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 £1, 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] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions >> Braes of Doune Wind Farm (Scotland) Ltd v Alfred McaLpine Business Services Ltd [2008] EWHC 426 (TCC) (13 March 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2008/426.html Cite as: [2008] EWHC 426 (TCC), [2008] Bus LR D137, [2008] 1 CLC 487, [2008] BLR 321, [2008] 2 All ER (Comm) 493, [2008] 1 Lloyd's Rep 608 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Buy ICLR report: [2008] Bus LR D137] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
BRAES OF DOUNE WIND FARM (SCOTLAND) LIMITED |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
ALFRED MCALPINE BUSINESS SERVICES LIMITED |
Defendant |
____________________
Andrew Bartlett QC (instructed by Dundas & Wilson LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 13 February 2008
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr. Justice AKENHEAD:
Introduction
Jurisdiction
"(1) The provisions of this Part apply where the seat of the arbitration is in England and Wales or Northern Ireland".
The seat of the arbitration is identified in Section 3 as being the "juridical seat" of the arbitration "designated by the parties to the arbitration agreement". If the juridical seat of the arbitration was in Scotland, the English Courts have no jurisdiction to entertain an application for leave to appeal. The Contractor argues that the seat of the arbitration was Scotland whilst the Employer argues that it was England.
"1.4.1. The Contract shall be governed by and construed in accordance with the laws of England and Wales and, subject to Clause 20.2 [Dispute Resolution], the Parties agree that the courts of England and Wales have exclusive jurisdiction to settle any dispute arising out of or in connection with the Contract.
20.2.2. (a) …any dispute or difference between the Parties to this Agreement arising out of or in connection with this Agreement shall be referred to arbitration.
(b) Any reference to arbitration shall be to a single arbitrator…and conducted in accordance with the Construction Industry Model Arbitration Rules February 1998 Edition, subject to this Clause (Arbitration Procedure)…
(c) This arbitration agreement is subject to English Law and the seat of the arbitration shall be Glasgow, Scotland. Any such reference to arbitration shall be deemed to be a reference to arbitration within the meaning of the Arbitration Act 1996 or any statutory re-enactment."
"1.1 These Rules are to be read consistently with the Arbitration Act 1996 (the Act), with common expressions having the same meaning. Appendix 1 contains definitions of terms. Section numbers given in these Rules are references to the Act.
1.2 The objective of the Rules is to provide for the fair, impartial, speedy, cost-effective and binding resolution of construction disputes, with each party having a reasonable opportunity to put his case and deal with that of his opponent. The parties and the arbitrator are to do all things necessary to achieve this objective: see Sections 1 (General Principles), 33 (General duty of the tribunal) and 40 (General duty of parties).
1.4 The arbitrator has all the powers and is subject to all the duties under the Act except where expressly modified by the Rules.
1.5 Sections of the Act which need to be read with the Rules are printed in the text. Other Sections referred to in the text are printed in Appendix II.
1.6 These rules apply where:
(a) a single arbitrator is to be appointed, and
(b) the seat of the arbitration is in England and Wales or Northern Ireland.
1.7 These rules do not exclude the powers of the Court in respect of arbitral proceedings, nor any agreement between the parties concerning those powers.
4.1 The arbitrator has the power set out in Section 30
4.2 The arbitrator has the powers set out in Section 37…
4.3 The arbitrator has the powers set out in Section 38(4) to (6)…"
In Appendix I the "Act" was defined to mean the Arbitration Act 1996.
(a) There is the substantive or proper law of the contract which governs the law by which the parties' substantive rights are to be determined.
(b) There is the law to which the parties have agreed that the arbitration agreement is to be subject.
(c) The curial law relates to the place in which the arbitration is held.
(d) There may be a yet further law which covers the reference to arbitration itself.
Of course, all these applicable laws may be the same as or different to each other.
" B.English law does not recognise the concept of a "delocalised" arbitration… or of "arbitral procedures in the transnational firmament unconnected with any municipal system of law" (Bank Mellat v Helleniki Techniki SA [1984] QB 291 at p. 301 (Court of Appeal). Accordingly, every arbitration must have a "seat" or locus arbitri or forum which subjects its procedural rules to the municipal law there in force…
C…Where the parties have failed to choose the law governing the arbitration proceedings, those proceedings must be considered, at any rate prima facie, as being governed by the law of the country in which the arbitration is held, on the ground that it is the country most closely connected with the proceedings…
See Dicey & Morris…and the references to the approval of this classic statement by the House of Lords in Whitworth Street Estates v James Miller…Or, to quote the words of Mr. Justice Mustill in the Black Clawson case…at p. 453 where he characterised law (3) as "the law of the place where the reference is conducted: the lex fori". Although Mr. Milligan contested this, I cannot see any reason for doubting that the converse is equally true. Prima facie, i.e. in the absence of some express and clear provision to the contrary, it must follow that an agreement that the curial or procedural law of an arbitration is to be the law of X has the consequence that X is also to be the "seat" of the arbitration. The lex fori is then the law of X, and accordingly X is the agreed forum of the arbitration. A further consequence is then that the courts which are competent to control or assist the arbitration are the Courts exercising jurisdiction at X...
E. There is equally no reason in theory which precludes parties to agree that an arbitration shall be held at a place or in country X but subject to the procedural laws of Y…
F. Finally…it seems clear that the submissions advanced below confused the legal "seat" etc. of an arbitration with the geographically convenient place or places for holding hearings…"
"…the seat of the arbitration and the choice of procedural law will almost invariably coincide, apart from the possibility, provided for in s 4(5) [of the 1996 Act] of the parties choosing another procedural law in relation to the matters covered by the non-mandatory provisions of pt 1, which will take effect…"
(a) One needs to consider what, in substance, the parties agreed was the law of the country which would juridically control the arbitration.
(b) I attach particular importance to Clause 1.4.1. The parties agreed that essentially the English (and Welsh) Courts have "exclusive jurisdiction" to settle disputes. Although this is "subject to" arbitration, it must and does mean something other than being mere verbiage. It is a jurisdiction over disputes and not simply a court in which a foreign award may be enforced. If it is in arbitration alone that disputes are to be settled and the English Courts have no residual involvement in that process, this part of Clause 1.4.1 is meaningless in practice. The use of the word "jurisdiction" suggests some form of control.
(c) The second part of Clause 1.4.1 has some real meaning if the parties were agreeing by it that, although the agreed disputes resolution process is arbitration, the parties agree that the English Court retains such jurisdiction to address those disputes as the law of England and Wales permits. The Arbitration Act 1996 permits and requires the Court to entertain applications under Section 69 for leave to appeal against awards which address disputes which have been referred to arbitration. By allowing such applications and then addressing the relevant questions of law, the Court will settle such disputes; even if the application is refused, the Court will be applying its jurisdiction under the 1996 Act and providing resolution in relation to such disputes.
(d) This reading of Clause 1.4.1 is consistent with Clause 20.2.2 (c) which confirms that the arbitration agreement is subject to English law and that the "reference" is "deemed to be a reference to arbitration within the meaning of the Arbitration Act 1996". This latter expression is extremely odd unless the parties were agreeing that any reference to arbitration was to be treated as a reference to which the Arbitration Act 1996 was to apply. There is no definition in the Arbitration Act of a "reference to arbitration", which is not a statutory term of art. The parties presumably meant something in using the expression and the most obvious meaning is that the parties were agreeing that the Arbitration Act 1996 should apply to the reference without qualification.
(e) Looked at in this light, the parties' express agreement that the "seat" of arbitration was to be Glasgow, Scotland must relate to the place in which the parties agreed that the hearings should take place. However, by all the other references the parties were agreeing that the curial law or law which governed the arbitral proceedings was that of England and Wales. Although authorities establish that, prima facie and in the absence of agreement otherwise, the selection of a place or seat for an arbitration will determine what the curial law or "lex fori" or "lex arbitri" will be, I consider that, where in substance the parties agree that the laws of one country will govern and control a given arbitration, the place where the arbitration is to be heard will not dictate what the governing or controlling law will be.
(f) In the context of this particular case, the fact that, as both parties seemed to accept in front of me, the Scottish courts would have no real control or interest in the arbitral proceedings other than in a criminal context, suggests that they can not have intended that the arbitral proceedings were to be conducted as an effectively "delocalised" arbitration or in a "transnational firmament", to borrow Lord Justice Kerr's words in the Naviera Amazonica case.
(g) The CIMAR Rules are not inconsistent with my view. Their constant references to the 1996 Act suggest that the parties at least envisaged the possibility that the Courts of England and Wales might play some part in policing any arbitration. For instance, Rule 11.5 envisages something called "the court" becoming involved in securing compliance with a peremptory order of the arbitrator. That would have to be the English Court, in practice.
(a) It was predicated upon the fact (supported by witness statement evidence) that both parties orally accepted at the arbitration hearing that English law governed the dispute and did not assert that Scottish law governed the procedure.
(b) The fact that the parties' representatives did not assert that Scottish law governed the procedure does not give rise to any estoppel; it is very rare for silence to give rise to any form of estoppel and the circumstances when it does (for instance, a fiduciary relationship) do not apply here.
(c) Even if both parties' lawyers both parties did orally accept at the arbitration hearing that English law governed the dispute, that acceptance does not amount to some unequivocal or any material estoppel. The acceptance is as much, and in context more, applicable to an acceptance that the substantive law was English, rather than that the English Courts had jurisdiction to control the arbitration. Something much clearer would be required to support the type of estoppel relied upon by the Employer.
The application for leave to appeal
"8.7.1 Subject to the limitations contained in this Clause 8.7, if the requirements of Clause 8.2 [Time for Completion] are not complied with, the Contractor shall…pay delay damages to the Employer for this default at the rate set out in Clause 8.7.2 below. These delay damages shall be paid for every day which shall elapse between the relevant Time for Completion up to and including the date of issue of the Taking-Over Certificate. For the avoidance of doubt, the Contractor will be entitled to an extension of time pursuant to Clause 8.4.1(c) to the extent that it suffers any delay, impediment or prevention caused by or attributable to other contractors on the Site (including for the avoidance of doubt the Wind Turbine Contractor) subject to compliance by the Contractor of his applicable and relevant obligations under this Contract and under the Interface Agreement.
8.7.2 The amount of delay damages shall be £642…for each MW of the total installed capacity for the Plant which is unavailable ("Unavailable Capacity") for each day of such unavailability for the period from 1 October to 31 March and £385… for each MW of Unavailable Capacity for each day of such unavailability for the period from 1 April to 30 September, provided that the Contractor's maximum total liability to pay delay damages under this Clause 8.7 shall not exceed 50%...of the Contract Price…"
"…absent any extension of time under the EPC Contract, the [Employer] is entitled to withhold liquidated or other delay damages against sums otherwise due to the [Contractor] under the EPC Contract; and whether in consequence the [Contractor] is entitled to an award in respect of the liquidated damages so withheld." (Paragraph 1.14 of the award)
"…the provisions of Clause 8.7 are not capable of generating with certainty liquidated damages flowing from an identified breach by the [Contractor]. Accordingly, in accordance with established authority, Clause 8.7 should not be enforced."
He then decided that there was no entitlement to withhold or set off against sums otherwise due to the Contractor and issued his award in a money sum, £2,836,840.30 plus VAT and interest.
"(a) that the determination of the question will substantially affect the rights of one or more of the parties;
(b) that the question is one which the tribunal was asked to determine;
(c) that, on the basis of the findings of fact in the award-
(i) the decision of the tribunal on the question is obviously wrong; or
(ii) the question is one of general public importance, and the decision of the tribunal is at least open to serious doubt; and
(d) that, despite the agreement of the parties to resolve the matter by arbitration, it is just and proper in all the circumstances for the court to determine the question."
It is accepted, and properly so, that the first two requirements have been met.
A. The extension of time clause (Clause 8.4) did allow the Contractor extensions to the extent that overall or critical delay was caused by the Wind Turbine Contractor.
B. There was no provision in the contract for sectional completion of the Works. Thus, until all 36 WTG's were complete and fully connected into the (Contractor's) Works, the Works could not be completed.
C. However, if overall or critical delay was caused by the Contractor but individual WTG's were delayed by the default of the Wind Turbine Contractor, there was no provision to alleviate the imposition of liquidated damages on the Contractor.
D. As each WTG accounted for 2 MW and each MW accounted for £642 or £385 (depending upon the time of year) by way of liquidated damages per day of unavailability, the Contractor could end up paying liquidated damages for delays caused by the Wind Turbine Contractor's defaults in completing their work on the turbines even though the parties had agreed that for critical or overall delay the Contractor was not responsible.
E. Because it was clearly intended that the Contractor was not as such to be responsible for the defaults of the Wind Turbine Contractor or at least those which good co-ordination by the Contractor would have avoided, the parties nonetheless agreed a liquidated damages clause which would impose such damages upon the Contractor in certain foreseeable circumstances.
F. In those circumstances, there is in law a penalty which English Law will not enforce.