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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 >> WSP Cel Ltd v Dalkia Utilities Services Plc [2012] EWHC 2428 (TCC) (28 August 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2012/2428.html Cite as: [2012] EWHC 2428 (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 :
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WSP CEL LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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DALKIA UTILITIES SERVICES PLC |
Defendant |
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Mr Michael Soole QC (instructed by Reynolds Porter Chamberlain LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 7 August 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Ramsey:
Introduction
Background
"Before Dalkia takes any step in this current adjudication, please note the following.1. That Dalkia will be asserting in the case of many if not all of the issues referred that the Referring Party is not entitled to do so for failure to comply with clause W1.3(2), which provides:"If a disputed matter is not notified and referred within the times set out in this contract, neither Party may subsequently refer it to the Adjudicator or the tribunal.2. To the extent that any claims in this referral seek to re-open issues already decided in [WSP's] First Referral Dalkia will assert that they are already the subject of a decision.Dalkia therefore formally reserves its right to assert that so far as such issues are jurisdictional (and not for example simply part of ascertaining [WSP's] entitlement to final payment pursuant to clause 92), you have no jurisdiction to determine them. I propose for convenience to develop these reserved issues in Dalkia's Response to the Referral Notice, unless you or the Referring Party require to take them as preliminary issues.All steps Dalkia takes hereafter are subject to this reservation."
"4. I concede that by clause 6 of [the Consent Agreement] the parties conferred on you exclusive jurisdiction in the first instance to decide the effect and interpretation of it. I reserve however Dalkia's right to argue hereafter before the court that you have no jurisdiction to determine whether any claims within the Final Account were themselves barred by the operation of option W1.3(1) at the time [the Consent Agreement] was made....
I therefore invite you to rule that the effect of [the Consent Agreement] of 13 January is as stated in paragraph 2 above and that option W1 applies in full to the conduct of the adjudication save as conceded in paragraph 2 above. Dalkia maintains the jurisdictional reservations I have already communicated in my previous email."
"We maintain our denial that the adjudicator had jurisdiction to determine those claims which by operation of clause W1.3(1) were not open for referral to adjudication and/or about which he had made a previous finding of fact and we dispute the adjudicator's decision as to the effect of the [Consent Agreement] of 13 January 2012."
The Consent Agreement
"[WSP] shall be entitled to refer the Dispute (or such aspects of the Dispute as remain disputed) for determination by the Adjudicator provided always that:(1) The referral shall take effect once the Adjudicator is appointed and a Notice of Adjudication has been served on the Adjudicator; and(2) The appointment of the Adjudicator and service of the Notice of Adjudication must be made within 7 days of effective written notice given under clause 3."
"The effect and interpretation of this Agreement shall be subject to the exclusive jurisdiction of the Adjudicator in the first instance (and whose decision is final and binding on the Parties unless and until revised by the English Courts).".
The NEC Conditions
(1) Clauses 61 to 65 which deal with compensation events;(2) Clause 92.1 which deals with payment on termination;
(3) Option W1 which provides:
(a) By Clause W1.1 that "A dispute arising under or in connection with this contract is referred to and decided by the Adjudicator."(b) By Clause W1.3(1) that "Disputes are notified and referred to the Adjudicator in accordance with the Adjudication Table" which is then set out.
(c) By Clause W1.3(2) that: "The times for notifying and referring a dispute may be extended if the Consultant and the Employer agree to the extension before the notice of referral is due. If a disputed matter is not notified and referred within the times set out in the contract, neither Party may subsequently refer it to the Adjudicator or the tribunal." In this case the tribunal was the courts of England and Wales.
(d) By Clause W1.3(10) that: "The Adjudicator's decision is binding on the Parties unless and until revised by the tribunal and is enforceable as a matter of contractual obligation between the parties and not as an arbitral award. The Adjudicator's decision is final and binding if neither Party has notified the other within the times required by this contract that he is dissatisfied with a decision of the Adjudicator and intends to refer the matter to the tribunal."
(e) By Clause W1.4(1) that: "A Party does not refer any dispute under or in connection with this contract to the tribunal unless it has first been referred to the Adjudicator in accordance with this contract."
(f) By Clause W1.4(2) that: "If after the Adjudicator notifies his decision a Party is dissatisfied, he may notify the other Party that he intends to refer it to the tribunal. A Party may not refer a dispute to the tribunal unless the notification is given within four weeks of notification of the Adjudicator's decision."
The jurisdiction of the Adjudicator under Clause 6 of the Consent Agreement
"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."
Jurisdiction under an ad-hoc agreement in March 2012
The interpretation of the Consent Agreement
"The times for notifying and referring a dispute may be extended if the Consultant and the Employer agree to the extension before the notice or referral is due. If a disputed matter is not notified and referred within the times set out in this contract, neither Party may subsequently refer it to the Adjudicator or the tribunal."
"A Party does not refer any dispute under or in connection with this contract to the tribunal unless it has first been referred to the Adjudicator in accordance with this contract."
"A Party may not refer a dispute to the tribunal unless the notification is given within four weeks of notification of the Adjudicator's decision."
The ability to refer disputes to adjudication under Clause W1.3(1)
(1) Dalkia's wrongful rejection of a valid compensation event;(2) Dalkia's failure to respond at all to WSP's notification of a compensation event or a compensation event quotation;
(3) Dalkia's assessment of the value of a compensation event at an amount less than that calculated by WSP;
(4) Dalkia's failure to provide notification of a compensation event where a compensation event had occurred for which Dalkia was responsible;
(5) Dalkia's late payment of invoices rendered giving rise to an entitlement to interest.
"The rights of the Employer and the Consultant to changes to the Prices, the Completion Date and the Key Dates are their only rights in respect of a compensation event."
(1) an amount due assessed as for normal payments and(2) other costs reasonably incurred by the Consultant in expectation of completing the whole of the services and to which the Consultant is committed.
Jurisdiction concerning Claims 30 to 63
Other Issues
Summary