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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 >> Rok Building Ltd v Bestwood Carpentry Ltd [2010] EWHC 1409 (TCC) (17 June 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2010/1409.html Cite as: [2010] EWHC 1409 (TCC) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
Royal Courts of Justice Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
ROK BUILDING LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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BESTWOOD CARPENTRY LIMITED |
Defendant |
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Abdul Jinadu (instructed directly) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 9 June 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Akenhead:
Introduction
The History
"Please supply 6 No 2nd fix joiners on a dayworks basis, rates agreed with our Raj [Jandu] on site, from 10.2.06 to assist in completing units ready for the decorations until further notice including full shift weekend working. Please report to our Mr A McDonald on site"
"Please proceed in accordance with the following instructions:-
Please accept this as written confirmation that we will require your company for week end working at Oriental city and that you have worked
Saturday the 11th of February 06
Sunday the 12th of February 06
Saturday the 18th of February 06
Sunday the 11th of February 06
Any further non-productive over time is to be agreed with Rok management and either or our Mr Andrew McDonald or Mr Tony Ingram.
Confirmation will be given via a written Site Instruction"
As part of the pro forma document in a box below, the following appeared:
"ALL TERMS AND CONDITIONS AS OUR MAIN ORDER REFERRED TO ABOVE APPLY TO THIS INSTRUCTION"
"Please carry out all carpentry and associated works on price as agreed with our Quantity Surveyors. This is for blocks A-b-C-D-E-F and completion of block F [sic-probably means H].
This order includes all works associated with the construction and erection of timber fencing Requirements.
All erection and fixing of Larch pre made or site constructed panels to all blocks not just the blocks listed above.
This order is to run concurrent with the previous issued site instruction and to be serviced by separate and additional labour."
"Re: 8135-Oriental City
We write to you with regards to the Specialist works that your company has carried out to the above project.
In accordance with the terms and conditions of the SPC 2000 and Rokbuild Limited Schedule of Amendments to SPC 2000 sub-contract conditions, we would like to notify you under clause 20.5 of the SPC 2000 that the sum of £239,688.25 will be withheld from your account on the following grounds/s:
- Un-measured works to the Internals
- Unagreed Externals measure
- Unagreed Daywork account
- Unagreed Variations and Prolongation
These monies will be withheld from your next valuation."
There is an issue between the parties as to whether and, if so, when and how the "SPC 2000 and Rokbuild Limited Schedule of Amendments to SPC 2000 sub-contract conditions" came to be incorporated in any material contract between the parties, to which I will return later in this judgement.
The Adjudication
"contained in or evidenced in writing by the following documents, or alternatively the agreement was agreed by conduct by reference to written terms:
(i) The instruction issued under cover of ROK's facsimile dated 9th February 2006.
(ii) ROK's Instruction to Sub-Contractor No. 8135/FP 238 dated 19th February 2006.
(iii) Specimen Subcontract Order (pages 1 to 8).
(iv) ROK Building Ltd Schedule of Amendments to SPC 2000 Sub-Contract Conditions.
(v) SPC 2000-Specialist Payment Terms."
Only disputes under Sub-Contract No. 1 work were to be referred, and the Notice makes clear that there was a Sub-Contract No. 2 which related to be measured works which were the subject matter of discussion and instruction in March and April 2006.
These Proceedings
The Evidence and the Factual Findings
(a) it was agreed that Bestwood would initially supply 6 joiners on a day work basis but that, if the need arose, additional carpenters would be requested by Rok giving Bestwood 48 hours notice, and that Bestwood would provide such additional carpenters following such notice.
(b) The six carpenters would be supplied to commence work on 10 February 2006.
(c) Rok would provide the Bestwood carpenters with snagging sheets as and when required; these sheets would clearly detail all works required to be carried out in each plot and the carpenters would be required to carry out such detailed works accordingly.
(d) The supervision and management of Bestwood operatives would be the sole responsibility of Rok.
(e) Day work rates were agreed with a rate of £20.50 per hour chargeable for the standard normal working day (Monday to Friday). It was at the very least agreed that this rate excluded out of normal hours working as well as week end working and that for Saturday morning working the rate should be enhanced as time and a half whilst working thereafter on the weekend on a double time basis.
(f) It was agreed that Bestwood would work on Saturdays and Sundays, as required.
(a) Bestwood's pleading supported by a Statement of Truth from Mr Bansul is to the effect that a Specimen Subcontract Order, Rok's Schedule of Amendments to SPC 2000 Sub-Contract Conditions and SPC Specialist Payment terms were handed over by Mr Ingram of Rok to Mr Soora on or around 14 July 2006 following requests made by the latter a copy of the "Main Order" referred to at the foot of Rok's various instructions.
(b) However, Mr Soora's witness statement simply does not address this at all. Mr Ingram says in his witness statement in effect that no such documents were handed over. Thus, this assertion has simply not been proved by Bestwood, upon whom the onus of proof rests, given that it has made the positive assertion.
(c) The only evidence about this is Mr Bansal who in his witness statement says that Mr Soora had chased Rok for a copy of the Order and, he recalled that sometime in July 2006 Mr Soora brought into Bestwood's office the three documents (see (a) above, also referred to in the Defence) and told him that Mr Ingram had given them to him. Mr Soora is said to have said that the documents since "whilst not completed, covered and the terms and conditions to both the day work labour and the work on a measured basis."
(d) However, Mr Bansal in his oral evidence presented a materially different picture in that he said that the order was not a "Specimen" Order but an order which had been filled in with the names of the parties and with other details. He said that he signed the order and that he would have expected a copy to have been retained in Bestwood's files. The only documents disclosed by Bestwood were the Specimen and uncompleted documents. No signed order has been disclosed. Thus it is that Mr Bansul's oral evidence is inconsistent with the pleaded case. To be fair to him, he was trying to do the best he could whilst giving oral evidence but from what he said and the way he said it I am satisfied that his recollection both in his evidence in writing and on the witness stand was unreliable.
(e) I have formed the very clear view that at some stage, possibly in connection with other projects altogether, Bestwood secured the Specimen and other documents upon which it now relies and has simply got it wrong as to whether these documents were handed over in connection with the Oriental City project. I would have expected Mr Soora specifically to address this in his witness statement; there seems no doubt that he is cooperative towards Bestwood as he provided them with a statement on other matters, albeit that he works for someone else now. Mr Bansal made it clear that he was a very busy man dealing with dozens of different projects and undertakings and I am satisfied that he has simply confused himself as to what was said and done about these documents.
The Law
"On the point of construction of section 107 [of the HGCRA], what has to be evidenced in writing is, literally, the agreement, which means all of it, not part of it."
"The principle of law which I derive from the majority judgements in RJT is this: an agreement is only evidenced in writing for the purpose of s. 107, subsections (2), (3) and (4), if all the express terms of that agreement are recorded in writing. It is not sufficient to show that all terms material to the issues under adjudication have been recorded in writing."
"It is thus necessary (and, indeed, is conceded by Mr Jess) that in order to enforce this agreement by adjudication, the price, which is a vital time, must be recorded in writing within the meaning of the Act. That does not mean that the actual price must be stated. It would be sufficient if (as he contends) by a process of construction I was satisfied that the provision in the latter of which says "forward your costs once finalised and agreed" means that the contract price will be that which is agreed with Book subject to the 2½% main contractor's discount. If that argument is right, then there will be a construction contract in writing within the meaning of the Act. What I have thus to determine is whether that argument is correct. I pause before considering that to note that it is agreed by both parties (in my view rightly) that if the matter is not one of construction, but falls to be determined by way of implication of that time, then that would not suffice to render the agreement and agreement in writing within the meaning of the Act."
The learned judge then went on to construe the words in the order.
Discussion
(a) The faxed message of 9 February 2006 simply requires and confirms agreement whereby Bestwood would supply six joiners on a dayworks basis at agreed rates from 10 February 2006 to assist in completing units raided the decorations until further notice including full shift weekend working.
(b) Nothing was confirmed in writing in relation to the agreement reached at the meeting earlier that week in relation to (i) the provision of additional joiners upon 48 hours notice, (ii) the agreed provision to the joiners of snagging lists, or (iii) the fact that supervision and management of the joiners was to be provided, not by Bestwood but,
by Rok.
(c) Although it matters not as to whether these terms were material, they were material because they imposed a potentially heavy obligation on Bestwood, at least within reason, to provide what could turn out to be a substantial further quantity of joiners on relatively short notice, the provision of snagging lists would provide a detailed record of the work which the joiners were required to work on and question of supervision and asked to some extent at least responsibility for any deficiencies in the work done by the joiners could be, at least in part, attributable to Rok as opposed to Bestwood.
(d) The "agreed rates" were only agreed orally. The faxed message confirms the fact that there were agreed rates but does not evidence in writing what the agreement about rates was. For the reasons given earlier in this judgement, because the agreement about what the rates were was not in, or evidenced in, writing, the contract was not a construction contract in writing under the HGCRA.
Decision
Supplementary Matters