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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions >> CN Associates (A Firm) v Holbeton Ltd [2011] EWHC 43 (TCC) (26 January 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2011/43.html Cite as: [2011] CILL 2969, [2011] BLR 261, [2011] EWHC 43 (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 :
____________________
CN ASSOCIATES (a firm) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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HOLBETON LIMITED |
Defendant |
____________________
Mark James (instructed by Ross & Craig) for the defendant
Hearing date: 11 January 2011
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Crown Copyright ©
The History and Background
"Further to our recent meeting we understand that you would like to procure and construct the above project using our services as construction managers/quantity surveyors and propose the following fees as indicated in the budget costings previously forwarded to you.
We would require a fee of 6% of the construction value of the elements under our control…
The fee will cover our management services but any site based staff would form part of the prime cost for the works.
We set out below an outline of the services we will provide as part of our Construction Management duties and would request your confirmation to our appointment and seek your authority to place orders on your behalf.
Duties
Our proposal assumes that we are part of the Construction Team and report directly to the Client. We will act on instructions issued by the Client/Architect who is deemed to be the lead consultant for the project…
Our specific duties will broadly include the following functions:-
[There are then set out 21 particular services]
Payment terms for our services will be £3000.00 per month with payment commencing after the first month on-site and any balance due adjusted in the last payment at completion of the works…
We would like to thank you for this opportunity and look forwards [sic] to receiving your confirmation and authority to fulfil the role outlined above."
"I refer to your letter of 3 March 2004 outlining the terms are acting as Construction Manager/Quantity Surveyor for the above refurbishment programme.
Further to our meeting yesterday and our discussions, I write to confirm that we would like you to act as Construction Manager for the above project on the terms contained in your letter…"
It is rightly accepted by the parties that this created a contract between Bright and CNA.
"I act for Holbeton…who have asked me to send you the enclosed Appointment in respect of your services for works to be undertaken at 17, The Bishop's Avenue. I should be grateful if you would read through this document to ensure that it meets with your understanding and approval and let me have any comments you may have.
In particular I shall be grateful if you would confirm/provide the following information:
1 A copy of your current professional indemnity insurance certificate;
2 Confirmation as to who can execute this appointment on behalf of the partnership together with an extract authorising the signatory from the partnership deed;
3 A list of your services for incorporation into Schedule 1;
4 Your agreed fees together with the dates of any instalments for incorporation into Schedule 2.
I look forward to hearing from you in the meantime if you have any queries please do not hesitate to contact me."
"We are in receipt of your letter dated 15th June enclosing a draft appointment letter in respect of our services on the above project and have referred the matter to our insurers for their comments.
We are now in receipt of their response and comment as follows
With regards to the level of insurance, we have spoken with Fahim [Mr Ahmed] regarding the level stated in your schedule 3 clause 3. We carry insurance of £1,000,000 for any one event…The problem is that fees do not cover for the increased levels requested and the required run of costs for twelve years. We understand that this is a common problem for all the professional team and that Fahim will be talking to you about agreeing to the lower level current in force for the respective Consultants.
Under the definition of our insurance we would prefer it if our appointment refers to us as 'Construction Manager'…"
It went on to refer to a number of specific clauses upon which it wished to have certain amendments, both in the body of the Appointment letter as well as in the collateral warranty. It also purportedly enclosed "a copy of additional clauses that our insurers have recommended should be included in the agreement and warranty" and also a copy of its letter of 3 March 2004 (see above).
The Adjudication
"The Responding Party submits that the adjudicator has no jurisdiction to determine this dispute. This is because:
(1) The construction contract relied upon is said to be contained in the exchange of letters between the Referring Party dated 3 March 2004 and Bright Services Ltd dated 19 March 2004. The Responding Party is not a party to this contract."
It goes on in this paragraph to make the points that not all the terms of the contract were recorded in those two letters, that there were various variations also not recorded and that the adjudicator's appointment was wrongly made by the Chartered Institute of Arbitrators. It went on expressly to develop its jurisdiction point later in the Response.
"It is agreed that the referral to adjudication is purportedly made under s.108 of the Act… but [Holbeton] avers that there was no jurisdiction to refer this dispute. [CNA's] remedy is to sue for its fees in the courts."
Paragraphs of 42 to 47 are entitled "The jurisdiction argument in more detail". Although it was accepted that the contract evidenced by the exchange of letters in March 2004 was a "construction contract" in relation to "construction operations", the relevant letters did no more than identify the parties, the nature of the work and the price and that much more was expected to be reduced to writing and to be agreed. The contract was said to be incomplete and it followed that "not all of the terms of the contract were in writing" and accordingly, "the adjudicator has no jurisdiction to determine this dispute". The Response then turned to dealing with payment and the claim itself. No particular relief was claimed as such.
"18. In addressing jurisdiction I deal at the same time with the parties' respective arguments as to contract and contract formation; which were matters in the Notice of Adjudication and formed the basis of Holbeton's submissions on jurisdiction.
19. In the Response Holbeton submitted that I did not have jurisdiction to determine the Dispute. Holbeton listed four specific reasons. I invited CN to submit observations on Holbeton' points with the Reply. Holbeton maintained its position in the Rejoinder.
20. I cannot make a binding ruling on my jurisdiction. However, I had to decide whether, or not, I should continue with the Adjudication. After considering the parties' respective submissions and the authorities they each referred me to I concluded that I should continue with the reference. I wrote on 4th October 2010 informing the parties I was continuing with the Adjudication. I set out below the parties' principal arguments and evidence which led me to conclude that I had a valid appointment and should continue to adjudicate upon the Dispute."
Over the next 26 paragraphs he sets out both parties' detailed assertions and then says:
"I find on balance from the parties' respective arguments summarised above, together with my consideration of the detailed submissions, the documents and Exhibits, and having examined the case authorities I was referred to, that…"
He then sets out in detail his view that Bright acted for and on behalf of Holbeton, that the contract was evidenced in writing and that essential terms were agreed around 23 June 2005 with the parties proceeding on the basis of those terms evidenced in writing notwithstanding that the appointment was not executed as a Deed. At Paragraph 54 he said:
"It follows that I am satisfied I have a valid appointment to determine the Dispute set out in the Notice of Adjudication and in accordance with the procedure there. I have proceeded on that basis."
"DECISION
For the reasons set out above I decide and direct that:
1. Holbeton shall forthwith pay to CN the sum of £104,315.81.
2. Holbeton shall, upon receipt of an appropriate VAT invoice, also pay forthwith to CN any VAT properly due on the above sum.
3. My fees and expenses total £12,075.00 exclusive of VAT, which I require CN to settle. Holbeton is liable for and shall thereafter upon receipt of an invoice forthwith reimburse CN the total of my fees and expenses."
These Proceedings
The Law
"It has long been established in the relatively short period of time in which the Housing Grants Construction and Regeneration Act 1996 ("HGCRA") has been in force that it is necessary for a party challenging the jurisdiction of the adjudicator to reserve its position in relation to its challenge; for instance, although not cited in argument, this issue was raised and commented upon by Mr Justice Dyson as he then was in The Project Consultancy Group v The Trustees of the Gray Trust [1999] BLR 377 at Paragraphs 14 and 15. Having reserved its position appropriately and clearly, that party can safely continue to participate in the adjudication and then, if the decision goes against it, to challenge its enforceability on jurisdictional grounds in the Court. If it does not reserve its position effectively, generally it cannot avoid enforcement on jurisdictional grounds. I say generally because there might be unusual circumstances in which a jurisdictional challenge can be mounted when there has been no reservation; for instance, if the party making the challenge did not know or could not reasonably have ascertained the grounds of challenge before the decision was issued. It is however difficult to envisage circumstances in which a jurisdictional challenge on the grounds that there is no dispute should not and can not be the subject of a reservation of rights."
"15. So far as jurisdictional objections that have been or could be taken during the adjudication, one will need to ascertain whether the parties have expressly agreed to give the adjudicator jurisdiction to resolve those objections or, even if they have not as such done so, whether the objecting party has effectively reserved or waived its position on jurisdiction. For instance in Pilon Ltd v Breyer Group Ltd [2010] EWHC 837 (TCC), Mr Justice Coulson said:
"12. The law on this topic is clear. Jurisdictional issues often arise during the course of an adjudication, and it is usually sensible for the parties to ask the adjudicator to investigate the issue and state his conclusion. But, unless the parties have also agreed to be bound by the result of the adjudicator's investigation into his own jurisdiction, his ruling on that issue will not be determinative, and the challenger can defeat any subsequent enforcement proceedings by showing a respectable case that the adjudicator had reached an erroneous conclusion as to jurisdiction: see, in particular, paragraph 10 of the judgment of May LJ in Pegram Shopfitters Limited v Tally Weijl (Uk) Limited [2003] EWCA Civ 1750.
13.Accordingly, there needs to be either an express agreement between the parties that the adjudicator's decision on jurisdiction is to be binding or, at the very least, an implied agreement to the same effect, which may arise where the objecting party fails to reserve its position, or there has been a unilateral waiver of any jurisdictional objection. In both JW Hughes Building Contractors Limited v GB Metal Work Limited [2003] EWHC 2421 (TCC) and Nordot Engineering Limited v Siemens Plc [2001] CILL 1778, the court found an ad hoc agreement between the parties that they would be bound by the adjudicator's decision as to jurisdiction, but such cases are rare. Generally speaking, as Dyson LJ put it in Amec Projects Limited v Whitefriars City Estates Limited [2004] EWCA Civ 1418, "the 'decision' of an adjudicator as to his jurisdiction is of no legal effect and cannot affect the rights of the parties….""
16. In Thomas-Fredric's (Construction) Ltd v Keith Wilson [2003] EWCA Civ 1494, Simon Brown LJ (as he then was) said:
"33. The position can I think be summarised in the following two propositions. (1) If a defendant to a Part 24(2) application has submitted to the adjudicator's jurisdiction in the full sense of having agreed not only that the adjudicator should rule on the issue of jurisdiction but also that he would then be bound by that ruling, then he is liable to enforcement in the short term, even if the adjudicator was plainly wrong on the issue. (2) Even if the defendant has not submitted to the adjudicator's jurisdiction in that sense, then he is still liable to a Part 24(2) summary judgment upon the award if the adjudicator's ruling on the jurisdictional issue was plainly right."
17. There is obviously no great difficulty about an express agreement made by both parties with their eyes open that the adjudicator should have jurisdiction to produce a binding decision that he has jurisdiction to resolve the particular dispute referred to adjudication. It is with the implied agreement or waiver or abandonment of a jurisdictional objection that parties and indeed adjudicators get into murkier waters. There is no doubt that, when one party raises a jurisdictional objection, good or bad, adjudicators, like arbitrators, are entitled to enquire into their own jurisdiction. In practice in adjudication, that will usually involve considering the Referral, witness statements and other documents available to the adjudicator at the time that he is making that enquiry. Even if no objection is made, an adjudicator who believed that he had no jurisdiction could raise the issue with the parties and, unless persuaded otherwise or the parties agreed to give him jurisdiction, he could stand down.
18. There have been a number of observations in various cases about what is needed for a party making a jurisdictional objection during the course of the adjudication effectively to do so. In Project Consultancy Group v Trustees of the Gray Trust (1999) 65 Con LR 146, Mr Justice Dyson had to deal with an allegation that there had been an ad hoc agreement to refer a jurisdictional issue to the adjudicator. He said dealing with the particular facts:
"In my view, the defendants' solicitor's letter of 9 March 1999 stated in the clearest terms that the defendants protested the adjudicator's jurisdiction, and that they would not recognise and comply with any decision to award money to the claimant. The letter also made it clear that, if the adjudication proceeded, they reserved their rights to participate, but without prejudice to their contention that there was no jurisdiction. I do not consider that there can be any reasonable doubt as to the meaning of that letter. The only real question is whether, by participating in the adjudication process, the defendants waived the jurisdiction point, and agreed to submit to abide by the decision of the adjudicator on that issue. The only material relied on by Ms Rawley [Counsel] is the content of the defendants' response…But, in their response, the defendants continued to assert that the adjudicator had no jurisdiction…It is a matter of fact whether a parties submit to the jurisdiction of the third person…"
19. In Euro Construction Scaffolding Ltd v SLLB Construction Ltd [2008] EWHC 3160 (TCC), the judge said:
"So far as jurisdiction challenge to an adjudicator is concerned, it is necessary for the party objecting to the adjudicator's jurisdiction to make a clear and full reservation".
The report of that case goes on to review whether an adequate reservation was made and considers, amongst other things, whether the adjudicator proceeded on the basis that there had been a reservation about jurisdiction. In that case, there had been an effective reservation but in the event the jurisdictional challenge was not a good one.
20. In CJP Builders Ltd v William Verry Ltd [2008] EWHC 2025 (TCC), the following was said at Paragraph 72:
"Various cases such as Thomas Frederic's (Construction) Limited v Keith Wilson [2004] BLR 23 and The Project Consultancy Group v The Trustees of the Grey Trust [1999] BLR 377 make it clear that if there is to be an objection to jurisdiction of the arbitrator generally there should be a clear reservation of the objecting party's stance on jurisdiction. Such a reservation will usually be done effectively by clear words but it could also be done by unequivocal conduct."
21. I can draw these various strands together:
(a) An express agreement to give an adjudicator jurisdiction to decide in a binding way whether he has jurisdiction will fall into the normal category of any agreement; it simply has to be shown that there was an express agreement.
(b) For there to be an implied agreement giving the adjudicator such jurisdiction, one needs to look at everything material that was done and said to determine whether one can say with conviction that the parties must be taken to have agreed that the adjudicator had such jurisdiction. It will have to be clear that some objection is being taken in relation to the adjudicator's jurisdiction because otherwise one could not imply that the adjudicator was being asked to decide a non-existent jurisdictional issue which neither party had mentioned.
(c) One principal way of determining that there was no such implied agreement is if at any material stage shortly before or, mainly, during the adjudication a clear reservation was made by the party objecting to the jurisdiction of the adjudicator.
(d) A clear reservation can, and usually will, be made by words expressed by or on behalf of the objecting party. Words such as "I fully reserve my position about your jurisdiction" or "I am only participating in the adjudication under protest" will usually suffice to make an effective reservation; these forms of words whilst desirable are not absolutely essential. One can however look at every relevant thing said and done during the course of the adjudication to see whether by words and conduct what was clearly intended was a reservation as to the jurisdiction of the adjudicator. It will be a matter of interpretation of what was said and done to determine whether an effective reservation was made. A legitimate question to ask is: was it or should it have been clear to all concerned that a reservation on jurisdiction was being made?
(e) A waiver can be said to arise where a party, who knows or should have known of grounds for a jurisdictional objection, participates in the adjudication without any reservation of any sort; its conduct will be such as to demonstrate that its non-objection on jurisdictional grounds and its active participation was intended to be and was relied upon by the other party (and indeed the adjudicator) in proceeding with the adjudication. It would be difficult to say that there was a waiver if the grounds for objection on a jurisdictional basis were not known of or capable of being discovered by that party."
"3. It is usually possible to establish by the conventional approach to contract formation what the contract in any given case is. Thus there will be an offer, an acceptance, consideration and an intention to create a legal relationship…It is trite to say that each case will depend on its own facts as to whether, when and how any given offer or counter-offer has been accepted. Many of the cases relied upon do not decide much beyond their own facts…
4. In G Percy Trentham Ltd v Archital Luxfer Ltd & Others [1993] 1 Lloyd's Rep 25, Lord Justice Steyn, with whom the other members of the Court of Appeal agreed, said at Page 27 in a case which necessarily turned on its own facts:
"Before I turn to the facts it is important to consider briefly the approach to be adopted to the issue of contract formation in this case. It seems to me that four matters are of importance. The first is the fact that English law generally adopts an objective theory of contract formation. That means that in practice our law generally ignores the subjective expectations and the unexpressed mental reservations of the parties. Instead the governing criterion is the reasonable expectations of honest men. And in the present case that means that the yardstick is the reasonable expectations of sensible businessmen. Secondly, it is true that the coincidence of offer and acceptance will in the vast majority of cases represent the mechanism of contract formation. It is so in the case of a contract alleged to be made by an exchange of correspondence. But it is not necessarily so in the case of a contract alleged to have come into existence during and as a result of performance. See Brogden v Metropolitan Railway (1877) 2 AC 666; New Zealand Shipping Co Ltd v A.M. Satterthwaite & Co Ltd [1974] 1 Lloyd's Rep 534 at p.539, Col 1; [1975] AC 154 at p.167 D-E; Gibson v Manchester City Council [1979] 1 WLR 294. The third matter is the impact of the fact that the transaction is executed rather executory. It is a consideration of the first importance on a number of levels. See British Bank for Foreign Trade Ltd v Novinex [1949] 1 KB 628. at p 630. The fact that the transaction was performed on both sides will often make it unrealistic to argue that there was no intention to enter into legal relations. It will often make it difficult to submit that the contract is void for vagueness or uncertainty. Specifically, the fact that the transaction is executed makes it easier to imply a term resolving any uncertainty, or, alternatively, it may make it possible to treat a matter not finalised in negotiations as an inessential. In this case fully executed transactions are under consideration. Clearly, similar considerations may sometimes be relevant in partly executed transactions. Fourthly, if a contract only comes into existence during and as a result of performance of the transaction it will frequently be possible to hold that the contract impliedly and retrospectively covers pre-contractual performance. See Trollope & Colls Ltd v Atomic Power Construction Ltd [1963] 1 WLR 333."
5. It is important to appreciate that the reference in the first of Steyn LJ's four matters to "the reasonable expectations of sensible businessmen" is in the context of confirming that the law recognises only an "objective theory of contract formation". Thus, in the context of a commercial contract such as that entered into in this case, one needs to have regard to an objective interpretation of what the parties did and said in fact. When one couples the first with the second matter, conduct in terms of possible acceptance is again construed upon an objective basis. Thus, a contractor who commences work after receipt of an order to commence may well have its conduct in commencing the work objectively construed as an acceptance of the order, because objectively sensible business people would expect that commencement without reservation suggested acceptance of the order.
6. The case of Brogden v Metropolitan Railway (1877) 2 AC 666 referred to by Steyn LJ established or confirmed the proposition that conduct by a party to a contract can in appropriate circumstances probably be considered as an implied acceptance…
7. Lord Hatherley said this:
"My Lord, Mr. Herschell, in his extremely able argument in this case, has given us every assistance that we could wish to have for its determination, and has, at it appears to me, put the case on a very proper foundation, when he says that he will not contend that this agreement is not to be held to be a binding and firm agreement between the parties, if it should be found that, although there has been no formal recognition of the agreement in terms by the one side, yet the course of dealing in conduct of the party to whom the agreement was propounded has been such as legitimately lead to the inference that those with whom they were dealing were made aware by that course of dealing, that the contract which they had propounded had been in fact accepted by the persons who so dealt with them" (Page 686)
8. In this case, Brogden, is authority for the proposition that a course of dealing and conduct, construed objectively, can amount to acceptance, in contractual terms of an offer made by a party.
9. This Reliance has been placed on the case of Jayaar Impex Ltd v Toaken Group Ltd [1996] 2 Lloyd's Rep. 437. This was a decision of Mr. Justice Rix (as he then was) and was clearly and expressly a decision upon its own facts. It is a case from which one can draw this relatively obvious proposition: where there is an established contract between the parties, it is difficult to infer that there has been an agreed variation to that contract by reason of conduct which is referable only to the established contract. Thus, where commencement of the works is consistent with and referable to an established contract, it is difficult and in many cases impossible, without more for that commencement of works to be conduct which, objectively construed, implies acceptance of some variation to that subsisting contract."
Discussion
Decision