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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 >> Celtic Bioenergy Ltd v Knowles Ltd [2017] EWHC 472 (TCC) (16 March 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2017/472.html Cite as: 171 Con LR 160, [2017] EWHC 472 (TCC), [2017] CILL 3961, [2017] 1 Lloyd's Rep 495, [2017] BLR 312 |
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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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CELTIC BIOENERGY LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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KNOWLES LIMITED |
Defendant |
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Mr Jonathan Acton Davis QC (instructed by Isca Legal LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 9th February 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Jefford:
The background to the arbitration
Events up to March 2016
"3. THAT Knowles will withdraw and extinguish it (sic) invoices served on Devon County Council.4. THAT Knowles will provide an indemnity in favour of Devon County Council in the matter of the Celtic BioEnergy assignment in favour of Knowles and that it will not pursue Devon County Council for such sums as are owed by Devon County Council to Celtic BioEnergy Limited."
(i) that Knowles waived all its right to payment under the construction contract and the assignment; and
(ii) that "[Knowles] will indemnify and save harmless the Council against all claims, legal and equitable and actions in contract or howsoever arising pursuant to the Deed of Assignment dated 19 November 2010 or payments made pursuant to the Construction Contract to any party whomsoever."
"Knowles answer is "yes", there are other reasons, which are that Knowles to paraphrase [DCC], is not fully appraised of the circumstances under which it entered into the purported waiver and indemnity."
(i) The arbitrator decided that the fees that would be due to Knowles for their services in respect of adjudications nos. 6 to 8 were fixed or capped.
(ii) The arbitrator decided that the fees would be payable from the proceeds of adjudication no. 8, 14 days after receipt of those sums or, if the proceeds were insufficient, on the publishing of an award in or the settlement of the arbitration between CBL and DCC.
The March Correspondence
"3. On recently reviewing the situation it remains the case that DCC has not paid to us the sums awarded by Mr Michael Twine in this Decision dated 7 February 2014. The total sum to be paid with accrued interest on that Decision to the date of this letter is £197,980.50 with VAT in addition.4. Also an additional sum which DCC plans to or has paid to Celtic which we understand to be in the sum of £180,000 has not been paid to us.
5. Would you please make full payment of £377,980.50 with VAT in addition to [account details] within 7 days of the date of this letter, or otherwise say by that time your reasons for not complying with the terms of the Deed of Assignment dated 19 November 2010 of which you have been given notice.
6. We confirm we can and will give good receipt for these monies and remind you to avoid any doubts you may have that all sums decided to be paid to Celtic in adjudication proceedings, sums awarded in arbitration proceedings and sums ordered paid by any court pursuant to the Construction Contract and all payments thereunder are sums assigned and to be paid to Knowles Limited and no other party.
7. Absent any payment or response and following the expiry of the 7 days period set out in paragraph 5 above, we reserve the right to seek the court's assistance in securing payment of these sums assigned to us."
I note that the sums referred to in paragraph 3 were those awarded in adjudication no. 8 which were the subject of the earlier invoices and that the letter was addressed to the same parties to whom those invoices had been sent.
"I feel it is for you to make yourself aware of the exchanges and to take these into account in considering how you wish to proceed. I do not feel this is a task for me to take on except to alert you to my recollection of the exchanges."
"… There is relevant correspondence not only with DCC but also its advisers. In addition there are the representations made to Celtic and the court and the record of the Judges findings (on the assignment document).It is not for DCC to either list documents or confirm any list.
If Knowles are considering seeking the assistance of the court then Knowles will have to clearly set out its position taking into account the full history including Knowles' dealings with [CBL].
Subject to Knowles' compliance with the pre-action protocol, DCC will respond as it sees fit. Until then DCC's position is fully reserved.
If you decide to submit information in accordance with the pre-action protocol, I will instruct solicitors to respond. Otherwise, I will not be responding to further demands for information or payment from Knowles."
Events from March 2016
Knowles' applications under s. 39 and/or 47 Arbitration Act 1996
"(1) A declaration that Knowles had complied with paragraph 3 of the Arbitration Agreement [ie the ad hoc agreement] as it has withdrawn its invoices served on [DCC].
(2) A declaration that Knowles has complied with paragraph 4 of the Arbitration Agreement in that it has provided an indemnity in favour of DCC indemnifying the latter against Knowles pursuing sums owed by DCC to [CBL] under an assignment in favour of Knowles dated 19.11.10."
"….the Claimant has complied with paragraph 3 of the Arbitration Agreement as it has withdrawn its invoices served on [DCC]
"…. The Claimant has complied with paragraph 4 of the Arbitration Agreement in that it has provided an indemnity in favour of [DCC] indemnifying the latter against the Claimant pursuing sums owed by [DCC] to the Respondent under an assignment in favour of Knowles dated 19.11.10."
I will refer to the arbitrator's reasoning further below.
Following the Award
CBL's argument on declaration no. 1
CBL's argument on declaration no. 2
"51. However, I also remind myself that despite preparing its own version of the waiver and indemnity [the DCC Waiver], DCC were willing to accept the terms of the Knowles Waiver providing only that Knowles notify DCC if it considered the terms of the Waiver were not binding on it. This must indicate that the terms agreed by the parties in the Knowles Waiver were acceptable to DCC per se, even though perhaps not in the form preferred by DCC.52. As to the Knowles response to the DCC query as to whether there were any reason why DCC may not rely on the Knowles Waiver, Mr Rainsberry denies that Knowles retracted the terms of the Waiver. He asserts that in the letter of 27 November Knowles was merely seeking information further to the DCC letter of 13 November 2014.
…
55. Considering all the evidence presented to me, I come to the view that the terms of the Arbitration Agreement require that Knowles provide an indemnity in favour of DCC and that Knowles did provide this by the deed dated 18 July 2014. At that date it clearly considered itself bound by the terms agreed. As to the Knowles letter of 27 November 2014, in my view it goes beyond merely seeking further information, although it does require that information. In my view it raises the potential that Knowles may consider it possible to repudiate the Waiver. On balance, however, notwithstanding that Knowles asserted that DCC could not rely on the terms of the Waiver, I accept Mr Rainsberry's assertion that it does not provide the express terms needed to retract or repudiate the Waiver. ….."
CBL's application
The legal principles
"(1) A party to arbitral proceedings may … apply to the court challenging an award in the proceedings on the ground of serious irregularity affecting the tribunal, the proceedings or the award.(2) Serious irregularity means an irregularity of one of more of the following kinds which the court considers has caused or will cause substantial injustice to the applicant –
…(g) the award being obtained by fraud or the way in which it was procured being contrary to public policy
…"
(i) For example, in relation to the public policy limb of s.68(2)(g), in Gater Assets v Nak Naftogas Ukrainiy (No.2) [2008] EWHC 237 at [41], Tomlinson J. said:
"… it is never wise to attempt an exhaustive definition of its content. For present purposes however I am satisfied that nothing short of reprehensible or unconscionable conduct will suffice to invest the court with a discretion to consider denying to the award the recognition of enforcement. That means conduct which we would be comfortable in describing as fraud, conduct dishonestly intended to mislead."
(ii) In Double K, at paragraph 33, Blair J added that:
"Where, as in this case, the allegation is fraud in the production of evidence, the onus is on the Applicant to make good the allegation by cogent evidence."
(iii) In Cuflet Chartering, Moore-Bick J. had similarly said that:
"… once it is recognised that the allegation is one of serious impropriety, it must also be recognised that cogent evidence will be required to satisfy the court that the owners did behave in such a manner."
"… fraud (that is dishonest, reprehensible or unconscionable conduct) must be distinctly pleaded and proved, to the heightened burden of proof as discussed in Hornal v Neuberger Products Ltd. [1954] 1 QB 247 and re H (minors) [1996] AC 563. This was emphasised by Rix LJ in The Kriti Palm, at paragraphs 256-259, a case which provides a salutary reminder to any judge of the importance of being satisfied to the necessary heightened standard of proof that what is involved is dishonesty and of the fact that the explanation for something is much more likely to be human error than dishonesty."
Knowles' position on this application
The motivation for the March correspondence and its non-disclosure
What happened when the correspondence came to light
The "letter of claim" point
"A: Well, the arbitration agreement says nothing about the assignment, about operating the assignment, so …Q: … we don't need to go into an analysis of what that agreement meant. If this is a letter of claim for the adjudication 8 sum, if that is what that letter was doing, that would represent, wouldn't it, a clear breach of paragraph 3 of the ad hoc arbitration agreement, where Knowles promised in effect to withdraw and extinguish the invoice and not make a further claim for that money?
A: Well, no, because this says nothing about reinvoicing. So it cannot be a breach. When this was written the invoices had been extinguished in a way in which Celtic agreed, their solicitor sent credit notes to Devon County Council. Devon County Council had two credit notes extinguishing both invoices, so there is no "if" this was a claim and therefore it was a breach of the arbitration agreement; that just cannot be the case.
Q: Are you suggesting that reinvoicing for the adjudication no 8 sums… wouldn't in your mind have been a breach of the agreement? Yes or no?
A: Yes that would have been.
Q: If this is a letter of claim, that is what you are doing isn't it?
A: No, it isn't what I'm doing, because I have not issued any invoices beforehand, so this cannot be considered as a letter of claim."
"Q: If it were a letter of claim, it would be a breach, wouldn't it?A: No
Q: Well, can you just explain that? If [it] were claiming the adjudication 8 sums and pursuing DCC direct, how would that not be a breach of paragraph 4 of the ad hoc arbitration agreement?
A: This letter is not a letter of claim. If a different letter existed which was a letter of claim, that could be a breach of 4. But a different letter doesn't exist."
Credibility generally
Conclusions on the evidence
Recklessness
"As for the element of dishonesty, the leading cases are replete with statements of its vital importance and of warnings against watering down this ingredient into something akin to negligence, however gross. The standard direction is still that of Lord Herschell in Derry v Peek (1889) 14 App Case 337 at 374:"First, in order to sustain an action in deceit, there must be proof of fraud and nothing short of that will suffice. Secondly, fraud is proven when it is shown that a false representation has been made (1) knowingly, (2) without belief in its truth, or (3) recklessly, careless of whether it be true or false.""
Conclusions
Extension of time
"(i) the length of the delay;(ii) whether, in permitting the time limit to expire and the subsequent delay to occur, the party was acting reasonably in all the circumstances;
(iii) whether the respondent to the application or the arbitrator caused or contributed to the delay;
(iv) whether the respondent to the application would by reason of the delay suffer irremediable prejudice in addition to the mere loss of time if the application were permitted to proceed;
(v) whether the arbitration has continued during the period of delay and, if so, what impact on the progress of the arbitration or the costs incurred in respect of the termination of the application by the court might now have;
(vi) the strength of the application;
(vii) whether in the broadest sense it would be unfair to the applicant for him to be denied the opportunity to having the application determined."
Remedy