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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 >> PT Building Services Ltd v ROK Build Ltd [2008] EWHC 3434 (TCC) (08 December 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2008/3434.html Cite as: [2008] EWHC 3434 (TCC) |
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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 :
____________________
PT Building Services Limited |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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ROK Build Limited |
Defendant |
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Mr Jonathan Lee (instructed by Davies Arnold Cooper) for the Defendant
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Crown Copyright ©
The Hon. Mr Justice Ramsey MR JUSTICE RAMSEY:
Introduction
The adjudication
"Contrary to your letter and attachments, we would confirm the dispute which you are attempting to refer does not exist and your submission is flawed and unfounded. Furthermore, any attempt on your part to continue with this action will ultimately lead to wasted time and resources on your part, as well as our pursuing your company for our costs in dealing with this matter.
With respect, we would refer you to our previous submissions and content of our recent meetings whereby we have confirmed to you our view that your works are grossly over-valued and you have attempted to misrepresent the extent of actual works carried out and completed. This, as you have been made aware, has and is causing ROK some difficulties and embarrassment with our client, although we acknowledge that this is a matter for us to resolve directly with Harlow District Council.
We would also refer you to the email issued by your Mr Jerry Twum-Asare dated 26th June 2008 which we aver corroborates and acknowledges your over-valuation."
"As you will hopefully glean from such correspondence, there is no dispute crystallised and, as such, there can be no formal adjudication. Furthermore, ROK would confirm having received no referral notice not later than seven days from their receipt of the notice of adjudication (11 August 2008)."
"In making this response and participating in this adjudication, ROK reserves its position as to the jurisdictional matters referred to in section 2 below and does not confer upon the adjudicator any power or authority that he does not have otherwise have."
"The challenge on the basis of 'No crystallised dispute' would be the source of considerable argument and expense in any enforcement proceedings."
"The exact same dispute has been the subject of a previous adjudication commenced by PTB. It was decided by Mr Peter Barnes. We enclose a copy of the previous adjudicator's decision dated 1 October 2008. Paragraph 17 of that decision confirms that the dispute was in relation to payment of the final account dated 20 August 2008. The adjudicator decided, amongst other matters, that we should pay PTB the sum of £314,242.18. Given that a dispute in relation to payment of the final account dated 20 of August 2008 has already been referred to adjudication, it cannot be the subject of a second adjudication. If PTB do not agree with the existing adjudicator's decision, their only remedy is to refer the dispute to litigation.
In the circumstances, please confirm that you will resign your appointment as adjudicator.
For the avoidance of doubt, we have raised a number of jurisdictional arguments in the previous adjudication. We consider that our jurisdictional arguments have merit and so we have not paid PTB the sums awarded. In the unlikely event that you decide to continue to act as adjudicator, we reserve the right to raise these additional arguments in this reference."
"As referred to in our previous letter, we have a number of jurisdictional challenges. However, the primary point is that the referring party has asked you to value its final account. This is exactly the same dispute that was decided by the previous adjudicator. We admit that we have not paid the sums awarded by the previous adjudicator because we do not believe that his decision is enforceable. For the avoidance of doubt, to the extent that PTB are asking you to either enforce or challenge the first decision, you have no jurisdiction to do so.
As regards the matters set out at paragraph 2 of the notice of adjudication, PTB may not refer multiple disputes in relation to several interim applications for payment to adjudication. In any event, given that the final account has been the subject of a previous adjudication, the position at the interim stage is redundant. We fail to see the relevance of the case referred to by PTB. The first adjudicator issued a decision in PTB's favour. Once again, we respectfully submit that you do not have jurisdiction given that the dispute has already been the subject of a previous adjudication."
"In the matter referred to me, Mr Barnes has already taken that second step and decided what sum was in fact due. He has done this because the wording of the dispute referred to him had, in his opinion, sufficient latitude in its wording to give him the jurisdiction so to do. Thus, it is my opinion that the dispute referred to me and the remedy sought is already the subject of a previous adjudicator's decision. Apart from this point, the only difference between the previous referral and the dispute referred to me are that the nature of the dispute and remedies sought have both been expanded and the responding party, which was previously cited as ROK Maintenance, is now cited as ROK Building Limited. In my opinion, the expanded wording merely adds detail in terms of dates, references and description, but does not change the issues in dispute from those already adjudicated upon. As to the name of the responding party, I take note of this point, which was raised as a jurisdictional challenge in the first adjudication. However, I do not consider that differentiating ROK Maintenance from ROK Building Limited is a significant enough step to consider the subject of this referral to be a fresh dispute.
In the light of the above points and careful consideration, I respectfully resign from the nomination to act in this matter."
These proceedings
(1) Is ROK entitled to contend that the decision is not binding in the light of:
(a) its objection to the commencement of the adjudication before Mr Brooker;
(b) its payment of the adjudicator's fees?
(2) Is there a contract in writing within the meaning of s.107 of the 1996 Act?
(3) Is ROK entitled to resist enforcement on the basis that the claim included work outside the scope of the contract in writing?
(4) Did the Adjudicator lack jurisdiction on the basis that the dispute referred to him had not crystallised? Alternatively, did the manner in which the dispute was referred amount to such a serious breach of the rules of natural justice that the decision should not be enforced?
(5) Was there non-compliance with paragraph 7(2) of the Scheme so that there was not a valid adjudication? Alternatively, did any non-compliance amount to such a serious breach of the rules of natural justice that the decision should not be enforced?
(6) Did the Adjudicator answer the wrong question so as to deprive the decision of any effect?
Can ROK contend that the decision is not binding?
"He who accepts a benefit under an instrument must adopt the whole of it, conforming to all its provisions and renouncing every right inconsistent with it."
"From the authorities cited to us, it seems to me to be clear that these phrases must be taken to express, first, that the party in question is to be treated as having made an election from which he cannot resile and, secondly, that he will not be regarded, at least in a case such as the present, as having so elected unless he has taken a benefit under or arising out of the course of conduct which he has first pursued and with which his present action is inconsistent. These requirements appear to me to be inherent. For example, in Smith v. Baker LR 8 CP 350 and Ex parte Roberston LR 20 Eq 733. See also the speech of Lord Atkin in Evans v. Bartlam [1937] AC 473 at 479:
"I find nothing in the facts analogous to cases where a party, having obtained and enjoyed material benefit from a judgment, has been held precluded from attacking it while he is still in enjoyment of the benefit. I cannot bring myself to think that a judgment debtor who asks for and receives a stay of execution approbates the judgment so as to preclude him thereafter from seeking to set it aside, whether by appeal or otherwise. Nor do I find it possible to apply the doctrine of election."
and the speech of Lord Russell of Kilowen at 483:
"The doctrine of approbation and reprobation requires for its foundation inconsistency of conduct as, where a man having accepted a benefit given him by a judgment, cannot allege the invalidity of the judgment which conferred the benefit."'"
"In this country, I do not think it expresses any formal legal concept. I regard it as a descriptive phrase equivalent to, 'Blowing hot and cold'. I find great difficulty in placing such phrases in any legal category, though they may be applied correctly in defining what is meant by election, whether at common law or in equity. In cases where the doctrine does apply, the person concerned has the choice of two rights, either of which he is at liberty to adopt but not both. Where the doctrine does apply, if the person to whom the choice belongs irrecoverably and with knowledge adopts the one, he cannot afterwards assert the other. Election between the liability of principal and agent is perhaps the most usual instance in common law."
"In my view, if a defendant wished to challenge the validity of the decision, it had an election. One course open to it was, as it did, to treat it as a decision within the meaning of clause 27 and refer the dispute to arbitration. The other was to contend that it was not a decision at all within the meaning of clause 27 and to seek to defend the enforcement proceedings on the basis that the purported decision was not binding or enforceable because it was a nullity. For the reasons stated earlier in this judgment, this second course would have availed the defendant, but what the defendant could not do was to assert that the decision was a decision for the purposes of being the subject of a reference to arbitration but was not a decision for the purposes of being binding and enforceable pending any revision by the arbitrator. In so holding, I am doing no more than applying the doctrine of approbation and reprobation or election. A person cannot blow hot and cold - see Lissenden v. CAV Bosch Limited [1940] AC 412, and Halsbury's Laws, Fourth Edition, Volume 16, paragraphs 957 and 958. Once the defendant elected to treat the decision as one capable of being referred to arbitration, he was bound also to treat it as a decision which was binding and enforceable unless revised by the arbitrator."
"In my judgment, by inviting Mr Haller to correct the award under the slip rule, Berwins, on behalf of Automajor, accepted that the award was valid. It is true that, in its letter to Mr Haller dated the 6th of November 2001, Berwins asserted that the award contained an error which went to Mr Haller's jurisdiction, but, if that were right, it would follow that the award, or the relevant part of it, was a nullity. There would be nothing to correct. I accept the submission of Mr Constable that the invitation to Mr Haller to correct the award under the slip rule is only consistent with recognising it as valid. I also accept the submission of Mr Constable that, by paying part of the sum the subject of the award, Automajor elected to treat the award as valid."
"In my judgment, it cannot be right that it is open to a party to an adjudication simultaneously to approbate and reprobate a decision of the adjudicator. Assuming that good grounds exist on which a decision may be subject to objection, either the whole of the relevant decision must be accepted or the whole of it must be contested."
Contract in writing
"The notes on their own do not constitute an offer [or] acceptance unless it is issued as part of a formal subcontract and were not a construction contract."
"However, the biggest difficulty comes with the consideration of the contract work scope. The work scope, according to the letter, is work which will or might be the subject of orders in the future, whether written or oral. That might be sufficient for a binding contract, although I do not think it is, and, as I have indicated, enforcement of it would be next to impossible. More importantly, such a definition of work scope is a recipe for confusion and dispute of the very sort which s.107(2)(c) is designed to avoid. This point can be emphasized by reference to Hart's own pleading in this case. In paragraph 3 of the particulars of claim Hart defined the contractual work scope as including:
'The retention and preservation of the front and side facades of the property, the removal of the main part of the building and the construction of the basement and the reconstruction of the building above the new constructed basement area.'
This work scope is plainly not discernible from the letter of intent. It is based on subsequent orders, instructions and the like, which may or may not have been reduced to writing. If the contract document does not even begin to define the contract work scope, it seems to me impossible to say that all the terms, or even all the material terms, are set out in writing."
"ROK deny that [the Meeting Notes are] sufficient to fulfil the requirements of the HGCRA. It is clearly not a document that was intended by itself to form the subcontract. The notes were intended to be incorporated into a formal subcontract in due course in the event that a subcontract was awarded to PTB. Although it was anticipated that further terms and conditions would be discussed and that the interview notes would be incorporated into that subcontract, this did not happen. Instead, when ROK had packages of Decent Homes work in Brenthall Towers that it wanted to subcontract to PTB, separate instructions were issued to PTB and the scope of work to any particular property was defined by a combination of documents and oral site instructions.
Although the interview of the 15 February 2007 concerned kitchen and bathroom works at Brenthall Towers as part of the Decent Homes Project, ROK was awarded such work to a wider range of properties and, with later agreement of PTB, ROK gave further packages of work to PTB. Over the following months PTB's work was extended over many different properties. ROK accept that, while there is no written contract in respect of these works, it was agreed orally that these were to be valued and paid on the same basis as the kitchen and bathroom works in Brenthall Towers (those rates being revised by agreement between PTB and ROK from 1 January 2008). …
There is not, in my view, a sub-contract of which it can be said that all the terms are in or evidenced in writing, whether in the notes of the interview that took place on 15 February 2008 or otherwise.
This is emphasized further by the reference to the "Final Account" that PTB provided, for the first time, with the Notice of Adjudication on 20 August 2008. Within that account is a whole collection of works, some from Brenthall Towers Decent Homes (which was the subject of the meeting on 15 February 2007) and many from further kitchen and bathrooms work as part of the broader Harlow Decent Homes project that ROK was carrying out for Harlow District Council. Also within PTB's account are claims for payment in respect of work which is wholly unrelated and which cannot be related back to the meeting on 15 February 2007 in any shape or form, nor to any instruction that was issued by ROK in any extension of that work from Brenthall Towers to other Harlow Decent Homes kitchen and bathroom works."
Work outside the contract
"8(1) The adjudicator may, with the consent of all the parties to those disputes, adjudicate at the same time on more than one dispute under the same contract.
8(2) The adjudicator may, with the consent of all the parties to those disputes, adjudicate at the same time on related disputes under different contracts, whether or not one or more of those parties is a party to those disputes."
Crystallised dispute
Paragraph 7(2) of Part I of the Scheme
"A referral notice shall be accompanied by copies of or relevant extracts from the construction contract and such other documents as the referring party intends to rely upon."
The wrong question
Summary