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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 >> London Underground Ltd. v Pillar Broadway Ltd. [2003] EWHC 28 (TCC) (23 January 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2003/28.html Cite as: [2003] EWHC 28 (TCC), 87 Con LR 205 |
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QUEENS BENCH DIVISION
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
133-137, Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1HD | ||
B e f o r e :
____________________
LONDON UNDERGROUND LIMITED | Claimant | |
- and - | ||
PILLAR BROADWAY LIMITED | Defendant |
____________________
Vivian Ramsey Q.C. and Sean Brannigan (instructed by Gouldens for the Defendant)
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
H.H. Judge Richard Seymour Q. C. :
Introduction
The Development Agreement
"19.1 The Developer [that is, Pillar] shall pay to LUL in accordance with this clause all proper fees costs charges and expenses or other sums properly incurred by LUL or any party responsible from time to time for the management of the Railway or the maintenance or inspection thereof in connection with or as a consequence of this Agreement whether incurred before or after the date of this Agreement as certified by LUL and including (without prejudice to the generality of the foregoing and whether or not LUL shall retain such sums itself or discharge the accounts of third parties):-
19.1.1 proper legal costs and surveyors' fees together with any disbursements in respect of the implementation of this Agreement the grant of the Lease and the negotiations and completion of all documents contemplated by this Agreement;
19.1.2 proper costs incurred (having regard to LUL's responsibilities as a transport authority) by LUL in the design and checking of designs the approval of plans and the inspection of the Works;
19.1.3 the proper costs incurred by LUL in respect of the services of LUL's project manager and for the services of its officers and employees in relation to the provisions of this Agreement and its implementation;
19.1.4 all proper sums paid by LUL to such consultant surveyors quantity surveyors and/or project managers as LUL may reasonably require in connection with the monitoring of the Development and advice in relation thereto;
19.1.5 all proper fees and charges paid by LUL to any public authority or to any statutory undertaker in connection with the carrying out or execution of the Works;
19.1.6 all proper costs properly incurred in relation to the implementation of the LUL Works Conditions and for the occupation of the line during the railway non traffic hours and for the supervision by employees and/or contractors (as the case may be) of work carried out either on or adjacent to the railway;
19.1.7 all proper costs incurred in making any alterations or additions whether temporary or permanent to the railway signals electrical equipment and other appliances and in the provision alteration or removal of lighting power or other services to the railway station and in the support of or protection to the railway;
19.1.8 all proper costs incurred in connection with the provision of signs advisory notices and information to the public in relation to the details and progress of the Development;
19.1.9 all other proper costs properly incurred by LUL in connection with the Development.
save that the Developer shall not be liable to repay LUL the purchase price paid by LUL in relation to the purchase of the Property pursuant to the Sale and Purchase Agreement.
19.2 ….
19.3 LUL shall issue to the Developer not more frequently than once in every period of four weeks an invoice in respect of such costs and other monies payable pursuant to this clause together with a breakdown of such costs and other monies and copies of invoices rendered to LUL and the Developer shall within ten working days of receipt of any such invoice pay to LUL a sum equal to the amount shown on any such invoice. "
The Invoice
"LUL & LT Property costs as per attached documentation for period to 14/06/2002."
The figure which appeared beside that description was £2,718,751.91, to which was to be added Value Added Tax of £475,781.58. However, the Invoice then indicated that credit was to be given against those figures for sums of £2,284,498.42 and Value Added Tax of £399,787.22 in respect of sums previously invoiced. Thus the total sum claimed in the Invoice was £434,253.49, together with Value Added Tax of £75,994.36, making the total of £510,247.85. It was common ground at the hearing before me that the Invoice was payable, if at all, by Pillar rather than by Pillar Property Plc.
"I enclose L T Property's invoice No 374707 in respect of our costs and those of London Underground Limited. It is accompanied by supporting documentation for your approval.
I have sent copies to Sam Walsh."
Mr. Walsh is a partner in the firm of E. C. Harris, construction consultants, and had been engaged to advise Pillar in relation to the costs claimed by LUL under clause 19 of the Development Agreement.
"LT PROPERTY SALARIES 21,190.00
EXTERNAL PROJECT MAN. 27,955.00
QUANTITY SURV/EXT VALUER 2,000.00
EXTERNAL SOLICITORS 29,105.00
COMPENSATION -4,500.00
PFI CONTRACTORS 662,473.63
LUL GENERAL
Internal Contrs 17,218.00
SSL Stations 18,103.68
Eng Services 43,686.00
ADJUSTMENTS -382,978.72"
"FINANCIAL RATE HOURS
YEAR
2002/03 1 G. Ayers 115 9 1,035.00 1 J. Sawtell 37.5 7 262.50
2 G. Ayers 115 37 4,255.00
2 J. Sawtell 37.5 26 975.00"
The arithmetical total of those items is £6,527.50. No other documents enclosed with the Invoice gave any more information concerning the item in the Summary called "LT PROPERTY SALARIES".
"in connection with acting on your behalf in relation to the development at Fulham Broadway between January 2001 and 31 December 2002. All correspondence, attendances etc."
The disbursements were broken down between £9.25 for "Fares and expenses" and £96.65 for "printing costs". Copy documents attached to the Invoice indicated that LUL had paid the fee note.
"POWER PFI CONTRACT
PSC – Supplementary invoice for Fulham Broadway Development Variation ECMV0046
Please find attached invoice number AC046 together with the associated blue copy of LUL's Contract Payment Approval Form.
This invoice has been raised to the value of £399,771.00 (plus VAT) as an advance payment in respect of the ordering of long-lead plant items together with design work in relation to the Fulham Broadway Development project sponsored by LT Property."
The invoice referred to was also copied as an attachment to the Invoice. It was dated 28 August 2001 and described the work to which it related as "Variations: (Initial payment for Fulham Broadway Development V0046)." The attachments to the Invoice included in addition documents indicating that the invoice numbered AC046 raised by Seeboard had been paid by LUL.
"POWER PFI CONTRACT
PSC Supplementary Invoice for Fulham Broadway Variation ECMV0046
Please find attached Invoice number AC063 together with the associated blue copy of the LUL Contract Payment Approval Form.
This Invoice has been raised to the value of £262,702.63 (plus VAT) in respect of an interim payment for Variation ECMV0046 – Fulham Broadway Redevelopment."
The copy of the invoice numbered AC063 enclosed with the attachments to the Invoice indicated that it related to "Variations: (ECMV0046)." The addition of £399,771.00 and £262,702.63 produces a total of £662,473.63, the amount indicated in the Summary as that included in the aggregate amount of the Invoice in respect of "PFI CONTRACTORS".
"EARLS COURT STATION STAFF 4 PERCENT PAY AWARD
COSTS FOR PERIOD 2 TO 8 – 779.18
REVENUE STAFF – 70.80
PERIOD OF CHARGE: PERIOD ENDING 08/12/01"
Separate documents showed how these elements totalling £849.98 were made up. The sum of £779.18 was said in a memorandum dated 5 December 2001 written by Mr. Robert Clark, described as Stations Liaison Manager, Fulham Broadway Project, to Karen Thomas to relate to "GSM Earl's Court, Cost Centre 2881 for Station Staff", while the sum of £70.80 was indicated as relating to "Revenue Control Manager Cost Centre 4558 for Revenue Staff." In a memorandum dated 4 December 2001 to Mr. Bailey Mr. Clark gave a breakdown of these figures of £779.18 and £70.80 by period and general activity. The "Revenue Control" was all said to relate to "Football", while some station staff activity also related to "Football", but other activity to "Platform". However, it appeared from the memorandum that the greater part, in cash terms, of the sum of £779.18, a total of £657.83, related to the activities of Mr. Clark himself on "Operations".
"COST OF PROJECT REP P12 – 2,822.17
GOODS OR SERVICES ORDERED FOR USE ON PROJECT P12 – 65.08
PERIOD OF CHARGE: PERIOD ENDING 19/03/02"
The documentation which showed how those figures were made up indicated that the figure of £2,822.17 represented a claim for the cost of 102.5 hours worked by Mr. Clark in the period 3 February 2002 to 3 March 2002, plus 8 hours overtime on 11 February 2002 conducting a CCTV survey. The figure of £65.08 was said to represent, as to £12.54 on each occasion, mileage for Mr. Clark on 11 February 2002 and 25 February 2002, on the first date in connection with the CCTV survey and on the second date delivering equipment for Seeboard. The balance of £40 was described as a payment of rental to Vodafone for Mr. Clark's mobile telephone for the month of January 2002. The documents to which I have referred on their respective faces indicated that they had been prepared by Mr. Clark.
"COST OF PROJECT REP P13 – 2,911.56
GOODS OR SERVICES ORDERED FOR USE ON PROJECT P13 – 30.00
PLATFORM ATTENDANCE P13 – 163.43
FOOTBALL CROWD CONTROL P13 – 102.06
FOOTBALL CROWD REVENUE P13 – 1,418.34
PERIOD OF CHARGE: PERIOD ENDED 31/03/02"
Supporting documents indicated that the charge in respect of "COST OF PROJECT REP P13" was again a claim for the cost of Mr. Clark, this time for a total of 114 hours worked in the period 4 March 2002 to 29 March 2002 at a rate of £25.54 per hour. The £30 was the sum paid to Vodafone for rental of Mr. Clark's mobile telephone in the four weeks ending on 30 March 2002. So far as platform attendance was concerned, the details set out named the individuals involved, the dates of the relevant activities, the general nature of the relevant activities, the hours worked and the charge for each individual. The charges in respect of football crowd control were detailed in documents which again named the individuals concerned, set out the date of the relevant football match, specified the match concerned, recorded the hours worked and the charge for each individual. Each of the supporting documents bore upon its face an indication that it had been prepared by Mr. Clark.
"Contrary to the Development Agreement between us dated 20th January 2000 LUL have requested, due to the existence of a PFI contract with Seeboard Powerlink Limited which prohibits electrical works to be carried out at Fulham by anybody other than Seeboard Powerlink Limited, that the procedure set out in the Development Agreement for the procurement of the Station Works be varied.
The nature of the requested variation is that London Underground Limited be allowed to procure directly from Seeboard Powerlink Limited those elements of the Station Works (as defined in the Development Agreement) set out in the attached Schedule (the "Seeboard Works"). No control or contractual comfort will be provided to us in respect of those Seeboard Works and we have today been notified by your Solicitors that already Seeboard have notified that there will be a ten week delay to the programme submitted initially. This delay will further delay the completion of the Development as a whole and we will seek to recover the costs of the delay from yourselves.
We have agreed to pay the figure of £450,000 in connection with the Seeboard Works and will forward a cheque in relation to this order under separate cover.
It is noted that this matter is of considerable concern to Pillar (Broadway) Limited as contractual rights of action against Seeboard Powerlink Limited will not exist. This will have time and cost consequences on the completion of the Development as a whole. That said Pillar (Broadway) Limited are prepared to allow this procurement route to be used on the basis that it is now time critical to the completion of the Development on the current programme and that this matter will need to be resolved finally in terms of both cost and liability consequences at some point in the future."
The Dispute
"2. Clauses 19.1 and 19.3 are clearly intended to and must be read together. The clear and sole purpose of Clause 19.3 is to act as a mechanism for controlling claims made pursuant to Clause 19.1, ensuring that such claims are made in a manner which allows them to be properly assessed by Pillar so that any wrongly claimed costs can be identified.
3. If compliance with Clause 19.3 does not, as LUL contends, have any effect on a Clause 19.1 claim, the clause is robbed of any contractual worth or effect and is rendered entirely pointless. The parties must be assumed to have included Clause 19.3 for a reason and to have intended it to be effective: to suggest otherwise is misconceived."
"10…. By its own admission the Invoice LUL supplied was at best one which related to a mixture of such costs and other items which it accepts it cannot show to be proper costs.
11. LUL suggests that this is of no consequence. That, however, is incorrect:
(a) the Development Agreement is clear that an Invoice as to "such costs" is to be supplied before the Claimant is entitled to payment in respect of a Clause 19.1 claim. To that extent compliance with 19.1 could be described as a condition precedent;
(b) In fact such an invoice has not been supplied;
(c) Therefore no sum is due under the Agreement.
12. It is to be noted that the only real answer advanced by LUL to this point has been to suggest that this analysis cannot be right because that would mean that in all cases where a party sues under an invoice its claim would fail in full if it could be shown that the invoice was incorrect. However this submission by LUL is once again misconceived: this case is different to many others in that:
(a) the claim made is one made pursuant to a specific term of a bespoke contract (and not, for example, one made pursuant to a quantum meruit);
and
(b) that contract contains bespoke terms as to what needs to be supplied as a condition precedent to the claim succeeding."
"7. …. The intent of Clause 19.3 is clear: it is to provide a mechanism by which a claim for monies under clause 19.1 is to be made in sufficient detail to allow Pillar to ascertain that the claim is one for "proper costs properly incurred". Accordingly it is relatively clear what "Breakdown" is required: one sufficient to permit a reasonable party to ascertain whether the claim made is one for proper costs properly incurred. Anything less makes an absurdity of what the parties were trying to achieve in agreeing this clause.
8. What breakdown would therefore be sufficient to permit a reasonable party to ascertain whether the claim made is one for proper costs properly incurred? That will depend on the nature of the costs claimed in each case. In relation to works carried out by an LUL employee it may simply be enough to provide details of what works were carried out and when: the time or allocation sheets lying behind the global figures put forward may well be enough. In relation to PFI contractors rather more may be needed: details of the work carried out and the rates used may well be necessary – this would presumably come from the build up to the application for payment which, apparently, has been signed off by LUL."
"12. Pillar contends that on the 3rd February 2000 Mr. Bailey of LUL and Mr. Walsh of Pillar entered into an agreement whereby LUL agreed that it would provide timesheets in relation to all staff being charged for by LUL. That is disputed as a matter of fact by LUL and both Mr. Bailey and Mr. Walsh will give evidence on the issue.
13. If the Court accepts that such an agreement was reached LUL's present stance of refusing to supply those timesheets which lie behind its claim is all the more noteworthy and unacceptable."
Contrary to the case set out in the Defence of Pillar in this action, it was not in the event contended that the agreement alleged was legally binding. Rather what seemed to be said was that it was evidence of what the parties envisaged would be provided as "a breakdown" of costs.
"4. No point has been taken either on the pleadings or in oral or written submission that if part of the invoice is not proven, then the whole is irrecoverable and it is submitted that such a proposition (unsupported, if made, by authority) would be incorrect in law and too late to take on the pleadings. No more about that will be said in these written submissions."
"9. Clause 19.3 refers to two different types of invoice. Firstly, invoices rendered to Pillar by LUL and secondly invoices rendered to LUL by others. The clause also requires a breakdown of the costs which make up the invoice rendered to Pillar by LUL. The breakdown is referred to in the words "breakdown of such costs and other monies and copies of invoices rendered to LUL".
10. The breakdown of costs which is now sought by Pillar is altogether different to the type of breakdown which the clause provides for. The breakdown which the clause provides for is precisely in the form of the spreadsheet which accompanies the Claimant's Opening [which was the Summary]… It is a costs summary which sets out the amount and category of claim made by LUL in invoices rendered to Pillar.
11. What is sought by Pillar is a different type of breakdown, namely the costs and backup timesheets which would justify the invoices which are rendered to LUL by others….
12. … The aggregate of costs within the invoice rendered to Pillar by LUL should be broken down, as indeed the spreadsheet does. But the clause does not require a breakdown of the costs charged to LUL within any invoice rendered to LUL by others.
13. Such a requirement is not contained within clause 19.3 and would produce an uncommercial result. The construction which Pillar puts forward would allow for an endless audit which could stretch far beyond the ten working days allowed for payment of the invoice after its presentation.
14. It is submitted that the information which was supplied with invoice number 374707, being the various spreadsheets and supporting documentation, is sufficient for the purposes of clause 19…."
The submission contained in paragraph 14 of Mr. Wilmot-Smith's written closing submissions seems to reflect a more cautious position than that adopted in paragraph 10, that the Summary was a sufficient "breakdown" on its own.
The evidence
"84. I refer to the summary. LT Property Salaries which are referred to as surveyors Costs on the project expenditure requisition includes time expended on the project by Mr. Ayers, Mr. Holmes and Mr. Sawtell of the Claimant. I set out the number of hours spent and the rate. Each individual records their time electronically….
86. External Project Management represents the costs of employing me on the project. The costs included in this invoice are £27,955.
87. The Quantity Surveyors/External Valuers/Cons General costs include the costs of Tweeds, the consultant quantity surveyor employed by the Claimant and Insignia Richard Ellis who are the Claimant's valuers. A fee of £20,000 paid to Richard Ellis was included in this invoice….
89. External Solicitors are the costs of Travers Smith Braithwaite in negotiating the Development Agreement and dealing with property related issues. £29,105.40 of their fee supported by an invoice was included in invoice 374707….
94. The next item on the summary is PFI costs. The Claimant has entered into three PFI contracts whereby the PFI contractors are engaged to undertake certain categories of work on the tube network. Under the Power PFI, Seeboard Powerlink supply power to the network. Under the Prestige PFI, Transys deal with fare collection. Under the Connect PFI, Citilink deal with communications.
95. There were two invoices for Seeboard Powerlink works included in invoice 374707. The scope of the works and the cost of the works had been set out in a detailed implementation statement agreed by the Claimant with Seeboard Powerlink which was sent to the Defendant before works were carried out.
96. The next costs heading on the summary is LUL General which is further sub-divided into internal Contractors, LT Property, Miscellaneous, SSL Stations and Engineering Services. I put the invoices into chronological order and, on the invoice schedule, I show the headings under which the costs are claimed. There are no charges for LT Property or Miscellaneous included in this invoice….
99. SSL Stations is the part of the Claimant that runs the stations on the sub-surface lines (which include Fulham Broadway). They provide staff for the running of the station. There are five invoices under this heading totalling £18,103.68.
100. Engineering Services are the costs of various departments of the Claimant dealing with and commenting on and approving designs and drawings. There are five invoices included under this heading totalling £43,686."
"Further to our meeting of the 3rd February 2000 in respect of the LUL and LTP costs, I confirm the following:
1. Richard Ellis.
The basis under which you project the cost is: £6,000 per quarter from the unconditional date to practical completion of the works.
I would be grateful if you could substantiate their proposed increases in the budget for their time.
2. Travers Smith Braithwaite
I would be grateful if you could advise us in detailed substantiation of their increased costs that you are projecting.
I confirm you anticipate that the next invoice will be issued in March 2000.
3. LTP Direct Staff
It is agreed that you will prepare a staff programme to enable a cashflow draw-down to be projected.
4. MPM Capita contract staff
You are currently projecting at £6,000 per month.
It is agreed that you will prepare a staff programme to enable a cashflow draw-down to be projected.
5. LUL
It is agreed that you will prepare a staff programme and cashflow for the LUL staff anticipated for the project.
I confirm that we shall require copies of the timesheets for all staff being paid for by our client and invoices are to be submitted to myself for consideration and approval in the second week of the month following the work having been carried out.
I look forward to receiving the above points of clarification."
It is to be noted that while, in relation to some matters, specifically the preparation of staff programmes and cashflows, Mr. Walsh recorded that agreement had been reached at the meeting on 3 February 2000, he did not record that there had been such an agreement in relation to the provision of time sheets. Rather, so far as time sheets were concerned, Mr. Walsh was in the letter communicating a requirement of his own and seeking confirmation that it would be met. I am not, therefore, satisfied that Mr. Bailey did in fact agree at the meeting on 3 February 2000 that time sheets would be provided. Certainly there was no suggestion that he ever did provide time sheets, and my attention was not drawn to any communication from Mr. Walsh to Mr. Bailey in which Mr. Walsh asserted that Mr. Bailey was acting contrary to what had been agreed between them in not providing time sheets.
Were any of the costs claimed in the Invoice properly incurred?
"14. In this context the sole evidence advanced by LUL – that of Mr. Bailey – not only fails to support the claim, but fatally undermines it.
15. Mr. Bailey's evidence was unsatisfactory – particularly in relation to the "mistakes" so recently admitted by LUL. This much was clear however:
16. His Role and the information supplied to him;
(a) He relied entirely upon information provided to him by others within LUL: he merely looked at the documents supplied to him by those departments;
(b) That process provided scope for delay and confusion;
(c) That information had proven in the past to be incorrect;
(d) He had only been able to ascertain the incorrect nature of that information by going behind the documents supplied to him and obtaining further information;
17. The "Mistakes" Made in the Invoice;
(a) He had obtained further information in relation to the costs claimed for:
(i) LT Property Salaries;
(ii) External Project Management; and
(iii) Quantity Surv/Ext Valuer
and now accepted that the costs claimed in the relevant Invoice were not proper costs properly incurred;
(b) He agreed that until he had obtained further information not available to Pillar or the Court, he could not have known that these claimed costs were not proper;
(c) He accepted that in relation to these items one could not say on the basis of the information supplied with the Invoice that these were proper costs properly incurred.
(d) He agreed that LUL's position was that where it discovered mistakes in its invoices it would deal with them, but where they remained hidden through a refusal to provide back up documentation, they would not.
18. As a result the sums claimed are not supported by the evidence. Accordingly LUL has failed to show that any sums are due in relation to these three heads."
The terms of the comments in that passage on what was not detectable from the documents copies of which accompanied the Invoice reflected the earlier, oral submissions of Mr. Ramsey as to what amounted to a "breakdown" for the purposes of clause 19.3 of the Development Agreement, to which I referred above.
Construction of clause 19 of the Development Agreement
Conclusion