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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 >> PP Construction Ltd v Geoffrey Osborne Ltd [2015] EWHC 325 (TCC) (17 February 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2015/325.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 325 (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 :
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PP Construction Limited |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Geoffrey Osborne Limited |
Defendant |
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Jonathan Lewis (instructed by Fenwick Elliott) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 6 February 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Stuart-Smith:
Introduction
The Factual Background
"(9) The adjudicator may on his own initiative or at the request of either party correct his decision so as to remove any clerical mistake, error or ambiguity provided that such initiative is taken or such request is made within 14 days of the notification of his decision to the parties. Any such correction shall be made and notified to the parties within 7 days from when such initiative is taken or such request is made as the case may be and for the avoidance of any doubt, the parties shall be deemed to have agreed that any such correction forms part of the decision of the adjudicator. "
Clause 70(9) differs markedly from the standard provision for correction of accidental clerical or typographic errors under Clause 20A of the Scheme for Construction Contracts (England and Wales) Regulations 1998 (Amendment) (England) Regulations 2011, which requires any correction of a decision to be made within five days of the delivery of the decision to the parties.
"PPCL has reviewed the arithmetic to your Decision and believes there is a slip therein which it asked [sic] that you correct.
You have valued the account in the sum of £2,235,910.12 prior to any discount being taken however PPCL has already taken £99,898.33 off the measured and additional measured sections. It follows, with respect, that you have taken the discount of 5% twice in some areas.
Attached is an amended Variation 20 which can be found in Folder 2 of 4 section 15. PPCL has added the Adjudicator's Awards including the deductions and referencing each item in the Award.
Therefore using the Adjudicator's figures there is an error of £92,530 excluding the interest.
PPCL, therefore, requests that you correct the above slips."
"Certainly there is no intention to take 5% twice.
RS [i.e. PP's solicitor]: the attachment is not clear. Suggest you take me to the particular items in the award."
"In the application which is the subject of the dispute PPC applied for the sum of £2,235.910.12, which after the deduction of 2.5% retention (in the sum of £55,897.75) and that previously paid (in the sum of £1,759,286.88) left the net sum due of £420,725.48. The sum sought of £420,725.48 was after the deduction of the 5% discount in the sums of £74,965.98 and £24,932.35. This is shown in the column headed "This Valuation" in the PDJ attached hereto.
In reaching your Decision you have deducted amounts from that applied for by PPC.
PPC has set down in the column headed "PPC Valuation" in the attached PDF the amounts it applied for before discount being deducted being in the sum of £2,335.808.44. In your Decision, however, at page 27 of 30 at paragraph 33 you have used the sum of £2,235,910" which was after the deduction of 5% discount (in the sums of £74,965.98 and £24,932.35 as above). It is the difference between these two sums (£2,235,910.00 and £2,335.808.44) that equates to the slip.
You have decided that the sums of £73,117.00, £6,189.00 and £10,000.00 are not due. If these sums are deducted from the sum of £2,335.808.44 (before the deduction of discount) this leaves a sum of £2,246,502.44.
If one then deducts 5% discount from £2,246,502.44 (being £112,335.12) and retention at 2.5% (being £53,354.43) this leaves a sum of £2,080,822.89.
Then taking from the sum of £2,080,822.89 the previous paid of £1,759,286.88 leaves a sum due of £321,536.12.
We hope that the above provides the necessary clarification."
While the copy of this second attachment in the Court's file is of slightly better quality than the first, there is no evidence about the quality of the second attachment as received by Mr Bingham other than that he did not subsequently ask for further clarification.
"Nothing in this correction is a rethink of any decision. If the award had been set out as above there would be no clerical error.
The correction will be issued as above once you cast an eye."
It is common ground (and if it were not common ground I would find) that, because it was referred to as a draft for comment and because Mr Bingham said he would issue the correction "once you have cast an eye", the email of 30 November is not itself a correction of the clerical mistake within the meaning of clause 70(9).
"Further to our email dated 1 December and confirmation of our agreement to the correction of the slip to your Decision, please can you issue your revised Decision."
It is a peculiar feature of the case that no email of 1 December 2014 was received by Mr Bingham or by GOL's solicitors. In these circumstances, PP rightly accepts that the possibility of an email having been drafted is irrelevant and that it was not sent.
(a) The email and attachment from PP's solicitors to Mr Bingham on 26 November 2014, which was the day of his original Award;(b) The email and attachment from PP's solicitors to Mr Bingham on 28 November 2014, which was two days after his original Award;
(c) The email from PP's solicitors to Mr Bingham on 4 December asking him to issue his revised Decision, which was 8 days after his original award;
(d) The email from PP's solicitors to Mr Bingham on 5 December asking him again to issue his revised decision, which was 9 days after his original award;
(e) Mr Bingham's correction of his clerical error by the "Slip Award" on 5 December, which was 9 days after his original award and the initial email from PP's solicitors on 26 November, 7 days after the second email from PP's solicitors on 28 November, 1 day after the email on 4 December and the same day as the email of 5 December.
The Issues
(a) Whether the email and attachment on 26 November 2014 were a "request" within the meaning of Clause 70(9)?(b) If the email and attachment on 26 November 2014 were not a "request" within the meaning of Clause 70(9), did PP issue a "request" within the meaning of the Clause at a later date?
(c) If the email and attachment on 26 November 2014 were a "request" within the meaning of Clause 70(9):
a) was it open to PP to issue another request within the meaning of the Clause and, if it was,b) did PP issue another request within the meaning of the Clause?(d) If the answers to issues (i), (ii) and (iii)(b) are "No", did Mr Bingham correct his decision on his own initiative?
Issue (i): Was the email and attachment on 26 November 2014 a "request" within the meaning of Clause 70(9)?
Issue (ii): did PP issue a "request" within the meaning of Clause 70(9) at a later date?
Issue (iii): if the email and attachment on 26 November 2014 were a "request" within the meaning of Clause 70(9):(a) was it open to PP to issue another request within the meaning of the Clause and, if it was,
(b) did PP issue another request within the meaning of the Clause?
Conclusion