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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 >> Transport for Greater Manchester v Kier Construction Ltd (T/a Kier Construction - Northern) [2021] EWHC 804 (TCC) (31 March 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2021/804.html Cite as: [2021] EWHC 804 (TCC), [2021] BLR 431, 196 Con LR 194 |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT (QBD)
Rolls Building London, EC4Y 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
TRANSPORT FOR GREATER MANCHESTER |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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KIER CONSTRUCTION LIMITED (t/a Kier Construction - Northern) |
Defendant |
____________________
Adrian Williamson QC (instructed by Walker Morris LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 5th November 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
"Covid-19 Protocol: This judgment was handed down by the judge remotely by circulation to the parties' representatives by email and release to Bailii. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be Wednesday 31st March 2021 at 10:30am"
Mrs Justice O'Farrell:
The Contract
"13. Communications
13.1 Each instruction, certificate, submission, proposal, record, acceptance, notification, reply and other communication which this contract requires is communicated in a form which can be read, copied and recorded. Writing is in the language of this contract.
13.2 A communication has effect when it is received at the last address notified by the recipient for receiving communications or, if none is notified, at the address of the recipient stated in the Contract Data.
…
13.7 A notification which this contract requires is communicated separately from other communications …"
"All communications shall be undertaken using the project extranet 'NEC3 Change Management Tool', [provided by Conject (formerly BIW Technologies)]. Each communication should be completed as fully as possible by the Project Manager, Contractor or Supervisor and issued as required. The system will automatically send a corresponding email notification to those concerned. One copy of all communications and attachments will be provided on disk as an archive by the extranet change management provider at the end of the contract.
All communications issued will be regarded as the contractual record. Hard copies of communications will only be issued under the following circumstances:
- when required to do so by the Works Information
- when issuing documents that cannot be easily electronically transferred and as agreed between the Project Manager and Contractor."
"(1) Before a Party refers a dispute to the Adjudicator, he gives a notice of adjudication to the other Party with a brief description of the dispute and the decision which he wishes the Adjudicator to make…."
(2) Within seven days of a Party giving a notice of adjudication he
- refers the dispute to the Adjudicator,
- provides the Adjudicator with the information on which he relies, including any supporting documents and
- provides a copy of the information and supporting documents he has provided to the Adjudicator to the other Party.
…
(6) A communication between a Party and the Adjudicator is communicated to the other Party at the same time."
…
(11) 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 matter decided by the Adjudicator and intends to refer the matter to the tribunal …"
"(1) A Party does not refer any dispute under or in connection with this contract to the tribunal unless it has first been decided by the Adjudicator in accordance with this contract.
(2) If, after the Adjudicator notifies his decision a Party is dissatisfied, that Party may notify the other Party of the matter which he disputes and state that he intends to refer it to the tribunal. The dispute may not be referred to the tribunal unless this notification is given within four weeks of the notification of the Adjudicator's decision.
(3) The tribunal settles the dispute referred to it. The tribunal has the powers to reconsider any decision of the Adjudicator and to review and revise any action or inaction of the Project Manager or the Supervisor related to the dispute. A Party is not limited in tribunal proceedings to the information or evidence put to the Adjudicator."
The dispute
"Kier are represented by Walker Morris LLP whose contact details are 33 Wellington Street, Leeds, LSI 4DL, telephone: 0113 283 2500; fax: 0113 245 9412;
email: [email protected] and alex.jones@ walkermorris.co.uk."
"This Notice of Adjudication constitutes Kier's written notice of its intention to refer the dispute as herein described and which has arisen under the Contract to Adjudication."
"Walker Morris LLP, 33 Wellington Street, Leeds, LSI 4DL Tel: 0113 283 2500, Fax:0113 245 9412
Ref: AJJ/TTP/KCL0007.110
Solicitors for the Referring Party."
"In the First Adjudication between Kier Construction Limited ("Kier") and Transport for Greater Manchester ("TfGM")
We write with reference to the Decision of Mr. Curtis dated 25 November 2019 in the above Adjudication ("Decision"). Having considered the reasoning given by Mr. Curtis in reaching his Decision on the dispute referred, it is clear that he has erred in law and in his interpretation and application of the express terms of contract between the parties in a number of fundamental respects.
However, and without prejudice to TfGM's right and intention to seek formal resolution to reverse the outcome of the Decision, TfGM is prepared to comply with the Decision on a provisional basis. To that end, we confirm that TfGM has made arrangements for payment in satisfaction of the Decision to be made to Kier. Please can you ask Kier to raise an invoice for the sums awarded, plus the VAT status, as soon as possible, as TfGM cannot process payment without an appropriate invoice.
Please confirm in the course of the next 7 days if Walker Morris LLP is instructed to accept service of formal Proceedings for and on behalf of Kier."
"Further to the adjudication decision dated 25th November 2019 on Bolton, please can you raise two invoices in the following sums:
Invoice in relation to payment assessment Nr 48 (issued on conject today) in the sum of £713,572.90. This value is inclusive of the repayment of delay damages and associated interest charges up to 25th November 2019.
A separate invoice in the sum of £31,259.25 in relation to the payment of the TfGM element of the adjudicator's fees in accordance with the decision notice.
Also, please can you confirm the bank account details to which the funds will be directed.
We intend to honour the timeline as instructed by the adjudicator and would appreciate the invoices to be raised by return. "
"Further to the issue of Payment Assessment nr 48 and the subsequent payments to Kier in accordance with the Adjudicator's decision dated 25th November 2019, we record that it has been issued on a provisional basis only and without prejudice to TfGM's right and intent to seek formal resolution to reverse the Decision.
If you have any queries, do not hesitate to contact myself."
The claim
The application
Parties' submissions
i) The Contract provides for adjudication, that the result is to be honoured and that the same will become final and binding unless a notification of dissatisfaction is given within four weeks. This obviously serves an important commercial purpose of achieving certainty and finality in relation to disputes. Such a notification must, therefore, be clear and unambiguous, and comply with the contractual provisions for service.
ii) The letter of 29 November 2019 was not such a notification because:
a) contrary to clause 13.2, it was not sent to the address of Kier stated in the Contract Data, no other address having been notified by Kier for receiving communications;
b) it was not sent separately from other communications, contrary to clause 13.7; and
c) it did not state that TfGM intended to refer a specified matter to court, contrary to clause W2.3(11).
iii) Further, the letter relied on was defective as a matter of substance in that TfGM failed to identify the matters with which it was dissatisfied and wished to take to court.
iv) The email dated 3 December 2019 suffered from similar defects.
v) TfGM's attempt to rely on clause WI 920 does not assist because:
a) the two purported Notices of Dissatisfaction do not identify the matter decided by the Adjudicator with which TfGM are dissatisfied;
b) the letter dated 29 November 2019 was not sent in compliance with Clause WI 920 and was sent not by TfGM but by Pannone Corporate;
c) the email of 3 December 2019 was not sent via the Clause WI 920 method;
d) Clause WI 920 is clearly concerned with routine contractual communications and was not intended to cut down the effect of clauses 13.2, 13.7 and W2.3(11).
vi) Walker Morris sent and received communications in the adjudication on behalf of Kier but this does not assist TfGM because this was not provided for in the Contract Data and Kier did not identify the address of Walker Morris as that for receiving communications pursuant to Clause 13.2.
i) Kier authorised communications in relation to the adjudication through its representatives, Walker Morris; therefore, this was a valid method of giving notice to Kier.
ii) The contents of the 29 November letter clearly asserted that (a) TfGM considered that the Adjudicator's decision was wrong in law as a matter of interpretation of the Contract and (b) TfGM intended to reverse the decision by court proceedings.
iii) In any event, email was an accepted contractual method of communication between the parties and notice of dissatisfaction in similar terms was also communicated by TfGM directly to Kier via email on 3 December 2020.
iv) Further, the validity of the adjudication decision depends on the adjudication having been validly commenced by a notice in accordance with clauses 13 and W2.3. Kier's Notice of Adjudication was a document created and served on TfGM by Walker Morris and not by Kier. If the originating document commencing the adjudication constituted a valid notice under the Contract, that document gave the address and contact details of Walker Morris and thereby constituted the 'last notified address' for the purposes of further notices under the Contract. The logical corollary of Kier's contractual notice point (if right) would mean that the adjudication itself was null and void, and the adjudication decision would therefore not be binding.
v) It would also make the adjudication provisions unworkable if every communication in relation to the adjudication for the purposes of clause W2 was required to be sent to the registered office of the party by the party itself and not via client representatives. Clearly none of the communications in the adjudication under clause W2.3 was sent and received in the manner in which Kier's case would require, nor would it be required under W2.4.
Discussion
"[45] It seems to me that the probable commercial purpose of the clause is to enable each party to the contract to work on the basis that all communications in relation to the contract will be channelled through one particular office, with the obvious advantage of enabling every incoming document to be properly filed and its arrival properly recorded…
[46] Turning to the wording of the clause itself, it seems to me that clause 13.2 is there to fix the moment in time when a communication takes effect. For the reasons given by Mr Streatfeild-James, in the case of certain types of communication the date of its receipt will trigger the start of the period in which a response or action is required. The answer to the rhetorical question asked by Mr Wales — what is wrong with a document being handed over in a meeting? — is nothing, but I consider that the contract requires that a copy of the document should be sent also to that party's prescribed address.
[47] It would be unsatisfactory, in my view, if in any case where there was a dispute about the time when a communication took effect, the parties had to investigate the circumstances in which the communication was made and received in order to determine whether the mode of delivery was actually as good as, or better than, the mode of delivery prescribed by clause 13.2. Apart from anything else, there might well be legitimate room for disagreement as to whether the actual mode of service was an improvement on the prescribed mode of service…
[49] For these reasons I conclude that compliance with the mode of delivery specified in clause 13.2 is the only means of achieving or securing effective delivery of a communication under the contract because the communication only takes effect when it is received at the prescribed address.
[50] The consequence of this conclusion is that I reject the submission that the fact that notification was received within time by the relevant personnel at LOR effectively trumps the failure to give notice in accordance with the contract. On this aspect I would echo the words of Gross J, albeit made in a different context and to a different end, in Lantic Sugar Ltd v Baffin Investments [2009] EWHC 3325 (Comm), namely:
'If a claimant is required to serve X and, mistakenly purports to serve Y, the mere fact that Y informs X of the purported service so that X knows of it, cannot convert Y's receipt of the documents into good service upon X'…"
"[68] … In the absence of a notice of intention to refer served within the four week period, the adjudicator's decision becomes finally binding on the parties. A valid notice of intention to refer served in time is therefore relevant to the adjudication because it prevents the adjudicator's decision being final. Whilst it is not part of the adjudication process itself, in my judgment it is relevant to the adjudication for this reason …"
"A communication has effect when it is received at the last address notified by the recipient for receiving communications or, if none is notified, at the address of the recipient stated in the Contract Data."
Conclusion
i) TfGM gave a valid notice of dissatisfaction in respect of the adjudication decision, so as to preserve its right to challenge the decision through legal proceedings and prevent the decision becoming final and binding.
ii) Kier's application under CPR Part 11, seeking a declaration that the Court lacks jurisdiction to hear the Part 8 claim and an order setting aside the Part 8 claim, is dismissed.