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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 >> Fenice Investments Inc v Erram Falkus Construction Ltd [2011] EWHC 1678 (TCC) (06 July 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2011/1678.html Cite as: [2011] EWHC 1678 (TCC), 141 ConLR 206 |
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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 :
sitting as a Judge of the High Court
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FENICE INVESTMENTS INC |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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ERRAM FALKUS CONSTRUCTION LIMITED |
Defendant |
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Graeme Sampson (instructed by Davies & Davies, Solicitors) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 20 June 2011
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Crown Copyright ©
Introduction
(1) The claim is a simple enforcement of an adjudication because the principal sum claimed is what Dr Mastandrea determined that JFC should pay;(2) Alternatively, Dr Mastrandrea's determination of his reasonable fees can only be challenged if there was bad faith on his part and there is no such allegation here;
(3) Alternatively, the fees are in any event manifestly reasonable so that there is no real prospect of having them reduced on any assessment. Or at the very least they clearly exceed more than the £5,000 plus VAT paid by JFC.
The Basic Facts
"JFC shall within 7 days of the date of this Decision pay my charges in connection with this adjudication in the total sum of £23,235.63 being £19,775 for the fees and £3,460.63 for the VAT."
The Contractual Position
"Adjudicator's decision
20. The adjudicator shall decide the matters in dispute. He may take into account any other matters which the parties to the dispute agree should be within the scope of the adjudication or which are matters under the contract which he considers are necessarily connected with the dispute......
Effects of the decision
23. (1) In his decision, the adjudicator may, if he thinks fit, order any of the parties to comply peremptorily with his decision or any part of it.
(2) The decision of the adjudicator shall be binding on the parties, and they shall comply with it until the dispute is finally determined by legal proceedings, by arbitration (if the contract provides for arbitration or the parties otherwise agree to arbitration) or by agreement between the parties....
25. The adjudicator shall be entitled to the payment of such reasonable amount as he may determine by way of fees and expenses reasonably incurred by him. The parties shall be jointly and severally liable for any sum which remains outstanding following the making of any determination on how the payment shall be apportioned.
26. The adjudicator shall not be liable for anything done or omitted in the discharge or purported discharge of his functions as adjudicator unless the act or omission is in bad faith, and any employee or agent of the adjudicator shall be similarly protected from liability."
"35. The adjudicator's contractual right to payment does not arise under and is not affected by the terms of the decision by which the adjudicator decides which party is to pay his fees and expenses. That decision determines who, as between the parties, is to bear those sums but it does not affect any contractual right to payment which the adjudicator may have or provide a right to payment if he has no contractual right. It may, in practice, lead to the relevant party making payment direct to the adjudicator but it gives the adjudicator no enforceable rights to payment."
Fenice's Primary claim against JFC
(1) If the claim for fees was part of the decision in the same way as the substantive ruling, it would follow that the adjudicator's entitlement was only provisional and subject to paragraph 23 (2) of the Scheme. That makes no sense at all. The only further proceedings contemplated by paragraph 23 (2) are those to determine the substantive rights of the parties inter se. Mr Webb suggested that there could be some later claim made against the adjudicator by one or both parties to recover back any fees overpaid, but that is unrealistic;
(2) Fenice's contention ignores the fact that under paragraph 25 of the Scheme the adjudicator is entitled to his reasonable fees. Whatever may be the appropriate way of assessing them (see below) it cannot be the case that he (or any party who has paid him and now seeks to recover them from the other) is entitled to whatever he decides; otherwise the reference to reasonableness in paragraph 25 is entirely otiose. Moreover, that paragraph is not governed by paragraph 23 (2). The latter provision, unsurprisingly, governs paragraph 23 (1);
(3) This contention is also inconsistent with the contractual analysis described above;
(4) The fact that if this contention is wrong there may have to be some kind of assessment of the reasonableness of the fees (either in a direct claim by the adjudicator or in a claim by the other party) is not so repugnant or absurd that the framers of the Scheme could not have intended it.
Fenice's Second Claim – Bad Faith
"Joint and several liability of parties to arbitrators for fees and expenses
(1) The parties are jointly and severally liable to pay to the arbitrators such reasonable fees and expenses (if any) as are appropriate in the circumstances.
(2) Any party may apply to the court (upon notice to the other parties and to the arbitrators) which may order that the amount of the arbitrators' fees and expenses shall be considered and adjusted by such means and upon such terms as it may direct.
(3) If the application is made after any amount has been paid to the arbitrators by way of fees or expenses, the court may order the repayment of such amount (if any) as is shown to be excessive, but shall not do so unless it is shown that it is reasonable in the circumstances to order repayment."
"Immunity of arbitrator
(1) An arbitrator is not liable for anything done or omitted in the discharge or purported discharge of his functions as arbitrator unless the act or omission is shown to have been in bad faith.
(2) Subsection (1) applies to an employee or agent of an arbitrator as it applies to the arbitrator himself.
(3) This section does not affect any liability incurred by an arbitrator by reason of his resigning (but see section 25)..."
Fenice's Third Argument – the reasonableness of the fees
(1) The work has to be undertaken at considerable speed, and sometimes with moving targets in the sense of what the core issues underlying the adjudication are, or become; by analogy, where work is done by solicitors on an urgent basis, this is frequently advanced as a reason why the Court should award more than the guideline rate of costs;
(2) Routine satellite litigation about an adjudicator's costs could not have been intended by the framers of s108 or the Scheme and would be a discouragement to potential adjudicators to act in this important process.
Assessment in this case
Two preliminary points
The sums claimed by Fenice
(1) First, as with any jointly and severally liable party, Fenice has a right at common-law to recoup wholly or in part its payment of the underlying debt, the debt here being the reasonable fee owed to Dr Mastrandrea; alternatively the claim made be seen as arising under the Civil Liability (Contribution) Act 1978 on the basis that both parties are liable for "the same damage". The practical outcome will be the same. The Court will assess the appropriate contributions inter se (here following the adjudicator's decision that JFC should pay) and order payment;
(2) But in addition, as there is in any event a contract between the parties with regard to the adjudication which includes the obligation to pay the fees if the adjudicator determines that one party should do so, JFC here was contractually obliged to pay Dr Mastrandrea and did not. So Fenice brings a claim for breach of contract.
(1) What level of the fees charged by HI can clearly be found to be reasonable, and
(2) Whether and to what extent Fenice acted reasonably in paying £6,200 to HI and incurring £3,282.50 of its own costs.
The fees themselves
(1) In the two previous adjudications, Dr Mastrandrea charged a similar fee. Admittedly, JFC did not expressly agree it but nor did it raise a specific objection including when it was the paying party. So it cannot be said that a fee of this order is unusual;
(2) Nor did JFC specifically object to the fee proposed for this adjudication. If a paying party wishes to object to a fee of which it was aware at the outset, it surely behoves it to make that known at the time. This at least gives the adjudicator the chance to reconsider or adjust on the basis that he knows that there might be a challenge later. This is well illustrated by the suggestion in Davies & Davies' letter of 8 November, after the dispute arose, that this adjudication did not require a barrister (which Dr Mastrandrea is) and that a construction professional could have done the job just as well and more cheaply. The time to make that point was at the beginning, not the end, and in any event both parties agreed to be bound by the adjudication nomination process undertaken here by RICS which led to Dr Mastrandrea's appointment;
(3) Dr Mastrandrea is also a senior chartered surveyor and chartered arbitrator. He is an experienced adjudicator. If one compares the fee to the hourly rate of senior barristers or solicitors it cannot possibly be said to be out of the norm;
(4) JFC has set much store by what Dr Mastrandrea said in his e-mail of 10 November referring to the letter of 8 November and another letter from Davies & Davies of 10 November, namely:
"Save to say that, in any event, my time records are now rendered entirely irrelevant as – depending on the view taken of the appropriate rate that a "construction professional qualified to act as an adjudicator" might have charged (being the basis of JFC's offer in relation to the work which it says, wrongly, that I should have carried out) – that would represent between 25 and 33 hours' work for such a person (which I am happy to estimate for such work) ...."
so that he appeared impliedly to accept a rate for such a person of £150-£200 per hour. There is nothing in this point. Perhaps such a person would have charged that amount but that does not mean that Dr Mastrandrea's hourly rate was, for a person in his position, unreasonable. There might have been more to JFC's point had it adduced evidence to show that a fee in the region of £350 was clearly and significantly more than the general level of fees charged or the fees charged in adjudications known to JFC, or its advisers.
(1) that the instructions given to it to remedy the defect in terms of levels amounted to "divergence between the Employer's Requirements and the definition of Site Boundary" within the meaning of clause 2.10 of the Contract. If correct it would have been a Relevant Event entitling JFC to an extension of time;
(2) that the instructions to proceed with the utilities works concurrently or otherwise delayed the completion of the works even though (delay in) performance of statutory undertakers was not a Relevant Event and it was JFC's own failings which then delayed and disrupted performance by the utility companies.
"Whilst, given the narrow parameters upon which my jurisdiction is based, it is not necessary for me so to decide, I am satisfied that in this JFC failed."
Glover's Fees
Fenice's own legal fees
Further Assessment
Fenice's financial position
Costs and interest
Note 1 IE The Scheme for Construction Contracts (England and Wales) Regulations 1998. [Back]