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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Ruttle Plant Hire Ltd v Secretary of State for Environment Food & Rural Affairs [2009] EWCA Civ 97 (27 February 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2009/97.html Cite as: [2009] BLR 301, [2009] EWCA Civ 97, [2009] Bus LR D93, [2010] 1 All ER (Comm) 444 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION (TECHNOLOGY &
CONSTRUCTION COURT)
The Hon Mr Justice Coulson
HT-06-22
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
THE RT HON LORD JUSTICE JACOB
and
THE RT HON LORD JUSTICE LLOYD
____________________
Ruttle Plant Hire Limited |
Claimant/ Appellant |
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- and - |
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Secretary of State for Environment Food & Rural Affairs |
Defendant/ Respondent |
____________________
WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
for the Claimant/Appellant
Jonathan Acton Davis QC and Fiona Banks (instructed by Eversheds LLP)
for the Defendant/Respondent
Hearing date: 23 January 2009
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Jacob:
The Primary Facts
a. "The first tranche" between August 2000 and February 2001;
b. "The second tranche" sent in March 2002;
c. What were called the "Revision A invoices" sent in December 2004 and January 2005.
Coulson J's findings as to interest.
(1) Ruttle were not entitled to interest under either Act until 11th May 2007 on the 35% which had been discounted in the first tranche and for which, until the Final Account, there never had been an invoice.(2) Nor was it entitled to interest under either Act for the underclaims until 30 days after notice of the claim was first made at the correct rate.
(3) Ruttle was entitled to interest under the 1998 Act from the outset as if its labour rate had been the £17.70 per hour agreed in May 2005.
(4) Even if there was a prima facie entitlement to interest under either Act from the time of the earlier invoices, in the exercise of his discretion he would have refused that interest until after 11th May 2007.
(5) The rate of interest so far as it was allowed was to be 2% over base rate under either Act.
The points live on this appeal
(1) Whether the fact that the second tranche and Revision A invoices were calculated using the wrong rates for plant hire precludes the application of the 1998 Act. The Judge so held.(2) If the 1998 Act does apply to these invoices, should Ruttle nonetheless be deprived of all interest until May 11 2007 by an exercise of discretion under the power contained in that Act (what the Act calls "remission")? The parties are agreed that by implication the Judge made a hypothetical exercise of discretion to that effect.
(3) Should the 1998 Act rate of interest (8% simple above Bank of England base rate) apply after the 11th May 2007 or should it be remitted? The Judge held that it should be remitted to 2% above Bank of England base rate.
(4) If the 1998 Act does not apply to the second tranche and Revision A invoices (challenged as issue (1) above) does the 1981 Act apply to these? That turns on when Ruttle's causes of action in respect of the debts to which those invoices relate begin for the purposes of that Act. The Judge held that these causes of action did not arise until correct invoices were sent in the Final Account and so there could be no interest for the earlier periods.
(5) If the 1981 Act does apply to the second tranche and Revision A invoices, should interest under the 1981 Act be withheld until 11th May 2007 in the exercise of the Court's discretion? As in the case of the discretion under the 1998 Act, it is agreed that by implication the Judge made a hypothetical exercise of discretion to that effect.
Issue (1): Whether the fact that that the second and Revision A invoices were calculated using the wrong rates precludes the application of the 1998 Act.
1. Statutory interest
(1) It is an implied term in a contract to which this Act applies that any qualifying debt created by the contract carries simple interest subject to and in accordance with this Part.
(2) Interest carried under that implied term (in this Act referred to as "statutory interest") shall be treated, for the purposes of any rule of law or enactment (other than this Act) relating to interest on debts, in the same way as interest carried under an express contract term.
Section 6 provides the power to set the rate of statutory interest. It was 8% above base rate for all the periods with which this case is concerned. Section 2 defines the types of contract to which the Act applies. It is common ground that the DEFRA/Ruttle contract falls within the definition.
3. Qualifying debts.
(1) A debt created by virtue of an obligation under a contract to which this Act applies to pay the whole or any part of the contract price is a "qualifying debt" for the purposes of this Act, unless (when created) the whole of the debt is prevented from carrying statutory interest by this section.
And s.4 defines the period for which statutory interest is to run. I set out only that which is material here
4. Period for which statutory interest runs.
(1) Statutory interest runs in relation to a qualifying debt in accordance with this section (unless section 5 applies).
(2) Statutory interest starts to run on the day after the relevant day for the debt, at the rate prevailing under section 6 at the end of the relevant day.
(3) Where the supplier and the purchaser agree a date for payment of the debt (that is, the day on which the debt is to be created by the contract), that is the relevant day unless the debt relates to an obligation to make an advance payment.
The "relevant day" where no advance payment is agreed is defined as:
(5) … the relevant day is the last day of the period of 30 days beginning with—
(a) the day on which the obligation of the supplier to which the debt relates is performed; or
(b) the day on which the purchaser has notice of the amount of the debt or (where that amount is unascertained) the sum which the supplier claims is the amount of the debt,
whichever is the later.
5. Remission of statutory interest.
5(1) This section applies where, by reason of any conduct of the supplier, the interests of justice require that statutory interest should be remitted in whole or part in respect of a period for which it would otherwise run in relation to a qualifying debt.
(2) If the interests of justice require that the supplier should receive no statutory interest for a period, statutory interest shall not run for that period.
(3) If the interests of justice require that the supplier should receive statutory interest at a reduced rate for a period, statutory interest shall run at such rate as meets the justice of the case for that period.
(4) Remission of statutory interest under this section may be required—
(a) by reason of conduct at any time (whether before or after the time at which the debt is created); and
(b) for the whole period for which statutory interest would otherwise run or for one or more parts of that period.
(5) In this section "conduct" includes any act or omission.
"our client's position on 'the relevant invoice' is that to the extent that the sums claimed in the invoices rendered by your client in the first tranche of invoices (i.e. the invoices before they were reissued as described in paragraph 47(b) of our Defence and Counterclaim) are shown to be due and are valid, interest on those sums will run from 30 days after receipt by our client of each of those invoices. As to the reissued invoices, to the extent that the sums claimed in them are shown to be due and valid, interest on those sums will run from 30 days after receipt by our client of each of those invoices".
the day on which the purchaser has notice of the amount of the debt or (where that amount is unascertained) the sum which the supplier claims is the amount of the debt
Does "notice of the amount of the debt" require that the invoice be correct? Is any error, howsoever small is enough to exclude the Act? Mr Acton Davis eventually found that he had to so contend – an earlier suggestion that somehow an error in the rate for plant hire did not amount to such notice whereas an error in the periods of plant hire did fell away in the course of argument. According to Mr Acton Davis the only kind of error which would not take a case outside the 1988 Act was one where, on the face of the invoice, the reasonable reader could see the error and also understand what was really meant – something like an obviously misplaced decimal point or error of addition.
created by virtue of an obligation under a contract to which this Act applies to pay the whole or any part of the contract price is a "qualifying debt" for the purposes of this Act.
Issue 2: should statutory interest on the second tranche and Revision A invoices be remitted until May 11 2007?
[200] For the avoidance of doubt, I should also say, whether it is in respect of the interests of justice under section 5 of the 1998 Act, or the arguably wider discretion under section 35A of the 1981 Act, that I have no hesitation in concluding that it would be contrary to the interests of justice, and a wholly illegitimate exercise of the court's discretion, to award Ruttle interest from 2000/2001 on the 35% that they deliberately chose not to claim. Thus, even if I was wrong about when notice was given for the purposes of either Act, I would still exercise my discretion against awarding interest on the unpaid 35% from the date of the first tranche of invoices.
[2002] Ruttle say that, in relation to the second tranche of invoices and the Revision A invoices, they were claiming at rates that were higher than the August 2000 rates and that, therefore, those invoices must be sufficient notice under the relevant statutes. It seems to me that the fundamental problem with that assertion is that, although the rates were indeed generally higher than the August 2000 rates, they were the wrong rates: they were simply not the rates to which Ruttle were entitled to be paid. In those circumstances I consider that it would be an unjust result if it could be said that liability to pay interest was triggered by way of an invoice, in respect of which the substantive claim was (and has subsequently been found to be) erroneous.
[203] Furthermore, looking at the matter in the round, it seems to me that allowing interest on the 35% from the time that that 35% was first unequivocally claimed is an appropriate and fair result. The intervening years between the completion of the works and the provision of the final account were largely spent by Ruttle in pursuing the unsuccessful case on the FMD rates. It would therefore be wrong, I think, to ignore all of that and to award Ruttle interest as if, somehow, their claims had been correctly formulated all along. Therefore, if I was wrong about notice, on the exercise of my discretion under either Act, I would again conclude that interest on the missing 35% should run from when it was first claimed, which was May last year.
Issue 3: Should the post-May 11th 2007 interest be remitted to 2% above base rate?
[206] That, I think, leaves the question of the applicable rate. I am not persuaded that the penal base rate plus 8% allowed by the 1998 Act is appropriate or in the interests of justice in the present case. If there are unpaid sums, then plainly Ruttle are entitled to be compensated by way of interest. In view of all the circumstances of this case, which I have already outlined in this Judgment, I consider that the appropriate rate of interest would be the base rate plus 2%. I make it clear that, for the same reasons, this is the appropriate rate of interest to all the claims for interest advanced by Ruttle.
Issue 4: Does the 1981 Act apply to the "Wrong" (second tranche and Revision A) invoices?
Power of High Court to award interest on debts and damages.
— (1) Subject to rules of court, in proceedings (whenever instituted) before the High Court for the recovery of a debt or damages there may be included in any sum for which judgment is given simple interest, at such rate as the court thinks fit or as rules of court may provide, on all or any part of the debt or damages in respect of which judgment is given, or payment is made before judgment, for all or any part of the period between the date when the cause of action arose and—
(a) in the case of any sum paid before judgment, the date of the payment; and
(b) in the case of the sum for which judgment is given, the date of the judgment.
Work and services. Unless a time for payment is otherwise agreed, the right to claim payment upon an entire contract accrues when the work is completed.
Chitty cites Coburn v Colledge [1897] 1 QB 702 for this proposition. In that case Lord Esher MR said (with the other members of the court saying much the same thing in other words):
In the case of a person who is not a solicitor, and who does work for another person at his request on the terms that he is to be paid for it, unless there is some special term of the agreement to the contrary, his right to payment arises as soon as the work is done; and thereupon he can at once bring his action.
There could only be a cause of action for unpaid monies if the sum in question had been claimed and not paid.
He gives no authority for that proposition and it seems neither Chitty nor Coburn were drawn to his attention. I think he was in error here.
Issue 5: Should the discretion under the 1981 Act be exercised so as to withhold interest until the correct invoice was supplied in 2007?
Conclusion
Lord Justice Lloyd:
Lord Justice Sedley: