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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 >> Surrey and Sussex Healthcare NHS Trust v Logan Construction (South East) Ltd [2017] EWHC 17 (TCC) (13 January 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2017/17.html Cite as: [2017] 2 All ER (Comm) 586, [2017] BLR 189, 170 Con LR 65, [2017] EWHC 17 (TCC) |
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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 :
(sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge)
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SURREY AND SUSSEX HEALTHCARE NHS TRUST |
Claimant |
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- and |
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LOGAN CONSTRUCTION (SOUTH EAST) LIMITED |
Defendant |
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Alexander Hickey QC (instructed by Berwin Leighton Paisner) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 20 December 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Alexander Nissen QC:
Introduction
The Contract
"4.7 Interim Payments due dates and certificates
.1 Subject to any agreement between the Parties as to stage payments, the due dates for interim payments by the Employer are:
.1 for the period up to the date of practical completion of the Works, the monthly dates specified in the Contract Particulars;
.2 a date not later than 14 days after the date of practical completion;
.3 thereafter, the specified dates at intervals of 2 months; and
.4 the date of expiry of the Rectification Period or, if later, the date of issue of the certificate of making good (or, where there are Sections, the last such period or certificate).
.2 The Architect/Contract Administrator shall not later than 5 days after each due date issue an Interim Certificate, stating the sum that he considers to be or have been due at the due date to the Contractor in respect of the interim payment, calculated in accordance with clause 4.8, and the basis on which that sum has been calculated."
"4.10 Contractor's Interim Applications and Payment Notices
.1 In relation to any interim payment the Contractor may not less than 7 days before the due date make an application to the Quantity Surveyor (an 'Interim Application'), stating the sum that the Contractor considers will become due to him at the relevant due date in accordance with clause 4.8 and the basis on which that sum has been calculated.
.2 If an Interim Certificate is not issued in accordance with clause 4.7.2, then:
.1 where the Contractor has made an Interim Application in accordance with clause 4.10.1, that application is for the purposes of these Conditions an Interim Payment Notice; or
.2 where the Contractor has not made an Interim Application, he may at any time after the 5 day period referred to in clause 4.7.2 give an Interim Payment Notice to the Quantity Surveyor, stating the sum that the Contractor considers to be or have been due to him at the relevant due date in accordance with clause 4.8 and the basis on which that sum has been calculated."
"4.11 Interim Payments final date and amount
.1 Subject to clause 4.11.4, the final date for payment of an interim payment shall be 14 days from its due date.
.3 If the Interim Certificate is not issued in accordance with clause 4.7.2, but an Interim Payment Notice has been given under clause 4.10, the sum to be paid by the Employer shall, subject to any Pay Less Notice under clause 4.11.5, be the sum stated as due in the Interim Payment Notice.
.4 Where an Interim Payment Notice is given under clause 4.10.2.2, the final date for payment of the sum specified in it shall for all purposes be regarded as postponed by the same number of days as the number of days after expiry of the 5 day period referred to in clause 4.7.2 that the Interim Payment Notice is given.
.5 If the Employer intends to pay less than the sum stated as due from him in the Interim Certificate or Interim Payment Notice, as the case may be, he shall not later than 5 days before the final date for payment give the Contractor notice of that intention in accordance with clause 4.12.1 (a 'Pay Less Notice'). Where a Pay Less Notice is given, the payment to be made on or before the final date for payment shall not be less than the amount stated as due in the notice."
"4.12 Pay Less Notices and general provisions
.1 A Pay Less Notice:
.1 (where it is to be given by the Employer) shall specify both the sum that he considers to be due to the Contractor at the date the notice is given and the basis on which that sum has been calculated, and may be given on behalf of the Employer by the Architect/Contract Administrator or Quantity Surveyor or by any other person who the Employer notifies the Contractor as being authorised to do so;"
"4.14 Final Certificate and final payment
.1 The Architect/Contract Administrator shall issue the Final Certificate not later than 28 days after whichever of the following occurs last:
.1 the end of the Rectification Period in respect of the Works or (where there are Sections) the last such period to expire;
.2 the date of issue of the certificate of making good under clause 2.31 or (where there are Sections) the last such certificate to be issued; or
.3 the date on which the Architect/Contract Administrator sends to the Contractor copies of the statement and computations of the adjusted Contract Sum under clause 4.3.2.
.2 The Final Certificate shall state:
.1 the Contract Sum as adjusted in accordance with clause 4.3.1; and
.2 the sum of amounts already stated as due in Interim Certificates plus the amount of any advance payment paid pursuant to clause 4.6 and (where relevant) any sums paid in respect of any such Interim Payment Notice as is referred to in clause 4.8,
and (without affecting the rights of the Contractor in respect of any interim payment not paid in full by the Employer by its final date for payment) the final payment shall be the difference (if any) between the two sums, which shall be shown in the Final Certificate as a balance due to the Contractor from the Employer or to the Employer from the Contractor, as the case may be. The Final Certificate shall state the basis on which that amount has been calculated.
.3 The due date for the final payment shall be the date of issue of the Final Certificate or, if that certificate is not issued within the 28 day period referred to in clause 4.14.1, the last day of that period and, subject to clause 4.14.6, the final date for payment shall be 28 days from its due date".
(a) At the times prescribed by the Contract, the Contractor is entitled to make periodic Interim Applications for payment and the Employer is entitled to issue Interim Certificates for payment.(b) If the Contractor does not make a valid Interim Application and the Employer does not issue an Interim Certificate, the Contractor can issue an Interim Payment Notice after the fifth day after a due date for an interim payment.
(c) If no Interim Certificate is issued, the sum stated as due in a valid Interim Payment Notice becomes the sum due to be paid to the Contractor, unless a valid Pay Less Notice is given stating a different sum.
(d) A valid Pay Less Notice must be issued by the fifth day before the final date for payment, namely 28 days from the due date. That date is postponed by the number of days that an Interim Payment Notice is made after the fifth day after the due date. A Pay Less Notice must state the sum considered to be due to the Contractor at the date of the notice and the basis upon which that sum has been calculated.
Factual Background
"Subject: East Surrey Hospital Theatre Refurbishment 724 Account Meeting 21st September 2016
Attachments: ESH 724 Logan Interim Payment Notice Valuation No 24 20092016.xlsx
Importance: High
Dear Richard,
I hope you had a good break.
Please see the attached ahead of our meeting tomorrow. I look forward to seeing you then.
Kind regards,
Richard."
"INTERIM PAYMENT NOTICE
(Clause 4.10)
Due Date 24 August 2016
Valuation No. 24
Project No. 0724
Re: East Surrey Hospital Theatres 5-10 remodelling
SERVICE DESCRIPTION
To collection: £5,961,465.46
Less Retention @ 0% (completion of 12 months DLP) £ 0.00
Balance £5,961,465,46
Less Previously Paid (as BWA Interim Certificate Nr 23)
- main works -£4,887,073.27
Less Previously Paid (as BWA Interim Certificate)
asbestos works - £48,834.24
Less Previously Paid (as BWA Interim Certificate)
- Design Co-ordination and Planning for one Phase -£10,000.00
Balance £1,105,557.95"
"Subject: Theatre Refurbishment Logan Construction Final Certificate
Attachments: Logan Payment Certificate No24 pdf; Theatre Refurbishment Contract Sum Adjustment xlsx
Chris,
In accordance with Clause 4.14.1 of the Intermediate Building Contract with contractor's design 2011, I attach the Final Certificate for works undertaken by Logan Construction in connection with the Theatre Refurbishment project. For ease of reference, I also attach a copy of the Adjustment of Contract Sum which was issued on 25 May 2016.
Please note that on 20 September 2016 I received an Interim Payment Notice dated 24 August 2016 from Logan Construction. The last due date for an Interim Payment Notice under Clause 4.7.1.4 of the Building Contract was 24 August and as such the application issued by Logan Construction yesterday is out of date and void. In any event, the details stated in the Final Certificate are the same as would have been stated in any final Interim Certificate which may have been issued.
Regards
Richard Stone"
The First Declaration
The rival contentions
Decision
"34. Accordingly, in all three documents where the claimant had the opportunity to say clearly that these documents were what they now say they were, namely a new application for an interim payment and/or a payee's notice, the claimant failed to do so. I consider that this omission is significant. It suggests that the claimant's case now, that the documents were in fact a fresh claim, is something of an afterthought. The only other alternative is that the claimant believed that it was in its best interests to be studiedly vague about the nature of the documents, so as to set up precisely the argument they advanced successfully in the adjudication. On any view, if they intended to serve a valid payee's notice on 13 February, they could and should have said that that was what they were doing. They were even asked a question which, if that had indeed been their intention, required only that simple answer. It was not provided.
35. It is also important to remember that the claimant's alleged entitlement to be paid £1.5 million odd as a result of the second adjudication does not stem from the underlying merits of their claim. Those have not been considered by the adjudicator. The alleged entitlement only arises because, if the documents of 13 February 2015 were indeed a fresh claim, no payless notice was issued in time, so the sum falls due automatically.
36. One of the more baleful effects of the amendments to the 1996 Act has been a large increase in the number of cases before adjudicators (and thus before the TCC), in which the claimant contractor argues that the employer failed to serve its notices on time, and that therefore there was an automatic right to payment in full of the sum claimed. Although similar provisions existed in the 1996 Act, it is only since the amendments, with their emphasis on the sum being notified as the sum now due, that this point has become such a bone of contention.
37. In the UK (unlike other jurisdictions with mandatory construction adjudication, such as Malaysia) the employer's failure to serve a payless notice within a short period challenging the payee's notice can have draconian consequences. A failure to serve a notice in time will usually mean a full liability to pay. That is what the run of recent TCC cases on this topic, including ISG v Seevic College [2014] EWHC 4007 (TCC) and Galliford Try Building Ltd v Estura Ltd [2015] EWHC 412 (TCC), are all about. But it seems to me that, if contractors want the benefit of these provisions, they are obliged, in return, to set out their interim payment claims with proper clarity. If the employer is to be put at risk that a failure to serve a payless notice at the appropriate time during the payment period will render him liable in full for the amount claimed, he must be given reasonable notice that the payment period has been triggered in the first place."
"There is some very real importance in being able to ascertain whether a document filed by the Contractor is an Interim Application under Clause 4.11.1: it stands as an Interim Payment Notice (Clause 4.11.2.1) if no Interim Certificate is issued in accordance with Clause 4.10.1 (for instance, issued more than 5 days after the payment due date), and the "sum to be paid by the Employer shall, subject to any Pay Less Notice under clause 4.12.5, be the sum stated as due" in that Interim Application (Clause 4.12.3). That could be way over what the CA would otherwise have certified or what is actually due to the Contractor. Although fraud would probably unravel a fraudulently prepared Interim Application, no fraud is alleged here and there is often room for sometimes widely differing assessments of value and proportions of work completed. Although it is not apt to talk in terms of conditions precedent, I consider that the document relied upon as an Interim Application under Clause 4.11.1 must be in substance, form and intent an Interim Application stating the sum considered by the Contractor as due at the relevant due date and it must be free from ambiguity. In this context, the Interim Application should be considered in the same light as a certificate. If there are to be potentially serious consequences flowing from it being an Interim Application, it must be clear that it is what it purports to be so that the parties know what to do about it and when."
"The requirement for "form", "substance" and "intent" has often been repeated in the authorities (see for example Token Construction v Charlton Estates [1973] BLR 48). In construing the document or documents relied upon, the exercise is to assess it against its contextual setting how it would have informed a reasonable recipient - see Mannai Ltd v Eagle Star Ass. Co. Ltd [1997] AC 749 (per Lord Steyn at 772H)."
"Whether or not this conclusion can be said to lead to a harsh result for TIG, this is an area where, as the authorities make clear, there is little scope for latitude. If a contractor wishes to have the benefit of the interim payment regime such as that contained in the Contract, then its application for interim payment must be in substance, form and intent an interim application stating the sum considered by the contractor as due at the relevant due date and it must be free from ambiguity."
The Second Declaration
The rival contentions
Decision
"The courts will take a common sense, practical view of the contents of a payless notice and will not adopt an unnecessarily restrictive interpretation of such a notice It is thought that, provided that the notice makes tolerably clear what is being held and why, the court will not strive to intervene or endeavour to find reasons that would render such a notice invalid or ineffective."
"Whatever arguments there may be about the appropriateness of fine textual analysis to such a notice (see Thomas Vale Construction v Brookside Syston Ltd [2009] 25 Const LJ (at paragraph 43)), it is, as set out above, an essential requirement for the service of a contractual notice that the sender has the requisite intention to serve it. The senders' intention is a matter to be assessed objectively taking into account the context."
"The Pay Less Notice of 17 June 2015 (clearly served within time for the 29 May payment due date and the final payment date 28 days later) would have provided an adequate agenda for an adjudication as to the true value of the Works and the validity of the alleged entitlement to liquidated damages for delay."
Summary