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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 >> Penten Group Ltd v Spartafield Ltd [2016] EWHC 317 (TCC) (18 February 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2016/317.html Cite as: 165 Con LR 97, [2016] EWHC 317 (TCC) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
Rolls Building, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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Penten Group Ltd |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Spartafield Ltd |
Defendant |
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Paul Darling QC (instructed through Direct Access) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 18 February 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
The Hon. Mr Justice Coulson:
1. INTRODUCTION
2. THE HISTORY
"13.1 That a valid Construction Contract exists between the parties, and the terms of that Contract include the provisions of ICD2011.
13.2 The Employer was entitled to terminate the Contract.
13.3 As a result of a valid termination Notice being issued [the validity of which has not been challenged by the Responding Party] SL is entitled to:
(i) The Payment of Liquidated Damages from the Date for Completion up to and including the Date of Termination in the sum of £216,000 or such sum as the Adjudicator may decide is due. [Please note cost arising to SL after the Date of Termination will be dealt with separately under the provisions of clause 8.7 of the Contract and do not form part of the Adjudication].
(ii) The repayment of the balance of Advance Payments made to date in the sum of £23,400.00 or such sum as the Adjudicator may decide is due.
(iii) Interest on the above sums at 5% per annum above the official dealing rate of the Bank of England current as of 27 April 2015 or at such rate and for such period as the Adjudicator may decide is due. Detailed calculations are included in the Referral.
13.4 PG shall pay in full the fees and expenses of the Adjudicator or such proportion as the Adjudicator shall decide.
13.5 PG shall pay in full the fees of appointing the Adjudicator or such proportion as the Adjudicator shall decide.
13.6 That any sum SL is entitled to be paid by PG shall be paid within 7 days of the Adjudicators Decision and interest shall continue to accrue and be due the rate of £36.07 per diem or at such other rate as the Adjudicator shall decide from the date of this Notice until all sums are paid into the account of Stonegrove."
"154. I decide that a valid construction contract does exist between the parties but that the terms of that contract were not the JCT Contract but the Letter of Intent. (10/125)
155. I decide that Spartafield was entitled to terminate the employment of Penten Group, but that the termination was under the Letter of Intent and that this was done by Spartafield's letter dated 27 April 2015.
156. I decide that Spartafield has no entitlement to liquidated damages in either the sum claimed or in any sum.
157. I decide that Spartafield is entitled to be reimbursed the outstanding balance of its advance payment in the sum of £23,385.87 by Penten Group.
158. I decide that Spartafield is entitled to be paid interest from 7 September 2015 in the sum of 274.86.
159. I decide that the sum of £23,385.87 plus interest of £274.86 shall be paid by Penten Group to Spartafield within seven days of the date of this Decision and that, if such sum is not paid within the said seven days, interest will therefore accrue at the rate of £3.52 per day.
160. My fees and expenses total £6,700. I decide that Spartafield shall pay 50% of my fees and that Penten Group shall pay 50% of my fees.
161. Notwithstanding the joint and several liability of the parties for my fees and expenses, Spartafield shall pay my fees and expenses in the sum of £3,350 such sum to be paid within 7 days of the date of this Decision, namely by 3 December 2015.
162. Notwithstanding the joint and several liability of the parties for my fees and expenses, Penten Group shall pay my fees and expenses in the sum of £3,350 such sum to be paid within 7 days of the date of this Decision, namely by 3 December 2015.
163. If either party pays any part of my fees which I have decided are payable by the other party, that party may recover those fees from the other party".
(a) Penten paid the sum referred to in paragraph 159 of the Decision.(b) Both parties have paid their share of the adjudicator's fees (paragraphs 161 and 162 of his Decision).
"SL seeks the appointment of an Adjudicator to make the following declarations:
15.1 That the first Adjudicator was neither required nor had the necessary jurisdiction to decide on the terms of the contract between the Parties if he did not accept that it was ICD 2011.
15.2 That a contract between the Parties is in existence based on the simple requirements for a valid contract to be formed and an agreed contract sum and contract sum analysis, an agreed completion date, and agreed unamended contract conditions.
15.3 That Payment is due to SL from PG as certified by Architects Certificate No 017 dated 8 April 2015 in the sum of £84,154.12 adjusted only for reimbursement of the Advance Payment or such other sum as the Adjudicator shall decide.
15.4 That PG cannot rely on the LOI as a basis of payment which only was to come into force as a basis for payment of costs to be reimbursed to SL in the event that the contract did not proceed. The Contract did proceed to the extent that works as certified by the CA against an agreed Contract Sum of £1,150,000 amounted to some £926,970.67 were carried out together with some £228,210.71 of direct payments being made by SL on behalf of PG due to its impecuniosity. We do not believe these sums to be disputed, with the net result that as of the date of termination some 100% of the agreed contract sum had been paid by the Employer despite the works being substantially behind programme and incomplete. It cannot be realistically argued that "the works did not proceed" which would be a condition precedent to PG recovering its costs as opposed to being reimbursed in accordance with the agreed Contract Sum Analysis.
15.5 In the event that the Adjudicator disagree and believes the LOI to be the basis of contract then:
(i) PG is only entitled to recover its own reasonable direct and proven costs incurred, and
(iii) Any costs payable to third parties, including sub-contractors and suppliers, are to be substantiated and payable by reference to the sums payable under the formal executed contract. i.e. the agreed contract sum as set out in the Contract Sum Analysis which both parties have worked to throughout.
(iv) That sums claimed by PG for the supply of plant and equipment post the Date of Termination are not Construction Operations as defined by the amended HCGRA and cannot form part of this or any other Adjudication save by agreement between the Parties. SL rejects any such agreement.
15.6 PG shall pay interest on the above sums at 5% per annum above the official dealing rate of the Bank of England current as of 27 April 2015 or at such rate and for such period as the Adjudicator may decide is due. Detailed calculations are included in the Referral.
15.7 PG shall pay in full the fees and expenses of the Adjudicator or such proportion as the Adjudicator shall decide.
15.8 PG shall pay in full the fees of appointing the Adjudicator or such proportion as the Adjudicator shall decide.
15.9 That any sum SL is entitled to be paid by PG shall be paid within 7 days of the Adjudicators Decision and interest shall continue to accrue and be due per diem or at such other rate as the Adjudicator shall decide from the date of this Notice until all sums are paid into the account of Stonegrove."
3. THE RELIEF CLAIMED
"13. (a) A declaration that Mr Gupta's adjudication decision dated 26 November 2015 is enforceable;
(b) A declaration that any adjudicator appointed pursuant to the defendant's latest adjudication notice dated 20 January (or any future adjudication notified in the same terms) will not have jurisdiction to determine the matter set out therein because:
(i) The matters referred have already been decided by Mr Gupta; and
(ii) The notice of adjudication purports to refer more than one dispute to adjudication."
"In the light of the above and the documents appended hereto the defendant respectfully asks:
(a) That the declarations sought by the claimant that Mr Gupta's adjudication decision dated 26 November 2015 be enforceable in total be denied and that the part of Mr Gupta's decision relating to the letter of intent be severed due to lack of jurisdiction or any submission within the adjudication on that matter. There is clearly a strong arguable that the letter of intent should not and does not provide a valid basis for payment.
(b) That the declaration sought at paragraph 13b be denied on the basis that they are irrelevant given no such adjudication as proceeded."
4. THE PRINCIPAL ISSUE: THE DECISION IN ADJUDICATION 1 CONCERNING THE LETTER OF INTENT
(a) The adjudicator was asked to decide what contract might be in force, in the event that he did not consider the IDC form to have been concluded or incorporated.(b) The question for the adjudicator was in two parts: Is there a valid construction contract? If so, did the terms of that contract include the provisions of ICD? He properly answered both parts of the question.
(c) The financial claims in the notice of adjudication in Adjudication 1, at paragraphs 13.2 and 13.3 thereof, were separate, and required a decision to be made as to what the terms of the contract were, before the validity of those claims was considered.
(a) The relief sought in the notice of adjudication did not invite any determination of what the contract terms were, if it was found that the contract did not include the ICD form. The entirety of the notice, including those paragraphs prior to the redress sought at paragraph 13, made plain that Spartafield's case was based entirely on the incorporation of the ICD terms.(b) The use of the word "include", referring to only some of the terms, precluded a wider answer to the issue.
(c) It was unfair that the adjudicator reached the conclusion which he did because, although the letter of intent was referred to by Spartafield in the course of Adjudication 1, it was never fully addressed as being a possible alternative set of terms of the contract. Spartafield thought, as Mr Darling QC put it, that "that was a dispute for another day".
5. CONSEQUENTIAL ORDERS