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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 >> Lidl Great Britain Ltd v Closed Circuit Cooling Ltd (t/a 3cl) [2023] EWHC 3051 (TCC) (29 November 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2023/3051.html Cite as: [2024] WLR(D) 23, [2024] Bus LR 475, 211 Con LR 13, [2023] EWHC 3051 (TCC) |
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Case No: HT-2023-MAN-000050 |
BUSINESS & PROPERTY COURTS IN MANCHESTER
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT (KBD)
1 Bridge Street West, Manchester M60 9DJ |
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B e f o r e :
SITTING AS A JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
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LIDL GREAT BRITAIN LIMITED |
Part 7 Claimant / Part 8 Defendant |
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- and |
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CLOSED CIRCUIT COOLING LIMITED t/a 3CL |
Part 7 Defendant / Part 8 Claimant |
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Charlie Thompson (instructed by Hill Dickinson LLP, Manchester) for 3CL
Hearing date: 20 November 2023
Draft judgment circulated: 23 November 2023
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Crown Copyright ©
Remote hand-down: This judgment was handed down remotely at 10:30am on 29 November 2023 by circulation to the parties or their representatives by email and by release to The National Archives.
I direct that pursuant to CPR PD 39A paragraph 6.1 no official shorthand note shall be taken of this Judgment and that copies of this version as handed down may be treated as authentic.
His Honour Judge Stephen Davies
His Honour Judge Stephen Davies:
Paras Introduction and summary of decision 1- 3 The facts, summarised 4 20 The respective arguments, summarised 21 23 The relevant authorities 24 35 Discussion and conclusions 36 43 Application to the facts of adjudication no 2 and adjudication no 3 44 - 56
Introduction and summary of decision
i) Lidl's Part 7 claim for summary judgment of the adjudication decision of Mr Christopher Hough made 25 September 2023 (adjudication no 2 and decision no 2)
ii) Two of the three grounds raised in 3CL's Part 8 claim. These grounds relate to decision no 2 and to the further adjudication decision of Dr Franco Mastrandrea made 3 October 2023 (adjudication no 3 and decision no 3).
i) Lidl is entitled to summary judgment in relation to decision no 2 to the extent that there is unarguably no defence based on lack of jurisdiction, namely as to £496,946.02 of the £757,845.63 awarded, together with proportionate interest and together with the adjudicator's costs.
ii) 3CL is entitled to a declaration that Dr Mastrandrea had no jurisdiction to determine 3CL's right (or lack of such right) to any extension of time over part of the period in respect of which he was asked to do so, namely 18 June 2022 to 29 September 2022.
The facts, summarised
The respective arguments, summarised
i) There is no basis for any contention that a party may not commence any adjudication, regardless of its subject matter, until a notified sum is paid. Such a contention would be contrary to the right to allow any dispute arising under a construction contract to be referred to adjudication under s.108.
ii) On a proper analysis of Grove and subsequent authorities, the only prohibition on commencing an adjudication is where the dispute referred is a "true value" adjudication in respect of the same payment cycle as the notified sum adjudication, where a 'true value' adjudication is one concerned with the re-valuation of work for which payment has become due on a previous payment application. (I shall refer to this as the same payment cycle true value adjudication prohibition.)
iii) Neither adjudication no 2 nor adjudication no 3 was a true value adjudication.
iv) Adjudication no 2 was a breach of contract claim against 3CL to recover the costs of employing a third party to rectify 3CL's snagging items or defective works. Lidl sought monetary relief calculated by reference to the cost of employing a third party to carry out that work, pursuant to specific clauses in the contract which permitted it to do so. No part of Lidl's relief sought the valuation of 3CL's own works, whether pursuant to the contract payment mechanism procedures or otherwise.
v) Adjudication no 3 was an extension of time claim where no monetary relief at all was sought and where there was no connection between the claim referred and the circumstances relevant to the AFP19 payment cycle.
i) The Grove principle, properly determined, does prevent a party from commencing any adjudication until it has complied with its s.111 obligation, because it would be fatal to the adjudication system and, by extension, the prompt payment regime if a party was free to commence adjudication prior to complying with its s.111 obligation or to exhaust the other party by forcing them to defend an adjudication whilst they were deprived of the benefit of a payment due to them pursuant to s. 111. Such delay in compliance with the s.111 immediate payment obligation offends against the core purpose of the Act: to promote prompt payment. (I shall refer to this as the any adjudication prohibition.)
ii) Even if the Grove principle is limited to true value adjudications, that category is not limited as suggested by Mr Acton Davis but extends to all adjudications where the relief sought is designed to permit the party liable to pay the notified sum to avoid compliance with and/or to undermine its s.111 immediate payment obligation or in which it seeks to re-value the account between the parties. (I shall refer to this as the any true value adjudication prohibition.)
iii) Both adjudication no 2 and adjudication no 3 obviously offended against the any adjudication prohibition but also offended against the any true value adjudication prohibition because:
a) In adjudication no 2 Lidl was seeking payment of, or the right to make deductions in respect of, the true value of its claim for defective works where that was plainly designed to provide Lidl with the platform to set-off or deduct such sums against what was due under s.111 as a notified sum under adjudication no 1.
b) In adjudication no 2 there was also an overlap between a number of the items in respect of which Lidl had also sought, unsuccessfully, to withhold payment from AFP19 through PAY-7.
c) In adjudication no 3 Lidl was seeking relief designed to enable it to recover the true value of its entitlement to liquidated damages based on a re-assessment of the extension of time previously allowed to 3CL where that was also plainly designed to provide Lidl with the platform to set-off or deduct such sums against what was due under s.111 as a notified sum under adjudication no 1.
The relevant authorities
"107 Both the HGCRA and the Amended Act create a hierarchy of obligations, as discussed earlier. The immediate statutory obligation is to pay the notified sum as set out in section 111. As required by section 108 of the Amended Act, the contract also contains an adjudication regime for the resolution of all disputes, including any disputes about the true value of work done under clause 4.7. As a matter of statutory construction and under the terms of this contract, the adjudication provisions are subordinate to the payment provisions in section 111. Section 111 (unlike the adjudication provisions of the Act) is of direct effect. It requires payment of a specific sum within a short period of time. The Act has created both the prompt payment regime and the adjudication regime. The Act cannot sensibly be construed as permitting the adjudication regime to trump the prompt payment regime. Therefore, both the Act and the contract must be construed as prohibiting the employer from embarking upon an adjudication to obtain a re-valuation of the work before he has complied with his immediate payment obligation."
"[76] Thus, it is now clear that:
(i) where a valid application for payment has been made, an employer who fails to issue a valid Payment Notice or Pay Less Notice must pay the 'notified sum' in accordance with s 111 of the 1996 Act;
(ii) s 111 of the 1996 Act creates an immediate obligation to pay the 'notified sum';
(iii) an employer is entitled to exercise its right to adjudicate pursuant to s 108 of the 1996 Act to establish the 'true valuation' of the work, potentially requiring repayment of the 'notified sum' by the contractor;
(iv) the entitlement to commence a 'true value' adjudication under s 108 is subjugated to the immediate payment obligation in s 111;
(v) unless and until an employer has complied with its immediate payment obligation under s 111, it is not entitled to commence, or rely on, a 'true value' adjudication under s 108."
"44. This raises the question whether PAML can now raise a "true value" final account adjudication without first paying the sum awarded in Adjudication No. 1 [a notified sum adjudication in relation to an interim payment application]. Mr. Townend's answer to that question is "yes" because of Adjudication No. 3 and because the "true value" adjudication is of the final account post-termination.
45. Whilst the S & T decision does not expressly concern the present situation, where what is suggested as the possible subject of an as yet unstarted adjudication is the determination of a notional final account where the amount of that final account would be dependant on the validity of Decision No. 1 , the ability to mount such an adjudication attacking the validity of that Decision without prior payment of the amount awarded in Decision No. 1 would be a remarkable intrusion into the principle established in S & T: it would permit the adjudication system to trump the prompt payment regime, which is exactly what the Court of Appeal said in paragraph [107] of that case would not be permitted to happen.
47. Accordingly, in my judgment it is not open to PAML to seek to challenge the conclusion of the Adjudicator in Decision No. 1 in another adjudication without first paying the amount held due in Decision No. 1."
Discussion and conclusions
Application to the facts of adjudication no 2 and adjudication no 3
Adjudication no 2
i) The GEA costs claim for snagging works post-dated practical completion and, hence, could not have been the subject of the AFP19 payment cycle.
ii) He accepted that any costs relating to the rectification of incomplete or defective refrigeration elements of the project would, by virtue of the fact that they involve the refrigeration plant the subject of the works, inevitably involve some "cross-over" of items that are included within AFP19 but contended that nonetheless the claims made in adjudication no 2 were not true valuation claims associated with AFP19. He explained, correctly in my view, that the process of valuing interim payments under the contract was a different process to that of claiming for the cost of rectifying defective works the majority of which, he said, were notified between 1 October 2022 and 16 June 2023. (It is to be noted, however, that he did not, in this section of his witness statement - or indeed anywhere in his witness statement refer to the contractual entitlement given to Lidl of giving a payless notice to the contractor not less than 1 day before the final date for payment.)
iii) He asserted that the spreadsheet produced by 3CL "is misleading and I challenge its content". He gave as one example, whilst asserting that there are "certainly more examples which I could refer to", that of milestone 212, being the Glycol Distribution Pipework Pipework Header Installation. In short, he said that 3CL was wrong to equate the deduction in PAY-7 with the claim in adjudication no 2 because they refer to sections of pipework within different areas and because one of the items claimed in adjudication no 2 was claimed in error and withdrawn during the course of the adjudication.
i) Submitted that Mr Bowater's evidence was unsatisfactory in only giving one example (there were only 6 items from PAY-7 and only 9 items from adjudication no 2 in the spreadsheet).
ii) Stated that 3CL's case was that the schedule was not intended to comprise an exhaustive list, only those where the linkage was unarguable.
iii) Stated that, whilst not accepting the lack of linkage in the example given by Mr Bowater, the amount awarded by the adjudicator for these items was only £5,020.80 and, hence, for present purposes 3CL did not contest it.
iv) Submitted that for the purposes of summary judgment the balance of £260,899.61 ought on any view to be regarded as the subject of an overlap and that decision no 2 could and should be severed and the decision only enforced as to the remainder of £496,946.02 (viz. £757,845.63 less £260,899.61).
Adjudication no 3
End