, the Project Manager may neither reverse his decision that the matter is a compensation event, nor reassess the effects of the compensation event."
He then went on from Paragraph 6.02 through to Paragraph 6.22 to give reasons why the Project Manager was not entitled to withdraw his acceptance of the Northern Boundary work compensation event as a compensation event nor reassess its effect on the contract prices.
The Second Adjudication
"There has already been an adjudication in respect of the additional works at the north of the site on a similar factual basis. The Adjudicator in that referral has decided that the Project Manager was not entitled to reverse his assessment of the compensation event after it had been implemented…That Decision has not been put aside by the courts and is therefore binding on the Parties. As the same principles apply to this Issue in this referral we consider that the Adjudicator is bound by that previous decision (see Section 23(2) of the Scheme for Construction Contracts) and should therefore decide that the project manager is not entitled to withdraw a compensation event once it has been implemented. Should the Adjudicator not feel bound by the previous decision, which we consider would be incorrect, we request the Adjudicator to adopt the compelling arguments of Dr Ross in this issue."
The Notice then went on to address Issues 2 and 3 in respect of which Arcadis sought a declaration that the Southern Boundary work constituted a Compensation Event under the contract, payment and an extension of time as requested in the Notice.
"145.1 The Project Manager is neither entitled to reverse its decision that the matter constitutes a compensation event nor entitled to reverse his assessment of the effect of a compensation event;
145.2 The additional works to the Southern Area…does constitute a compensation event under the Contract;
145.3 The Project Manager's assessment of the compensation event should have been a change in the Prices of £480,231.44 plus VAT and delay to the Completion Date of 29 days;
145.4 The Referring Party is due the sum of £15,324.81 in respect of interest;
145.5 There shall be no deductions made for delay damages…"
"36. Whilst the Referring Party considers that I am bound by the previous adjudicator's decision, it suggests I should adopt the previous adjudicator's reasoning should I not feel bound by its decision.
37. The Responding Party contends that I am not bound by the previous adjudication on the basis that the Scheme for Construction Contracts does not bind and adjudicator in a successive adjudication to the reasoning or analysis employed by an earlier adjudicator.
38. I am bound by a previous adjudicator's decision and whilst I am not empowered to decide my own jurisdiction, I do have a duty to consider the matters raised regarding whether, and to what extent, I should be bound by the previous adjudication.
39. I note that the previous adjudicator predicated his decision to the extent that the compensation event in that particular case had been implemented.
40. I take the view that if I find that the Southern Boundary Works had been properly implemented under the Contract as a compensation event, then I am bound by the previous adjudicator's decision that [the] Project Manager was not entitled to withdraw his acceptance of that compensation event. I will also be bound by the decision that the Project Manager could not reverse his assessment of that event. However, the previous adjudicator's decision would not prevent me from making my own assessment of the effect of the Southern Boundary Works."
He was later in his decision at Paragraph 100 to "find that the Southern Boundary Works compensation event was not properly implemented in accordance with the contract".
"with the previous adjudicator's decision that the only assumptions that the Project Manager may legitimately make in respect of a compensation event are those that relates to the effect that compensation event [has] a bearing on the forecast of Defined Cost and the forecast of the delay to the Completion Date".
At Paragraph 101 to 104 he found that the Southern Boundary Work Compensation Event was not properly assessed in accordance with the contract. At Paragraph 105 to 118 he considered the effect which the Southern Boundary work compensation event had on the Completion Date finding that its effect should be "to extend the Completion Dated by 29 days". He broadly accepted Arcadis' argument that the exercise could be done by reference to the updated Accepted Programme saying:
"116. I have studied the Accepted Programme Rev 3 dated May 2011 together with a series of re-baselined programmes, albeit not Accepted Programmes, up to Contract Programme Rev 11 dated 27 January 2012 together with other evidence provided by the Responding Party. Whilst noting that the Responding Party contends that the programmes do not evidence any prolongation, I am satisfied that the Southern Boundary Works did not occur in parallel with any other critical path activity and did cause a critical delay to the Completion Date."
"136. In deciding what the forecast costs should have been at the time the Contractor submitted his revised quotation, I choose to split the difference between the Contractor's forecast (as recently requested by the Referring Party to be reduced to £541,799.79) and the Project Manager's forecast inclusive of prolongation costs (£418,663.09).
137. Given the above, I find that the effect of the compensation event should be to increase the Prices by £480,231.44 [(£541,799.79 + £418,663.09)/2]".
He concluded at Paragraph 145 with his overall decision as set out above.
The Proceedings
"The adjudicator made an error in his jurisdiction and/or breached the rules of natural justice. The adjudicator treated an earlier decision as binding and did not allow the defendant to address fully this issue."
There was no further involvement of the Defendant or its solicitors until shortly before the hearing when the solicitors lodged a comprehensible and comprehensive skeleton argument together with their own bundle which included some contemporaneous documents not previously lodged together with some authorities.
1. The Second Adjudicator "took an erroneously restrictive view of his own jurisdiction, with the result that he decided that he was bound by Adjudication Decision 1 and by the first adjudicator's reasoning in Adjudication Decision 1" and that Arcadis " brought about the adjudicator's error by a misguided attempt to seek a tactical advantage or otherwise influence" him.
2. The Second Adjudicator "went off on a frolic of his own" in relation to the quantum by "splitting the difference) between the Project Manager's figure (adjusted for prolongation) and the Arcadis' slightly adjusted forecast figure. This frolic involved him deciding the case "upon a basis which had not been argued or put forward by either side, without giving the parties an opportunity to comment."
3. The Second Adjudicator failed to consider Sanofi's defence on delay.
4. The Second Adjudicator's decision was invalid on the grounds of apparent bias in effect because he was put in the position in which he had to have regard to the First Adjudication decision.
The Law
"It is only too easy in a complex case for a party who is dissatisfied with the decision of an Adjudicator to comb through the Adjudicator's reasons and identify points upon which to present a challenge under the label of 'excess of jurisdiction' or 'breach of natural justice'. It must be kept in mind that the majority of Adjudicators are not chosen for their expertise as lawyers. Their skills are as likely (if not more likely) to lie in other disciplines. The task of the Adjudicator is not to act as arbitrator or judge. The time constraints within which he is expected to operate are proof of that. The task of the Adjudicator is to find an interim solution which meets the needs of the case. Parliament may be taken to recognise that, in the absence of an interim solution, the contractor (or sub-contractor) or his sub-contractors will be driven into insolvency through a wrongful withholding of payments properly due. The statutory scheme provides a means of meeting the legitimate cash-flow requirements of contractors and their sub-contractors. The need to have the 'right' answer has been subordinated to the need to have an answer quickly. The Scheme was not enacted in order to provide definitive answers to complex questions. Indeed, it may be open to doubt whether Parliament contemplated the dispute in evolving difficult questions of law would be referred to adjudication under the statutory scheme; or whether such disputes are suitable for adjudication under the Scheme. We have every sympathy for an adjudicator faced with the need to reach a decision in the case like the present."
"From this and other cases, I conclude as follows in relation to breaches of natural justice in adjudication cases:
(a) It must first be established that the Adjudicator failed to apply the rules of natural justice;
(b) Any breach of the rules must be more than peripheral; they must be material breaches;
(c) Breaches of the rules will be material in cases where the adjudicator has failed to bring to the attention of the parties a point or issue which they ought to be given the opportunity to comment upon if it is one which is either decisive or of considerable potential importance to the outcome of the resolution of the dispute and is not peripheral or irrelevant.
(d) Whether the issue is decisive or of considerable potential importance or is peripheral or irrelevant obviously involves a question of degree which must be assessed by any judge in a case such as this.
(e) It is only if the adjudicator goes off on a frolic of his own, that is wishing to decide a case upon a factual or legal basis which has not been argued or put forward by either side, without giving the parties an opportunity to comment or, where relevant put in further evidence, that the type of breach of the rules of natural justice with which the case of Balfour Beatty Construction Company Ltd -v- The Camden Borough of Lambeth was concerned comes into play. It follows that, if either party has argued a particular point and the other party does not come back on the point, there is no breach of the rules of natural justice in relation thereto."
"33. In essence, and doubtless for what he believed were good and sensible reasons, the adjudicator has gone off "on a frolic of his own" in using a method of assessment which neither party argued and which he did not put to the parties. In some cases, this may not be sufficient to prevent enforcement of the decision where the "frolic" makes no material difference to the outcome of the decision. Thus, an adjudicator who refers to a legal authority which neither party relied upon, may have his or her decision enforced nonetheless if the application of that legal authority obviously makes no difference to the outcome. The breach of the rules of natural justice has to be material. Here, for the reasons indicated above, the breach is material and has or has apparently led to a very substantial financial difference in favour of HKM but necessarily against the interests of DHB.
34. It follows from the above that the adjudicator's decision can not be enforced because not only has he exceeded his jurisdiction by addressing and finding a method of assessment which formed no part of the dispute referred to him but also he has breached the rules of natural justice, doubtless unwittingly, by deciding the case not only on the basis not argued by either party at any stage but also without giving each party the opportunity to make submissions at least on the method of assessment which the adjudicator considered that he should adopt."
Each case in which there is a substantive criticism of the adjudicator's conduct needs to be looked at on its merits. The Herbosch case was a relatively extreme albeit clear case in which the adjudicator departed from the quantum methodology put forward by both parties without giving either the opportunity to address the adjudicator's eventual approach and in which that approach made a very significant difference to the financial outcome of the decision.
"29. It is rightly not in dispute that the rule against bias applies to adjudicators appointed to determine disputes under the 1996 Act. It is not said on behalf of Whitefriars that Mr Biscoe was in fact biased in reaching his second decision. It is, however, submitted that his decision should be declared to be invalid on the grounds of apparent bias. The test for apparent bias is not in doubt. It is whether a fair-minded and informed observer, having considered all the circumstances which have a bearing on the suggestion that the decision-maker was biased, would conclude that there was a real possibility that he was biased: Porter v Magill [2001] UKHL 67, [2002] 2 AC 357 para 103".
"22. As a matter of principle, therefore, it seems to me that the law on this topic can be summarised as follows:
22.1. The adjudicator must attempt to answer the question referred to him. The question may consist of a number of separate sub-issues. If the adjudicator has endeavoured generally to address those issues in order to answer the question then, whether right or wrong, his decision is enforceable: see Carillion v Devonport.
22.2. If the adjudicator fails to address the question referred to him because he has taken an erroneously restrictive view of his jurisdiction (and has, for example, failed even to consider the defence to the claim or some fundamental element of it), then that may make his decision unenforceable, either on grounds of jurisdiction or natural justice: see Ballast, Broadwell, and Thermal Energy.
22.3. However, for that result to obtain, the adjudicator's failure must be deliberate. If there has simply been an inadvertent failure to consider one of a number of issues embraced by the single dispute that the adjudicator has to decide, then such a failure will not ordinarily render the decision unenforceable: see Bouygues and Amec v TWUL.
22.4. It goes without saying that any such failure must also be material: see Cantillon v Urvasco and CJP Builders Limited v William Verry Limited [2008] EWHC 2025 (TCC). In other words, the error must be shown to have had a potentially significant effect on the overall result of the adjudication: see Keir Regional Ltd v City and General (Holborn) Ltd [2006] EWHC 848 (TCC).
22.5. A factor which may be relevant to the court's consideration of this topic in any given case is whether or not the claiming party has brought about the adjudicator's error by a misguided attempt to seek a tactical advantage. That was plainly a factor which, in my view rightly, Judge Davies took into account in Quartzelec when finding against the claiming party.
23. I should add this. I note that, in any application under section 68 of the Arbitration Act 1996, a party who is alleging a serious irregularity, because the arbitrator failed to have regard to a particular issue, has an uphill task in demonstrating to the court that the issue went to the root of the arbitration and that the failure to deal with it has caused a substantial injustice: see Checkpoint Ltd v Strathclyde Pension Fund [2003] EWCA Civ 84 and Weldon Plant v The Commission for New Towns [2000] BLR 496. These and other cases repeatedly stress that the losing party cannot utilise this provision to scrabble around in the award to find a point, no matter how obscure, with which the arbitrator failed to deal. It seems to me that it would be wholly contrary to the Housing Grants (Construction and Regeneration) Act 1996, and all the subsequent decisions of the TCC and the Court of Appeal emphasising the temporarily binding nature of the adjudicator's decision, if a disgruntled party to an adjudication was in a better position than he would have been after a full-blown arbitration, to comb through the adjudicator's decision and find some aspect of the dispute which it is said that the adjudicator failed to address, whether deliberately or otherwise, in order to defeat the summary enforcement of the decision."
I can not improve on or add to this.
Discussion
Decision
Procedural Comment