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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 >> Jacques & Anor (t/a C&E Jacques Partnership) v Ensign Contractors Ltd [2009] EWHC 3383 (TCC) (22 December 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2009/3383.html Cite as: [2009] EWHC 3383 (TCC) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
CYNTHIA JACQUES and ELISE JACQUES GROMBACH (trading as C&E JACQUES PARTNERSHIP) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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ENSIGN CONTRACTORS LIMITED |
Defendant |
____________________
Dominique Rawley (instructed by SLS Solicitors) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 14 December 2009
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Akenhead:
Introduction
History
"(1) The adjudication decision of Mr Jeremy Sutcliffe dated 16 October 2007 alternatively…18 October 2007 alternatively 22 October 2007 is null and void and does not bind the Claimant and the Defendant.
(2) The Claimant is entitled to adjudicate at any time a dispute concerning the amount to be paid to the Claimant pursuant to a final certificate issued…pursuant clause 4.8 of the JCT Minor Works Contract 2005 with Contractor's Design."
Adjudication No 5
"1.4 …the Referring Party would have the adjudicator believe that the Responding Party's work was carried out to such a poor standard that the Referring Party should be paid the sum of almost £200,000…in connection with the project with an original contract value of some £340,000. The Referring Party adopted a similar approach in the previous adjudication which was referred to Mr Sutcliffe. Indeed, Mr Sutcliffe noted this very point at paragraph 195 of his decision and stated that the Referring Party's claim was "tantamount to saying that almost 60% of the project value had either not been carried out or has been carried out so badly that 60% of its value should be abated. I respectfully submit that that stance is unrealistic, untenable and doomed to failure".
1.8 As Mr Sutcliffe found in October 2007 when a similar case was presented to him, it is difficult to believe that the alleged defects in the works were not apparent before 3 November 2006. It will be noted that at paragraph 26 of his decision Mr Sutcliffe stated that "I am somewhat perplexed by aspects of the workmanship issue. The works which are now alleged to be no-complaint (sic) did not become so overnight. It is surely fair to assume that the works in question had been non-compliant since the time they were carried out. This being the case, I am at a loss as to why they were apparently only identified as such, at a much later date. Why, for example, was at work not identified as non-compliant at the time of execution, or very soon thereafter, and (the Responding Party) advised that the work was unacceptable and would need to be remedied".
1.10 It is noted that the Referring Party is keen to stress that Mr Sutcliffe's decision "is irrelevant and its contents should not be reviewed or revisited in determining the dispute now referred"…It is hardly surprising that the Referring Party is taking this stance given Mr Sutcliffe's reasons for his decision…The Responding Party of course accepts that the decision was a nullity, as a result of Mr Sutcliffe's procedural failings. However, it is clear that the Referring Party itself accepts that the Responding Party's submissions in that adjudication at least are relevant, as it states that it has factored those submissions into Mr Irvin's final account calculation. In any event, the fact remains that, notwithstanding Mr Sutcliffe's procedural errors which served to nullify his decision, this final account dispute has been previously considered by an independent adjudicator who, without taking into account the Responding Party's delay and disruption claim, decided that the sum of £298,587.86 represented a fair and reasonable value for the Responding Party's final account."
The Response then went on to deal over some 10 pages with the Referral on a paragraph by paragraph basis.
"Proper instruction was hampered by the Employer's insistence that they carry out the 'day to day' role of project manager. Indeed this is a point recognised by the previous Adjudicator, which is discussed… below and ultimately led to the position we find ourselves in.
At ' practical completion', a defects schedule composed by the Employer and rejected by Mr Thomas was issued. EC maintained that, subject to getting agreement with Mr Thomas that the list should properly reflect the Contract, defects would be rectified in accordance with the Contract. The Employer (assisted by Mr Trevor Irvin) refused to recognise the Contract and pursued the works considered to be out with the contemplation of the parties. In addition Mr Thomas was removed from his position and Mr Irvin appointed. The Employer in implementing this significant change removed any form of impartiality. Mr Irvin was now in a position which required total impartiality, despite previously being the Employer's 'hatchet man'. Additionally, during a previous adjudication Mr Irvin provided a signed 'witness statement' to suggest he was only involved from January 2007 onwards. This is a straight forward falsification…
In addition to this another individual was introduced, that of Mr Anthony Nelson. Mr Nelson claimed to be someone who, on the 12th March 2007, only recently became involved with the project…This too is a lie. Mr Nelson was involved in the scheme prior to the appointment of EC. Indeed he provided a tender for the works. Furthermore, Mr Nelson provided opinion on the roof works during the currency of the scheme… with site inspections on behalf of the Employer.
A more worrying point is that Mr Nelson and Mr Irvin were actually co- directors of another company at that time, despite masquerading as independent operatives. Thus their joint involvement in this scheme allowed them to effectively generate their own work; possibly something the Employer was not aware of…Impartiality, thus, was never on the agenda.
Mr Irvin's further impropriety included Mr Irvin masquerading as a member of the Chartered Institute of Architectural Technicians when he in fact wasn't…"
"The TRUE facts do not support the Referring Party's contentions. They merely rely on fabrication and subterfuge.
The Employer removed all impartiality. This was a point raised in the previous adjudication when the adjudicator described the Employer as '…judge, jury and executioner…'. When the one person positioned to properly administer the works was removed by the Employer, EC was left vulnerable. It would appear on the face of it that the Employer never sought EC to fulfil its obligation [per se] but merely to remove all obstacles to allow for this 'mugging'. The plot to put in place Mr Irvin and Mr Nelson was merely an exercise in recouping the alleged £200,000 overpayment to the previous contractor. Why was this necessary? Because the Employer had no legal basis to pursue them.
The case put together by the Referring party relies entirely on ignoring the Contract between the parties…
Paraphrasing Shakespeare, 'lies cannot be hid long; but at length the truth will out'.
"In circumstances where the 4th Adjudication Decision is null and void its contents cannot be given any cognisance and it must be treated as if no such decision had ever been given…
The scheme which governs this Adjudication requires the adjudicator to "act impartially" and to ascertain themselves "the facts and law necessary to determine this dispute". You must not be influenced by a previous adjudicator's decision, when that decision has been declared null and void and is in any event is now irrelevant.
In order to avoid any influence being presented by way of reference to or reliance on the 4th adjudication decision we propose that you direct the revised copy of the Response and "Response to Salient Points" these submitted, admitting there from any reference to, quotation from or reliance on the 4th Adjudication Decision…"
"I acknowledge with thanks receipt of the Claimant's letter to me of 1st September 2009 asking me to take two actions as follows:
1. Confirm that I will take no cognisance of the Respondent's submissions which referred to or relate to the 4th Adjudication Decision nor to the 4th Adjudication Decision itself, and
2. Direct the revised copy of the Response and "Response to Salient Points" be submitted, omitting therefrom any reference to, quotation from or reliance on the 4th Adjudication Decision.
An Adjudication Decision is the view of that Adjudicator based upon the evidence and submissions presented to him; I must make my Decision based on my view of the evidence and submissions presented to me. I find therefore that the previous Adjudicator's Decision is irrelevant and therefore inadmissible as evidence and consequently I should not even read it let alone have regard to it.
It is part of an Adjudicator's role to exclude inadmissible evidence from his considerations and therefore there is no need for me to direct the Respondent to revive its Response."
"…Your decision to "not even read (the earlier adjudicator's decision) let alone have regard to it" seems to us to breach the principles of natural justice.
As is explained in the Response…our client relies upon the earlier adjudicator's decision in submitting that, notwithstanding Mr Sutcliffe's procedural errors which served to nullify his decision, this final account dispute has been previously considered by an independent adjudicator, whose findings our client maintains are relevant to this dispute and to the issue of your fees (and, more specifically, which party should be required to pay them), as the earlier decision sheds light on the Referring Party's previous conduct. Moreover, our client is concerned that having decided to "not even read" the earlier decision, you will not be able to properly consider our client's Response, given the manner in which that Response is drafted.
In the circumstances, you will appreciate that we must reserve our client's right to challenge your decision in due course on the basis of this apparent breach of the principles of natural justice."
No point was taken that the adjudicator had formed the view expressed by him in his letter of 2 September 2009 without giving the Contractor the opportunity to put forward its views first.
The Adjudicator's Decision
"I have confined my notes to the essentials only but nevertheless I have carefully considered all the evidence and submission although not specifically referred to in this Decision".
At pages 5 to 9, he set out on a table which identified every item on the final account (variations, omissions of "further agreed works", delay/disruption charges, "other omissions by Claimant", "omissions and related losses" and defects, as well as a reference to the "lost rent" claim). In that table he summarised in money terms what he found fell to be omitted or added to the contract sum. Of the 88 items, some 25 had been agreed. In respect of each item which had not been agreed, he identified a note by number (Notes 1-64) which sets out his reasoning as to why he found what he did. Two examples are:
"Note 3-Item 13-Redundant Hearth
The Respondent claims that a further hearth was made redundant because of the decision of the Employer to change it and it claims £89.00, reduced in the Response to £59.00. The Respondent however has given no proper explanation or documentation or an invoice, and therefore I accept the Claimant's case that it has not provided the evidence to support its claim, and therefore the claim under this head fails
Note 4-Item 17-Surplus Carpet from Ground Floor Lobbies
This item is agreed in principle. The Respondent claims £345.12 but with no explanation as to that charge. The Respondent has produced a statement from its supplier that the cost of the redundant carpet would be £300 and the claimant has valued this item at £300.00. I add 15% and therefore value the item at £345.00."
These Proceedings
The Law
"85.The objective which underlies the Act and the statutory scheme requires the courts to respect and enforce the adjudicator's decision unless it is plain that the question which he has decided was not the question referred to him or the manner in which he has gone about his task is obviously unfair. It should be only in rare circumstances that the courts will interfere with the decision of an adjudicator. The courts should give no encouragement to the approach adopted by DML in the present case; which (contrary to DML's outline submissions, to which we have referred in paragraph 66 of this judgment) may, indeed, aptly be described as "simply scrabbling around to find some argument, however tenuous, to resist payment".
86. It is only too easy in a complex case for a party who is dissatisfied with the decision of an adjudicator to comb through the adjudicator's reasons and identify points upon which to present a challenge under the labels "excess of jurisdiction" or "breach of natural justice". It must be kept in mind that the majority of adjudicators are not chosen for their expertise as lawyers. Their skills are as likely (if not more likely) to lie in other disciplines. The task of the adjudicator is not to act as arbitrator or judge. The time constraints within which he is expected to operate are proof of that. The task of the adjudicator is to find an interim solution which meets the needs of the case. Parliament may be taken to have recognised that, in the absence of an interim solution, the contractor (or sub-contractor) or his sub-contractors will be driven into insolvency through a wrongful withholding of payments properly due. The statutory scheme provides a means of meeting the legitimate cash-flow requirements of contractors and their subcontractors. The need to have the "right" answer has been subordinated to the need to have an answer quickly. The scheme was not enacted in order to provide definitive answers to complex questions. Indeed, it may be open to doubt whether Parliament contemplated that disputes involving difficult questions of law would be referred to adjudication under the statutory scheme; or whether such disputes are suitable for adjudication under the scheme. We have every sympathy for an adjudicator faced with the need to reach a decision in a case like the present.
87. In short, in the overwhelming majority of cases, the proper course for the party who is unsuccessful in an adjudication under the scheme must be to pay the amount that he has been ordered to pay by the adjudicator. If he does not accept the adjudicator's decision as correct (whether on the facts or in law), he can take legal or arbitration proceedings in order to establish the true position. To seek to challenge the adjudicator's decision on the ground that he has exceeded his jurisdiction or breached the rules of natural justice (save in the plainest cases) is likely to lead to a substantial waste of time and expense – as, we suspect, the costs incurred in the present case will demonstrate only too clearly."
"May I now turn from general principles to five propositions which bear upon this case:
1. If an adjudicator declines to consider evidence which, on his analysis of the facts or the law, is irrelevant, that is neither (a) a breach of the rules of natural justice nor (b) a failure to consider relevant material which undermines his decision on Wednesbury grounds or for breach of paragraph 17 of the Scheme. If the adjudicator's analysis of the facts or the law was erroneous, it may follow that he ought to have considered the evidence in question. The possibility of such error is inherent in the adjudication system. It is not a ground for refusing to enforce the adjudicator's decision. I reach this conclusion on the basis of the Court of Appeal decisions mentioned earlier. This conclusion is also supported by the reasoning of Mr Justice Steyn in the context of arbitration in Bill Biakh v Hyundai Corporation [1988] 1 Lloyds Rep 187…
3. It is often not practicable for an adjudicator to put to the parties his provisional conclusions for comment. Very often those provisional conclusions will represent some intermediate position, for which neither party was contending. It will only be in an exceptional case such as Balfour Beatty v the London Borough of Lambeth that an adjudicator's failure to put his provisional conclusions to the parties will constitute such a serious breach of the rules of natural justice that the Court will decline to enforce his decision…
5. If an adjudicator is requested to give reasons pursuant to paragraph 22 of the Scheme, in my view a brief statement of those reasons will suffice. The reasons should be sufficient to show that the adjudicator has dealt with the issues remitted to him and what his conclusions are on those issues. It will only be in extreme circumstances, such as those described by Lord Justice Clerk in Gillies Ramsay, that the court will decline to enforce an otherwise valid adjudicator's decision because of the inadequacy of the reasons given. The complainant would need to show that the reasons were absent or unintelligible and that, as a result, he had suffered substantial prejudice."
This was quoted with apparent approval in the Court of Appeal in the same case.
"54. It is, I believe, accepted by both parties, correctly in my view, that whatever dispute is referred to the Adjudicator, it includes and allows for any ground open to the responding party which would amount in law or in fact to a defence of the claim with which it is dealing. Authority for that proposition includes KNS Industrial Services (Birmingham) Ltd -v- Sindall Ltd 75 Con LR 71."
"30. I respectfully agree with what is said by Akenhead J. Where the dispute referred to adjudication by a claimant is one which involves a claim to be paid money, it is difficult to see why a respondent should not be entitled to raise any defence open to him to defend himself against that claim, regardless of whether or not it was raised as a discrete ground of defence in the run-up to the adjudication, and subject to any considerations of natural justice. The adjudicator has jurisdiction to, and should, consider any such defence. That may result in him accepting or rejecting the defence, in whole or in part. It may be the case that one ground for rejecting a defence not previously raised is that it cannot properly be advanced in the absence of a withholding notice. It may be the case that another ground for rejecting a defence not previously raised is that the failure to raise it at an earlier stage is fatal to the adjudicator's assessment of the genuineness of that defence. But it does not seem to me that a decision to either such effect is a decision by the adjudicator as to his jurisdiction to consider the defence; instead it is a decision within his jurisdiction about the merits of that defence.
31. I consider, therefore, that Ms. McCredie was right to submit that if the adjudicator had considered the defence and decided, even if wrongly, that it could not succeed in the absence of a withholding notice, that would be a decision within his jurisdiction and would not be one which this court could review on an enforcement hearing. This is consistent with the judgment of Lord MacFayden in SL Timber Systems Limited v Carillion Construction Limited [2001] BLR 516, to which she referred me, at paragraph 23. However the corollary of that, in my judgment, is that since the adjudicator has jurisdiction to consider such defences, he ought to do so, and if he does not do so then he does not properly perform the task which he has been appointed to do. In those circumstances, he also does not in my judgment act in accordance with natural justice, because he has not heard the respondent on all of the defences which he seeks and is entitled to put forward.
32. Ms. McCredie submitted that in paragraph 54 of his judgment Akenhead J. was saying no more than that where a defence was properly open to a respondent, then the adjudicator ought to consider it. I do not accept this. Apart from the objection that such a reading would deprive the paragraph of any meaningful content, it is wholly inconsistent with paragraph 55, where Akenhead J. says in terms that 'it is open to any defendant to raise any defence to the claim when it is referred to adjudication or arbitration' (emphasis added).
33.I conclude, therefore, that in this case the adjudicator did make a significant jurisdictional error and that he did not act in accordance with the requirements of natural justice in refusing to consider the omissions defence. It was a defence which was open to Honeywell to advance as a defence to Quartzelec's money claim, and it should have been considered by the adjudicator on its merits. In fairness to him, the adjudicator appears to have decided not to do so at the express invitation of Quartzelec and without, it would appears, having had the advantage of Cantillon having being cited to him."
(a) The Adjudicator must consider defences properly put forward by a defending party in adjudication.
(b) However, it is within an adjudicator's jurisdiction to decide what evidence is admissible and, indeed, what evidence is helpful and unhelpful in the determination of the dispute or disputes referred to that adjudicator. If, within jurisdiction, the adjudicator decides that certain evidence is inadmissible, that will rarely (if ever) amount to a breach of the rules of natural justice. The position is analogous to a court case in which the Court decides that certain evidence is either inadmissible or of such little weight and value that it can effectively be ignored: it would be difficult for a challenge to such a decision on fairness grounds to be mounted.
(c) Even if the adjudicator's decision (within jurisdiction) to disregard evidence as inadmissible or of little or no weight was wrong in fact or in law, that decision is not in consequence impugnable as a breach of the rules of natural justice.
(d) One will need in most and possibly all "natural justice" cases to distinguish between a failure by an adjudicator in the decision to consider and address a substantive (factual or legal) defence and an actual or apparent failure or omission to address all aspects of the evidence which go to support that defence. It is necessary to bear in mind that adjudication involves, usually, the exchange of evidence and argument over a short period of time and the production of a decision within a short time span thereafter. It is simply not practicable, usually, for every aspect of the evidence to be meticulously considered, weighed up and rejected or accepted in whole or in part. Primarily, the adjudicator, needs to address the substantive issues, whether factual or legal, but does not need (as a matter of fairness) to address each and every aspect of the evidence. The adjudicator should not be considered to be in breach of the rules of natural justice if the decision does not address each aspect of the evidence adduced by the parties.
"In a number of the authorities which I have cited above the point has been made that each case must turn on its own facts. Whilst I respectfully agree with that, it does seem to me that there are a number of clear principles which should always govern the exercise of the court's discretion when it is considering a stay of execution in adjudication enforcement proceedings. Those principles can be set out as follows:
a) Adjudication (whether pursuant to the 1996 Act or the consequential amendments to the standard forms of building and engineering contracts) is designed to be a quick and inexpensive method of arriving at a temporary result in a construction dispute.
b) In consequence, adjudicators' decisions are intended to be enforced summarily and the claimant (being the successful party in the adjudication) should not generally be kept out of its money.
c) In an application to stay the execution of summary judgment arising out of an Adjudicator's decision, the Court must exercise its discretion under Order 47 with considerations a) and b) firmly in mind (see AWG).
d) The probable inability of the claimant to repay the judgment sum (awarded by the Adjudicator and enforced by way of summary judgment) at the end of the substantive trial, or arbitration hearing, may constitute special circumstances within the meaning of Order 47 rule 1(1)(a) rendering it appropriate to grant a stay (see Herschell).
e) If the claimant is in insolvent liquidation, or there is no dispute on the evidence that the claimant is insolvent, then a stay of execution will usually be granted (see Bouygues and Rainford House).
f) Even if the evidence of the claimant's present financial position suggested that it is probable that it would be unable to repay the judgment sum when it fell due, that would not usually justify the grant of a stay if:
(i) The claimant's financial position is the same or similar to its financial position at the time that the relevant contract was made (see Herschell); or
(ii) The claimant's financial position is due, either wholly, or in significant part, to the defendant's failure to pay those sums which were awarded by the adjudicator (see Absolute Rentals)."
Discussion
(a) When one comes to consider the points made in the Response and "Response to Salient Points", it is clear on analysis that primarily the Contractor was merely praying in aid what Mr Sutcliffe had said in his decision as opposed to saying simply that, because Mr Sutcliffe had said what he said, he must be right without more. Put another way, Mr Sutcliffe's findings were used merely to underpin the evidence and argument which the Contractor was putting forward in Adjudication No 5 in any event. A good example is Paragraph 1.8 of the Response, as set out above, which is prefaced with the words: "As Mr Sutcliffe found in October 2007…it is difficult to believe that the alleged defects in the works were not apparent before 3 November 2006". Thus, on this example, the assertion was being made independently in the Response that it was not credible that the alleged defects were not apparent, which assertion was thought to be underpinned by Mr Sutcliffe's finding.
(b) The Contractor had the fullest opportunity following the Adjudicator's ruling on to September 2009 that he was going to disregard the Adjudication No 4 decision to put in any further evidence or argument which it wished to do in the light of that ruling.
(c) It is absolutely clear that on every material point in issue on the final account the Contractor not only had but also took the opportunity to adduce evidence and argument. The general points about the suggested unreliability of Messrs Irvin's and Nelson's unreliability (whether good or bad points) were independently and emphatically made. The very large bulk (and I suspect all) of the points made by the Contractor (both general and specific) were made by reference to evidence and argument put forward by it in Adjudication No 5 as opposed to what was contained in Mr Sutcliffe's decision.
(d) The essential defences put forward by the Contractor were that on numerous items on the Employer's final account the Employer's representative was simply wrong. For instance, it was asserted that omissions were made which should not have been, that defects were asserted which did not exist or were not the contractual responsibility of the Contractor, that various variations were ordered and implemented and that there were numerous examples of the quantum of omissions and defects being significantly exaggerated. It cannot be said that the Adjudicator did not do a proper job in considering each and every one of those items in issue and giving at least brief reasons for deciding what he did. Jackson J in the Carillion case indicates, properly, that brief reasons will suffice. It really is not necessary for an adjudicator to analyse in his or her decision each and every aspect of the evidence as to why he or she accepts or rejects it in whole or in part.
(e) The Adjudicator makes it clear at Paragraph 8 of his decision that he has confined his notes to "the essentials only" but that he has "carefully considered all the evidence and submissions although not specifically referred to" in the Decision. It is not possible to draw an inference let alone an unavoidable inference that what he said there was incorrect or untrue. Indeed, the 23 pages in the decision in which he deals with every item in dispute would if anything lead to the inference that what he said at Paragraph 8 was true.
(f) A point was made that there was a breach of the rules of natural justice on the part of the Adjudicator in that he reached his decision to ignore the Adjudication No 4 for decision before hearing from the Contractor. This point was not argued with any great force and indeed was not referred to in the extensive written submissions of the Contractor's Counsel. Whilst it would have been better if he had waited for the Contractor to respond, it was not in material breach in any event.
Stay of Execution
"…has not yet been able to afford to rectify [other items of defective works] because of the losses it is currently standing because of the overpayments currently paid to [the Contractor] for it Works and because it does not have sufficient funding from another source to fund the rectification works still required".
In her witness statement in an earlier adjudication, the second-named Claimant said:
"The purchase and the renovation [of the property] was financed primarily from the proceeds from the sale of our personal residences and inheritance. It has taken our entire life savings. Our intent was to purchase the property, renovate it, and for Cynthia to manage the property and live from the income".
She went on to say that the first contractor whom the sisters employed had taken "the money and ran".
"Our clients appreciate that they are jointly and severally liable for your fees but, as explained previously, our clients have limited available funds and without receiving payment of the principal award from [the Contractor] they are not currently in a position to satisfy your fees themselves and then have to look to recovery from [the Contractor]."
A somewhat different picture however is presented in the witness statement of the second-named Claimant dated 11 December 2009 presented to the Court. She is resident in Switzerland. At Paragraph 15, she says that she has in her bank account "sufficient funds to repay the sums in one instalment". I do not find that credible in the light of everything which she and her sister had been saying before and through her solicitors. The amount of the judgement will be with interest and costs probably over £130,000. Counsel for the Employer was unable to provide any convincing answer to the point put to him that the Employer was deliberately lying either through its solicitors as recently as 19 November 2009 or in the latest witness statement; all that he could say was that the witness statement, containing a Statement of Truth, was more likely to be right.
The Adjudicator's fees
Decision
The Unfortunate Development
(a) She seeks in the Second Statement to explain why her solicitors wrote as they did on 19 November 2009 that "our clients appreciate that they are jointly and severally liable for your fees but, as explained previously, our clients have limited available funds…they are not currently in a position to satisfy your fees themselves and then have to look to recovery from [the Contractor]." She says that she had always drawn a distinction between her personal wealth and the position of the funds actually in the partnership which she had with her sister and so, she says, the solicitors were writing on behalf of the partnership which had insufficient funds.
(b) With respect to her, that is not a credible explanation, on three counts. On her current evidence, the partnership was more than capable of paying out £25,000 at that stage. Secondly, the letter itself makes it clear that the two sisters appreciate that they are "jointly and severally liable" for the fees: if that is right, it would seem to be, there can have been no real doubt that funds "severally" available from each of the sisters could be deployed. Thirdly, from all the evidence, Ms Grombach appears to be an intelligent, astute and sophisticated person who would have known that it was material that she had substantial assets and funds available. Indeed, she has asserted in correspondence which I was shown on the costs issues that she was the USA equivalent of a UK barrister; if that is so, she will have been well aware of the importance of accuracy in statements to be submitted to the Court, particularly those signed with a Statement of Truth
(c) There is amaterial discrepancy between the two Statements. In the First, she says Paragraph 15: "I further confirm that I have in my bank account sufficient funds to repay the sum in issue in one instalment"; the sum in issue in the proceedings was and is some £113,000. In her Second Statement, she says:
"10. [My husband and I] have a number of bank accounts with cash (in Swiss Francs). I attach…a computerised printout of my bank balance on one of my accounts. The account is in my husband's name, but it is a joint account and I am free to use the money as I see fit. The balance in the account is [equivalent to £45,675.62].
11. In addition to our operating bank accounts, which I have not provided as these are relevant to our regular cash flow, I also have about (approximately £20,590) in a safe."
The clear inference from this is that there is only some £66,000's worth of cash readily available. It thus appears to be in direct contradiction to what she said in her first statement.
(d) I conclude therefore that her evidence in the Second Statement is inherently unreliable.
(e) Much of the latest evidence is at best inconclusive. The new evidence from the valuer of the properties does not assist much. He does not identify which of the two values in his September 2008 report is the appropriate one (and there is a £300,000 difference); he does not identify by how much the value falls to be reduced in relation to Flat 1 at No 33, which is not owned by the partnership. She provides no reliable evidence as to what is owed to the bank, without which one can not start to determine whether there is any equity; for instance a current or recent statement from the bank as to what is owed would spell this out. Although he says that he would not anticipate a deduction of more than 5 to 10% from his September 2008 valuations, he qualifies this by saying that his comments "do not in any way constitute a revaluation".
(f) She says that she has a joint bank account with her husband in the Switzerland, albeit that the account is in her husband's name. There is no independent evidence that she is free to use the money in it, as she says "as I see fit". She says, somewhat surprisingly that she has "about" 35,000 Swiss Francs "in a safe" but there is no explanation why it has to be kept there rather than in the bank earning (even) Swiss rates of interest.
(g) She says that she has some 10kg of gold in a safe, which is of course at the moment a particularly valuable commodity. She has produced some purchase receipts and she invites the Contractor to visit Switzerland with a gold expert to verify this. This assertion is surprising.
(g) She attaches a schedule, not apparently independently prepared, of income for 2009 and expenditure from 1 January to 15 December 2009. That schedule does not deal with any expected expenditure or exceptional items (other than legal fees and costs). She does say that the irrecoverable legal fees for the adjudication mean that there is no net income for 2009. She does not address the extent to which normally there will be Schedule A tax on net income from real property. Since it is unlikely that the Claimant will recover all of their costs of and occasioned by these proceedings, there will be an additional burden on the partnership income in 2010.
(a) In Adjudication No 5, the Contractor effectively argued that there was no good reason why, if there really were defects for which it was responsible, the remedial works had not been done. It was argued that the fact that the remedial works have not been done materially undermined the credibility of the whole defects claim.
(b) The whole issue of whether the Employer could afford to carry out the remedial works was an issue raised in the adjudication. It would have taken little or nothing to argue that the let premises must have been producing some net income such as would enable remedial works to be done; thus it was open to the Contractor to challenge the credibility of the assertions made by the Employer that it could not afford to carry out remedial works.
(c) The effect and impact of Ms Grombach's evidence leads me to the conclusion that what she said in her statements to the Court about her financial worth is unreliable and that what she says does not rebut or undermine the prima facie view that the Claimants would be unable to repay the judgement sum or at least a significant part of it. The prima facie view is based on what the Employer said in Adjudications Nos. 4 and 5 being true.
(d) For these reasons and those adumbrated in SG South Ltd. v King's Head Cirencester LLP & Anor [2009] EWHC 2645 (TCC), this is not a case therefore which merits refusing enforcement.
Time to Pay
"5. So far as the law and practice is concerned, CPR 40.11 says this:
"A party must comply with a judgment or order for the payment of an amount of money, including costs, within 14 days of the date of the judgment or order unless-
(a) the judgment or order specifies a different date for compliance, including specific payment by instalments …"
It is clear that the court does have some discretion there to change the normal 14 day period to another one. It could indeed be less, it could be more, and it is clear that the court does have some discretion to order payment by instalments. It may be, for instance, that there are cases where it is appropriate to make payment by instalments.
6. But one then turns to the provisions in the Rules of the High Court about enforcement of judgments and orders. The introductory notes to CPR Part 70 say this:
"It is a feature of civil justice that the court does not automatically enforce its judgments, nor even decide how they should be enforced. It is up to the judgment creditor".
In broad terms, that does reflect the law and the practice. Part 70, and those provisions of the Rules of the Supreme Court which were retained by that Part, give a wide variety of different methods to a successful party to litigation for enforcing judgments. That can include the appointment of a Receiver, third party debt orders, charging orders, stop orders, stop notices, and other writs of execution such as a writ of fieri facias. There are provisions to seek to attach earnings as well. So there is a wide variety of recourses open to the successful party to enforce any given judgment. In addition, there is a statutory option available to a judgment creditor to initiate proceedings for bankruptcy or, in the case of a company, liquidation of the debtor.
7. Parliament has given a successful judgment creditor those rights and it should be an exceptional case, it seems to me, where the court interferes with those rights given by Parliament.
8. It is clear, however, that when those provisions for alternatives to enforcement are considered, the court, which may be dealing with the different methods of enforcement, is given a discretion. I have considered, for instance, RSC Ord.46, which deals with writs of execution, and those provisions relating to fieri facias writs. In certain circumstances, where there is a realistic prospect of payment being achieved by interim payments, then the court is sometimes prepared to consider making such an order.
9. I consider that the court, at this stage - that is the court which has given the judgment - can take into account similar factors to those which a court handling enforcement can take into account. I have indicated to Mr. Butler, in argument, that I do have some real sympathy, for the defendants in this sense, that, although they have lost the proceedings, they are ordinary individuals who have been caught up in litigation. The effect of my judgment is that that is a matter of their own making, but nonetheless they were not financially equipped to get involved in substantial litigation such as this proved to be. They are now suffering the consequences.
10. The problem that this court faces, however, is that there is no realistic prospect, on the figures and on the information that has been put forward, of the defendants being able to pay. They both, frankly, admitted, and accepted that, in effect, the only way that this judgment debt is going to be paid within the foreseeable future is by way of charitable donation or possibly lending, as the case may be, from charitable institutions or people within the Jewish community in this country. Unsurprisingly, they have been unable to secure yet any such offer or undertaking to provide any such financial assistance. In those circumstances, it is difficult for the court (sympathetic though it is) to think of a way in which, if justice is being observed for both parties, it can assist here."
Costs