BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £5, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Ballast Plc v. The Burrell Company (Construction Management) Ltd [2002] ScotCS 324 (17 December 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2002/324.html Cite as: 2003 SLT 137, [2002] ScotCS 324 |
[New search] [Help]
EXTRA DIVISION, INNER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION |
|
Lord President Lord Johnston Lord Weir
|
P336/01 OPINION OF THE COURT delivered by LORD JOHNSTON in RECLAIMING MOTION on PETITION and ANSWERS in the cause BALLAST PLC Petitioners and Respondents; against THE BURRELL COMPANY (CONSTRUCTION MANAGEMENT) LIMITED First Respondents and Reclaimers: for JUDICIAL REVIEW _______ |
Act: Glennie, Q.C., Masons, (Petitioners and Respondents
Alt: Keen, Q.C., Dundas & Wilson, (First Respondents and Reclaimers)
17 December 2002
"(1) The provisions of this Part apply only where the construction contract is in writing, and any other agreement between the parties as to any matter is effective for the purposes of this Part only if in writing.
The expressions 'agreement', 'agree' and 'agreed' shall be construed accordingly.
(2) There is an agreement in writing -
(a) if the agreement is made in writing (whether or not it is signed by the parties),
(b) if the agreement is made by exchange of communications in writing, or
(c) if the agreement is evidenced in writing.
(3) Where parties agree otherwise than in writing by reference to terms which are in writing, they make an agreement in writing.
(4) An agreement is evidenced in writing if an agreement made otherwise than in writing is recorded by one of the parties, or by a third party, with the authority of the parties to the agreement."
"Any party to a construction contract ('the referring party') may give written notice ('the notice of adjudication') of his intention to refer any dispute arising under the contract to adjudication."
"2. THE CONTRACT
The parties entered into a contract subject to inter alia the terms of the JCT Form of Management Contract 1987 Edition. The contract was entered in or about September 1998. The contract related to a project known as the Terrace and Object Buildings, Home for the Future Project, Glasgow Green, Glasgow. In terms of the contract, the Burrell Company (Construction Management) Limited was the Employer and Ballast Wiltshier plc was the Management Contractor. The contract entered into by the parties is a construction contract for the purposes of the Housing Grants Construction and Regeneration Act 1996.
3. THE DISPUTE
The Referring Party is entitled to have the works valued periodically and to be paid by the Respondent. Valuations issued by the Respondents' Professional Team have fluctuated considerably during the last 12 months and no payments have been made by the Respondents since 3 November 1999.
The Respondents have asserted a right to withhold certain monies but in 12 months have produced no detailed proof of any entitlement.
The Referring Party believes the total sum due to be in the order of £1,600,000 gross exclusive of retention and any VAT liability. The Referral Notice will give exact detail. The current certificate shows a gross value £521,639 less than this.
Accordingly the amount of the payment due and payable is in dispute.
A Notice of Adjudication in respect of the dispute referred to above was served on the Respondents on 8 September 2000. A Referral Notice was issued on 22 September. The Respondents lodged a response to the Referral Notice on or around 4 October 2000, disputing the Referring Party's valuation of sums due. However, the Adjudicator resigned before issuing a decision. The dispute between the parties remains unresolved."
"4. THE DISPUTE
The Referring Party is entitled to have the works valued periodically and to be paid by the Respondents. Valuations issued by the Respondents' Professional Team have fluctuated considerably during the last 12 months and no payments have been made by the Respondents since 3 November 1999.
The Respondents have asserted a right to withhold certain monies but in 12 months have produced no detailed proof of any entitlement.
The Referring Party believes the total sum due to be £1,588,177.85 gross (exclusive of retention and any VAT liability).
This is detailed in the Schedule produced in Volume 5 titled 'Summary & Collection'.
The current certificate (the 'amended' Certificate 18) is in the sum of £1,078,361 gross. This is £509,816.65 less than is due & payable to the Claimants.
Accordingly the amount of the payment due and payable is in dispute."
"5.5 Reference is made to Section 2 in the Comments on Relevant Background Information in Volume 1 regarding Valuation & Payment, and the documents referred to in that Section. Further, it is believed by the Referring Party that the valuation and certification process has been either directly or indirectly interfered with, by the Respondents. As a result, the Quantity Surveyor and the Architect have, for example, insisted for the purposes of valuation and certification, upon site of formal, written instructions for work included in the referring parties applications, where it is known that none exist but where equally cogent and persuasive evidence of the instruction by and/or approval of the Respondents and/or others on their behalf, is and has been made, available. Reference is made to the comments regarding Als and Drawings in Sections 3 & 4 of said Comments, respectively, and the documents referred to in those Sections."
"DECISION
The decision on the various remedies sought contained in the Referral are as follows
1. 'The Adjudicator is asked to assess the value of the work done, the common services, the management fee, loss and expense and other appropriate amounts due and payable to the Referring Party and to make directions as to the amounts due and payable to Works Package Contractors.
DECISION 1
Not valid:- On the grounds that the issues and methods utilised in formation of the works package contracts lack certainty and reliability as to value and related considerations.
2. 'The Adjudicator is asked to find that where his directions regarding any Works Package Contract would involve reduction of amounts previously paid in relation to that Package, no reduction in value due and payable to the Referring Party may be made until such time as the Referring Party recovers from the relevant Works Package Contractor(s) any sums found in those directions to have been overpaid'.
DECISION 2
Not valid:- On the grounds that not in accordance with the Act or Regulations and in particular Part II Regulation 11 on conditional payment provisions; in addition this presupposes that the costs could have been passed on to the Respondent without proof that they could contractually be recovered due to lack of true transparency between works package and main contracts.
3. 'The Adjudicator is asked to order payment by the Respondents to the Referring Party of any sums due and payable arising from the remedies sought under 1 and 2 above'.
DECISION 3
Not Applicable:- On the grounds of Decisions 1 and 2.
4. 'The Adjudicator is asked to order payment of the Adjudicator's fees and expenses by the Respondent'.
DECISION 4
Not Granted: On the grounds that both parties, on the basis of joint several liability for the costs, will share them equally. This is based on the joint failure to ensure that the contract and its conditions were adhered to in their entirety. On receipt of the Decision the Responding Party is to immediately remit £2,771.50 inclusive of VAT to the Referring Party as the share of fees and expenses of the Adjudicator.
DIRECTION
Both parties will be responsible for their own direct costs arising from this adjudication."
"[39] Balancing the various considerations to which I have referred, I have come to the conclusion that the Scheme should be interpreted as requiring the parties to comply with an adjudicator's decision, notwithstanding his failure to comply with the express or implied requirements of the Scheme, unless the decision is a nullity; and it will be a nullity if the adjudicator has acted ultra vires, (using that expression in a broad sense to cover the various types of error or impropriety which can vitiate a decision), for example because he had no jurisdiction to determine the dispute referred to him, or because he acted unfairly in the procedure which he followed, or because he erred in law in a manner which resulted in his failing to exercise his jurisdiction or acting beyond his jurisdiction.
"In truth the referred matters are not 'premature' and possibly 'overmature'. The nature of Adjudication is set up to deal with disputes on an ongoing basis which allows the project to continue with a temporary solution which may become final if the parties so wish. With all due respect to the Parties two matters arise. First had they used the perpetual motion of a string of small Adjudications the risk management of these matters would have been simpler. Second and most important is that this referral may have been capable of Adjudication. This is based on the complexity and interaction of too many factors which are not properly recorded, and if the submission text is correct, if ever recorded. The problem is now ripe for alternative methods of disposal unless the Parties can reach some settlement outwith ADR."
and
"Given the lack of clarity and a compatible contractual matrix I have found it impossible to reach what I can substantiate as reasonably legally based decisions. Whatever my instincts appear to indicate the basis of responsible decisions can only arise under the contract. Where the parties have departed from the strict pre-agreed code then they have to accept that it is, as with Courts, not the Adjudicators place to make decisions that give business efficacy to situations where the factual contract does not match up to the actions of the parties being based on another contractual base."
"As a result of that error the adjudicator misconstrued his powers and in consequence failed to exercise his jurisdiction to determine the dispute. His decision is therefore a nullity."