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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Supreme Court >> RTS Flexible Systems Ltd v Molkerei Alois Muller Gmbh & Company KG (UK Production) [2010] UKSC 14 (10 March 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSC/2010/14.html Cite as: [2010] 1 WLR 753, [2010] CILL 2868, [2010] 1 CLC 388, (2010) 129 Con LR 1, [2010] WLR 753, [2010] Bus LR 776, 129 Con LR 1, [2010] UKSC 14, [2010] 3 All ER 1, [2010] 2 All ER (Comm) 97, [2010] BLR 337 |
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Hilary Term
[2010] UKSC 14
On appeal from: [2009] EWCA Civ 26
JUDGMENT
RTS Flexible Systems Limited (Respondents) v Molkerei Alois Müller Gmbh & Company KG (UK Production) (Appellants)
before
Lord Phillips, President
Lord Mance
Lord Collins
Lord Kerr
Lord Clarke
JUDGMENT GIVEN ON
10 March 2010
Heard on 2 and 3 December 2009
Appellant Kenneth MacLean QC Michael Fealy (Instructed by Pinsent Masons LLP) |
Respondent Stuart Catchpole QC Charles Manzoni QC (Instructed by Addleshaw Goddard LLP) |
See original JUDGMENT ON FORM OF ORDER AND COSTS
LORD CLARKE (delivering the judgment of the court)
Introduction
The relevant facts
"Project: Build, delivery, complete installation and commissioning by RTS … of the Automated Pot Mixing Lines 1 & 2 and the De-Palletising Cell ('the Equipment') for the Repack line ('Repack Line') within the Repack facility in Market Drayton of … Müller …
Thank you for your mail dated 16 February 2005 setting out your offer (number FS04014 – Issue J) to supply the Equipment to Müller ("the Offer").
Please accept this letter of intent as confirmation of our wish to proceed with the Project as set out in the Offer subject to the following terms:-
(i) The agreed price for the engineering, build, delivery, installation and commissioning as set out in the Offer is GBP 1,682,000 …
(ii) RTS is now to commence all work required in order to meet Müller's deadlines set out in the Offer to allow commencement of full production by Müller on the Repack Lines by 30 September 2005. Delivery of line also to be in accordance with the timetable set out in the Offer.
(iii) That the full contractual terms will be based on Müller's amended form of MF/1 contract and the full terms and the relevant technical specifications will be finalised, agreed and then signed within 4 weeks of the date of this letter. Prior to agreement on the full contractual terms, only Müller shall have the right to terminate this supply project and contract. However, should Müller terminate, Müller undertakes to reimburse RTS for the reasonable demonstrable out of pocket expenses incurred by RTS up to the date of termination. Müller will not be liable for any loss of profits (whether direct or indirect), loss of contracts, loss of anticipated savings, data, goodwill and revenue or any other indirect or consequential loss arising from such termination. No further legal rights or remedies shall be available to RTS upon such termination.
Please confirm your acceptance of the above by signing below where indicated.
This letter of intent shall be governed by English law and subject to the exclusive jurisdiction of English courts."
It is important to note that the Letter of Intent provided for the whole agreed contract price and was not limited to the price of the works to be carried out during the currency of the LOI Contract. It is also of interest and, we think, of some importance that it was contemplated from the outset that the full contract terms were to be based on Müller's MF/1 terms.
"a) The agreed price for the engineering, build, delivery, installation and commissioning of the work set out in the Quotation was to be £1,682,000;
b) RTS was bound to embark on such work as was necessary to ensure the provision of the equipment to be supplied by it in accordance with the provisions of sections 4 - 8 of Quotation J and the timetable set out in Appendix 7 thereof. Commissioning was to be completed by 30 September 2005 and the equipment was to be ready for production (but not full production) and Site Acceptance Testing as shown in that Appendix at that date;
c) Müller and RTS were to have a period of four weeks from 21 February 2005 to finalise, agree and sign a contract based on Müller's amended MF/1 form of contract. Following the expiry of that period the contract would terminate;
d) Prior to agreement of the full contractual terms and conditions based on Müller's amended MF/1 contract, only Müller had the right to terminate the supply project;
e) If Müller did so terminate or the term of the contract expired, it would reimburse RTS for the reasonable, demonstrable out of pocket expenses incurred by RTS up to the date of termination, including the cost of engineering time, cancellation costs of subcontract commitments, and any out of pocket expenses, but without profit;
f) RTS would have no further legal right or remedy on termination and Müller would not be liable for any loss of profit (whether direct or indirect), loss of anticipated savings, data, goodwill and revenue or any other indirect or consequential loss arising from termination;
g) There were no exclusions or limitations of liability in the contract."
"The absence of agreed full contractual terms would be of limited significance over a four week period; but more significant, if it could continue until the end of the project. The parties did not, in my judgment, contemplate that, in the absence of finalisation and signature within the specified timescale (or any agreed extension), RTS would be bound to continue with a project for which the applicable terms had not been agreed. Consistent with that the Letter of Intent says nothing about when any part of the price would be payable and gives Müller a right to cancel upon payment only of expenses and cancellation costs - a right that is entirely reasonable during a four week period but inappropriate for a contract for the entire project. The payment schedule in the Quotation does specify a series of percentage payments, but the first of those is the 30% of TCV payable on receipt of order and the Letter of Intent is not an order."
"48. COUNTERPARTS
48.1 This Contract may be executed in any number of counterparts provided that it shall not become effective until each party has executed a counterpart and exchanged it with the other."
"Given that the contract is now almost agreed we hereby confirm that the expiry date for the current letter of intent can be extended until 27 May 2005, or, if sooner, the date the contract is actually signed …"
As stated above, the judge held, in the light of the exchanges between the parties, that they agreed that the LOI Contract would expire on 27 May.
"Schedule 1: General Conditions extending to 48 paragraphs.
Schedule 3: A page headed "Functional Design Specification". This is a document which states the intended functionality of the RTS equipment. It is usually derived from the User Requirement Specification: see below.
Schedule 4: A page headed "User Requirement Specification". This is usually compiled by the client but, on this occasion, was lifted from RTS' Quotation K at Müller's request.
Schedule 5: A three page schedule, drafted by Müller, divided into Part 1 "Tests on Completion" and Part 2 "RTS Tests".
Schedule 6: A two page schedule, drafted by Müller, headed Performance Tests". The last paragraph of this read as follows:
"THIS SCHEDULE NEEDS TO PROVIDE THAT IF THE TEST WITHIN A CERTAIN PERCENTAGE OF THE REQUIRED LEVEL LDs WILL APPLY AND THE EQUIPMENT WILL STILL HAVE "PASSED". IF THE PERCENTAGE ACHIEVED IS LOWER THAN THAT SPECIFIED BY LDs (I.E. LOWER THAN THE MAXIMUM PAYOUT UNDER LDS) THE EQUIPMENT WILL HAVE FAILED THE TEST AND THE OTHER REMEDIES WILL BE AVAILABLE TO THE PURCHASER"
Schedule 7: An Advance Payment Guarantee to be given by RTS' parent.
Schedule 8: A defects liability demand guarantee also to be given by RTS' parent.
Schedule 9: This made provision for the supply of a list of stock items and wear and non-wear parts.
Schedule 10: A description of what the programme needed to include.
Schedule 11: An empty table of Key Performance Indicators, Performance required and Liquidated Damages.
Schedule 12: A page headed "Certificates of Payment" together with a form of Delivery Certificate, Completion Certificate and Final Certificate of Payment.
Schedule 13: A list of the operating manuals and other drawings and maintenance schedules required.
Schedule 14: A Schedule dealing with Training Requirements.
Schedule 15: A Schedule headed "Health and Safety Requirements" but otherwise blank.
Schedule 16: A Schedule headed "Free Issue Equipment" but otherwise blank.
Schedule 17: A Schedule headed "Site Preparations" but otherwise blank."
SCH. | Understood status | My Comment |
1 | Not referred to in the e-mail. | No need. Schedule 1 consisted of the General Conditions. |
2 |
Assumed not required as the payment schedule is included in the body of the contract. | This schedule is described in the Contract as setting out the price; but that is in the General Conditions in Schedule 1 anyway. |
3 | FDS - currently being reissued. Brown suggested it should be referred to rather than incorporated. |
The FDS was later agreed: see the RTS e-mail of 29 June and para 52. |
4 | URS. Agreed that section 4 of the Quotation would form the URS, which was attached. | The URS had the appendices referred to at para 26. |
5 | Agreed that RTS Test Plan would form this Schedule. With Müller for approval. | The RTS Test Plan was later agreed: see the RTS e-mail of 29 June: para 52 |
6 | RTS Test Plan | RTS REGARDED ITS TEST PLAN AS COVERING THE GROUND OF SCHEDULES 5 AND 6 AND MÜLLER WAS HAPPY WITH THAT PROVIDED THAT IT DID SO. BUT THE ONLY VERSION OF SCHEDULE 6 CONTAINED MÜLLER'S WORDING. |
7 | Advance Payment guarantee already agreed. | The guarantee had been attached to the e-mail of 16 May. |
8 | Defect Liability guarantee - RTS' parent company to approve. | A draft had been attached to the 16 May e-mail. The parent company never approved it. |
9 | To be completed during the project. | Part 1 related to stock items. It was never completed. Part 2 contains provisions for the durability of Wear Parts, which is capable of standing on its own. |
10 | Approved programme attached | The attachment was either as in Quotation I or Quotation J. This programme was overtaken by the overall project plan and Installation at Müller plan referred to in para 52 below. |
11 | KPIs agreed: attached. | These included details of the Performance Required and Liquidated Damages |
12 | Müller to complete. | This related to Certificates of Payment. Never completed. |
13 | To be completed during the project. | This related to operating manuals. Never completed, It would not have been possible to provide them at the time. |
14 | To be completed during the project. | This related to Training Requirements. Never completed |
15 | Müller to provide details. | This related to Health and Safety Requirements. Never completed |
16 | As per attached document. | The attached document contained the Assumptions for Free Issue Equipment for the Project |
17 | Müller to provide site preparation details. | This does not seem to have been provided, but the site was prepared. |
The references to para numbers in the Comment boxes are references to para numbers in the judge's judgment. For simplicity we have omitted two footnotes.
"59. On 25 August 2005 there was a meeting to discuss the problem, at which, as is common ground, there was an agreed variation of the delivery plan.
60. It was agreed that there would be no CFAT at RTS' premises and that Line 1 would be installed first so that production could begin on this Line as soon as it could be made operational once delivered. At the meeting Mr Brown gave Müller certain warnings to which I shall refer hereafter.
61. Most of the RTS components for Line 1 were delivered to Müller on or about 5 September 2005. The RTS components for Line 2 were delivered on or about 2 December. Line 1 was run on automatic, for the first time, on 1 October. The 150,000 packs were produced, although much of the production was the result of manual operation without the robots. SAT testing has never taken place. One of the matters in dispute is as to whether it should have done."
The parties' cases before the judge
"a) the Letter of Intent which referred to the full terms and the relevant technical specifications being finalised, agreed and then signed within 4 weeks of the date of that letter;
b) Mr Morris' e-mail of 13 May, which referred to the Letter of Intent lasting until 27 May or, if sooner, the date the contract is "actually signed";"
and was consistent with
"c) the evidence of Mr Brown of RTS, in para 46 of his witness statement, referring to his e-mail of 26 May 2005 that:
"My view was that whilst we had agreed the wording in principal (sic), until the whole contract including the schedules had been compiled as a complete document and signed as accepted by RTS then it wasn't enforceable. Whether this is right or not I don't now know, but it was what I thought then. Therefore, to my mind, the milestone event at which the terms and conditions of the anticipated contract were agreed and in force was when RTS signed the document."
The conclusion and reasoning of the judge
i) Müller's Letter of Intent and its e-mail of 13 May 2005 indicated that the final terms were not to be contractually agreed until signature.
ii) The contract sent with the e-mail of 16 May was designed to operate as a composite whole, consisting of (a) the basic two page, seven clause contract, and (b) the 17 schedules that are annexed to it and referred to in the general conditions which constitute Schedule 1. Although many of these Schedules were agreed several were not. In particular it was not agreed what Schedule 6 would contain. The words in capitals represented a proposed, but never agreed, refinement to give Müller some ampler remedy than liquidated damages if the performance of the equipment was lower than that degree of non performance which would give rise to the maximum liquidated damages.
iii) The parties did not proceed on the basis of the conditions. RTS did not procure the provision of the Advance Payment Guarantee (Schedule 7), which, under the conditions, was required to be procured prior to the advance payment being made. Schedules 15 and 17, which address matters relevant from the start of the contract, were not completed. Müller did not appoint an Engineer. Payment was not made in accordance with the application and certification procedure laid down in clause 11 and the procedure for Changes to the Contract laid down by clause 39 was not followed. The dispute procedure required by clause 41 was not followed.
iv) Clause 48 of the general conditions was not satisfied because the contract was not executed, nor were any counterparts exchanged.
The parties' cases in the Court of Appeal
"53. The force of this argument was clearly not lost on Müller. The major part of their skeleton in the Court of Appeal was aimed at arguing that RTS should not be entitled to argue the point in the Court of Appeal having regard to the stance they had taken before the judge. The answer to the point on its merit was put shortly as follows and in much the same way as the argument had been put before the judge:-
'79. On its proper construction, clause 48 of the amended form MF1 prevented a contract on those terms taking effect without signature by the parties and RTS plc. It does not follow that in the absence of a signed agreement there could not be a binding contract between the parties on some other terms as a result of their conduct.'"
Conclusion and reasoning of the Court of Appeal
"He relied on condition 48 as preventing a contract coming into being on the MF/1 conditions [see para 76]. This, I understand, to be the point taken by [Müller] at paragraph 79 of their skeleton quoted above. But once it is appreciated that the definition of contract in condition 48 covers not just those conditions but the contract including the schedules, condition 48 seems to me to become a complete answer."
We put 'Müller' in square brackets because the copy of the judgment we have refers to RTS. However that is a typographical error because the reference is in fact to Müller's skeleton, as Waller LJ's para 61 states. His reference to 'the definition of contract' is a reference to clause 49, which defined 'Contract' as meaning 'this Contract signed by the parties and the Schedules'.
"It would, as it seems to me, from the way negotiations had gone as between the parties, and once the true construction of condition 48 has been appreciated, have needed a clear express variation of condition 48 for a court to be able to reach the conclusion which the judge reached, i.e. that all of MF/1 had been put on one side by the parties and the Schedules (and only in so far as they have been agreed) applied. With condition 48 properly understood and in the context of the importance the parties actually considered the negotiations of MF/1 to have, in my view, the above conclusion is simply not open to the court, and I reject Mr Maclean's submissions as encapsulated in paragraph 79 of his written submissions."
Discussion
The principles
"(1) In order to determine whether a contract has been concluded in the course of correspondence, one must first look to the correspondence as a whole...
(2) Even if the parties have reached agreement on all the terms of the proposed contract, nevertheless they may intend that the contract shall not become binding until some further condition has been fulfilled. That is the ordinary 'subject to contract' case.
(3) Alternatively, they may intend that the contract shall not become binding until some further term or terms have been agreed...
(4) Conversely, the parties may intend to be bound forthwith even though there are further terms still to be agreed or some further formality to be fulfilled...
(5) If the parties fail to reach agreement on such further terms, the existing contract is not invalidated unless the failure to reach agreement on such further terms renders the contract as a whole unworkable or void for uncertainty
(6) It is sometimes said that the parties must agree on the essential terms and it is only matters of detail which can be left over. This may be misleading, since the word 'essential' in that context is ambiguous. If by 'essential' one means a term without which the contract cannot be enforced then the statement is true: the law cannot enforce an incomplete contract. If by 'essential' one means a term which the parties have agreed to be essential for the formation of a binding contract, then the statement is tautologous. If by 'essential' one means only a term which the Court regards as important as opposed to a term which the Court regards as less important or a matter of detail, the statement is untrue. It is for the parties to decide whether they wish to be bound and if so, by what terms, whether important or unimportant. It is the parties who are, in the memorable phrase coined by the Judge [at page 611] 'the masters of their contractual fate'. Of course the more important the term is the less likely it is that the parties will have left it for future decision. But there is no legal obstacle which stands in the way of the parties agreeing to be bound now while deferring important matters to be agreed later. It happens every day when parties enter into so-called 'heads of agreement'.
The same principles apply where, as here, one is considering whether a contract was concluded in correspondence as well as by oral communications and conduct.
"The real difficulty is to be found in the factual matrix of the transaction, and in particular the fact that the work was being done pending a formal sub-contract the terms of which were still in a state of negotiation. It is, of course, a notorious fact that, when a contract is made for the supply of goods on a scale and in circumstances such as the present, it will in all probability be subject to standard terms, usually the standard terms of the supplier. Such standard terms will frequently legislate, not only for the liability of the seller for defects, but also for the damages (if any) for which the seller will be liable in the event not only of defects in the goods but also of late delivery. It is a commonplace that a seller of goods may exclude liability for consequential loss, and may agree liquidated damages for delay. In the present case, an unresolved dispute broke out between the parties on the question whether CBE's or BSC's standard terms were to apply, the former providing no limit to the seller's liability for delay and the latter excluding such liability altogether. Accordingly, when, in a case such as the present, the parties are still in a state of negotiation, it is impossible to predicate what liability (if any) will be assumed by the seller for, eg defective goods or late delivery, if a formal contract should be entered into. In these circumstances, if the buyer asks the seller to commence work 'pending' the parties entering into a formal contract, it is difficult to infer from the [seller] acting on that request that he is assuming any responsibility for his performance, except such responsibility as will rest on him under the terms of the contract which both parties confidently anticipate they will shortly enter into. It would be an extraordinary result if, by acting on such a request in such circumstances, the [seller] were to assume an unlimited liability for his contractual performance, when he would never assume such liability under any contract which he entered into."
(Waller LJ rightly put 'seller' in parenthesis since, although the report reads 'buyer', Robert Goff J must have meant 'seller'.)
Application of the principles to the facts
(1) No contract
(2) Contract on the terms found by the judge
"clear express variation of condition 48 for a court to be able to reach the conclusion which the judge reached, i.e. that all of MF/1 had been put on one side by the parties and the Schedules (and only in so far as they have been agreed) applied." (para 61)
We can well understand that, given the Court of Appeal's conclusion that, for the reasons discussed above, there could have been no contract on the terms found by the judge if clause 48 (or the 'subject to contract' understanding embodied in it) remained, the court would have no alternative but to hold that there was no contract. That is not, however, so if the parties have by their exchanges and conduct waived the 'subject to contract' condition or understanding.
(3) Contract on terms wider than found by the judge
All essential terms agreed?
"Percentage of Contract Price to be paid to the Purchaser or deducted from the Contract Price [words deleted] [to be calculated in accordance with Schedule 6].
Maximum percentage of Contract Price for which liquidated damages payments paid under clause 27.7.2 is 2.5%.
"27.7 If the Works fail to pass the Performance Tests [words deleted] as determined by the provisions of Schedule 6 above then the following remedies will be available to the Purchaser:-
27.7.1 the Contractor shall (without prejudice to the Purchaser's other rights and remedies) pay to the Purchaser [words deleted] the sum set out in clause 5 [words deleted] within 14 days of receipt of an invoice from the Purchaser such sum being agreed between the parties as being a genuine pre-estimate of losses suffered by the Purchaser as a result of the Equipment not meeting the requisite standards;
27.7.2 where the Purchaser has not become entitled to liquidated damages due to the Performance Tests not being successfully passed and the Equipment not meeting the requisite standards to entitle the Purchaser to claim the maximum liquidated damages pursuant to clause 27.7.1 as set out in clause 5 above the Purchaser may give written notice to terminate the Contract immediately such failure shall be deemed a material breach incapable of remedy and pursuant to clause 34.1.2 and without prejudice to its other rights and remedies in the Contract the Purchaser may by written notice terminate the Contract immediately and take at the expense of the Contractor such steps as may in all circumstances be reasonable to ensure that the Works pass the Performance Tests."
The words deleted show that in the original draft clause 27.7.1 was concerned with delay. The words in italics are in blue and were first added by Müller in Mr Morris's email of 11 May.
"THIS SCHEDULE NEEDS TO PROVIDE THAT IF THE TEST WITHIN A CERTAIN PERCENTAGE OF THE REQUIRED LEVEL LDs WILL APPLY AND THE EQUIPMENT WILL STILL HAVE "PASSED". IF THE PERCENTAGE ACHIEVED IS LOWER THAN THAT SPECIFIED BY LDs (I.E. LOWER THAN THE MAXIMUM PAYOUT UNDER LDS) THE EQUIPMENT WILL HAVE FAILED THE TEST AND THE OTHER REMEDIES WILL BE AVAILABLE TO THE PURCHASER"
Clause 48 and subject to contract
CONCLUSION