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 >> Allen Wilson Shopfitters v Buckingham [2005] EWHC 1165 (TCC) (27 May 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2005/1165.html Cite as: 102 Con LR 154, [2005] EWHC 1165 (TCC) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
TECHNOLOGY & CONSTRUCTION COURT
London WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
ALLEN WILSON SHOPFITTERS | Claimant | |
- and - | ||
MR. ANTHONY BUCKINGHAM | Defendant |
____________________
Official Shorthand Writers and Tape Transcribers
Quality House, Quality Court, Chancery Lane, London WC2A 1HP
Tel: 020 7831 5627 Fax: 020 7831 7737
THE DEFENDANT appeared in person.
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
JUDGE PETER COULSON QC:
INTRODUCTION
BACKGROUND
(a) There was no written contract in respect of the works which were the subject matter of the adjudication;
(b) Any contract had been terminated and was therefore irrelevant and could not give the Adjudicator jurisdiction;
(c) The works concerned the refurbishment of a dwellinghouse and were therefore excluded from the adjudication provisions set out in the Housing Grants, Construction and Regeneration Act 1996 ("the 1996 Act"); and
(d) Any agreement to adjudicate was contrary to the Unfair Terms in Consumer Contracts Regulations 1999.
"Given Mr. Buckingham's submissions on jurisdiction set out below, he will not respond to the substantive issues and/or the individual paragraphs contained in the Referral in this adjudication … Furthermore, Mr. Buckingham is in the process of preparing final proceedings against Allen Wilson, which will be commenced shortly for delay and defective works and the additional costs of having to complete these incomplete and defective works."
JURISDICTION - GENERAL
THE FIRST LETTER OF INTENT
"On behalf of our client, Mr. Tony Buckingham, we are issuing the letter of intent to your company for refurbishment works at Clobb Copse, Bucklers Hard, Beaulieu based on the following:
1. Works to be carried out under the terms and conditions of the JCT 1998 Private Without Quantities 1998 edition.
2. The scope of works will be Preliminary Internal Demolition and Alteration works as detailed in the agreed schedule of works and costs agreed at the meeting on 14th July 2004, as follows:-
(a) Schedule No.3 (amended) and to include the complete demolition and rebuilding the fireplace and chimney stack in the kitchen
In the sum of £51,535
(b) Schedule 4 works (preparatory stripping-out works) to include only …[the preparatory stripping-out works are then set out]
In the sum of £16,965
….
6. Please accept this letter as our instruction to commence the Works in accordance with the terms and conditions of the Contract, pending execution of the formal Contract documents. In the event that no formal Contract is entered into then the terms of this letter will apply to the whole of the works carried out by you. The Employer will pay for you any work so completed in accordance with the payment provisions of the Contract…..
10. By signing and returning a copy of this letter to us, you shall agree to indemnify us against all loss or liability due to death or personal injury or damage to real or personal property save to the extent that such loss or liability is due to any act or neglect of the Employer or of the Employer's Consultants … We enclose a duplicate copy of this letter of intent which you are required to sign in confirmation of your agreement to the contents of this letter, which, upon signing, should be returned to Deacon & Jones."
"If any dispute or difference arises under this Contract, either party may refer it to adjudication in accordance with Clause 41A."
(a) The Claimant would carry out the schedule 3 works for £51,535;
(b) The Claimant would carry out the preparatory stripping-out works in schedule 4 for £16,965;
(c) All the terms of the JCT 1998 Edition, including of course those relating to variations and additional work as well as those relating to adjudication, were incorporated into this Contract.
THE SECOND LETTER OF INTENT
"With reference to the letter of intent dated 8th November 2004 and my reminder letter of 1st December, I note that you have still not yet returned it signed, as requested. Please can you respond to this urgently."
It appears that Deacon & Jones were (quite rightly) beginning to become concerned that there was no fixed price, lump sum agreement in place, even though the Claimant, on their instructions, was carrying out work far more extensive in scope than the work covered by the two lump sums in the Contract. However, this letter crossed with a letter from the Claimant to Deacon & Jones, dated the same day, in which the Claimant made complaints about outstanding information and what it described as the Defendant's "abysmal payment record". This letter concluded:
"We are of the view that because of the continuous breaches of our payment agreement that we are not bound by the contract terms and conditions."
THE WORK IN VALUATIONS 12 AND 13
THE CONTRACT PAYMENT MACHINERY
endeavoured to enforce the contract terms, rather than the scheme under the 1996 Act. In allowing the appeal, Sir Murray Stuart-Smith said:
"29… The Adjudicator's jurisdiction is determined by and derives from the dispute that is referred to him. If he determines matters over and beyond the dispute, he has no jurisdiction. But the scope of the dispute was agreed, namely as to the Employer's obligation to make payment and the Contractor's entitlement to receive payment following receipt by the Employer of the Contractor's Applications for interim payment Nos 4, 5 and 6 … In order to determine this dispute the Adjudicator had to resolve as a matter of law whether Clauses 30.3.3-6 applied or not, and if they did, what was the effect of failure to serve a timeous notice by the Employer. Even if he was wrong on both these points that did not affect his jurisdiction.
30. It is important that the enforcement of an adjudicator's decision by summary judgment should not be prevented by arguments that the adjudicator has made errors of law in reaching his decision, unless the adjudicator has purported to decide matters that are not referred to him. He must decide as a matter of construction of the referral, and therefore as a matter of law, what the dispute is that he has to decide. If he erroneously decides that the dispute referred to him is wider than it is, then, in so far as he has exceeded his jurisdiction, his decision cannot be enforced. But in the present case there was entire agreement as to the scope of the dispute, and the Adjudicator's decision, albeit he may have made errors of law as to the relevant contractual provisions, is still binding and enforceable until the matter is corrected in the final determination."
RESIDENTIAL OCCUPIER
TERMINATION
THE UNFAIR TERMS IN CONSUMER CONTRACTS
REGULATIONS 1999
(a) It was not individually negotiated and
(b) It is contrary to the requirement of good faith and
(c) It causes a significant imbalance in the parties' rights and obligations arising under the Contract, to the detriment of Mr. Buckingham as a consumer and
(d) It is unfair, taking into account the nature of the goods or services for which the contract was concluded, by referring at the time of the conclusion of the Contract to all the circumstances attending the conclusion of the Contract and all the other terms of the contract.
"The terms of the contract were decided upon by Mr. Beckingham's agents, who are chartered surveyors, and Mr. Beckingham had, or had available to him, competent and objective advice as to the existence and effect of the adjudication clause before he proffered and entered into the contract. Westminster did no more than accept the contract terms offered and had no reasonable need to draw to Mr. Beckingham's attention the potential pitfalls to be found in the adjudication clause and in its operation during the course of the work. The clause did not therefore contravene the requirement of good faith (see especially the speech of Lord Bingham in the case of Director-General of Fair Trading v. The First National Bank Plc [2002] 1 AC 481)."
It seems to me that the present case is precisely on all fours with the decision in Westminster and the same result should apply.
"While it may be going too far to say that a building contractor who merely, without more, accepts a proposal from a 'consumer' as to the terms of the contract to be made between them could never contravene the requirement of good faith, it is difficult to envisage circumstances in which the criticism could properly be made that the contractor had acted contrary to the requirement of good faith in such a case."
CONCLUSIONS
(a) The sum of £50,401.35, being the total due in respect of valuations 12 and 13;
(b) Interest in a sum which I direct the parties to agree, pursuant to the Late Payment of Commercial Debts Interest Act 1998;
(c) The nomination fee payable to the RICS, which the adjudicator ordered the defendant to pay; and
(d) The sum of £2,112.25, plus VAT, in respect of the adjudicator's fees, which he also directed to be paid.