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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 >> Quadro Services Ltd v Creagh Concrete Products Ltd [2021] EWHC 2637 (TCC) (28 September 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2021/2637.html Cite as: [2021] EWHC 2637 (TCC) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS IN BIRMINGHAM
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT (QBD)
Priory Courts 33 Bull Street Birmingham B4 6DS |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
QUADRO SERVICES LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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CREAGH CONCRETE PRODUCTS LIMITED |
Defendant |
____________________
Mr Ben Graff (instructed by Brodies LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 19 August 2021
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Her Honour Judge Sarah Watson:
The application
The Facts
"We are instructed in relation to debts owed to Quadro under five separate contracts as follows:-
£
Woking 40,026.00
Chatham 94,180.20
Paddington 6,903.00
Uddingston 2,520.00
Newcastle 8,970.00
Total Debt 152,599.20
We enclose a statement of account in the above respect.
We are aware of an "incident" that you have claimed is the responsibility of our client in respect of a slab installed at the Newcastle project. We note that by email to our client on 5 November 2020 (at 6:53) from your James McKeague enclosing a "report" (which was prepared by yourselves – not independent and, in the opinion of our client, fatally flawed) ,….
We understand that you have no issues with regard to the value for payment claimed by our client in respect of the five contracts (this is confirmed by the fact there are no valid pay less notices in respect of the monies due). It seems that your refusal to pay is based upon the incident at the Newcastle project. Our client does not consider that to be their responsibility. However, without prejudice to that position, if it is established to be any liability on our client at all, you are fully covered by our client's insurance. See attached email dated 27 November 2020 (at 16:52) from our client's insurance broker. As such, there would be no loss to you in any event.
Further, as a matter of contract law, you cannot set off a potential claim for damages/losses (which is disputed) on the Newcastle contract against monies due on the other contracts. ……
It is not permissible for you to refrain from paying debts due (and now overdue) to our client over the five contracts because: -
1 There is no credible evidence of default on the part of our client in respect of the Newcastle project;
2 If there is any evidence of fault in respect of the Newcastle project, you have no loss because that is fully insured;
3 There are no pay less notices.
In addition to the above, your Stephen Armour stated to our client that if they continued working for you they would be paid at least monies due in September and October 2020 (at 12:16). No monies have been paid in respect of October 2020."
"Our client has the option of pursuing claims against you under each of the contracts. We are sure that you would wish, for example, to avoid the time and cost of dealing with five separate adjudications when monies are clearly due. We trust that it will not be necessary for our client to instruct us to proceed further by way of formal actions."
"4.1 A dispute has arisen between the parties under the Contract. The dispute concerns the non-payment by CCPL of agreed monies due to QSL.
4.2 CCPL have agreed monies due to QSL and agreed to receiving invoices ("the Invoices") in respect of the same, as follows:…."
"5.1 CCPL have refused to pay the Invoices within 30 days of the rendering of the same as agreed. QSL has not received payment into its bank account or at its offices and considers that is where and when the dispute arose.
5.2 On 2 December 2020, Hickman Construction Law, solicitors acting for QSL requested by email to CCPL, payment of the invoices within five working days. No payment has been made.
5.3 A dispute has clearly arisen."
"6.1 QSL seek the appointment of an adjudicator to make the following decisions: -
6.6.1 CCPL immediately pay the sum of £40,026 to QSL or such other such (sic) as the Adjudicator considers is appropriate…"
"Introduction
…………
1.3 the dispute concerns QSL's entitlement to payment of £40,026 (including VAT) in respect of agreed invoices dated 24 July 2020, 27 August 2020 and 12 October 2020. CCPL agreed the invoices and has not served any timely and/or valid Pay Less Notices."
"Dispute
QSL are owed monies by CCPL on four other contracts which will be subject to separate action. An issue has arisen between the parties in respect of a separate contract at a site in Newcastle in respect of which QSL refutes liability and is subject to insurance. Regardless, for the reasons set out above there is no basis for CCPL having not paid the invoices in full.
On 2 December 2020, HCL, Solicitors for QSL sent a letter by email to CCPL … in respect of all monies outstanding from CCPL to QSL on the five contracts including the Invoices. CCPL has refused to make any payment and as such this dispute has arisen."
"We do not consider that you have jurisdiction to consider this matter because the Referring Party has in fact referred three separate disputes to adjudication under one notice and referral.
The Referring Party sets out at paragraph 3.1 of the Referral Notice that the Referring Party issued three applications for payment under the contract. The Referring Party's position, put shortly, is that in each instance an application has been made, no pay less notice was issued and accordingly the sum invoiced is the sum due in terms of the Housing Grants Construction and Regeneration Act 1996. Each application, its validity, whether a pay less notice was issued and the sums due in terms of that application is a separate dispute.
You can test that point by observing that the Referring Party's reliance upon an absence of any pay less notices will mean that the Referring Party contends it is liable to be paid the "notified sum" under the Act. But the notified sum cannot be the sum claimed in the adjudication because no application for that sum has ever been made. Rather, three disputes have been referred on three separate applications.
You do not have jurisdiction to determine more than one dispute at one time without the consent of the parties and that consent is not being given by the respondent.
…
In the circumstances, we invite you to resign ….
If you take a different view, the respondent shall maintain this jurisdictional challenge and reserve its entire rights, remedies and please. Further, the respondent will not participate in this adjudication…."
"The dispute is clear in that it is the failure to pay a debt in the sum of £40,026 under one contract for works that the Referring Party has carried out for the Responding Party….However the consideration of the sums agreed and rendering of the invoices are really only sub issues to be considered in resolving the one dispute (i.e. the debt). Further, and decisively, the three interim applications are for cumulative amounts."
The parties' positions
The law
"33. It is important to bear in mind that construction contracts are commercial
contracts and parties, at least almost invariably, can be taken to have agreed
that a sensible interpretation will be given to what the meaning of a dispute is.
It is conceivable that there may be a dispute on a construction contract which
is simply: what is due to one or other of the parties? That could be a very
broad dispute covering a large number of issues. For instance, there may be a
dispute between the parties about an interim valuation with the contractor
saying that it is entitled to payment for 50 variations but overall it is claiming
£100,000; the Architect certifies £80,000 and disagrees with the contractor on
each of the 50 variations (a) the amount of work done and (b) the rate or price.
One could say that there were 100 disputes, namely 2 per variation.
Alternatively, and obviously sensibly, one could and should say that there was
one dispute with 100 sub-issues. The parties can not sensibly have intended in
these circumstances that each sub-issue for the purposes of adjudication and
even arbitration gives rise to a separate dispute which must be referred to a
separate adjudication or arbitration. The dispute in this example will be as to
what sum the contractor was entitled to on the interim valuation. A particular
dispute, somewhat like a snowball rolling downhill gathering snow as it goes,
may attract more issues and nuances as time goes on; the typical example in a
construction contract is the ever increasing dispute about what is due to the
contractor as each monthly valuation and certificate is issued; a later
certificate may accept amounts in issue previously not certified but then reject
some more items of work. One may in the alternative have a dispute, like the
proverbial rolling stone gathering no moss, which remains the same and unaffected by later events; an example might be disputed responsibility over
an accident on site."
"38. Drawing all these threads together, I draw the following conclusions:
(i) A dispute arises generally when and in circumstances in which a claim
or assertion is made by one party and expressly or implicitly challenged or
not accepted.
(ii) A dispute in existence at one time can in time metamorphose in to
something different to that which it was originally.
(iii) A dispute can comprise a single issue or any number of issues within
it. However, a dispute between parties does not necessarily comprise
everything which is in issue between them at the time that one party
initiates adjudication; put another way, everything in issue at that time
does not necessarily comprise one dispute, although it may do so.
(iv) What a dispute in any given case is will be a question of fact albeit
that the facts may require to be interpreted. Courts should not adopt an
over legalistic analysis of what the dispute between the parties is, bearing
in mind that almost every construction contract is a commercial
transaction and parties can not broadly have contemplated that every issue
between the parties would necessarily have to attract a separate reference
to adjudication.
(v) The Notice of Adjudication and the Referral Notice are not necessarily
determinative of what the true dispute is or as to whether there is more
than one dispute. One looks at them but also at the background facts.
(vi) Where on a proper analysis, there are two separate and distinct
disputes, only one can be referred to one adjudicator unless the parties
agree otherwise. An adjudicator who has two disputes referred to him or
her does not have jurisdiction to deal with the two disputes.
(vii) Whether there are one or more disputes again involves a
consideration of the facts. It may well be that, if there is a clear link
between two or more arguably separate claims or assertions, that may well
point to there being one dispute. A useful if not invariable rule of thumb is
that, if disputed claim No 1 can not be decided without deciding all or
parts of disputed claim No 2, that establishes such a clear link and points
to there being only one dispute."
"15. Thirdly, I consider that, on an application of well-known principles, the dispute about extensions of time and loss and expense was a different dispute to the dispute about retention. Mr Choat sought to argue, by reference to the decision of Akenhead J in Witney Town Council v Beam Construction (Cheltenham) Ltd [2011] EWHC 2332 (TCC); [2011] BLR 707, that, on an application of the principles set out in this case, the delay claim and the retention claim were both part of the same dispute because they both related to what was due on 30 June 2015, the date of practical completion. But in my view, the proper application of Akenhead J's principles, referred to at paragraph 38 of his judgment in Witney Town, leads to the opposite conclusion.
16 Akenhead J said that: "A useful if not invariable rule of thumb is that, if disputed claim No 1 cannot be decided without deciding all or parts of disputed claim No 2, that establishes such a clear link and points to there being only one dispute." In this case, DATL's claim for an extension of time and loss and expense, as noted in paragraph 5 above, could easily be decided without any reference to the claim for the failure to reduce retention (as noted in paragraph 7 above), which was a separate and stand-alone claim. Indeed, at one point Mr Choat appeared to accept that, when he submitted that, in order to reach his decision in Adjudication 2, "the Adjudicator did not need to decide decision 3". I respectfully agree. That demonstrates that these were not part of the same dispute."
"17. There is nothing in Mr Choat's argument that both claims related to what was due on 30 June 2015. That date is not identified in either of the relevant notices of adjudication. Moreover, the relevant date for Adjudication 2 was the date of the critical application for an interim payment (see Section 5 below); the relevant date for Adjudication 3 was the date of practical completion.
18. Finally, it should be noted that there is no authority to support the proposition that two different disputes, deliberately raised by the claiming party in two separate adjudication notices, and described in very different terms, could still somehow be part of the same dispute. All of the authorities about the reference of more than one dispute, which culminate in Witney Town, were cases where there was one notice of adjudication, and the outcome depended on the nature of the issues that had been referred to the Adjudicator under that single notice. Thus, whilst I accept that the mere fact that there were two notices may not necessarily be determinative, it might be thought that it would take a very unusual set of circumstances to conclude that the disputes referred to in the adjudication notices, started at different times, both formed part of the same dispute."
"33 Ms Hannaford Q.C. is right when she submits that each of the matters referred to Mr Molloy in Adjudication 2, and set out in paragraph [31] above, could have been decided independently. However, I do not read Akenhead J's guidance in the Witney case as meaning that unless each claim cannot be decided without deciding all or part of the other claims, each claim constitutes a separate dispute. Clearly a single dispute in the context of a construction contract may include several distinct issues such as when determining appropriate deductions for the purposes of a payment application or final account. One needs to look at the facts of each case and to use some common sense."
Analysis
"The dispute concerns the non-payment by CCPL of agreed monies due to QSL.
CCPL have agreed monies due to QSL and agreed to receiving invoices ("the Invoices") in respect of the same, as follows:
Date Invoice No £
24/7/2020 20/6905 17,910
27/8/2020 20/6916 16,800
12/10/2020 20/6944 5,316
40,026"
"Introduction
…………
1.3 The dispute concerns QSL's entitlement to payment of £40,026 (including VAT) in respect of agreed invoices dated 24 July 2020, 27 August 2020 and 12 October 2020. CCPL agreed the invoices and has not served any timely and/or valid Pay Less Notices."
"Dispute
QSL are owed monies by CCPL on four other contracts which will be subject to separate action. An issue has arisen between the parties in respect of a separate contract at a site in Newcastle in respect of which QSL refutes liability and is subject to insurance. Regardless, for the reasons set out above there is no basis for CCPL having not paid the invoices in full.
On 2 December 2020, HCL, Solicitors for QSL sent a letter by email to CCPL … in respect of all monies outstanding from CCPL to QSL on the five contracts including the Invoices. CCPL has refused to make any payment and as such this dispute has arisen."