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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Barrier Ltd v Redhall Marine Ltd [2016] EWHC 381 (QB) (30 March 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2016/381.html Cite as: [2016] EWHC 381 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
NEWCASTLE UPON TYNEDISTRICT REGISTRY
Oxford Row Leeds LS1 3BG |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
BARRIER LIMITED |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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REDHALL MARINE LIMITED |
Respondent |
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Hannah McCarthy (instructed by Hawkswell Kilvington) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 17 February 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
Judge Behrens:
1. Introduction
A. Deduction by Redhall of sums of between £88k and £130k due to Barrier on "the Workscope".
B. Deduction by Redhall of £240k on the Workscope.
C. Deduction of £60k from the Workscope, ostensibly in anticipation of an audit to be carried out by BAE for 2013-14.
D. Non-payment of 50% of the "Fixed Lump Sum". This relates to Boats 4 to 6 and quantum is undetermined.
2. Incorporation
The contract documentation.
The Purchase Order
"The terms overleaf must be read and strictly adhered to."
"18. Arbitration.
Any dispute or indifference (sic) arising from the Contract shall on application of either Seller or Purchaser be submitted to arbitration in accordance with the Arbitration Act 1950 or any amendment or re-enactment thereof for the time being in force."
The Main Contract
Clause 19.03 – "If within 30 days of either party giving the other notice of any matter or thing which constitutes a dispute, difference or question relating to the Contract, other than a matter or thing as to which the decision of any person or persons named in the Contract shall be final and conclusive and except to the extent to which special provision for arbitration is made elsewhere in the Contract, and the Shipbuilder and the Contractor have failed to reach agreement, then subject as expressly provided in this Contract such dispute, difference or question shall on either party serving a notice of arbitration on the other, be referred to the arbitration of two persons, one to be appointed by the Shipbuilder and one by the Contractor, or their Umpire, in accordance with the provisions of the Arbitration Act 1996."
Clause 19.05 – "If any dispute, difference or question raised under this contract raises issues which are substantially the same as or connected with the issues between the Shipbuilder and any Sub-contractor, sub-Sub-contractor and so on of the Contractor, then, at the option of the Shipbuilder such dispute shall also be referred to arbitration under this Contract …"
Clause 19.06 – "For the avoidance of doubt it is agreed between the parties that the arbitration process and anything said, done or produced in or in relation to the arbitration process (including any awards) shall be confidential as between the parties, except as may be lawfully required in judicial proceedings relating to the arbitration or otherwise. No report relating to anything said, done or produced in or in relation to the arbitration process may be made beyond the tribunal, the parties, their legal representatives and any person necessary to the conduct of the proceedings, without the concurrence of all parties to the arbitration."
Clause 20.14 – "The Contractor shall procure that all Sub-Contracts include a resolution of disputes provision and that any question, disputes or differences raised in connection therewith are settled in private."
The Subcontract
Clause 1 – "This Agreement relates to the three submarines covered by BAE Systems Marine Limited's Purchase Orders addressed to CIL and dated 14 December 2001 and numbered AC22T0589, AC23T0589 and AC24T0589 and the terms and conditions and the Schedules referred to therein, copies of which has been provided to Barrier and is hereafter referred to as "the Contract". Barrier participated with CIL in negotiating and agreeing the Contract terms."
Clause 9 – "The terms of the [Main] Contract shall be incorporated into this Agreement so as to bind Barrier to perform its terms save only where inconsistent with the express terms of this Agreement. For the avoidance of doubt and without limitation this shall include BAE SYSTEMS break clause (section 1, Contractors Clauses and Conditions Ref: V/SSC/1 (astute Class) Issue 10/99, Clause 12)."
Clause 10 – "Subject to paragraph 9 of this Agreement, CIL's standard terms and conditions, a copy of which was on the reverse of the CIL Purchase Order number 122274 dated 21 December 2001, shall be incorporated into this Agreement save only where inconsistent with its express terms, including, without limitation, the terms of the Contract incorporated by paragraph 9 above. For the avoidance of doubt, Purchase Order number 122274 dated 21 December 2001 is otherwise superseded by this Agreement."
1. As is clear from clause 1 it only expressly applies to 3 submarines. Furthermore Barrier had some specified part in the negotiations.
2. Clause 10 expressly incorporates CIL's standard terms and identifies them by reference to the Purchase Order. However it refers to it with a date and as being a "CIL" Purchase Order whereas, as noted above, the copy produced by Barrier is a CPSL purchase order without any terms on the reverse.
Submissions and Discussion
26. The Terms and Conditions were part of a standard form contract provided by CIL, which were communicated to the Applicant at the time of the contract. The Applicant did not need to have read the Terms and Conditions in order to be bound by them; the Courts have identified three circumstances regarding notice of such terms [Chitty, 32nd ed, at 13-013]:
"if the person receiving the document did not know that there was writing or printing on it, he is not bound;
If he knew that the writing or printing contained or referred to conditions, he is bound;
If the party tendering the document did what was reasonably sufficient to give the other party notice of the conditions, and if the other party knew that there was writing or printing on the document, but did not know it contained conditions, then the conditions will become the terms of the contract between them."
27. Further, "it is not necessary that the conditions themselves should be set out in the document tendered: they may be incorporated by reference, provided that reasonable notice of them has been given." [Chitty 32nd ed., at 13-014].
1. A and B make a contract in which they incorporate standard terms.
2. A and B make a contract incorporating terms previously agreed between A and B in another contract or contracts to which they were both parties
3. A and B make a contract incorporating terms agreed between A (or B) and C.
4. A and B make a contract incorporating terms agreed between C and D.
46. Where parties are in dispute as to what they have agreed the task of the Court is to determine from the communications that passed between them in the context in which those communications were made what reasonable persons in their position would regard them as having intended to agree. Where those parties agree the essential terms of a contract and also that their contract shall include the terms of a previous contract or contracts between them the Court may have to determine which provisions of which contract(s) they meant to incorporate. If the Court is able to decide what those provisions were, it should not, in my judgment, be astute to impose any special rules which limit the ability of the parties validly to agree what, on ordinary principles of construction, they would be taken to have agreed.
49. There is a particular need to be clear that the parties intended to incorporate the arbitration clause when the incorporation relied on is the incorporation of the terms of a contract made between different parties, even if one of them is a party to the contract in suit. In such a case it may not be evident that the parties intended not only to incorporate the substantive provisions of the other contract but also provisions as to the resolution of disputes between different parties, particularly if a degree of verbal manipulation is needed for the incorporated arbitration clause to work. These considerations do not, however, apply to a single contract case
Mr MacDonald Eggers relied on Habas Sinai Ve Tibbi Gazlar Isthisal Endustri AA v Sometal SAL [2010] EWHC 29 (Comm), to show that a more restrictive approach to incorporation is adopted where the issue is whether the parties have incorporated the terms of a contract between two other parties than where the issue is whether they have incorporated the terms of a previous contract between them. In that case Christopher Clarke J stated (at [34]) that in the former situation "clear words" are needed because arbitration clauses are not "germane or directly relevant to" the main subject of the contract, are "ancillary provisions", and "oust the jurisdiction of the courts". See also the reference to the need for "specific words of incorporation" in Aikens, Lord and Bools, Bills of Lading (2006), 7.99(5). I consider that these requirements are satisfied in this case. I have referred to the reference in the Notices of Readiness to the "the terms and conditions of" the recap email "dated 17 October 2005". Those terms and conditions included an explicit reference to clause 43 of the Shellvoy 5 charter-party form containing the arbitration clause and the notation "OK"
Boats 4 – 6
RNL and Barrier agreed the following:
All works completed under Sis for Boats` 4 and 5 do fall under the contract in accordance with Addendum 4 (attached for information)
RNL and Barrier agreed the following:
Neither RNL nor Barrier are contracted to complete the full scope of supply for Boats 4 and 5.
This position supersedes all comments/actions stated in any correspondences referred above.
1. He was instructed to carry out work on Boat 4 in 2007 with reference to Addendum 4. He was handed a copy of Addendum 4.
2. He suggests that there was a variation of the payment structure in 2007 but there were no other significant amendments to the subcontract.
3. He was later instructed orally to carry out on Boats 5 and 6. There was no suggestion that this work was to be carried out on different terms and he suggests that the terms were the same as for Boats 1 to 3.
Discussion
5 Agreements to be in writing
(1) The provisions of this Part apply only where the arbitration agreement is in writing, and any other agreement between the parties as to any matter is effective for the purposes of this Part only if in writing.
The expressions "agreement", "agree" and "agreed" shall be construed accordingly.
(2) There is an agreement in writing--
(a) if the agreement is made in writing (whether or not it is signed by the parties),
(b) if the agreement is made by exchange of communications in writing, or
(c) if the agreement is evidenced in writing.
(3) Where parties agree otherwise than in writing by reference to terms which are in writing, they make an agreement in writing.
(4) An agreement is evidenced in writing if an agreement made otherwise than in writing is recorded by one of the parties, or by a third party, with the authority of the parties to the agreement.
(5) An exchange of written submissions in arbitral or legal proceedings in which the existence of an agreement otherwise than in writing is alleged by one party against another party and not denied by the other party in his response constitutes as between those parties an agreement in writing to the effect alleged.
3. Conclusion