BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions >> Tata Consultancy Services Ltd v Disclosure and Barring Service [2024] EWHC 2025 (TCC) (01 August 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2024/2025.html Cite as: [2024] EWHC 2025 (TCC) |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT (KBD)
B e f o r e :
____________________
TATA CONSULTANCY SERVICES LIMITED | Claimants |
|
- and - |
||
DISCLOSURE AND BARRING SERVICE | Defendants |
____________________
Simon Croall KC, Andrew Carruth and William Mitchell (instructed by Bristows LLP) for the Defendants
Hearing date: 23 July 2024
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Constable:
(1) The Claimant ('TCS') is entitled to:
(a) Manpower costs (R1-D): £666,735.00
(b) Non-Manpower costs (R1-D): £1,732,989.70
(c) Volume Based Service Charge ('VBSC'): £6,976,737.00
(2) The Defendant ('DBS') is entitled to:
(a) CCN041 £4,559,439.00
(b) Barring Portal Defects (Snowbound) £8,270.00
(1) Correction of Judgment
'16. It has long been the law that a judge is entitled to reverse his decision at any time before his order is drawn up and perfected.
…
19. Thus there is jurisdiction to change one's mind up until the order is drawn up and perfected. Under CPR r 40.2(2)(b), an order is now perfected by being sealed by the court. There is no jurisdiction to change one's mind thereafter unless the court has an express power to vary its own previous order. The proper route of challenge is by appeal. On any view, therefore, in the particular circumstances of this case, the judge did have power to change her mind. The question is whether she should have exercised it.
…
27. This court is not bound by the Barrell case or by any of the previous cases to hold that there is any such limitation upon the acknowledged jurisdiction of the judge to revisit his own decision at any time up until his resulting order is perfected. I would agree with Clarke LJ in Stewart v Engel [2000] 1 WLR 2268, 2282 that his overriding objective must be to deal with the case justly. A relevant factor must be whether any party has acted upon the decision to his detriment, especially in a case where it is expected that they may do so before the order is formally drawn up…..Every case is going to depend upon its particular circumstances.'
DBS's contended error
"…for the purposes of the Clause 7 analysis, TCS were never going to achieve the R1-D Milestone until between July and September 2018, if one assumes a period of around 9-12 months from Final SIT to Go-Live. (9 months is not an unreasonable planned period: for example, the 4 October 2017 Microsoft update plan showed a period of 9 months from the start of Final SIT to Go-Live; the 12 December 2017; the February 2018 POAP showed a duration for this period 8.5 months; Dr Hunt's evidence referred to further below suggests 12 months)."
"As at 7 September 2017, but for the following delays, TCS would have, with no other interference, achieved the Go-Live Milestone for R1-D within about 1 year (I will assume a Go-Live Date of 7 September 2018, insofar as it may be relevant). The delays accrued to R1-D at this point were driven by preceding R1-B&B delays and were not matters for which TCS is entitled to relief or damages for the reasons set out in relation to R1-B&B"
"On the basis of my analysis of delays as set out above, (a) TCS has established an entitlement to loss and expense for 98 days, and (b) but for the wrongful de-
scoping, TCS would have delivered R1-D by 19 September 2019."
"(4) For the period from 14 June 2018 to 19 September 2018, TCS has established that the further accrued critical delays (day for day) were caused by 'AUTHORITY Cause'. This is a period of 3 months and 5 days (98 days)."
(4) For the period from 14 June 2018 to 19 September 2018, TCS has established that the further accrued critical delays (day for day) were caused by 'AUTHORITY Cause'. This is a period of 3 months and 5 days (98 days). However, for period through to 7 September 2018, TCS would not have, in any event, achieved the Milestone Date and loss and expense is therefore irrecoverable. The relevant period is limited to 12 days from 8 September 2018 to 19 September 2018."
(1) paragraph 378 should then read:
'Doing the best I can by a pro-rata of the days, the claimed sum for the period13 June 20188 September to 19 September 2018 would be a total of£1,640,562£119,381.20 (constituting£666,7352£50,279.60 verified costs and £69,101.60£973,8273unverified as to amount).'
(2) footnote 2 should be replaced with:
'The total of the September top line (£125,699) multiplied by 12/30 (number of recoverable days 8 September-19 Sept/total number of days in September)'.
(3) the first sentence in paragraph 388 should read:
'In the circumstances, the claim for Period 2 succeeds in the sum of£666,735£50,279.60.'
(4) paragraph 397 should read (also correcting a typographical error in relation to a reference to 2018 which should be 2019):
'On the basis of my analysis of delays as set out above, (a) TCS has established an entitlement to loss and expense for 1298days, and (b) but for the wrongful de-scoping, TCS would have delivered R1-D by 19 September 2019. It is usual that claims for prolongation costs are calculated by references to the expenses incurred during the period of relevant critical delay. However, in the circumstances of the present case, I consider that the fairest method of analysis which gives effect to the factual findings above, and takes DBS's point about the timing of renewals into account, is that I should assess TCS's entitlement by allowing all non-manpower costs incurred after 1298days prior to 19 September 20189, i.e. after13 June7 September 20189. I therefore allow all of the sums claimed for the months ofJulyOctober 2019 to the end, together with1724/30 of the sum claimed forJuneSeptember 2019 (£206,733£173,831). That comes to£1,615,841£1,083,652 plus£117,148.70£139,064.80, making£1,732,989.70£1,222,716.80.'
(5) footnote 4 should read:
'£173,831 x 24/30'
(6) Paragraph 821(1) (a) and (b) should read:
'(a) Manpower costs (R1-D):£666,735.00£50,279.60
(b) Non-Manpower costs (R1-D):£1,732,989.70£1,222,716.80'
(7) Paragraph 823 should read:
'The net sum payable by DBS to TCS is therefore£4,808,752.70£3,682,024.40 (subject to the remaining issue of applicable VAT).'
TCS's Contended Error
(2) Interest on the VBSC
'Further, the Claimant claims interest on such sums as are found to be due to it pursuant to the Late Payment of Commercial Debts (Interest) Act 1998 for the unpaid Transaction Charges plus VAT; and section 35A of the Senior Courts Act 1981 for sums due in damages (and, in the alternative, for the unpaid Transaction Charges plus VAT), for such periods and at such rate as the Court thinks fit.'
"In essence, the court must, taking account of the overriding objective, balance the injustice to the party seeking to amend if it is refused permission, against the need for finality in litigation and the injustice to the other parties and other litigants, if the amendment is permitted. There is a heavy burden on the party seeking a late amendment to justify the lateness of the application and to show the strength of the new case and why justice requires him to be able to pursue it. These principles apply with even greater rigour to an amendment made after the trial and in the course of an appeal."
(1) The 1998 Act has been ousted by Clause 16.3 of the Agreement;
(2) Interest did not start to run;
(3) Interest should be remitted pursuant to Section 5 of the 1998 Act.
Qualifying Debt
'3.— Qualifying debts.
(1) A debt created by virtue of an obligation under a contract to which this Act applies to pay the whole or any part of the contract price is a "qualifying debt" for the purposes of this Act, unless (when created) the whole of the debt is prevented from carrying statutory interest by this section.'
'16.1 In consideration of the CONTRACTOR carrying out its obligations, including the provision of the Services under this Agreement, the AUTHORITY shall pay the Charges to the CONTRACTOR in accordance with the payment profile and the invoicing procedure specified in schedule 2-3 (The Charges and Charges Variation Procedure) and schedule 2-4 (Invoicing Procedure).'
'16.3 The CONTRACTOR shall not suspend the supply of the Services unless the CONTRACTOR is entitled to terminate this Agreement under clause 55.16 for failure to pay undisputed Charges. Interest shall be payable on the late payment of any undisputed Charges properly invoiced in accordance with the Late Payment of Commercial Debts (Interest) Act 1998.'
'3.1. The AUTHORITY shall pay all valid invoices submitted by the CONTRACTOR in accordance with the provisions of this Schedule in accordance with the provisions of Clause 16 of this Agreement.
3.2. Invoices shall be due for payment within 30 elapsed days of receipt of a valid invoice.
3.3. In the event of a disputed invoice, the AUTHORITY shall make payment in respect of any undisputed amount in accordance with the provisions of Clause 16 of this Agreement and return the invoice to the CONTRACTOR within ten (10) Working Days of receipt with a covering statement proposing amendments to the invoice and/or the reason for any non-payment. The CONTRACTOR shall respond within ten (10) Working Days of receipt of the returned invoice stating whether or not the CONTRACTOR accepts the AUTHORITY's proposed amendments. If it does then the CONTRACTOR shall supply with the response a replacement valid invoice. If it does not then the matter shall be dealt with in accordance with the provisions of Clause 27 of this Agreement.'
'This letter therefore constitutes written notice that DBS is in breach of its payment obligations under the Contract and that TCS requires payment of the Overdue Invoices on an urgent basis.
In the meantime, TCS reserves all of its rights in respect of the Overdue Invoices, including the right to charge interest on the outstanding amounts in accordance with the Late Payment of Commercial Debts (Interest) Act 1998 pursuant to Clause 16.3 of the Contract.'
'We refer to your letter of 31 July 2018 enclosing an Appendix containing a list of the sums claimed by TCS in respect of invoices dated 29 September 2017 to 11 April 2018 (the "Disputed Invoices"). In each case, DBS has paid the undisputed amounts. TCS is well aware of the fact that the balance of £3,158,283.95 (the "Outstanding Sum") is disputed.
In response to that letter, please find below a Notice of Dispute in accordance with paragraph 1.2 of Schedule 2-9 of the Agreement dated 4 October 2012'
Ousting of the Act
'8(3) The parties may not agree to vary the right to statutory interest in relation to the debt unless either the right to statutory interest as varied or the overall remedy for late payment of the debt is a substantial remedy.
(4) Any contract terms are void to the extent that they purport to—
(a) confer a contractual right to interest that is not a substantial remedy for late payment of the debt, or
(b) vary the right to statutory interest so as to provide for a right to statutory interest that is not a substantial remedy for late payment of the debt, unless the overall remedy for late payment of the debt is a substantial remedy.
(5) Subject to this section, the parties are free to agree contract terms which deal with the consequences of late payment of the debt.
9(1) A remedy for the late payment of the debt shall be regarded as a substantial remedy unless—
(a) the remedy is insufficient either for the purpose of compensating the supplier for late payment or for deterring late payment; and
(b) it would not be fair or reasonable to allow the remedy to be relied on to oust or (as the case may be) to vary the right to statutory interest that would otherwise apply in relation to the debt.
(2) In determining whether a remedy is not a substantial remedy, regard shall be had to all the relevant circumstances at the time the terms in question are agreed.
(3) In determining whether subsection (1)(b) applies, regard shall be had (without prejudice to the generality of subsection (2)) to the following matters—
(a) the benefits of commercial certainty;
(b) the strength of the bargaining positions of the parties relative to each other;
(c) whether the term was imposed by one party to the detriment of the other (whether by the use of standard terms or otherwise); and
(d) whether the supplier received an inducement to agree to the term.'
'87. When construing this Act it seems to me that there are several factors that should be borne in mind: (1) Interest rates can vary significantly: I do not suppose that any member of Parliament would have foreseen in 1998 that a decade later the bank base rate would have fallen almost to zero. (2) The Act does not automatically substitute the statutory rate for any lower rate of interest for late payment provided in the contract: it does so only if the contractual rate does not afford a "substantial remedy". (3) The statutory rate could be described as penal in that, when it was set, it produced a rate of interest that was more than double the base rate. (4) Historically, in commercial cases the courts have awarded interest on awards of damages at rates of between 1% and 3% over base, more commonly the former rather than the latter where there is no specific evidence as to the cost to the claimant in question of borrowing money. I accept, of course, that there is a divergence in principle between awarding interest on a sum that was disputed, usually both as to liability and as to amount, and awarding interest on a debt in respect of which there might often be no room for reasonable dispute. Nevertheless, I regard it as legitimate to take note of what the courts have traditionally regarded as the fair remedy for being kept out of one's money.
88. … Putting it crudely, it seems to me that the imposition of the statutory rate is the penalty that a contracting party pays for failing to provide in its contracts a fair remedy for late payment to suppliers (Eady J referred to counsel's description of it as "punitive" in Banham Marshalls Services Unlimited v Lincolnshire County Council [2007] EWHC 402(QB) at [69])'
'70. ...It is no doubt necessary to have in mind that the mischief to which the statute appears to be primarily directed is that of casual or feckless non-payment. The extent to which the "interests of justice" require that it shall be enforced also upon those who withhold payment because of a bona fide dispute requires careful consideration.
71. Mr Ramsden points to the considerable delay in bringing these proceedings (well over two years after the relevant debts accrued). Mr Lenon, on the other hand, unsurprisingly referred to the six year limitation period. I cannot accept, however, that it is appropriate for a creditor to delay without any particular reason for several years and then to expect to recover interest at the enhanced rate. I have little doubt that "conduct", as used in s.5 of the statute, would embrace conduct prior to or in the course of litigation to recover the debt.
72. Although I am conscious that there is, from a moral or public policy perspective, a distinction to be drawn between those who choose not to pay their outstanding debts and those who refuse to pay because of a genuine legal dispute, it would be wrong for me to approach the issue on the basis that the statutory interest is not to apply at all in cases of bona fide dispute. That would be to detract from the broad discretion which Parliament clearly intended when formulating s.5 in the terms set out above.'
'In summary as regards the construction of s 4, I would say this: that my construction does not lead to any unfairness. A paying party can withhold payment for sums reasonably in doubt or not yet properly settled. The court will protect him by the use of s 5 remission because the uncertainty to that extent was created by the supplier. What he cannot do is to pay nothing at all and expect to escape the high rates of interest imposed by the 1998 Act on what on any view is due.'
(1) notwithstanding the fact that the 1998 Act is capable of applying to debts which are genuinely disputed, it is readily apparent that, as the authorities make clear, there is, from a moral or public policy perspective, a distinction to be drawn between those who choose not to pay their outstanding debts and those who refuse to pay because of a genuine legal dispute. As concluded under Section 9(1)(a), the overall remedy, as varied by Clause 16.3, still provides a deterrent by way of the application of penal interest to those who choose not to pay their outstanding debts. This is a weighty factor when considering whether an agreement between parties to reflect this distinction within a contractual regime for the late payment of debts is fair or reasonable, and it militates in favour of the overall remedy remaining a fair and reasonable one.
(2) it is also relevant, in all the circumstances, that the supplier is still able to claim pursuant to section 35A of the 1981 Act that which, as described by Edwards-Stuart J, 'the Courts have traditionally regarded as the fair remedy for being kept out of one's money', albeit that is only a discretionary remedy and such a claim may be met with arguments that it is not appropriate in particular circumstances;
(3) it is also relevant that the parties have, in this sophisticated contract, specifically put their mind to what is to be regarded as 'undisputed' in the context of Clause 16.3, and provided a specific procedure within Schedule 2-4 by which reasons have to be given for any sums which are 'disputed' and the requirement that such a dispute is to be dealt with in accordance with the dispute resolution provisions, potentially expeditiously. Given the stepped Dispute Resolution Process, there is (at least to some extent) a further guardrail against plainly unmeritorious reasons for withholding payment being any cause of continuing delay to payment;
(4) Mr Cogley argued that such a construction would simply permit any party to avoid the application of statutory interest by disputing an invoice and drive a coach and horses through the 1998 Act; but this is not the case. The dispute has to be (at least) bona fide, and as the authorities referred to above each make clear in their different contexts, the Court is readily able to discern between a sum that is genuinely disputed, whether as to liability and/or as to amount, and a debt in respect of which there is no room for reasonable dispute. If the Court determined that the debt was one in respect of which there was no room for reasonable dispute, Clause 16.3 would not apply to protect the non-payer from the application of the 1998 Act. A set out above, the principal purpose of the 1998 Act is not defeated by Clause 16.3;
(5) in addition to these general points, it is necessary to have regard specifically to the matters set out in sections 9(1)(3)(a)-(d). As to section 9(3)(a), it might be said that limiting the application of the act to 'undisputed' invoices detracts from commercial certainty, and this weighs against the reasonableness of the provision;
(6) As to sections 9(3)(b)-(d), because this is being considered upon an amendment application, the matters have not been the subject of specific pleas or evidence. Were that considered necessary, that of itself would be a reason to refuse the amendment at this late stage. However, on the basis of my understanding of the relationship between the parties from the evidence at trial I have little hesitation in concluding that (a) the strength of the bargaining position between the parties was equal; (b) the form was an amended version of a Government standard form, and Clause 16.3 applied in respect of invoiced Charges from TCS to DBS and, in this respect, was a 'one way' provision; (d) there is no suggestion of any inducement received by the supplier to agree to such a term.
Interest did not start to run
'But the use of the phrase in the 'unascertained' alternative, 'the sum which the supplier claims is the amount of the debt' shows that a provisional view of an amount due is within the section. Mr Acton Davis suggested that the alternative was aimed only at cases where you could not do a calculation, such as where the agreement was to pay a reasonable sum—so you could not calculate the exact sum due. That it covers such cases I accept, but I see no reason why it should be so limited. Unless the sum has been determined already in a way binding on the parties, it is likely to depend on calculations which the supplier may have got right, or may have got wrong. In such a case it is not ascertained and what the supplier has to give notice of is what he claims to be due. He may or may not have got it right. In either case he is within the second half of the section.'
Interest should be remitted pursuant to Section 5 of the 1998 Act
(1) the parties (and, by definition, by TCS's conduct as well as DBS's) had agreed Clause 16.3 which (irrespective of its contractual validity) purported to disapply the 1998 Act to disputed invoices;
(2) TCS had expressly sought to rely upon the potential application of the 1998 Act by reference to this clause in Mr McCarthy's letter of 31 July 2018 which I have already referred to. As I have found in the context of the existence, or otherwise, of a qualifying debt, I consider that DBS's response was plainly seeking to engage the contractual distinction between 'disputed' and 'undisputed' amounts for the purposes of the claim for interest under Clause 16.3.
(3) TCS then failed to assert a claim to interest under the 1998 Act in relation to the sums claimed for service year 5 (i.e. the Clause 2.8.8 issue) until two months after the Judgment was handed down, years after the performance of the Agreement ended.
Interest under Section 35A of the 1981 Act
CCN 041 Counterclaim
VAT
Costs
Introduction
(1) The ultimate order is for payment by DBS to TCS in the sum of '£3,682,024.4040 (as corrected);
(2) TCS's pleaded claim was for c.£124m, and it was awarded just over £8m (before set off). This was made up of just over £1m in respect its c.£110m delay losses claim; and just under £7m in respect of its c.£14m VBSC claim;
(3) DBS's pleaded counterclaim for delay and defects related losses was for around £120m, and it was awarded around £4.6m. Other than the sum of just over £8,000 in relation to one defect, the amount awarded was always accepted as a 'credit' against TCS's claims relating to a period prior to that under consideration in the litigation. The limited issue in relation to this sum related to whether it could be characterised as a debt for the purposes of whether 1998 Act interest ran, which DBS lost;
(4) The litigation started life as TCS's Part 8 Claim relating to the VBSC issue alone. This was met with a denial of the right to payment and a counterclaim that DBS had overpaid in respect of VBSC, coupled with DBS's enormous counterclaim for delay (liquidated and unliquidated damages) and defects. DBS's position was that the VBSC issue should form part of the same overall claim. TCS did not object. The claim became a Part 7 Claim, and in TCS's Amended Particulars of Claim, it introduced its own enormous delay and partial termination claim for relief from liquidated damages and loss and expense;
(5) If considered in isolation, the VBSC claim probably would have accounted for less than (and possibly significantly less than) 5% of the costs incurred on both sides. It took up, at most, around a day of the 28 day hearing. It was an entirely discrete issue, unrelated to the broader dispute arising out of delay, partial termination and defects. It was plainly the single determining issue upon which the outcome in terms of overall net-payor/payee turned. Ignoring the issue, TCS failed to recover more than the credit it accepted it owed DBS.
(6) No relevant offers were made.
The Legal Principles
(1) the Court has discretion as to whether costs are payable by one party to another, the amount of those costs and when they are to be paid (CPR 44.2(1));
(2) the general rule, or starting point, is that the unsuccessful party will be ordered to pay the costs of the successful party, although the Court may make a different order (CPR 44.2(2));
(3) having regard to the general rule, the first task must be to decide who is the successful party. The Court should then apply the general rule unless there are circumstances which lead to a different result (Straker v Tudor Rose [2007] 368 (CA) per Waller LJ at [12]).
(4) where the claim is for money, particularly in a commercial context, in deciding who is the successful party, the most important thing is to identify the party who is to pay money to the other. This has been made clear numerous times: see e.g. Barnes v Time Talk (UK) Ltd [2003] EWCA Civ 402 per Longmore LJ at [28], with whom Waller LJ agreed in Straker at [13]; Multiplex Constructions (UK) Limited v Cleveland Bridge UK Limited (No.7) [2008] EWHC 2280 (TCC) per Jackson J, as he was then, at [72]; Fiona Trust & Holding Corporation v Privalov [2011] EWHC 664 (Comm) at [36] per Andrew Smith J;
(5) in deciding whether to depart from the general rule, the Court will have regard to all the circumstances, including (as set out at (CPR 44.2(4)):
(a) the conduct of the parties (including consideration those factors listed at CPR 44.2(5));
(b) whether a party has succeeded on part of its case, even if that party has not been wholly successful; and
(c) any admissible offer to settle made by a party which is drawn to the court's attention, and which is not an offer to which costs consequences under Part 36 apply;
(6) as to CPR 44.2(4)(b):
(a) in departing from the general rule, the Court may order a party to pay a proportion of another party's costs, or from or until a certain date (CPR 44.2(6)(a) and (c)), or an issues-based costs order (CPR 44.2(6)(f)). Before doing the latter, it will consider whether it is practicable to make an order limiting the costs payable to a proportion of the overall costs or by reference to a specific date (CPR 44.2 (7));
(b) however, a Court will be cautious before departing from the general rule. This is because, particularly in complex commercial litigation such as this, it is regularly the case that arguments or factual disputes may be relevant to a number of underlying issues which have to be addressed in the proceedings; and a party may rely on a number of grounds to support a claim, and succeed on some and not others. Parties should be afforded a reasonable degree of latitude in formulating claims, including pleading alternative bases for the same basic claim, and Courts should avoid an unduly finely detailed division of issues and sub-issues when deciding what costs orders to make (F&C Investments (Holdings) Ltd v Barthelemy [2011] EWHC 2807 per Sales J at [16]-[21]). Moreover, over-zealous departure from the general rule also generates unwelcome uncertainty for litigants (Fox v Foundation Piling Ltd [2011] 6 Costs LR 961 per Jackson LJ at [62])
(7) as to CPR 44.2(4)(c), the absence of an offer may be as relevant as the existence of one. Where a defendant is faced with an exorbitant claim which they wish to defend vigorously but where they are vulnerable to a finding that they are liable for a much smaller amount, there is a clear process provided by the CPR Part 36 which they can follow to protect their position (Global Energy Horizons Corporation v Gray [2021] Costs LR 133). I would add, in the context of the arguments made by the parties, that this is a relevant factor, not in all cases a determinative one.
Analysis
(1) this is a case in which, quite unusually, over 95% of the time and cost spent by both parties was entirely unrelated to the single issue of contractual construction which drove the ultimate determination of winner/loser. Whilst not of direct relevance this point is demonstrated neatly as follows: the forensic accounting experts had prepared an agreed table of results in respect of the various outcomes from the VBSC issue, which contained a calculation error not discovered until the end of the trial. Had the error not been discovered, the sum which would have been awarded to TCS for VBSC based on the erroneous joint expert evidence would have been £1,275,638 rather than the £6,976,737 in fact awarded on the basis of the revised agreed calculations. If this had happened, applying the general principle, DBS would have been the net-winner;
(2) this is very a long way from the position in Global Energy where the principal driver for the enormous waste of time and costs remained upon the shoulders of the dishonest losing party, irrespective of the fact that a fraction of the sums claimed were awarded. In that case, the costly process of demonstrating the falsity of Mr Gray's account was always a necessary part of the litigation in order to recover any sums;
(3) by contrast, if the discrete constructional VBSC issue is set to one side, virtually all the costs were incurred in the pursuit and defence (in both directions) of a classic multi-issue delay, defects and termination case between employer and contractor/supplier, in the context of an IT infrastructure project. Looking at the substance of the dispute which drove the expenditure, TCS was not the overall net-winner. Because of the £4.6m owed to DBS on account of a settlement of a claim arising out of previous delays, which it had not been paid by TCS, TCS had to succeed in recovering more than this sum in order, sensibly, to be regarded as the 'winner'. It did not do so.
(4) Whilst Mr Cogley relies upon the fact it was DBS who first met the short constructional VBSC point with its large, and unmeritorious, counterclaim, this is of limited relevance where TCS responded by bringing its own, largely unmeritorious, claim;
(5) the majority of the costs, in terms of factual and witness evidence and time at trial, were undoubtedly taken up by questions of liability/causation in respect of R1 B&B. TCS failed on this completely. Its recovery in respect of R1-D was minimal and, as set out above, even though it succeeded in principle in relation to partial termination, its successful delay/termination claims remained insufficient to over-top the delay monies it accepted it owed DBS in respect of a prior period;
(6) enormous amounts of time and effort were expended on delay analysis, in respect of which TCS's approach led by two experts was rejected. It effectively relied, in closing, on a modified version of DBS's own analysis to establish such little success as it enjoyed.
(1) TCS won the VBSC issue, a discrete point accounting for less than 5% of the costs, and which drove its overall net success;
(2) Although its net success was (a) minimal and (b) unrelated to the issues on which over 95% of the costs were expended, it remains the case that DBS could have protected itself against a small liability by making a Part 36 Offer, which it did not do;
(3) In respect of the issues which drove 95% of the time and cost relating to this litigation:
(a) Neither side can sensibly be said to have 'won' delay. TCS's minimal recovery did not overtop the other delay compensation it accepted it owed. However, DBS's delay claims for liquidated and unliquidated damages also failed.
(b) DBS lost its counterclaim. I do not consider the somewhat ambitious approach to causation, in particular, nor the fact that as the litigation progressed defect claims were dropped as sufficient to warrant viewing DBS's conduct as 'out of the norm' in this respect for the purposes of indemnity costs. DBS's approach was no less ambitious than TCS's to entitlement to relief fordamages and/or loss and expense on the basis of its expert analysis and in the face of the terms of Clause 7 of the Agreement.
Interim Costs
Appeal
(1) Delay Payments Whether the provision of a Non-Conformance Report under Clause 6 of the Agreement was a condition precedent to the payment of Delay Payments by TCS.
(2) VBSC Year 5 Whether Clause 2.8.8 of the Agreement provided that the VBSC for Year 5 of the Agreement should be an agreed flat charge, as contended for by DBS, or a charge based on actual transaction volumes with no cap, as contended for by TCS.
Delay Payments
4.1: The absence of an explicit warning as to the consequence of non-compliance was taken into account, and is not determinative against construing the regime as one of condition precedent (see [74(4)]). There is express language of conditionality which sits at the heart of the proper construction;
4.2: Pointing to the absence of particular language in Clause 6.2 is irrelevant when the requisite, and express, cross reference and conditionality is in the last sentence of Clause 6.1. The clauses are obviously read together.
4.3 The suggestion that only the conditional 'if…then…' only applies to the first 'then' (the provision of the NCR) was considered expressly: see [91]. It makes no sense (either linguistically or commercially) to apply the conditional link between Clause 6.2 (the entitlement) and just the first part of Clause 6.1, effectively leapfrogging the second part of Clause 6.1 (the obligation).
4.4 The judgment expressly acknowledged that 'shall' was necessary, and not determinative (see [74(3)]). This is correct and the appropriate (i.e. not excessive) weight was placed on this word.
4.5 The word 'then' is, indeed, important, as it provides (particularly coupled with 'if') the requisite expression of conditionality when the words are read naturally. The addition of the word 'only' is not necessary to import that conditionality. DBS advanced, and advances, no sensible meaning to the use of the word 'then' in the last sentence of Clause 6.1.
4.6 The use of the word 'promptly' rather than a defined period of time was a factor specifically considered (at [74(7)] by way of principle and at [93] by way of application). Its use did not outweigh the expression of conditionality conveyed by the ordinary meaning of the rest of the clause.
4.7 Each of the remedies in Clause 6.2 provided entitlements to DBS to the potential detriment of TCS, following the preceding failure(s) by TCS referred to in Clause 6.1. The benefit of clarity as to the basis of failures relied as a condition of exercising those entitlements applies generally.
4.8 This elides two points. The judgment clearly factored in the linguistic asymmetry between Clause 6 and Clause 5 acknowledging it was a point in DBS's favour. The judgment then dealt with commercial/purposive symmetry which acted as a counterbalance (and it is noted that DBS does not deal with the substance of that commercial/purposive symmetry or suggest it was misplaced).
4.9-4.10 The usefulness of direct analogies to other authorities is by definition limited where each clause is specific to its wording. The authorities were principally traversed in order to distil the principles articulated at [74]. That analysis was plainly correct and properly applied.
VBSC
15.1 This ignores entirely reading the clause as a whole, and in particular Clause 2.3.3. It also requires TCS to do a potentially unlimited amount of work for a potentially capped costs. It is this which turns the previously applicable regime for years 1-4 on its head.
15.2 This essentially repeats in different ways the complaint at paragraph 15.1. It ignores the fact that there is, pursuant to the construction contended for, a benefit to both parties where there are higher than anticipated volumes: whilst this brings uncapped revenue to TCS, it of course also brings the equivalent revenue to DBS from which the sums owed to TCS are paid. On DBS's construction, higher than predicted volumes merely creates a windfall for DBS by way of revenue collected and no costs.
15.3 This focuses on the word 'minimum' which I have dealt with at [93] above.