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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 >> RCS Contractors Ltd v Conway [2017] EWHC 715 (TCC) (04 April 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2017/715.html Cite as: 171 Con LR 151, [2017] EWHC 715 (TCC) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
Rolls Building Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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RCS Contractors Limited |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Anthony Conway |
Defendant |
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The Defendant was in Person
Hearing date: 4 April 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
The Hon. Mr Justice Coulson:
1. INTRODUCTION
2. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
(a) Shaw's letter of 9 January 2015, procured by Mr Conway in the adjudication, which referred to RSC's contract with Mr Conway, and noted that the work was then performed by "your sub-contractor RSC";(b) Paragraph 6 of Mr Conway's witness statement which said "I have entered into three different contracts with Shaw Interiors by then, and I have sub-contracted them to RSC Limited separately at different point of time in 2013".
3. THE LAW
"A party to a construction contract has the right to refer a dispute arising out of the contract for adjudication."
Because there was no written contract in this case, it was common ground that the Scheme for Construction Contracts, England and Wales Regulations 1998 (as amended) applied.
"20. …During the course of a construction contract, many claims, heads of claim, issues, contentions and causes of action will arise. Many of these will be, collectively or individually, disputed. When a dispute arises, it may cover one, several or many of one, some or all of these matters. At any particular moment in time, it will be a question of fact what is in dispute. Thus, the 'dispute' which may be referred to adjudication is all or part of whatever is in dispute at the moment that the referring party first intimates an adjudication reference. In other words, the 'dispute' is whatever claims, heads of claim, issues, contentions or causes of action that are in then in dispute which the referring party has chosen to crystallise into an adjudication reference."
(a) In Grovedeck Limited v Capital Demolition Limited [2000] BLR 181 HHJ Bowsher QC decided obiter that, because there were claims under two separate contracts, there could not be one single dispute and the adjudicator's decision was not enforced.(b) In Enterprise Managed Services Limited v Tony McFadden Utilities Limited [2009] EWHC 3222 (TCC), TML were insolvent assignors to the defendant of claims against Enterprise under 4 separate contracts. Under rule 4.90 of the Insolvency Rules, the financial position under all 4 contracts had to be considered together, not just by reference to one contract only, thereby depriving the adjudicator of jurisdiction.
(c) By contrast, in AMEC Group Limited v Thames Water Utilities Limited [2010] EWHC 419 (TCC), although there were numerous works contracts, the parties' overarching contractual obligations were set out under a single framework agreement. The judge decided that the dispute arose under that single contract, so that there was no jurisdictional issue.
(d) In Viridis UK Limited v Mulally & Co Limited [2014] EWHC 268 (TCC), the works involved the replacement of windows and doors in a number of different locations. Summary judgment was not ordered because the claimant had not shown that there was a single overarching contract between the parties.
4. THE ADJUDICATOR'S FINDINGS AND THE SUBSEQUENT EVIDENCE
"2.16 I issued my non-binding decision on the challenge on 19 October 2015 as follows:
I refer to the jurisdictional challenge, dated 16 October 2015, made by Mohammed Al Haque for and on behalf of Mr Conway and the response by Messrs Dentons, dated 19 October 2015, for and on behalf of PSC Contractors Ltd RSC). I acknowledge receipt of Mr Haque's further submission on 19 October 2015 by email.
On the evidence adduced before me I understand that during May and June 2012 Mr Conway concluded three contracts with Shaw Interiors Ltd (Shaw) for groundworks at three sites – Walmer Road Notting Hill, London; Middlemas Green, Pewsey, Wiltshire; and Ridge Road, Sutton, Surrey.
In or about November 2012 Mr Conway met Mr Evan O'Rourke, a director of RSC Contractors Ltd, at which meeting they agreed that Mr Conway would attempt to procure construction contracts for RSC in consideration for a fee of £l,500 per week. Mr Conway apparently informed Mr O'Rourke that there was a possibility that he would be able to procure work for RSC using his industry contacts. In fact Mr Conway had already concluded three groundworks contracts with Shaw on his own account.
There is no evidence that the contracts Mr Conway had concluded with Shaw were novated to RSC or that they were assigned to RSC. Therefore, as between Shaw and Mr Conway, Mr Conway was contracted to Shaw to carry out the groundworks on each of the three projects.
In order to fulfil his obligations to Shaw in regard to the three contracts, Mr Conway concluded an oral contract with RSC under which RSC would carry out and complete the groundworks for Mr Conway on each of the projects. The contract works were begun in early 2013 and completed by mid-June 2013.
On the evidence before me, as between Mr Conway and RSC, Mr Conway was in control of the construction works; he gave instructions to RSC in regard to the carrying out of the works; he applied to Shaw for interim payments; he made payments to RSC from monies received from Shaw, deducting as he did so his weekly fee of £1,500.00 in addition to, no doubt, a margin off the rates and prices agreed with Shaw.
On these facts, I do not understand the contract concluded between Mr Conway and RSC to have been an agency contract.
Based on the evidence adduced before me, and the facts as I have found them,' I am satisfied that the parties entered into a single construction contract under which RSC agreed to carry out and complete groundworks for Mr Conway under his direction for consideration based on rates and prices agreed by Mr Conway with Shaw.
I am further satisfied that a dispute has crystallised in relation to the amount of the final payment due to RSC from Mr Conway, which is a single dispute consisting of more than one issue. One such issue is the amount of any fee that may be due to Mr Conway under the putative agency agreement.
Consequently, it is my non-binding decision that I am clothed with jurisdiction in this matter and shall proceed on the reference accordingly."
"10. I then received a call from Mr Conway on 19 December. He confirmed that he had secured the 3 projects (Ridge Road, Walmer Road and Pewsey) from Shaw Interiors. The work was to start on 7th January 2013 and I agreed to take on the work. We agreed that his nominated quantity surveyor a Mr Jim Wyckham would price the work for us acting on a consultancy basis. I was little involved in the pricing arrangements after that as Mr Conway got the tender documents from Shaw Interiors and passed them to Mr Wyckham to price. He in turn returned them direct to Mr Conway. There was one conversation encompassing all three projects and agreed to do the work on all the projects. We did not discuss picking and choosing some of the projects and leaving others. At the time I trusted Mr Conway and thought he was acting on our behalf. I had no direct contact with Jim Wyckham.
11. It was therefore as a result of that conversation RSC agree to take on the work for the Shaw Interior projects. My understanding from the conversation is that we had agreed to complete all three of those projects as a single package albeit that the works would need to be broken down to show the cost allocation between each of those projects. In due course we priced bills of quantities for the works…
16. Once we got to the final account stage the financial claim was dealt with globally. The negotiations began with the final account submissions made on 2 July 2013 which showed that the total amount of work completed on all of the jobs less the payments received gross on all the jobs showing and a net balance due. Obviously in order to understand the claims it was necessary to analyse the breakdown in relation to each site. Again that was the approach taken consistently by the parties. In this regard I refer to Mr Conway's letter to RSC of 9 September 2013. The opening sentence refers to RSC's "final account for works completed at the Pewsey and Ridge Road projects.""
Following paragraph 6 to which I have already referred, Mr Conway's witness statement went on to say:
"7. Please note that each of the three contracts Walmar Road, Pewsey Wiltshire, and Ridge Road has three different price, variations, scope, specification, agreed through different process, has different duration, performed at different times and for value, payment was applied for differently, they were paid for differently. Even the final applications were separately made and assessed. Payment Notices were issued separately. Although a summary sheet to show the total entitlement was created purely for convenience."
5. ANALYSIS
"However, following on from paragraph 14 of the purported referral notice there must have been three contracts as each of the three projects/contracts had different obligations. Two of them had different start dates, each finished on different dates as well. Each of them are essentially different in scope, price, duration and variation."
As I have already noted, that approach could also be seen in the interchangeability of Mr Conway's use of the words "contracts" and "sites".
6. CONCLUSIONS