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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 >> MG Scaffolding (Oxford) Ltd v Palmloch Ltd [2019] EWHC 1787 (TCC) (09 July 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2019/1787.html Cite as: [2019] EWHC 1787 (TCC) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
Fetter Lane London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
MG SCAFFOLDING (OXFORD) LTD |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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PALMLOCH LTD |
Defendant |
____________________
Simon Arnold (instructed by Preston & Co. Law Firm Limited) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 1 July 2019
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MR ADAM CONSTABLE QC :
Background to the Adjudication
'This is a copy of the original PO, it will be the same number, so please make sure your accounts include this on the invoices and also note the company that needs invoicing, as any mistakes will delay payment.'
The Adjudication
'MCR Property Group does not recognise any claim or issue requiring resolution from an adjudicator. MCR Property Group is no more than a brand name and holds no assets of its own. MCR Property Group has no debt outstanding with the referring party. Any claim, if any, requiring adjudication or dispute resolution should be directed towards the company whom the referring party has a dispute'.
The letter did not suggest that the proper responding party to (any) claim was Palmloch.
'MCR Property Group is not the correct Responding Party. MCR Property Group is a trading name. The contracting party is Palmloch Limited, and in the event that the notice of adjudication is amended into the name of the correct Responding Party (Palmloch Limited), Palmloch Limited will serve a substantive response to the notice of adjudication. The correct Responding Party must be determined prior to the adjudication.'
'In the event that a decision is made against MCR Management Limited or MCR Property Group, the jurisdiction will be strongly challenged in any subsequent enforcement proceedings. Furthermore, in the event that a claim or adjudication notice were to be issued against Palmloch Limited, Palmloch Limited will serve a substantive defence to those proceedings.'
'In the circumstances and in view of your apparently [sic] decision to construe the Responding Party as Palmloch Limited, we believe it would be unjust for you to reach a decision (against Palmloch Limited) without first allowing Palmloch Limited sufficient time to issue a substantive response to the Notice of Adjudication. We therefore request a period of 14 days from the date of this letter to submit the said substantive response. In the event that you do not agree to this request, please note that Palmloch Limited will challenge the jurisdiction (in any subsequent court proceedings) of any decision made against it'.
The Parties Contentions
(1) MCR Property Group is admitted by Palmloch as being a trading name it uses;
(2) The notice identified the relevant property, with which no other company which used MCR Property Group trading name other than Palmloch Limited had any connection;
(3) It was in fact Palmloch who identified that the correct party to the adjudication was itself, Palmloch Limited. No confusion had, in fact, arisen on the part of the recipient.
Discussion
(1) the correct contacting parties are MGS and Palmloch;
(2) the Adjudication was commenced and pursued against 'MCR Property Group', which is a trading name for Palmloch, with no legal existence of its own.
(1) In construing the notice of adjudication, the exercise is to assess the notice as a whole against its contractual setting how it would have informed a reasonable recipient;
(2) A notice of adjudication should be interpreted broadly and flexibly avoiding a strict or technical approach, especially where the notice has been drafted by non-lawyers;
(3) A notice is validly started against a party provided that, read broadly and flexibly and against the relevant background, the notice identifies that party.
"The requirement for 'form', 'substance' and 'intent' has often been repeated in the authorities….In construing the document or documents relied upon, the exercise is to assess it against its contextual setting how it would have informed a reasonable recipient – see Mannai Investment Co Ltd v Eagle Star Assurance Co Ltd [1997] AC 749 (per Lord Steyn at 772H)"
"in considering whether these requirements are met, one should concentrate on the substance rather than the form of the notice and consider how a reasonable person in the position of the recipient would have understood the notice given its terms and the context in which it was written".
(a) where the identity of the party is concerned, particular clarity is required. In this respect, he relied upon the words of HHJ Wilcox in Total M & E Services v ABB Building Technologies (2002) 87 Con LR 154, in which he indicated, 'Where there are similar company names, as for instance in a group of companies or where there are subsidiaries with overlapping management systems and some common directors, a precise description of the referring party could be critical';
(b) the test is how an objective third party, not necessarily the 'recipient', would construe the Notice;
(c) in putting itself in the place of the objective third party, the Court should not approach the task assuming any particular knowledge about any particular project or any particular company to which the Notice of Adjudication might be directed.
"If someone trades under a particular name, and then is sued or otherwise proceeded against under that name, essentially it is he (or she) who is being proceeded against. The contract here was between Durham and HLB Architects which everyone must have understood was effectively a contract between Durham and Mr Kendall. Although the point was raised in the adjudication, in practice it did not stop Mr Kendall from fully participating in those proceedings."
(1) MCR Property Group is a trading name used by a multitude of companies, including Palmloch, all trading from the same address;
(2) Although Palmloch understood that the contract was between it and MGS, irrespective of Palmloch's use of a trading name, that was not understood (at least until now) by MGS. Indeed, MGS contended that it had not contracted with Palmloch.
(1) The Notice of Adjudication expressly referred to the specific property and project;
(2) Other details (such as reference to the quotation, pre-contract correspondence and the payment notices etc) within the Notice also put beyond doubt the property and project to which the Notice related;
(3) The relevant property was owned by Palmloch, and there is no suggestion that any other MCRPG companies were involved in the property or project in any way.