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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 >> Cubex (UK) Ltd v Balfour Beatty Group Ltd [2021] EWHC 3445 (TCC) (04 November 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2021/3445.html Cite as: [2021] EWHC 3445 (TCC) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT (QBD)
Fetter Lane London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
(Sitting as a Deputy Judge of the High Court)
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CUBEX (UK) LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and – |
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BALFOUR BEATTY GROUP LIMITED |
Defendant |
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Unit 1 Blenheim Court, Beaufort Business Park, Bristol, BS32 4NE
Web: www.epiqglobal.com/en-gb/ Email: [email protected]
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
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Crown Copyright ©
(i) A total of £408,216.04 in accordance with the adjudicator's decision; accordingly, it seeks judgment for damages in the same sum;(ii) Interest pursuant to the Late Payment of Commercial Debts (Interest) Act 1998, alternatively section 35A of the Senior Courts Act 1981 at 8% from 09 May 2018 to the date of judgment, alternatively at such rate and for such period or such amount as the court thinks fit.
(i) Balfour Beatty have real prospects of showing that the contract(s) between the parties' related:either wholly to "excluded operations" (the manufacture or delivery to site ofbuilding components and/or materials) such that the Adjudicator had no jurisdiction over the dispute(s);orat least in part to such excluded operations, such that the contract(s) were "hybrid" contract(s), with the result that the Adjudicator did not have jurisdiction over the dispute(s);(ii) Balfour Beatty have real prospects of showing that Cubex purported to refer, and the Adjudicator purported to decide, more than one dispute, and/or that the single contract contended for by Cubex never came into existence : either of which yields the result that the Adjudicator lacked jurisdiction over the dispute;
(iii) Balfour Beatty have real prospects of showing that the Adjudicator acted in breach of the principles of natural justice in his conduct of the Adjudication in that he decided the critically important issue of contract formation on the basis which neither party had put forward, and upon which neither party had the opportunity to make submissions or put forward evidence;
(iv) There is another compelling reason why summary judgment should be refused in this case, namely the inordinate delay on the part of Cubex between the Adjudication Decision being issued on 1st May 2018 and the commencement of the present proceedings in September 2021. The Court should, therefore, exercise its discretion not to give judgment.
The Decision
1. The Contract related either wholly to excluded operations or at least in part to excluded operations
"(2) The following operations are not construction operations within the meaning of this Part -
(d) manufacture or delivery to site of -
(i) building or engineering components or equipment,
(ii) materials, plant or machinery, or
(iii) components for systems of heating, lighting, air-conditioning, ventilation, power supply, drainage, sanitation, water supply or fire protection, or for security or communication systems, except under a contract which also provides for their installation;"
On this, Mr Jessop referred me to the Decision of Coulson J (as he then was) in Equitix FSI CHP (Wrexham) Limited v. Bester Generacion UK Limited [2018] EWHC 177 (TCC) as authority for the proposition that exceptions are to be defined narrowly (paragraph 33 refers). I respectfully accept that observation, however, the authority does not bear directly on the proper construction of Section 105(2)(d).
"I have therefore come to the conclusion that in relation to the Services under the Subcontract in this case, the only operation which is excluded from being a construction operation by section 105(2)(c)(ii) is the erection of the steelwork for the pipe racks and pipe bridges and not the prior activities of fabrication drawings, off-site fabrication or delivery to site of the fabricated steelwork. It follows that I consider that Cleveland Bridge is correct in its approach to the division between construction operations and excluded operations in relation to the Services under the Subcontract."
"In this Part a "construction contract" means an agreement with the person for any of the following -
(a) The carrying out of construction operations
(2) References in this Part to a construction contract include an agreement -
(a) to do architectural, design or surveying work, or
(b) to provide advice on building, engineering, interior or exterior decoration or on the laying-out of landscape
in relation to construction operations
(5) Where an agreement relates to construction operations and other matters, this Part applies to it only so far as it relates to construction operations."
On the basis that the design is said to be in relation to the supply of doors, this brings us back to Section 105(2)(d). Further, as set out above, it does not assist Cubex to treat this as a hybrid contract.
2. Cubex purported to refer and the Adjudicator purported to decide more than one dispute and/or the single contract contended for by Cubex never came into existence
"80. It appears to me therefore that by reference to the subsequent observations of Akenhead J himself Ms Chambers is right to say that the decision in Air Design is authority only for the proposition that where an adjudicator is properly appointed under a contract about which there is or can be no dispute, then he may also have jurisdiction to resolve jurisdictional issues if they are coincidentally part of the substantive dispute referred to him.
81. In my judgment it is clear that this proposition cannot on any view be said to apply to the present case where, on the findings I have made, the defendant was correct in its contention, which it maintained clearly before the adjudicator, but which was always disputed by the claimant, that there was never any initial concluded contract about which there was no dispute and that the claims made in the adjudication were all advanced under three separate contracts. It follows that the adjudicator could not properly have been appointed under any version of the initial concluded contract as contended for by the claimant, because no such contract was ever formed, in circumstances where there was a substantial dispute between the parties as to whether or not there was such a contract, or a series of separate contracts covering the same matter, and in circumstances where there were differences of substance in the adjudication procedures applicable to the differing contracts as well as in the other terms of those contracts. It is difficult to construe this as a case where the adjudicator was required, as part of the substantive dispute referred to him, to decide whether or not the subsequent orders were variations of the original order. The claim as advanced was a simple final account claim under a sub-contract, whereas the question was to whether or not the claim advanced arose under one or more than one contract was raised fairly and squarely as a question of jurisdiction, and the adjudicator decided it accordingly. In such circumstances there can, in my judgment, be no question of the court concluding that his answer on that question should, even if wrong, nonetheless be temporarily binding on the defendant, who never agreed to jurisdiction upon him to decide that question."
(i) On 8 and 12 September 2016 there were standard purchase orders issued by Balfour Beatty for doors. These were supply only purchase orders but, as I have noted, the supply included and is accepted to include elements of design;(ii) On 13 February 2017, Cubex provided an order confirmation in relation to 50 doors in the sum of £238,081.07;
(iii) On 22 February 2017, Cubex provided a commercial proposal for the design, manufacture and delivery of doors under which Cubex offered to supply 246 doors at a total price of £2,235,128.94.
(iv) On 24 February 2017, Cubex provided an adjusted price. This adjusted price was found by the Adjudicator to be a commercial bonus but one which post-dated the conclusion of a contract on 23rd February 2017.
"Breaches of the rules will be material in cases where the Adjudicator has failed to bring to the attention of the parties a point or issue which they ought to be given the opportunity to comment upon if it is one which is either decisive of or of considerable potential importance to the outcome or the resolution of the dispute and is not peripheral or irrelevant and whether the issue is decisive etc. is a question of degree."
"If BBGL had known that this was the Adjudicator's line of thinking, BBGL could have (a) attempted to secure witness statements from those present at the Design Interface Meeting on 23 February 2017; and (b) pointed out the above inconsistency out [sic] (namely that even Cubex did not suggest a contract was concluded at the Design Interface Meeting on 23 February 2017)."