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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 >> Atkins Ltd v Secretary of State for Transport [2013] EWHC 139 (TCC) (01 February 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2013/139.html Cite as: 146 Con LR 169, [2013] EWHC 139 (TCC), [2013] BLR 193 |
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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 :
____________________
ATKINS LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR TRANSPORT |
Defendant |
____________________
Daniel Lewis (instructed by the Treasury Solicitor) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 24 January 2013
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Akenhead:
Introduction
The Factual Background
The Contract
"(i) ensure that the area network is operated and maintained to no lesser standards than is appropriate for a highway of the character of the Area Network (budgets permitting) and for use by the traffic which is reasonably to be expected to use the Area Network".
The obligation to provide asset maintenance was set out in Paragraph 3.3.3 (1) of the Service Information:
"The Provider maintains the area network asset in a condition which meets the requirements of the Routine and Winter Service Code and the Network Management Manual and Annex 13."
The Pricing Schedule makes it clear in Section A of the Preamble that the lump sums entered in the Pricing Schedule "include full or Routine and Winter Services, and for the general management of the contract". Annex 13 provides performance requirements for routine and winter service. The Routine and Winter Service Code incorporated into the Contract states, materially:
"(i) [Introduction] Routine and winter service is the name for work traditionally carried out under the name of routine and winter maintenance.
3.1.1 Routine and winter service operations include both cyclic and unplanned activities that may be used to keep the highway safe and serviceable, and are needed to preserve the asset value. These activities include reactive repairs and winter, flood and emergency responses but exclude preventative and programmed renewals maintenance …
Routine and winter service activities that are required for the operation of the Network are considered in 17 Technical Areas that make up 4 technical groups.
2.1.1 Defects occur in the condition of all aspects of the Network. The general definition of a defect to an asset is that it:
- Represents a deterioration from the normal condition,
- Prevents an item from acting in the intended manner,
- Is damaged,
- Is likely to increase the rate of deterioration of another item, or
- Causes an unintended as it or nuisance…
Category 1 defects are those that require prompt attention because there is an immediate or imminent risk of either one or more of the following:
- Injury to any party using or repairing the Network
- Significant disruption to the normal flow of traffic through the Network
- Structural deterioration of part of the Work…
Annex 2.1.1… contains examples of aspects of condition that may be considered as Category 1 defects"
Annex 2.1.1 specifically includes in a non-exhaustive list:
"Potholes and other local defect in the carriageway/footway/cycle track…"
(38) Lump Sum Duties are those of the Services which the Pricing Schedule states will be paid for on a lump sum basis
(58) The Price for Services Provided to Date is the total of
- for Lump Sum Duties
• the total of the monthly lump sum prices stated in section A of the Pricing Schedule for the period since the access date, including any notified extension to the contract period
• a proportion of the Lump Sum Price for mobilisation stated in Section A of the Pricing Schedule which is the proportion of the Mobilisation Period which has elapsed
• The Lump Sum Price for demobilisation stated in Section A of the Pricing Schedule on completion of the demobilisation duties stated in the Service Information
• for the remainder of the Services, the total Defined Cost of the Services which have been carried out by the Provider, plus the resulting Fee.'
(67) To Provide the Services means to do the work necessary to perform the Services in accordance with this contract and all incidental work, services and actions which this contract requires'
(74) Routine Maintenance Works are works necessary to maintain the assets forming part of the Area Network in a good state of repair, excluding any works carried out to replace such assets that have reached the end of their economically viable life
(78) Services are the duties to be performed by the Provider under this contract
(87) Winter Maintenance Works are works carried out in severe weather to allow traffic to use the Area Network safely."
"60.1 (10) A defect in work carried out by Others live in or affecting the operation of the Area Network or any other default by Others in carrying out such work, unless the repair or rectification of the defect forms part of the Lump Sum Duties.
(11) The Provider encounters a defect in the physical condition of the Area Network which
- is not revealed by the Network Information or by any other publicly available information referred to in the Network Information,
- was not evident from a visual inspection or routine survey of the Area Network at the Contract Date,
- an experienced contractor or consultant acting with reasonable diligence could not reasonably have discovered prior to the Contract Date and
- an experienced contractor or consultant would have judged at the Contract Date to have such a small chance of being present that it would have been unreasonable for him to have allowed for it.
Only the difference between the physical conditions encountered and those for which it would have been reasonable to have allowed is taken into account in assessing a compensation event.
60.1(13) The Schemes Budget in any Financial Year is greater or less than that specified in the Network Information by a factor of more than 20%. Only the effect on the Defined Cost of the Lump Sum Duties due to the Schemes Budget in any Financial Year being greater or less than that specified in the Network Information by a factor of more than 20% is taken into account in assessing a compensation event. The first 20% of the deviation is ignored when making the assessment (but not when determining whether a compensation event has occurred).
61.3 The Provider notifies the Service Manager of an event which has happened or which he expects to happen as a compensation event if:
- the Provider believes that the event is a compensation event and
- the Service Manager has not notified the event to the Provider.
If the Provider does not notify a compensation event within eight weeks of becoming aware of the event he is not entitled to a change in the prices unless the Service Manager should have notified the event to the Provider but did not.
61.4 If the Service Manager decides that an event notified by the Provider
- arises from the fault of the Provider.
- has not happened and is not expected to happen.
- was something of which the Provider was or ought to have been aware at the time when the original prices for the work affected by the there is compensation event were assessed.
- has no effect upon defined cost or
- is not one of the compensation events stated in this contract.
he notifies the Provider of his decision that the prices are not to be changed.
If the Service Provider does not notify the Provider of his decision within two weeks of the Provider's notification, the Provider submits quotations for the event.
62.1 After discussing with the Provider different ways of dealing with a compensation event which are practicable, the Service Manager may instruct the Provider to submit alternative quotations…
62.3 The Provider submits quotations within three weeks of the event being notified as a compensation event or within such other period as the Service Manager may agree".
The Adjudication
"(2) further or alternatively that a "defect in the physical condition of the area network" for the purposes of clause 60.1(11) includes a defect arising after the contract date that could not have been anticipated from (a) the Network Information, (b) visual inspection, (c) discovery with reasonable diligence, and that an experienced contractor would have judged to have such a small chance of arising after the contract date that it would have been unreasonable for it to have allowed for it in its tender…"
This was a shorthand paraphrase of Clause 60.1(11) and in itself would have probably been unexceptionable.
"42. The Employer [Authority] next argues that the term 'defect' in clauses 60.1(11) is used in a generic sense, such that it refers to a type of defect. In this sense potholes as a category are a defect. The intention of clause 60.1 (11) is to compensate only for latent defects in the limited sense of unknown types of defect.
43. The consequences of this interpretation would be to make clause 60.1(11) very limited indeed. A reasonable contractor knows that potholes occur in roads from time to time, and indeed potholes are expressly referred to in the Network Information, but no pothole could ever fall within clause 60.1(11) so as to give rise to a compensation event. The same would be true of every type of defect mentioned in the Network Information and related documents.
45. I am unable to accept this part of the Employer's argument. There is no warrant in the words of clause 60.1(11), or anywhere else in the contract, for reading the word "defect" in that clause as referring to a type of rather than an individual defect. And in my view this interpretation is as uncommercial as Atkins' primary case, for it would turn clause 60.1(11) effectively into a dead letter. I note that the Employer did not put forward any practical example of a defect which would qualify under subclause (11)…
46. Having rejected the more extreme interpretations put forward by each party, I returned to consideration of Atkins' Secondary Case. In my judgment the phrase "being present" in the fourth bullet point of clause 60.1(11) is a reference to being present at any time up to the end of the contract period. This follows not only (negatively) from my rejection of Atkins' primary case but also (positively) from consideration of how the contract is constructed and phrase and how it works. In particular…
(c) Application of subclause (11) requires consideration of what it would have been reasonable or unreasonable for the Provider to allow for in its pricing. When tendering armed with the Network Information, it would have been reasonable for the Provider to have made allowances, in its figures for the lump sums, to cover dealing with potholes and other defects reasonably expected to occur month by month or year by year during the life of the contract. The nature of the Network Information was such as to permit such allowances to be made, based on past experience, the Provider's expertise, judgement of commercial risks, and other relevant factors…
47. Relying on the Secondary Case, Mr Mort [for Atkins] contended for the conclusion that Atkins was entitled to claim the additional potholes over and above the number of potholes that it would have been reasonable for an experienced contractor or consultant to have allowed for. Mr Nicholls [for the Authority] argued, in opposition to this, that there was nothing about volume (ie excessive numbers) in the wording of subclause (11). As a matter of express language this is correct, but it is not a valid objection to Mr Mort's contention. The relevant principle is consideration of whether it would have been unreasonable to allow for the defects which the Provider contends constitute a compensation event. Defects encountered might be outside the hypothetical reasonable allowance for a variety of practical reasons, which on particular facts might have to do with severity, number, distribution, or some other feature. Excess volume happens to be the feature which Atkins relies upon in this instance…
56…my decision is as follows:
a. As regards the meaning of clause 60.1(11)…
iii. The phrase "defect in the physical condition of the Area Network" includes one or more potholes; and the word "defect" in that phrase does not mean 'generic category of defect' or similar…"
"3.1 Given that there has not been a full exchange of pleadings in either the Adjudication or the Arbitration and that the parties have, in effect, decided upon a "preliminary issue" without the underlying issue being fully defined, I considered it important at the outset to define the dispute upon which a decision was required.
3.2 The Notice to Refer served by the Secretary of State recites that the Adjudicator had decided that a compensation event had arisen by reason of clause 60.1(11) of the Contract and that "potholes or other defects occurring after the Contract Date are defects within clause 60.1(11) where they are over and above the number of potholes that it would have been reasonable for an experienced contractor or consultant to have allowed for". The Secretary of State, in its reasons for contending that the Adjudicator was wrong contends that:
(i) The reference to "being present" in the fourth bullet point of clause 60.1(11) is a reference to a defect being present at the Contract Date.
(ii) The reference to "a defect in the physical condition of the area network" in clause 60.1(11), is incapable of being a reference to the volume of potholes.
3.3 Reference to the Adjudicator's decision shows that point (i) above was expressly decided by him. Point (ii) is not included in the dispositive part of the Adjudicator's decision but is referred to within the body of the decision (particularly paragraph 47).
3.4 After oral exchanges with the parties at the hearing, it was agreed that the findings set out in para 3.2 (i) and (ii) above were findings of the adjudicator which were challenged by the Secretary of State and accordingly that the dispute to be determined in the arbitration was whether either or both of those findings were correct. They are now referred to as issue (i) and issue (ii)…
5.1 It was agreed at the oral hearing that Atkins' counsel would go first. Atkins' case is therefore summarised first…
5.3 The price to be paid for the repair of defects was the lump sum, as adjusted by the compensation event regime. The parties agreed to reduce price certainty by agreeing to the compensation event regime. Clause 60.1(11) applies where unforeseeable defects are encountered and applies to lump sum work, in contrast to clause 60.1(10) which excludes application to lump sum duties.
5.4 The purpose of clause 60.1(11) is to protect the contractor from hardship in the event that defects are encountered in the network which it could not have foreseen, and therefore could not have allowed for in its tender price. That protection enables the contractor to reduce its lump sum bid and that is to the employer's benefit: the employer gets what it pays for.
5.5 If the Secretary of State's construction were correct the contractor would be taking on the risk that the government might reduce all funding of the network to nothing. That would be an extraordinary risk for the contractor to take on unless there was some mechanism contained in the contract for compensating the contractor in those circumstances. Clause 60.1 (13) does not provide such protection because it applies only to the "Defined Cost" of the Lump Sum duties and not to the Lump Sum itself.
Summary of the Authority's Case
6.1 Clause 60.1(11) applies solely to defects which appear after the Contract Date due to a cause which existed at the Contract Date (being present) and which were not and could not have been foreseen by the contractor. The clause thus applies to latent defects in the sense of an unknown type of defect.
6.2 The Contract requires Atkins to repair defects, which expressly includes potholes. The Contract provides no threshold or limit on the number of potholes Atkins might be required to repair. A construction of clause 60.1(11) which treats "defect" as meaning "volume of defects" removes the point of a lump sum contract and makes no commercial sense. On its true construction, clause 60.1(11) does not provide for a compensation event if the contractor encounters an unforeseen "volume of defects" after the Contract Date. Atkins' construction of Clause 60.1(11) as providing for compensation where an unforeseen volume of defects is encountered ignores the clear words used, both as to "defect" and "being present".
6.3 Atkins' case is not that any individual pothole is said to be unforeseen, but that the volume of potholes is unforeseen. This is not addressed by clause 60.1(11) nor can such a claim be brought within its terms.
6.4 The Authority accepts that a failure to implement Schemes (no such failure being accepted) might lead to a higher incidence of potholes. While other factors also affect the incidence of potholes, particularly weather, this situation is addressed by clause 60.1(13) which protects both parties, unlike clause 60.1(11), and does allow adjustment of the Lump Sum price, contrary to Atkin's submission.
6.5 On the case advanced by Atkins, there is no clear basis upon which it can be known when the compensation event has arisen. The contractor is required to give notice under clause 61 of the "event" within eight weeks. That event must be the first pothole to occur after the notional number or volume of potholes to be anticipated by the experienced contractor had been exceeded: every pothole thereafter would require notice and would require the compensation event procedure, including provision of a quotation, to be operated. This would be unworkable and cannot have been intended…
Consideration of Issues
7.9 Turning to issue (ii), the question is whether a "volume of defects" or "a number of defects" can, purely by virtue of its volume or number, constitute a "defect" within the meaning of sub-clause (11). In this case Atkins necessarily accept that a number or volume of defects up to the limit contended for (which has not otherwise been defined or described in any version of Atkins' case) does not comprise a defect within the clause. Furthermore, while the "excess" volume or number is said to constitute the "defect" within sub-clause (11), it is clear that this volume or number will or may consist of an indeterminate number of individual potholes (the separate causes of which are immaterial) distributed anywhere across the network and being encountered over an indeterminate period of time.
7.10 Plainly the foregoing description creates a host of practical problems as compared to the well understood process of notifying and pursuing a claim in respect of one discrete defect occurring at a particular place and a particular time. It was pointed out in argument that the parties had considered ways in which these procedural difficulties could be regulated and brought under control. I have no doubt that engineers on both sides would readily contrive some system to bring order and might well agree on a numerical basis from which to assess the "excess" number or volume of potholes being present over a given period or area. Such rationalisation, however, is not in point as regards the essential question whether an excess number or volume can constitute a defect falling within the wording of sub-clause (11) as properly interpreted…
7.12 In the Arbitration the Authority, through Mr Lewis, has restated its opposition to this part of the Adjudicator's decision. The Authority relies in part on its interpretation of the words "being present", which I have not construed in the manner contended for by the Authority. However reliance is also placed on the proper meaning of the word "defect" (singular) and on the practical difficulties involved in determining whether and when the "event" relied on under sub-clause (11) can be said to occur. Mr Lewis placed particular emphasis, rightly in my view, on the extensive notice provisions under the Contract requiring not only notice of the occurrence of the event to which the Service Manager is required to respond, but discussions between the Provider and the Service Manager which may involve submitting quotations in order to determine how the notified defect is to be dealt with.
7.13 Mr. Mort submitted that difficulties of giving notice and of complying with other related provisions under the Terms of Contract could not affect the construction of sub-clause (11) itself. While this submission has some force, it cannot be accepted as rendering these associated provisions irrelevant. They are, of course, part of the same contract and each of the terms is to be construed having regard to the whole. The immediate point, however, is that, in practical terms, the "defect" being contended for by Atkins is bound to lead to a dispute as to whether the notice provision has been complied with. It also gives rise to the question whether these provisions are capable of being complied with. The notice provision is not a mere formality since Clause 61.3 expressly provides that:
If the Provider does not notify a compensation event within 8 weeks of becoming aware of the event, he is not entitled to a change in the prices unless the service manager should have notified the event to the Provider but did not.
7.14 There are other requirements for the Provider to submit his quotation for dealing with a compensation event within 3 weeks of the event being notified or such other period as the Service Manager may agree. Given the circumstances outlined above, of the relevant events occurring at widely spaced locations and at different times, it is inevitable that the parties would be forced into a rationalisation amounting virtually to re-writing of the Contract to accommodate such a compensation event, particularly bearing in mind the inevitability of a major argument as to what constitutes a "reasonable allowance", whether for volume or numbers of defects. It is in this sense that the provisions as to notice and requirements for quotations are, in my view, relevant to the question whether the claim as asserted by Atkins falls within the wording of sub-clause (11)…
7.17 Returning to the main issue of construction, the question is whether the claim that Atkins wish to pursue can properly fall within sub-clause (11). This is ultimately a matter of construction of the words of the sub-clause. Starting with the last three lines of the printed clause, it can certainly be said that an excess number of potholes over and above that "for which it would have been reasonable to have allowed" may fall within these words which are, however, intended to limit the claim which can be made. In other words the Contractor cannot claim in respect of physical conditions which it would have been reasonable to allow for. Only the difference can form the basis of the claim. However, the claim must comply with the whole clause and with what is to be taken as the intention to be derived from the words used.
7.18 Before turning to this, it may be noted that the last three printed lines do not use the word "defect" and refer only to "physical conditions". It is the opening words of sub-clause (11) that refer to "a defect in the physical condition of the area network ...". As noted, "defect" is in the singular, suggestive of an occurrence of isolated or limited extent. In response to this argument, Mr. Mort contended that the occurrence of "rock", being a typical ground of a claim for unforeseen conditions, was likely to occur in different locations. While that may be so, it does not follow that each occurrence or group of occurrences of rock are not to be treated as an individual "defect" to which notice provisions and other requirements of the Contract would apply individually. It can readily be accepted that the use of "defect" in the singular is not conclusive, but it is at least a pointer to the intention of the clause.
7.19 While the argument is centred on the fourth bullet point for the purpose of the "unforeseen defects" claim, it is relevant to consider all the bullet points. With regards the first it can be said that defect is assumed to be of such a nature as to be capable of being revealed by the Network Information or other publicly available information. Likewise as regards the second bullet point, a defect is something which may or may not be evidenced from visual inspection or routine survey of the contract date. Thirdly, a defect is something which may or may not be capable of discovery acting with reasonable diligence prior to the date of the Contract. Putting those three bullet points together, it can be said they contemplate something with a physical existence which may or may not be capable of being foreseen from the material available at the Contract date.
7.20 Finally, the fourth bullet point requires the defect, in the judgment of a hypothetical experienced contractor or consultant at the Contract date "to have such a small chance of being present that it would have been unreasonable for him to have allowed for it". It is necessary here to note that the test is not, as the Adjudicator appears to have read the clause "whether it would have been unreasonable to allow for the defects", but whether the relevant judgment was such that it would have been unreasonable to have allowed for the defect at all because there was "such a small chance of [its] being present".
7.21 Correctly read, the fourth bullet point alone, in my view, makes it extremely difficult to bring Atkins' claim within the words. For there to be any such claim, Atkins accept that they must be deemed to have allowed for a volume or number of defects which are within the hypothetical limit. To describe the excess volume or number as an occurrence with "such a small chance of being present that it would have been unreasonable ... to have allowed for it" would surely be a misuse of words. What Atkins are saying, as apparently reflected in the Adjudicator's decision, is that it was reasonable to allow for a certain volume of potholes within their price. That may well be so, but it does not follow that any additional volume or number of potholes can fall within sub-clause (11).
7.22 The effect of Atkins' contention is not only, as the Authority contends, to breach the lump sum provision, but to turn the Contract into a re-measure provision by which, after some notional but unstated limit, the Contractor would be entitled to claim payment progressively as further potholes were encountered. Whether this would operate during the whole period of the Contract, so that the hypothetical allowance would have to be wholly expended before any payment became due, or whether it would operate on an annual basis, or whether it would operate on an area basis, are questions which have not been addressed. In my view they add further layers of complexity which have no place within the terms of sub-clause (11) and further militate against the interpretation contended for by Atkins.
7.23 The difficulties of bringing the claim within the words of sub-clause (11) as discussion above, are sufficient to reject Atkins' claim on balance. However, when coupled with the difficulties involved in complying with the notice provisions and other measures aimed at dealing with compensation events, the case against Atkins' contentions becomes overwhelming. In my view, the claim to be brought by Atkins cannot, on a fair and objective reading of the words, be brought within sub-clause (11). Issue (ii) is therefore to be resolved in favour of the Authority.
8. Disposition
8.1 For the reasons set forth above I find and declare that:
(i) The reference to "being present" in the fourth bullet point of clause 60.1(11) is a reference to a defect being present at any time during the contract period.
(ii) An excess volume of potholes beyond what it was reasonable to allow in the Contract is not capable of constituting "a defect in the physical condition of the area network" under Clause 60.1(11) of the Contract…"
These Proceedings
The Law
"57 (1) The parties are free to agree on the powers of the tribunal to correct an award or make an additional award.
(2) If or to the extent there is no such agreement, the following provisions apply.
(3) The tribunal may on its own initiative or on the application of a party—
(a) correct an award so as to remove any clerical mistake or error arising from an accidental slip or omission or clarify or remove any ambiguity in the award, or
(b) make an additional award in respect of any claim (including a claim for interest or costs) which was presented to the tribunal but was not dealt with in the award.
These powers shall not be exercised without first affording the other parties a reasonable opportunity to make representations to the tribunal.
(4) Any application for the exercise of those powers must be made within 28 days of the date of the award or such longer period as the parties may agree…
68. A party to arbitral proceedings may (upon notice to the other parties and to the tribunal) apply to the court challenging an award in the proceedings on the ground of serious irregularity affecting the tribunal, the proceedings or the award.
A party may lose the right to object (see section 73) and the right to apply is subject to the restrictions in section 70(2) and (3).
(2) Serious irregularity means an irregularity of one or more of the following kinds which the court considers has caused or will cause substantial injustice to the applicant…
(d) failure by the tribunal to deal with all the issues that were put to it…
69 (1) Unless otherwise agreed by the parties, a party to arbitral proceedings may (upon notice to the other parties and to the tribunal) appeal to the court on a question of law arising out of an award made in the proceedings.
An agreement to dispense with reasons for the tribunal's award shall be considered an agreement to exclude the court's jurisdiction under this section.
(2) An appeal shall not be brought under this section except—
(a) with the agreement of all the other parties to the proceedings, or
(b) with the leave of the court.
The right to appeal is also subject to the restrictions in section 70(2) and (3).
(3) Leave to appeal shall be given only if the court is satisfied—
(a) that the determination of the question will substantially affect the rights of one or more of the parties,
(b) that the question is one which the tribunal was asked to determine,
(c) that, on the basis of the findings of fact in the award—
(i) the decision of the tribunal on the question is obviously wrong, or
(ii) the question is one of general public importance and the decision of the tribunal is at least open to serious doubt, and
(d) that, despite the agreement of the parties to resolve the matter by arbitration, it is just and proper in all the circumstances for the court to determine the question.
70 (1) The following provisions apply to an application or appeal under section 67, 68 or 69.
(2) An application or appeal may not be brought if the applicant or appellant has not first exhausted—
(a) any available arbitral process of appeal or review, and
(b) any available recourse under section 57 (correction of award or additional award).
(3) Any application or appeal must be brought within 28 days of the date of the award or, if there has been any arbitral process of appeal or review, of the date when the applicant or appellant was notified of the result of that process.
(4) If on an application or appeal it appears to the court that the award—
(a) does not contain the tribunal's reasons, or
(b) does not set out the tribunal's reasons in sufficient detail to enable the court properly to consider the application or appeal,
the court may order the tribunal to state the reasons for its award in sufficient detail for that purpose."
"4. The test of "substantial injustice" is intended to be applied by way of support for the arbitral process, not by way of interference with that process. Thus it is only in those cases where it can be said that what has happened is so far removed from what could reasonably be expected of the arbitral process, that the court will take action…
7. Section 68 is designed as a longstop, only available in extreme cases, where the tribunal has gone so wrong in its conduct of the arbitration in one of the respects listed in s.68, that justice calls out for it to be corrected.
8. Section 68 must not be used as a means of circumventing the restrictions upon the court's power to intervene in arbitral proceedings. Further, the distinction between s.68 and s.69 must be maintained. In addition, the court's powers under s.70(4) should be borne in mind (see below).
9. Section 68(2)(d) ("failure by the tribunal to deal with all the issues which were put to it") does not require a tribunal to set out each step by which they reached their conclusion or to deal with each point made by a party. There is a distinction between criticism of the reasoning and a failure to deal with an issue (Thomas J. in Hussmann v. Al Ameen [2000] 2 L.L.R. 83, at 97, column 1)." (page 350)
Discussion
"The Provider encounters a defect in the physical condition of the Area Network which…
- an experienced contractor or consultant would have judged at the Contract Date to have such a small chance of being present that it would have been unreasonable for him to have allowed for it."
There is nothing in the language which expressly suggests that the number of defects is a key or important element in the compensation event equation. Verbally, this requirement makes it extremely difficult to conclude that an excess number of potholes over and above a reasonable maximum number which could be considered to have been allowed for can form the basis for establishing the encountering of one or more potholes above that number as one or more compensation events. I agree with the arbitrator's observation that to "describe the excess volume or number as an occurrence with 'such a small chance of being present that it would have been unreasonable...to have allowed for it'" is "a misuse of words".
Serious Irregularity
Sections 57 and 70 of the Arbitration Act 1996
"The Arbitrator may, within 28 days of the date of the award, correct an award so as to remove any clerical mistake, error or ambiguity, and may also make an additional award in respect of any matter which was not dealt with in the award."
It is unnecessary to consider the "mistake, error or ambiguity" part of this because it does not arise. There are however two functions of this paragraph and, verbally, the removal of a mistake, error or ambiguity is to be done by the Arbitrator within 28 days whilst there is no time limit for the making of an additional award. The use in the drafting of the word "may" twice underlines this. That is comprehensible because it leaves open to the arbitrator and indeed the parties the need to address later matters not dealt with in the issued award. Put another way, the issue of one award does not result in the resolution of matters in dispute which are not dealt with in that award. It follows therefore that there is no arbitral process of appeal or review in this context in the ICE Arbitration Procedure. There are some arbitration agreements and rules which do call for types of arbitral appeal so that the losing party can go to an arbitral appeal tribunal. That is not this case. There is no specific time limit as such on a party under this Arbitration Procedure to seek an additional award if the matter is not dealt with in an earlier award.
Permission to Appeal
Decision