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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 >> ISG Construction Ltd v Seevic College [2014] EWHC 4007 (TCC) (03 December 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2014/4007.html Cite as: 157 Con LR 107, [2014] EWHC 4007 (TCC), [2014] CN 2139, [2015] BLR 233, [2015] 2 All ER (Comm) 545 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
Rolls Building 7 Rolls Buildings, London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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ISG Construction Ltd |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Seevic College |
Defendant |
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Rupert Choat Esq (instructed by Birketts LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 14th November 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr. Justice Edwards-Stuart:
Introduction
The contract
The issues
The value has already been determined
"For the avoidance of doubt I record that I have made no decision as to whether or not that is the correct value of work undertaken by ISG."
"18. I have come to the conclusion that Watkin Jones is right and the second, or in this case, the third adjudicator does not have jurisdiction. The point is a simple one. The jurisdiction of an adjudicator stems from the notice of adjudication. In this case, as I have recounted, the notice of adjudication referred to the amount which is the subject or should have been the subject, according to Lidl, of application number 11. It said that there were, or had been, differences about that sum.
19. The contract, in my judgment, makes it clear that when a contractor applies for payment it expresses its view as to the gross valuation required by clause 30.2A. To that extent this contract does not differ from many other contracts. This contract provides that the employer then has within five days to decide whether that opinion as to the valuation is acceptable or not. If it is not acceptable then a notice must be given under clause 30.3.3. That will specify the amount of payment proposed to be made in respect of that application, the basis on which such amount is calculated and to what the amount relates (as provided by clause 30.3.3). In other words, the employer is to set out its view of what is due for the purposes of the gross valuation under clause 30.2A.
20. Although it is not material to the decision but it emphasises the commercial structure created by the provisions to which I have referred and does affect clause 30, an amendment was made to clause 30.3.2 deleting the existing clause and adding a new clause:
'Each application for an interim payment shall be accompanied by a detailed priced statement of work executed and material supplied referenced to the contract sum analysis'.
This enables the employer both to understand the contractor's valuation and to provide a reasoned statement of where its valuation departs from the contractor's valuation.
21. The contract is thus precise. If a notice is not given under 30.3.3 or 30.3.4 then the amount applied for must be paid. Watkin Jones' entitlement under those provisions was settled by the first adjudication. Lidl's attempt to avoid the absence of the notices by trying to characterise the application as one for a final account was rejected by the first adjudicator, who upheld Watkin Jones's view of the contract and the facts.
22. I do not consider that it is open to either party to this contract thereafter to go back over such ground, and certainly not the employer in this case, and thus to say that the valuation which ought to have been the subject of the payment stemming from an application number 11 was other than that applied for by Watkin Jones. Under this contract the route by which that contention may be raised is the route provided by clause 30.3.3. Its provisions are not therefore the same as those considered by Lord Macfadyen in SL Timber.
23. It is not possible, in my view, to avoid those consequences under this form of contract where no notice has been given by then asserting that the dispute, which undoubtedly does exist, is justiciable as it concerns prior questions namely what ought to have been applied for, what the valuation was, etc, since they are the rationale for clause 30.3.3. What Lidl might have done, after Mr. Bergin's decision, was to have sought a declaration from an adjudicator as to what is quite clearly in dispute which is the true value of the final account. In reality Watkin Jones' application was tantamount to a Final Account and Final Statement, as Mr. Bergin recognised. But I do not consider that Lidl's notice of adjudication can be read in that way in the light of the first adjudicator's decision, which decided that application number 11 was a reference to an application for an interim payment and not a reference to a Final Account."
"A declaration as to the contractual value of ISG's works as at 13 May 2014 (being the date of ISG's Application Nr 13)".
Want of jurisdiction - no dispute
"If, for example, proceedings are necessary to enforce the award the defendant cannot be allowed to allege that the decision was incorrect, i.e. that the claimant has not got a right or cause of action as some necessary fact or aspect of the law is missing, and is in effect temporarily estopped by its agreement from doing so. But ultimately the claimant will, if necessary, have to establish its right and cause of action."
Is ISG entitled to the declarations sought?
The practical consequences if Seevic were right
"Where the parties to a construction contract engage in successive adjudications, each focused upon the parties' current rights and remedies, in my view the correct approach is as follows. At the end of each adjudication, absent special circumstances, the losing party must comply with the adjudicator's decision. He cannot withhold payment on the ground of his anticipated recovery in a future adjudication based upon different issues. I reach this conclusion both from the express terms of the Act, and also from the line of authority referred to earlier in this judgment ..."
Seevic's request for guidance
"It is course open to any adjudicator in setting his or her procedure under Clause 38A to impose 'unless order' type arrangements, provided that the parties are given the right first to argue whether that is appropriate. It is sometimes said by some commentators that adjudication is or can be 'rough justice'. There is no need to make it even rougher by construing provisions such as those contained in Clause 38A as circumscribing a party's basic right to be heard."
Conclusion
Note 1 I have cited the paragraph in Keating, because the decision referred to (Multiplex Construction (UK) Ltd v Cleveland Bridge UK Ltd [2010] EWCA Civ 139) appears to be unreported. [Back] Note 2 This is under Alternative B (there is an alternative method of valuation - Alternative A). [Back]