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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 >> Walter Llewellyn & Sons Ltd & Anor v Excel Brickwork Ltd [2010] EWHC 3415 (TCC) (22 December 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2010/3415.html Cite as: [2010] EWHC 3415 (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 :
____________________
(1) WALTER LLEWELLYN & SONS LIMITED (2) ROK BUILDING LIMITED |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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EXCEL BRICKWORK LIMITED |
Defendant |
____________________
Ben Patten QC (instructed by Beachcroft LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 20 December 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Akenhead:
The Background
(a) WLAS Sub-Contract Order Ref No 8117/D12/014/11.08 dated 29 May 2002.
(b) WLAS Sub-Contract Works Analysis Schedule 1 dated 29 May 2002.
(c) The Standard NEC Engineering & Contract Conditions November 1995, Second Edition, Incorporating Option A and Clauses G, L, P, R, T, U, Y (UK2 & UK3) and X12.
(d) WLAS standard terms and conditions dated 1 June 2001.
(e) WLAS Brickwork Package Ref. WLS 8117.
(f) Various Drawings.
The Law
(1)"A party to an arbitration agreement against whom legal proceedings are brought (whether by way of claim or counterclaim) in respect of a matter which under the agreement is to be referred to arbitration may (upon notice to the other parties to the proceedings) apply to the court in which the proceedings have been brought to stay the proceedings so far as they concern that matter.
(3)An application may not be made by a person before taking the appropriate procedural step (if any) to acknowledge the legal proceedings against him or after he has taken any step in those proceedings to answer the substantive claim.
(4)On an application under this section the court shall grant a stay unless satisfied that the arbitration agreement is null and void, inoperative, or incapable of being performed."
The Sub-Contract
"This order is placed with you for the execution of the Sub-Contract Works hereinafter mentioned, upon the terms and conditions of
The NEC Document* Form of Sub-Contract issued by the Inst. Of Civ Eng. 2nd Edition 1995 and subject to the listed and/or attached documents, additions and amendments.
DETAILS OF THE SUB-CONTRACT WORKS, SPECIFICATION AND PROGRAMME
*NEC Option A incorporating clauses G, L, P, R, T, U, Y (UK2 & UK3), X12 and Schedule of Amendments.
Please provide all necessary Labour, Plant and Mortar to execute the BRICK and BLOCKWORK at the above contract in accordance with the attached documentation listed here under [various immaterial documents are then listed]
FOR THE SUM OF £135,897.00"
"The NEC Option A issued by the ICE 2nd Edition November 1995 incorporating clauses G, L, P, R, T, U, Y (UK3 & UK3), X12 and Schedule of Amendments and Llewellyn Standard Additions and Rules dated 1st June 2001."
There was nothing in the order which identified expressly or directly what the dispute resolution processes were to be.
"Notwithstanding the provisions of the Standard form of Sub- Contract the following Additions and rules shall override and modify the application or interpretation of its terms and conditions where any discrepancy in or divergence between them would otherwise exist."
"Additions to Sub Contract Conditions in respect of Adjudication
Clauses within the Sub-Contract, if any, dealing with the appointment and actions of an Adjudicator…are deleted and replaced with the adjudication provisions in the Schedule Part One of The Scheme the Construction Contract (England and Wales) Regulations 1998.
The parties to this Sub-Contract may agree to accept the decision of the Adjudicator as finally determining any dispute.
If an adjudicator or adjudicator nominating body is not specifically named in the Sub-Contract then an adjudicator will be appointed through the nominating bodies of the [RIBA or the RICS] at the sole discretion of the Contractor.
Addition to Sub-Contract in respect of Arbitration
If the standard Sub-Contract form makes provision for settlement of disputes by arbitration then it is hereby agreed by the parties to this Sub-Contract that any dispute which arises for which of those provisions have been made shall be referred to arbitration in accordance with them."
(a) Clause 10.1
"The Contractor and the Subcontractor shall act as stated in this subcontract and in a spirit of mutual trust and cooperation…"
(b) Clause 17
"The Contractor or the Subcontractor notifies the other as soon as either becomes aware of an ambiguity or inconsistency in or between the documents which are part of this subcontract. The Contractor gives an instruction resolving the ambiguity or inconsistency"
(c) Clause 29.1
"The Subcontractor obeys an instruction which is in accordance with this subcontract and is given to him by the Contractor"
(d) Clause 93
"93.1 If after the Adjudicator
- notifies his decision or
- fails to do so
within the time provided by this subcontract a Party is dissatisfied, that Party notifies the other party of his intention to refer the matter which he disputes to the tribunal. It is not referable to the tribunal unless the dissatisfied Party notifies his intention within three weeks of
- notification of the Adjudicator's decision or
- the time provided by this subcontract for this notification if the Adjudicator fails to notify his decision within that time,
which ever is the earlier. The tribunal proceedings are not started before Completion of the whole of the subcontract works or earlier termination…
- 3 The tribunal settles the dispute referred to it. Its powers include the power to review and revise any decision of the Adjudicator and any action or inaction of the Contractor related to the dispute. A Party is not limited in the tribunal proceedings to the information, evidence or arguments put to the Adjudicator."
"9 Disputes and termination………..
The tribunal is………………………………………………
Optional statements If the tribunal…is arbitration
- The arbitration procedure is………………………….."
The Issues
Discussion
(a) There is nothing in any of the Sub-Contract documents which shows or demonstrates any express or conscious agreement that arbitration was the ultimate dispute resolution process.
(b) The Additions document, leaving aside what it did to the adjudication provisions (to which I will return below), is predicated upon a conditional hypothesis ("if the standard Sub Contract form makes provision for settlement of disputes by arbitration").
(c) The standard (NEC) Sub Contract form does not on analysis "make provision for" arbitration. Clause 93 simply identifies "the tribunal". There is no standard form definition of "the tribunal". The parties make their own definition for the term "the tribunal". They do that by filling in Part one of the Sub-Contract Data. They did not fill it in. The rest of the relevant part of that Data is itself predicated upon a condition: "if the tribunal…is arbitration". "The tribunal" is only arbitration if the parties have selected it. They had not selected it.
(d) It follows that, however one construes the words "makes provision for", the Sub-Contract form did not provide for arbitration.
(e) It is clear that the Additions document was drafted primarily to overcome problems with the NEC conditions not complying with the HGCRA. It is in the clearly and understandably standard form typed document used by Llewellyn for Sub-Contracts which incorporated the NEC Conditions. It could therefore, logically, cover a variety of different sets of circumstances, including where the parties had expressly agreed upon arbitration and where they had not or had not applied their minds to the issue.
(f) Making the assumption that the draftsman of the Additions document had some awareness of the NEC Conditions, he or she would be aware that the un-amended standard NEC Conditions did not as such provide for arbitration but only provided for arbitration if the parties had expressly agreed it. The draftsman must be taken to have known that the Arbitration Addition clause would therefore be meaningless unless it was expected to cover the different sets of circumstances on different Sub-Contracts.
(a) The Additions clause ("Clauses within the Sub-Contract, if any, dealing with the appointment and actions of and Adjudicator…are deleted and replaced with the adjudication provisions in the Schedule Part One of The Scheme…") required the deletion of Clauses 90, 91, 92 and (at least) 93.1 of the Y(UK)2 document or the NEC clauses.
(b) The "adjudication provisions in…Part One of the Scheme" are Paragraphs 1 to 26. Paragraph 23(2) states:
"The decision of the adjudicator shall be binding on the parties, and they shall comply with it until the dispute is finally determined by legal proceedings by arbitration (if the contract provides for arbitration or the parties otherwise agree to arbitration) or by agreement between the parties."
(c) This is contrary to Clause 93.1 which leads to an adjudicator's decision becoming final and binding if the relevant dispute is not then referred to "the tribunal" within three weeks.
(d) If Clause 93.1 is effectively deleted, there is no provision by which disputes are referable to arbitration or indeed to any other tribunal.
(a) It is only "clauses within the Sub-Contract…dealing with the appointment and actions of an adjudicator" which are to be deleted.
(b) Clauses 90, 91 and 92 obviously do deal with the appointment and actions of an adjudicator.
(c) Clause 93.1 does not deal with the appointment and actions of an adjudicator. It deals with what is to happen after he or she has performed his or her final act in terms of adjudication, the issuing of a decision or the failure to do so. The failure to do so involves the inaction of an adjudicator.
(d) Therefore Clause 93.1 stands and survives.
(e) One must therefore seek to establish by interpretation what is meant by the deleted clauses being replaced "with the adjudication provisions" in the Scheme. It must be with those adjudication provisions which deal with the appointment and actions of an adjudicator. Therefore one ignores Paragraph 23 (2) of the Scheme or at least the final phrase because it deals with the effect or impact of the decision as opposed to the appointment and actions of an adjudicator.
Decision