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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 >> Skymist Holdings Ltd v Grandlane Developments Ltd [2018] EWHC 3504 (TCC) (19 December 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2018/3504.html Cite as: [2018] EWHC 3504 (TCC) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT (QBD)
B e f o r e :
____________________
SKYMIST HOLDINGS LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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GRANDLANE DEVELOPMENTS LIMITED |
Defendant |
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Jonathan Selby QC (instructed by Goodman Derrick LLP, Solicitors) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 10 December 2018
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE WAKSMAN:
INTRODUCTION
"Following the giving of a notice of adjudication and subject to any agreement between the parties to the dispute as to who shall act as adjudicator-…
(b) if no person is named in the contract… and the contract provides for a specified nominating body to select the person, the referring party shall request the nominating body named in the contract to select a person to act as adjudicator or(c) where neither paragraph (a) nor (b) above applies,… he referring party shall request an adjudicator nominating body to select the person to act as adjudicator."
THE ISSUES
(1) By the Decision, he found that the relevant contract between the parties was the DOA or at least a contract which included the Clause, itself part of the DOA; but if so, the appointment should have been made by the CIArb as the mandated nominating body and not the RICS; further or alternatively:
(2) Even if the Decision did not so hold, Grandlane has "approbated and reprobated" the DOA or "blown hot and cold" about it, in that on the one hand, Grandlane relied upon it, or material parts of it, for the purpose of its substantive submissions to Mr Riches, and yet reprobated at least part of it (i.e. the Clause) when seeking a nomination from the RICS; but if so, then the principle which prevents approbation and reprobation ("A/R") means that Grandlane cannot reprobate the DOA as it has done. The result is that it was and is precluded from applying to the RICS to nominate Mr Riches.
THE FACTS
Background
"Engaging of contractors and consultants ..When necessary and approved by the Customer, GL shall engage professionals (engineers, designers, architects, etc) and shall agree the budget to pay for the services. At the discretion of the Customer the payment for services performed shall be made directly by the Customer or by the GL at the expense of Customer on a monthly basis.…
Remuneration According to the payment schedule to these General Terms and Conditions. In the event the Customer decides to increase or decrease the budget the remuneration will be adjusted based on a new budget. The remuneration shall be calculated as follows: 5% of the total construction costs for the project management services and 0.5% of the total construction costs for the procurement of permits services.…
Termination and expiration of the Agreement In accordance with the standard market practice for this type of agreements".
The DOA
(1) Clause 7.10 which provides for a contractual rate of interest of 3% above base in relation to any sum due to Grandlane but unpaid;
(2) Clause 12.1 which permitted Skymist to terminate performance of the Services by Grandlane upon the giving of one month's notice in writing; this has been referred to as "termination at will";
(3) Clause 12.3 which provides as follows:
"Upon termination of the Services under clause 12.1, the Client shall pay [Grandlane] the appropriate part of the Fee for that part of the Services properly completed at the date of termination together with [its] reasonable and proper cost of bringing performance of the Services to an end on the condition those costs have been approved by the Client in writing in advance. [Grandlane] shall have no other claim arising out of the termination including loss of profit, loss of reputation, loss of use of staff and or equipment or redundancy costs."
(4) Clause 13 which provides for summary termination by Skymist in the event of material breach of its obligations on the part of Grandlane, certain other termination events and consequential provisions; and
(5) Clause 14 which provides for adjudication in accordance with the Scheme and then subparagraph (b) ("the Clause") provides that:
"the nominating body for purposes of the Scheme shall be the President or Vice President (or other official nominated by them for these proceedings) of the Chartered Institute of Arbitrators."
The Termination Letter
The Underlying Claim
(1) £620,000 being 5% of the total construction costs (of £12.4m) less the sums already paid on account by Skymist. This element of the claim is agreed (Claim 1);
(2) 0.5% for the procuring of permits services; Grandlane had contended that this too was to be taken as a percentage of the intended total value of the Property (said to be some £40m). Skymist agrees that it was 0.5% but of the total construction costs which would mean that the sum due was £62,000; this is what the adjudicator found. (Claim 2);
(3) Thirdly, payment in respect of monies either paid or payable to third parties engaged by Grandlane as part of its services for the purpose of the development of the project; leaving aside individual points on particular third parties, Skymist's overarching point was that Grandlane was not entitled to payment in respect of the fees of any third party which Grandlane had not yet paid itself; the adjudicator found that Grandlane was entitled to payment from Skymist irrespective of whether it had yet paid the relevant contractor.(Claim 3).
The Notice of Adjudication
(1) Paragraph 3.1 which stated (as had the original) that the contract was "partially evidenced in writing";
(2) Paragraph 3.2 which referred to the transfer of the contract to Skymist and that
"the terms of a formal development management agreement was negotiated and agreed in or around December 2016. Skymist at that time retained the services of Taylor Wessing who drafted the development management agreement on behalf of Skymist and who negotiated the terms. Grandlane acted as development manager for Skymist and Grandlane invoiced Skymist directly from 24 May 2016 (the "Contract").
(3) Paragraph 3.3 said that the Contract "included the carrying out of construction operations andexpressly includedtherefore was a construction contract within the meaning of section 104 of the Construction Act,the Scheme and the right for the parties to adjudicate at any time.
(4) Paragraph 3.4 was unchanged and referred to Grandlane's right to be indemnified against all consultants' fees paid, a fee of 5% of the construction costs for the development management services and a fee of 0.5% of the out-turn cost of the property for planning consent services;
(5) Paragraph 4.4 made clear that there was no claim made by Grandlane for Skymist's repudiatory breach of the contract;
(6) Paragraph 6.1 provided that "Clause 14.2 (b) of the Contract specifies that the nominating body for the purpose of the scheme shall be… The Chartered Inst of Arbitrators…Grandlane will apply to the .. Royal Institute of CharteredArbitratorsSurveyors (RICS)… for the appointment of an adjudicator in this dispute";
(7) Paragraph 7.1.3 was in substance unchanged and sought the same sum of just over £1.4m in respect of third party consultant fees;
(8) Paragraph 7.1.4 claimed interest, not now pursuant to the terms of the Contract as originally alleged but at a rate of 8.5% under the Late Payment of Commercial Debts (Interest) Act 1998 ("the Act").
The Referral Notice ("the Referral")
(1) A new paragraph 3.10 which first repeated part of the original 3.9 to the effect that it was acknowledged that under clause 12 of the DOA, Skymist had the right to terminate at will. But it then added that "… Skymist asserts that the Draft Deed of Appointment was not agreed between the parties. It follows that Skymist is unable to rely on this clause"; and again it states that nothing turns on the point anyway since Grandlane was not here seeking damages for repudiation;
(2) Paragraph 3.11 then makes the claims for the three sets of fees referred to above;
(3) Under the heading "the Contract", paragraph 4 referred to the original agreement from 2014 and payment thereunder, the payment of the 5% management fee in late 2015, the transfer to Skymist in about May 2016 and from that time the invoicing of Skymist directly and the payment of Grandlane's fees and expenses including the fees of third-party consultants, in accordance with an agreed monthly budget. The budgets contained Grandlane's fees and all of the third party consultants' fees every month. Paragraph 4.6 then stated expressly that "the above events evidence the contract between Skymist and Grandlane". Paragraph 4.7 then refers to the instructions to Skymist's lawyers to formalise the contractual relationship which was done in the Draft Deed of Appointment and the last amendments to it were made by Skymist and sent to Grandlane on 9 December 2016. All of this was new.
(4) Paragraph 4.8 then said that:
" The main terms of the Draft Deed of Appointment were agreed. The main matter left in dispute was whether the Draft Deed of Appointment should be backdated to cover the time Mrs Baturena acted as Grandlane's employer. The matter does not concern the dispute referred to in this adjudication.The Deed of Appointment was therefore agreed on or around 9 December 2016. This was a novation of the original agreement from Mrs Baturena to Skymist as Employer. Grandlane consented to this novation and Skymist became liable to Grandlane for payments.The novation was formalised by the negotiation of the Deed of Appointment.Nonetheless, by Skymist's own submission, the Draft Deed of Appointment was never agreed in a final form and therefore was not agreed."
(5) Paragraph 4.9 begins as follows: "For the sake of clarity, the key terms of the Draft Deed of Appointment relevant to this dispute which were negotiated are as follows" and then clauses 1 (Definitions) 12 (Termination and Suspension at Will), 13 (Termination for Breach) and 14 (Disputes) were quoted.
The adjudicator's decision on jurisdiction
The Decision
(1) Claim 1: as noted above, this was agreed;
(2) Claim 2: the only issue here was whether the 0.5% fee was calculated by reference to the intended value of the Property or the total construction cost;
(3) Claim 3: the total amount claimed here was £1,417,729.46. The only issue of principle was whether Grandlane had to pay the relevant third party before claiming payment from Skymist.
Claim 2
Claim 3
The PTP Claim
Skymist's Counterclaim
THE LAW
Adjudication Decisions without jurisdiction
"Whilst, at a practical level, I have some sympathy with this submission, I cannot accept it because the validity of the procedure by which the adjudicator was nominated goes to the heart of his jurisdiction."
Approbation and Reprobation
"In my judgment the underlying decisions on election or approbation and reprobation, as applied in the context of adjudication, show that a party cannot both assert that an adjudicator's decision is valid and at the same time seek to challenge the validity of the decision. The party must elect to take one course or the other. By taking a benefit under an adjudicator's decision, the party will generally be taken to have elected a particular course and will be precluded from challenging the adjudicator's decision. In Macob the benefit was the claim to have the proceedings stayed to arbitration in relation to the decision. In Shimizu the benefit was the right to have the decision corrected under the slip rule."
"from the authorities cited to us it seems to me to be clear that these phrases ["approbating and reprobating" .. "blowing hot and… cold"] must be taken to express, first, that the party in question is to be treated as having made an election from which he cannot resile, and second, that he will not be regarded, at least in a case such as the present, as having so elected unless he has taken a benefit under or arising out of the course of conduct which he has first pursued and with which his present action is inconsistent."
"there is a further fundamental difficulty in the way of this part of Pilon's case. This is Pilon's application to enforce the adjudicator's decision. It is therefore inherent in Pilon's application that the adjudicator was right. However, on this particular point, they wish to argue that the adjudicator was wrong, and that the court should substitute its own view for that of the adjudicator…. Such an approach would in my judgment amount to the clearest possible case of approbation and reprobation. There is clear authority that such an approach is simply impermissible on an application to enforce an adjudicator's decision: see ..Durtnell.. v Kaduna..[2003] EWHC 517."
(1) The approbating act or conduct in question needs to be clearly defined and unequivocal. Since it is fair to see the "doctrine" of approbation and reprobation as a species of election or a form of estoppel since the result is to preclude the relevant party from now making a particular argument or taking a particular course of action, the familiar requirement of "clear and unequivocal" should apply here too. It seems to me that this is also echoed in Banque des Marchands when Evershed MR referred to the approbation which prevented the later reprobation as being "an election from which he cannot resile". See also, paragraph 6.05 of Wilken and Ghaly's "The Law of Waiver, Variation and Estoppel, third edition"; it also has the practical advantage of enabling a proper comparison to be made with the later allegedly reprobating act, to see if the latter is truly inconsistent with the former;
(2) Second, the party in question must gain a benefit from the approbation. Although Wilken does not specifically make this point, it is well-established by both Banque des Marchands and ROK. It also makes sense because, reflecting the general context of election and estoppel, if there was no benefit, it is not clear why it would be unjust to the other party to allow the first party later to "reprobate";
(3) Finally, the reprobating act must be clearly inconsistent with the earlier approbation, and this will entail (for the same reasons as are set out in sub-paragraph (1) above), that the reprobating act itself must be clear and unequivocal.
ANALYSIS
The Decision
(1) it is plain that Grandlane was not contending that the contract was contained in the DOA even if not signed; that is clear from a fair reading of the NOA and the Referral, as explained above; nor did Grandlane need to;
(2) nor was Grandlane contending that the contract was wholly evidenced by the DOA; again, it did not need to;
(3) for the most part, the key terms in play were agreed between the parties anyway;
(4) to some extent, it is fair to say that both parties cherry-picked to a greater or lesser extent from the DOA; not because it was agreed as the contract but because certain parts of it were simply uncontroversial and had been agreed from an early stage, i.e. they simply evidenced parts of the agreement which were already concluded; the fact that as a matter of pure contractual analysis some of the points made might not be wholly correct does not matter for present purposes;
(5) it was therefore not necessary for the adjudicator to make any detailed or comprehensive findings as to the particular contract actually made here, given the narrow contractual (as opposed to factual) issues that arose. In particular, the adjudicator at no point made a finding that the DOA as a whole was the contract between the parties.
(1) Claim 1 did not require any findings because it was agreed;
(2) Claim 2 did, but the adjudicator's decision did not depend on any finding that the DOA was agreed; whether one looked at the TC or the DOA the wording for the 0.5% fee was the same;
(3) As for Claim 3,
(a) the issue as to whether Grandlane could recover fees which it had not yet itself paid to Skymist did not turn on any particular finding as to the governing contract; the point was that there was simply nothing in the documents to suggest that condition;
(b) as to whether Grandlane's claim was truly one in debt or rather for damages, in truth this was no more than stating the fairly obvious point that if it could be shown that certain fees had accrued by a particular date, because of the work done by that date, it did not matter that the third party may not have invoiced them until later; put another way, it was not right to say that the only claim for fees claimed later would have been in damages;
(c) it is true that the adjudicator did invoke clause 12.3 of the DOA but it probably was not necessary and again it does not say anything about what other terms of the DOA applied, unsurprisingly because he did not need to decide the point.
Approbation and Reprobation
(1) Approbated the DOA (necessarily including clause 14.2(b)) in the NOA and then reprobated the DOA (clause 14.2(b)) when procuring and obtaining a nomination by RICS;
(2) Approbated the DOA (necessarily including clause 14.2(b)) in the Referral while having reprobated the DOA (clause 14.2(b)) when procuring and obtaining a nomination by RICS;
(3) Approbated the DOA (necessarily including clause 14.2(b)) when claiming that Mr Riches' Decision is binding while having reprobated the DOA (clause 14.2(b)) when procuring and obtaining a nomination by the RICS;
(4) Put another way, approbated a contract without clause 14.2(b) when procuring - and obtaining - the nomination of an adjudicator by the RICS and reprobated such a contract in its NOA and Referral as well as when claiming that Mr Riches' Decision is binding.
Further Observations
CONCLUSION