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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 >> Thomas Barnes & Sons Plc v Blackburn with Darwen Borough Council [2022] EWHC 2598 (TCC) (17 October 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2022/2598.html Cite as: [2022] EWHC 2598 (TCC), 204 Con LR 143 |
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Neutral Citation Number: [2022] EWHC 2598 (TCC)
Case No: HT-2020-MAN-000023
IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS IN MANCHESTER
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT (KBD)
Manchester Civil Justice Centre
Date handed down: 17 October 2022
Before
His Honour Judge Stephen Davies
sitting as a High Court Judge
Between :
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
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THOMAS BARNES & SONS PLC (IN ADMINISTRATION) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
|
|
BLACKBURN WITH DARWEN BOROUGH COUNCIL
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Defendant
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- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Jennifer Jones (instructed by Hill Dickinson LLP, Solicitors, Liverpool) for the Claimant
Lynne McCafferty KC (instructed by Blake Morgan LLP, Solicitors, Oxford) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 12 -15,18-22, 25, 27 July 2022
Date draft judgment handed down: 6 October 2022
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JUDGMENT APPROVED
I direct that pursuant to CPR PD 39A paragraph 6.1 no official shorthand note shall be taken of this Judgment and that copies of this version as handed down may be treated as authentic.
His Honour Judge Stephen Davies
|
Paragraphs | |
A |
Introduction and summary of decision | |
B |
The witnesses | |
C |
The pleaded cases | |
D |
Formation of the contract | |
E |
The relevant contract terms summarised |
73 - 82 |
F |
Contractual design and design co-ordination obligations | |
G |
The claimant’s claims for extensions of time and compensation for prolongation |
99 - 157 |
H |
158 - 226 | |
I |
Did the claimant validly terminate the contract on or around 4 June 2015? | |
J |
The consequences of my finding that the defendant was entitled to and did effectively accept the claimant’s repudiatory breach of the contract? | |
K |
Reasons not to undertake a quantification of the claimant’s claim |
A. Introduction and summary of decision
(a) The claimant has established an entitlement to an extension of time (“EOT”) to 10 August 2015, which is greater than that allowed and contended for by the defendant but significantly less than that claimed and contended for by the claimant.
(b) However, the claimant has established an entitlement to prolongation and, hence, an entitlement to delay-related damages, for only 27 days beyond that commensurate with the EOT already granted by the defendant during the course of the contract. This will have a significant impact on the valuation of its delay related claim.
(c) As at 4 June 2015 the defendant was entitled both to terminate the contract under the contractual termination provisions for delay-related default on the part of the claimant and to accept the claimant’s delay-related breaches as repudiatory and thus entitling it to treat the contract as discharged, to remove the claimant from the site and to engage replacement contractors to complete the works.
(d) Although the defendant failed to follow the correct procedure under the contract as regards service of the notice of termination of the contract, that did not invalidate the effectiveness of its acceptance of repudiatory breach and nor in any event was the termination notice itself repudiatory, so that the termination under the contractual provisions was still effective.
(e) It follows that the claimant has no prospect of recovering anything in this litigation, since any entitlement it may establish under a final account analysis would be more than extinguished by the defendant’s right to recover and to set off against such entitlement the net cost of having the contract completed by replacement contractors.
(f) In the circumstances, and in order to avoid significantly over-lengthening this judgment and over-delaying its production, I have not undertaken the lengthy, complex and unnecessary process of conducting a determination of the claimant’s final account entitlement.
B. The witnesses
(a) The witnesses of fact called
(b) Factual witnesses not called
(c) The expert witnesses
C. The pleaded cases
D. Formation of the contract
E. The relevant contract terms summarised
F. Contractual design and design co-ordination obligations
2.1A.1 the co-ordination of the Works provided by the Contractor and each Sub-Contractor and the services provided by any consultants engaged in respect of the Works; and
2.1A.2 the co-ordination and integration into the overall design of the Works the designs of any consultants engaged in respect of the works and the designs of each Sub-Contractor; and
2.1A.3 the obtaining and providing of information needed in connection with the services provided by any consultants and/or Sub-Contractors engaged in respect of the Works and the Works.”
G. The claimant’s claims for extensions of time and compensation for prolongation
(a) The claimant’s case
(b) The defendant’s case
(c) The SCL Protocol
(d) The decision in Walter Lilly v Mckay
(e) Concurrent causes
“In respect of claims under the contract:
(i) depending upon the precise wording of the contract a contractor is probably entitled to an extension of time if the event relied upon was an effective cause of delay even if there was another concurrent cause of the same delay in respect of which the contractor was contractually responsible; and
(ii) depending upon the precise wording of the contract a contractor is only entitled to recover loss and expense where it satisfies the “but for” test. Thus, even if the event relied upon was the dominant cause of the loss, the contractor will fail if there was another cause of that loss for which the contractor was contractually responsible.”
(f) Common ground
(g) The hub steel deflection issue as a cause of delay
(h) The roof coverings issue as a cause of delay
(i) The criticality of the roof coverings
(j) Were the delays caused by the hub steel deflection issue and the roof coverings issue concurrent causes of delay and, if so, what is the outcome?
(k) The hub SFS and hub finishes
(l) AI 33
(m) Notification
“1. If and whenever it becomes reasonably apparent that the progress of the Works or any Section is being or is likely to be delayed the Contractor shall forthwith give notice to the Architect/Contract Administrator of the material circumstances, including the cause or causes of the delay, and shall identify in the notice any event which in his opinion is a Relevant Event.
2. In respect of each event identified in the notice the Contractor shall, if practicable in such notice or otherwise in writing as soon as possible thereafter, give particulars of its expected effects, including an estimate of any expected delay in the completion of the Works or any Section beyond the relevant Completion Date.
3. The Contractor shall forthwith notify the Architect/Contract Administrator of any material change in the estimated delay or in any other particulars and supply such further information as the Architect/Contract Administrator may at any time reasonably require.”
(n) EOT and prolongation - conclusion
(a) Further delay due to continuing steel deflection issues.
(b) Delay caused by payment issues with subcontractors.
(a) the defendant paid valuations 1 to 10 in full, with payment certificate number 10 dated 2 April 2015 recording a gross valuation of £2,643,700 which, after retention and previous payments, resulted in a further payment of £270,465 plus VAT which was paid on 10 April 2015. I deal with valuation 11 below.
(b) there is no evidence of the claimant complaining at the time of undervaluation or underpayment and, to the contrary, in his witness statement at paragraph 4 Mr O’Brien described them as agreed gross valuations. Although he attempted to row back from this in cross-examination, that attempt was inconsistent with paragraph 3 of his statement (in which he described the interim payments being based on “agreed valuations”) and wholly unconvincing. Even the witness statement made by Mr Cunningham in an adjudication between the claimant and the defendant in 2015 made only general allegations about a lack of timely valuations and under-valuations.
(c) It is true that Mr O’Brien did refer to a schedule which showed that there were only 10 invoices and 10 payments over the period from April 2014 to April 2015, when there should have been monthly applications and monthly payments. However, he gave no details of why this had happened and nor did he refer to this being the subject of contemporaneous correspondence or complaint. Whatever the contract may have said one would expect the claimant as main contractor to submit interim monthly valuations to enable Capita to review them and issue the relevant valuations. Indeed that is what Mr Nortley said that he did. Since there is no suggestion that at the time the valuations were disputed as being under-valuations or complaints that they were paid late once issued, the most that can be said is that the absence of some monthly valuations may have meant that there may have been some temporary impact on cashflow, but that is really as far as it goes and this certainly does not explain or justify the serious and persistent difficulties with subcontractors shown by the evidence.
(d) Thus, the claimant cannot blame its failure in the critical period from January to April 2015 to pay important subcontractors such as Millfield on the defendant.
(c) Specific events from 1 April 2015 onwards
(d) The termination notice
(a) (at paragraph 61) “First … So far as concerns repudiatory conduct, the legal test is simply stated … It is whether, looking at all the circumstances objectively, that is from the perspective of a reasonable person in the position of the innocent party, the contract breaker has clearly shown an intention to abandon and altogether refuse to perform the contact”.
(b) (at paragraph 62) “Secondly, whether or not there has been a repudiatory breach is highly fact sensitive. That is why comparison with other cases is of limited value”.
(c) (at paragraph 63) “Thirdly, all the circumstances must be taken into account insofar as they bear on an objective assessment of the intention of the contract breaker. This means that motive, while irrelevant if relied upon solely to show the subjective intention of the contract breaker, may be relevant if it is something or it reflects something of which the innocent party was, or a reasonable person in his or her position would have been, aware and throws light on the way the alleged repudiatory act would be viewed by such a reasonable person”.
(d) (at paragraph 64) “Fourthly, although the test is simply stated, its application to the facts of a particular case may not always be easy to apply …”.
(e) Conclusions
(f) The defendant’s reliance upon the claimant’s insolvency
(g) The defendant’s reliance on the claimant’s intention to wind up the business
(a) The validity of the defendant’s termination
“Any notice expressly required by this Contract to be given in accordance with this clause 1.7.4 shall be delivered by hand or sent by Recorded Signed for or Special Delivery post. Where sent by post in that manner, it shall, subject to proof to the contrary, be deemed to have been received on the second Business Day after the date of posting.”
(b) Was the defendant’s failure to terminate the contract in accordance with the contract itself a repudiatory breach which the claimant was entitled to accept?
K. Reasons not to undertake a quantification of the claimant’s claim
Item |
Strutt (low) |
Strutt (high) |
Ormston (low) |
Ormston (high) |
Contract Sum |
1,725,751.82 |
1,813,932.10 |
2,028,846.61 |
2,028,846.61 |
Adjustments |
|
|
|
|
Remeasured sections |
|
|
|
|
Bill 11.2 - Undefined provisional |
77,400.00 |
77,400.00 |
77,400.00 |
77,400.00 |
Variations |
|
|
|
|
Architect’s Instructions |
262,402.02 |
281,966.30 |
292,526.38 |
292,526.38 |
Works informally instructed |
170,692.61 |
175,105,37 |
159,349.97 |
159,349.97 |
Sundry claims |
0.00 |
0.00 |
0.00 |
0.00 |
Remeasure adjustments |
116,969.62 |
116,969.62 |
99,398.85 |
99,398.85 |
Claims |
|
|
|
|
Loss & Expense |
|
|
727,313.25 |
782,761.82 |
A - Prolongation 12 weeks |
0.00 |
83,901.61 |
|
|
B - Prolongation 8 weeks |
0.00 |
26,914.27 |
|
|
Demobilisation 6 weeks |
0.00 |
19,053.25 |
30,171.00 |
30,171.00 |
Omission of works |
0.00 |
132,338.32 |
221,252.00 |
442,503.14 |
Other |
|
|
|
|
Materials |
387,510.14 |
387,510.14 |
387,510.14 |
387,510.14 |
|
|
|
|
|
Gross valuation |
2,740,726.21 |
3,115,100.97 |
4,023,768.20 | |
Less previously paid |
(-2,511,515.00) |
(-2,511,515.00) |
(-2,511,515.00) |
(-2,511,515.00) |
Grand total |
229,211.21 |
603,585.97 |
1,512,253.20 |
1,788,953.76 |
Item |
Strutt (low) |
Strutt (high) |
Ormston |
Difference[3] |
Bill 1 - Preliminaries |
254,200.60 |
254,200.60 |
180,655.05 |
73,545.55 |
Bill 3 - Substructure |
108,752.21 |
108,752.21 |
139,714.66 |
30,962.45 |
Bill 4.1 - Frame |
318,146.46 |
318,146.46 |
318,146.46 |
0.00 |
Bill 4.2 - Upper floors |
16,026.22 |
16,026.22 |
16,829.66 |
803.44 |
Bill 4.3 - Staircase |
2,127.50 |
2,127.50 |
2,127.50 |
0.00 |
Bill 4.4 - Roof |
341,833.31 |
341,833.31 |
341,833.31 |
0.00 |
Bill 4.5 - External walls |
215,831.93 |
281,088.79 |
510,008.43 |
294,176.50 |
Bill 4.6 - Windows & ext. doors |
11,371.54 |
11,371.54 |
11,371.54 |
0.00 |
Bill 4.7 - Internal wall |
5,344.08 |
8,110.38 |
5,344.08 |
0.00 |
Bill 4.8 - Internal doors |
0.00 |
0.00 |
0.00 |
0.00 |
Bill 4.9 - Floor finishes |
0.00 |
0.00 |
0.00 |
0.00 |
Bill 4.10 - Wall finishes |
0.00 |
0.00 |
0.00 |
0.00 |
Bill 4.11 - Ceiling finishes |
166,947.28 |
166,947.28 |
185,200.53 |
18,253.25 |
Bill 4.12 - Furniture & fittings |
0.00 |
0.00 |
0.00 |
0.00 |
Bill 4.13 - Sanitary fittings disposal |
0.00 |
0.00 |
0.00 |
0.00 |
Bill 5 - Mechanical installation |
35,144.01 |
39,872.24 |
35,855.24 |
711.23 |
Bill 6 - Electrical installation |
100,534.98 |
107,996.99 |
112,480.70 | |
Bill 7 - Drainage |
51,908.07 |
56,352.63 |
60,320.37 |
8,412.30 |
Bill 8 - External works |
74,441.70 |
77,954.01 |
82,955.17 |
8,513.47 |
Bill 9 - Ext. works (Highways) |
1,161.93 |
1,161.93 |
4,023.91 |
2,861.98 |
Bill 10 - Street lighting works |
0.00 |
0.00 |
0.00 |
0.00 |
Bill 11.1 - Defined provisional |
0.00 |
0.00 |
0.00 |
0.00 |
Bill 11.2 - Undefined provisional |
0.00 |
0.00 |
0.00 |
0.00 |
Tender Sum |
1,703,771.82 |
1,791,952.10 |
2,006,866.61 |
303,094.79 |
Costs agreed letter 25/10/13 |
21,980.00 |
21,980.00 |
21,980.00 |
0.00 |
Contract Sum |
1,725,751.82 |
1,813,932.10 |
2,028,846.61 |
303,094.79 |
[1] In fact Mr Gunton considered that it over-catered for the delay for which the claimant was entitled to an EOT, but the defendant did not contest the EOT to 13 April 2015, so that is not an issue which needed to be or was investigated at trial.
[2] Although it is dated 28 Feb 2016 he confirmed in his witness statement that this was the version he produced as at 21 April 2015 after valuation 11.
[3] This is the difference between Mr Ormston’s assessment of the measured sums and the lower end of the range of Mr Strutt’s assessment.