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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 >> Twintec Ltd v Volkerfitzpatrick Ltd [2014] EWHC 10 (TCC) (24 January 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2014/10.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 10 (TCC), [2014] BLR 150 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
Rolls Building, 7 Rolls Buildings London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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Twintec Ltd |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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Volkerfitzpatrick Limited |
Respondent |
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(instructed by Nelsons Solicitors Ltd) for the Applicant
Paul Reed Esq, QC and David Pliener Esq
(instructed by Reynolds Porter Chamberlain LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 9th December 2013; 18th December 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr. Justice Edwards-Stuart:
Introduction
i) That the adjudication seeks to undermine and circumvent the case management in the Main Claim by: (a) disrupting Twintec's ability to abide by the Court's timetable in that Main Claim; and (b) by seeking to obtain a result which was refused in the Main Claim.ii) That the adjudication fragments the existing proceedings by pursuing Twintec alone when the issue referred to adjudication is, in fact, a multi-party dispute.
iii) That the adjudication is oppressive in that it imposes an unconscionable burden on Twintec.
iv) That the adjudication has no real prospect of success.
The background
The letter of intent ("LOI")
"None of the terms of an offer is binding on the offeror until the offer is accepted. When the offer is accepted it does not apply retrospectively so as to govern relations between the parties during the period between offer and acceptance. In the present case the defendants could not vary the work to be done, so as to have any contractual effect, until the offer had been accepted. Therefore, if the offer had been accepted by the defendants on April 11, 1960, what would have been accepted would and could only have been the original offer, as set out in the tender, for certain specified works, coupled with the right of the defendants to vary the works after, but only after, they had accepted the offer and made the contract. Any purported variations possible by the defendants before April 11, 1960, would be ineffective, because it could not be made contractually until there was a contract which conferred the right to vary."
"It is our intention to award you the Warehouse Slab works for all services as detailed within the documents listed below and attached, for the above project, but we are not yet in a position to enter into this Sub-contract.
Subject to the terms of this letter, we authorise and request you to proceed immediately with all works necessary to enable you to achieve the Design Programme and Construction Programme in accordance with the documents below.
a) Appendix A attached (and all documents referenced therein)
b) FCL minutes of Tender Review Meeting (duly signed and completed 28th September 2007).
Your total Sub-contract Sum for this project (should the project proceed through to Practical Completion) is agreed as £2,630,564.59, for all works as further detailed within the attached documents.
For the purposes of this letter only, FCL will reimburse you proven reasonable costs for such works satisfactorily completed up to the maximum sum of £2,630,564.59, as detailed within the above documents, excluding VAT. In the event that we are unable to conclude the appointment you shall be reimbursed for proven reasonable costs only, in line with the provisions of this letter.
Upon the issue of our formal Sub-contract Agreement, this letter will cease to have any effect and will be superseded by the terms and conditions of that Agreement."
"Refurbishment Works to 16 NR Houses and 51 NR Flats – Clapham Park Estate London, SW4.
We confirm that it is our intention to enter into a Contract with you on the basis of a JCT Intermediate Form of Contract, 2005 Edition with further amendments as specified in the Specification upon which your tender of 2nd April 2007 was based on.
Clapham Park Homes Ltd wish that you now commit the appropriate resources to permit you to take possession by no later than 28 calendar days from the date of this letter and to regularly and diligently proceed with the refurbishment works to achieve an overall completion with 36 working weeks from the date of possession.
The Contract Sum will be £2,489,302.00 as set out in your tender.
Should it not be possible for us to execute a formal Contract with you in place of this letter, we undertake to reimburse your reasonable costs up to and including the date on which you are notified that the Contract will not proceed provided that the Supervising Officer is satisfied that those costs are appropriate and that, in any event, total costs will not exceed the sum of £250,000 …
Clapham Park Homes Ltd do not undertake to reimburse any anticipated profits for the works as a whole, nor actual costs or actual or theoretically incurred general or specific overheads arising after the date of notification that no further work is to be carried out.
You are to comply with the Construction (Design and Management) Regulations 2007 ('the CDM Regulations') and be the 'Principal Contractor' for the Project as defined in the CDM Regulations and fulfil in relation to the Project all the obligations of the Principal Contractor as set out in the CDM Regulations …
You are also to effect all insurances stipulated in the Form of Contract and Specification referred to above and relevant to the work undertaken pursuant to this letter.
It is hereby confirmed that the undertakings given in this letter will be wholly extinguished upon the execution of the formal Contract.
Please confirm receipt of this letter and indicate acceptance of its terms by signing and returning the enclosed copy where shown."
i) Whilst the first paragraph of the Letter of Intent merely confirmed an intention to enter into a contract, the second paragraph effectively asked Diamond Build to proceed with the work.ii) There was an undertaking in effect pending the execution of a formal contract to pay for Diamond Build's reasonable costs, albeit up to a specific sum.
iii) The fact in the penultimate paragraph that the undertakings given in the latter part of the letter were "wholly extinguished" upon the execution of the formal contract pointed very strongly to those undertakings having legal and enforceable effect until the execution of the formal contract.
iv) The fact that the Specification referred to in the letter required a contract under seal demonstrated that the parties were operating with that in mind.
v) The very fact that Diamond Build was asked to (and did) sign in effect by way of acceptance the Letter of Intent pointed clearly to the creation of a contract based on the terms of the Letter of Intent itself.
"Although this is a simple contractual arrangement, it has sufficient certainty: there is a commencement date, requirement to proceed regularly and diligently, the completion date, and overall contract sum and an undertaking to pay reasonable costs in the interim."
Summary of my conclusions on the terms of the LOI
VFL's alternative case
"We thank you for your valued order that is now receiving our attention and would like to take this opportunity to confirm the details of our quotation and the basis on which we are proceeding with the works."
"Commencement of the works will be deemed acceptance of the terms stated herein."
The jurisdiction of the adjudicator
"It seems to me to be at least arguable either that there was a contract here, but upon JCT Prime Cost Terms, or, perhaps more likely, that there was no concluded written construction contract. The judge's recitation of the facts and the analytic contortions evidenced in paragraphs 30 and 31 of his judgment, including his characterisation of the situation as 'a construction contract whose terms cannot readily be ascertained', suggests to me a real possibility that there was no concluded written construction contract. I emphasise that I do not so decide. [Counsel's] submission however, overlooks the fact that the only circumstance in which the adjudicator would clearly have had jurisdiction was if the claimant's contentions as to the contractual terms were correct. I regard this as the least likely of the three possibilities. The fact that adjudication under the Scheme and adjudication under a JCT Prime Cost Contract would be similar procedures does not overcome the twin difficulties that Mr. Morris was appointed under the Scheme, and that a sufficiently secure identification of the contractual terms was intrinsically necessary to the proper performance of his adjudication task."
(My emphasis)
Is a referral to adjudication oppressive and unreasonable?
"My conclusion is that there is no difference in principle between the approach to be adopted by the court when considering whether or not to order a claim brought by way of litigation to be stayed on the grounds that it is being brought unreasonably and oppressively, and the approach to be adopted when considering whether or not to restrain the further pursuit of an identical claim by way of adjudication on the same grounds. However, the application of those principles may differ according to the circumstances. It does not follow that because a court would order the stay of a particular claim brought by litigation, that it would automatically restrain the pursuit of the same claim by way of adjudication."
The issue here, therefore, is whether this referral to adjudication has been brought unreasonably and oppressively. I should emphasise that these two requirements are disjunctive. A referral to adjudication may be unreasonable (for example, if deliberately delayed until shortly before Christmas) without necessarily being oppressive. Alternatively, it may prove to be oppressive - perhaps because, unknown to the referring party, the relevant personnel within the responding party have just been posted abroad - without having been unreasonably started. Both elements must be present and, in my judgment, to a fairly high degree.
i) The fact that a referral to adjudication is brought in parallel with existing litigation raising the same issue is not in itself a ground for restraining the referral: see Herschell Engineering v Breen Property [2000] BLR 272.ii) The mischief at which the 1996 Act is aimed is the delays in achieving finality in arbitration or litigation: see Herschell, at paragraph 20.
iii) The right to refer a dispute to adjudication at any time confers a commercial advantage on the referring party and this must be taken to have been known by Parliament when the 1996 Act was passed: see London Borough of Camden v Makers [2009] EWHC 605 (TCC), at paragraph 32. One aspect of this advantage is the fact that the responding party will in most cases incur irrecoverable costs in defending the adjudication, and this can operate as a bargaining lever in favour of the referring party.
iv) A party should not be prevented from pursuing its right to refer a dispute to adjudication save in the most exceptional circumstances see Makers, at paragraph 35.
Can VFL recover the costs of the tests by way of damages?
"VFL itself states in its letter of claim that VFL has had to undertake investigation works as a 'reasonable and proportionate response given that VFL was faced with claims from' Accolade and the Landlord. In paragraph 11.4 of the Referral, VFL says that by necessity it incurred costs 'to determine whether Twintec's defectively constructed slab was in fact capable of achieving the design loads to assist in the defence of accusations made against it by Accolade and GLD'. It is clear that the test costs (1) were incurred for VFL's own purposes to defend itself against claims against it and (2) were used to prepare the claim is now brings against Twintec."
"The test results are being used to defend one claim and bring another, and were incurred in the midst of pre-action correspondence and the issuing of claims. These were expenses and fees of the proceedings against VFL and incidental to the VFL proceedings against Twintec. They are properly to be characterised as costs and to date, all parties appear to have proceeded on the basis that this is the correct characterisation."
The last sentence of this passage is not entirely accurate, because VFL has in fact claimed the test costs as damages in its proceedings against Twintec.
Conclusion