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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> M T Hψjgaard A/S v E.On Climate And Renewables UK Robin Rigg East Ltd & Anor [2014] EWCA Civ 710 (22 May 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2014/710.html Cite as: [2014] EWCA Civ 710 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
TECHNOLOGY & CONSTRUCTION COURT
MR JUSTICE STUART-SMITH
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE PATTEN
and
LORD JUSTICE CHRISTOPHER CLARKE
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M T Hψjgaard A/S |
Claimant/ Respondent |
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- and - |
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E.ON Climate and Renewables UK Robin Rigg East Ltd E.ON Climate and Renewables UK Robin Rigg West Ltd |
Defendants/ Appellants |
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Stephen Dennison QC and Mark Chennells (instructed by Fenwick Elliott LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 6th March 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE CHRISTOPHER CLARKE:
The dispute
"i) MTH says that what should be omitted is the component of the original Contract Price included for the provision of the LISA (making due allowance for the fact that she carried out 2 of the 62 foundations); but
ii) E.ON contends that the deduction should be the product of applying a rate (or alternatively a cost) to the amount of time it alleges that the LISA would have taken to carry out the contract works if it had in fact done so.
5 E.ON says that, because the LISA had proved inadequate, MTH would have taken a very long time to install all the foundations using her. Consequently, applying either a rate or a cost to the time that MTH would have taken if it had completed the contract using the LISA has the result that the sums for which E.ON contends as appropriate deductions are greatly in excess of the sums for which MTH contends. MTH submits that the appropriate deduction (net of additions referable to working with the Resolution) is just shy of 12,900,000, whereas E.ON submits that it is either just under 57,250,000 (its primary case) or just under 34,650,000 (its secondary case)."
The Contract
Part L of the Contract
"Part L of the Contract was entitled "Schedule of Prices, Payment Profile & Draft Programme":
a) Schedule L1.1 was a segregation (or breakdown) of the Contract Price of 101,454,052. It showed, at a high level, what sums were attributed to specified elements of the Works. In particular:
i) Manufacture of the foundations totalled just over 60 million[1];
ii) Transportation of the foundations totalled just under 3.6 million;
iii) Installation of the foundations totalled 22.1 million;
iv) The Wait on Weather Allowance[2] was 3.58 million.
b) Schedule L1.2 provided prices for alternatives and extras;
c) Schedule L1.3 (which was expressly referred to in Clause 31.3) provided a Schedule of Rates "which will be used for the evaluation of Variation Orders". The rates for the provision of manpower were to be fully inclusive of all costs and charges including site and establishment overheads. Materials, plant and sub-contract work mark-ups were stated generally to be on a cost-plus basis but certain categories of plant (including the day rate for foundation installation vessel spread) were separately specified;
d) The draft programme provided for the LISA and its vessel spread to be mobilised to site by 16 June 2007 and included a period of 142.2 days thereafter for the installation of the foundations. Of this:
i) 127.2 days related to the installation of the 60 WTG foundations; and
ii) 15 days related to the installation of the met mast (which was subsequently omitted) and the two substation foundations.
iii) Part E of the Contract provided (at E1.8) that the 142 day foundation installation programme comprised 104 days of installation and 38 days of anticipated Waiting on Weather."
The course of the Contract
Variation Request No 5
Variation Order 5
"The Employer has secured the services of the MPI Resolution . This Variation Order formalises the Employer making available the MPI Resolution, and certain project equipment and services, to the Contractor for use to install to install (sic) foundations at the Robin Rigg site, in order to mitigate delays to the Works. The agreed deployment of the MPI Resolution partly replaces some of the working time for vessel LISA A from the scope of the Agreement.
Contractual arrangements shall be as follows:
- E.ON contracts directly with MPI for the vessel operational with the personnel and equipment detailed as Employer or MPI responsibility in [an attached document].
- MTH provide supervision on Resolution
- MTH manage/coordinate the overall foundation installation operation by LISA, Resolution and any other vessels."
2008
Variation Order 9
"The Employer has secured the services of the MPI Resolution. This Variation Order formalises the agreed provision by the Employer of the MPI Resolution, and certain project equipment and services, to the Contractor for use to install wind turbine generator foundations at the Robin Rigg site, in order to mitigate delays to the Works. The agreed deployment of the MPI Resolution reduces the work that will be undertaken by the vessel LISA A.
Contractual arrangements shall be as follows:
- MTH retain overall contractual responsibility for design, supply, transportation, storage, handling, and installation of foundations in accordance with the Agreement.
- E.ON contracts direct with MPI for the vessel operational with the personnel and equipment detailed as Employer or MPI responsibility [in an attached document]
- MTH manage/coordinate the overall foundation installation operation by LISA, Resolution and any other vessels"
Variation Order No 10
Variations
"31.3 DISAGREEMENT ON ADJUSTMENT OF THE CONTRACT PRICE
If the Contractor and the Employer are unable to agree on the adjustment of the Contract Price, the adjustment shall be determined in accordance with the rates specified in Part L, Schedule L1.3 Schedule of Rates.
If the rates contained in the Schedule of Rates (Schedule L1.3) are not directly applicable to the specific work in question, suitable rates shall be established by the Engineer reflecting the level of pricing in the Schedule of Rates (Schedule L1.3).
Where rates are not contained in the said Schedule, the amount shall be such as is in all the circumstances reasonable. Due account shall be taken of any over- or under-recovery of overheads by the Contractor in consequence of the Variation."
The judge's approach
"In valuing VOs 5, 9 and 10, the varied work should properly be characterised as a Variation (by omission and/or addition) of part of the Works, within the meaning of the first sentence of Clause 31.1.of the Contract".
The rival contentions
The interpretation of Clause 31
The judgment
E.ON's alternative approach
"E.ON seeks to meet this objection by basing its calculations on MTH's projections of time the LISA would have taken per foundation and extrapolating it forwards. However, as the factual summary set out above shows, MTH's estimates of time that it would take were constantly shifting, and there is no reason to suppose that the estimate of 3.83 days per foundation given on 22 June 2008 was more reliable than the estimate of 3.97 days per foundation given on 22 May 2008, or vice versa. To the contrary, on 11 July 2008 the Claimant noted that the average cycle time for the LISA was likely to increase to in excess of six days. When asked why E.ON had not based its calculations on that estimate, the only reply given was that perhaps E.ON had been too generous, which is neither compelling nor convincing."
Discussion
E.ON's submissions
Conclusions
LORD JUSTICE PATTEN
LORD JUSTICE LONGMORE
a) a change in the method of working; or
b) the omission and addition of work; or
c) in some other way?
Answer: In valuing VOs 5.9 and 10, the varied work should properly be characterised as a Variation (by omission and/or addition) of part of the Works within the meaning of the first sentence of Clause 31.1 of the Contract.
Answer: No
Limb 2
a) ascertain the component of the original Contract Price that relates or must be taken to relate to the provision of the LISA; and
b) ensure that it (or the rates upon which it is based) reflect the level of pricing in the Schedule of Rates and, if so,
c) deduct it from the Contract Price?
Answer: Yes
a) the time it would in fact have taken to perform the Works if the LISA had been deployed?
b) the time that it did in fact take to perform the Works with the Resolution?
c) the fact that had the LISA been used, the allowance in the Contract Price would have been exceeded?
d) the precise attendant equipment and labour that the Claimant provided whilst working with the Resolution?
e) the marginal cost increase or decrease to the Claimant resulting from the instruction(s)?
Answer: No, save that in assessing the addition to the Contract Price referable to the use of the Resolution, the precise attendant equipment that MTH provided while working with the Resolution falls to be taken into account by the Engineer
Answer: Issues 5, 6 and 7 do not arise in the light of the answer to issue 4
a) the superior performance of the Resolution;
b) the impact of the operating difficulties experienced by the LISA in performing the works that had actually been carried out;
c) the impact that the weather would have had on the operation of the LISA.
Limb 3
Answer: Yes
a) the time it would in fact have taken to perform the Works if the LISA had been deployed?
b) the time that it did in fact take to perform the Works with the Resolution;
c) the fact that had the LISA been used, the allowance in the Contract Price would have been exceeded;
d) the reasons why the Defendants decided to instruct the use of the Resolution in place of the LISA;
e) whether the LISA was capable of performing all the Works in any event;
f) the precise attendant equipment and labour that the Claimant provided whilst working with the Resolution;
g) the marginal cost increase or decrease to the Claimant resulting from the instruction(s).
Answer No, save that in assessing the addition to the Contract Price referable to the use of the Resolution, the precise attendant equipment that MTH provided while working with the Resolution falls to be taken into account by the Engineer
Answer: Issues 10, 11 and 12 do not rise in the light of the answers to Issue 9.
a) the superior performance of the Resolution;
b) the impact of the operating difficulties experienced by the LISA in performing the works that had actually been carried out;
c) the impact that the weather would have had on the operation of the LISA.
Note 1 Made up of 23.964 million for manufacture of the monopiles and 36.043 million for the transition pieces which together made up the foundation. [Back] Note 2 Meaning payment for those days on which sea conditions rendered impossible the safe execution of parts of the Works. [Back]