BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?

No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!



BAILII [Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback]

Scottish Sheriff Court Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Sheriff Court Decisions >> Aberdeenshire Council v. Bruce Plant Ltd [2008] ScotSC 2 (08 February 2008)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotSC/2008/2.html
Cite as: [2008] ScotSC 2

[New search] [Help]


SHERIFFDOM OF GRAMPIAN HIGHLAND AND ISLANDS AT BANFF

 

A199/06

JUDGEMENT

 

of

 

SHERIFF PRINCIPAL SIR STEPHEN S T YOUNG Bt QC

 

in the cause

 

THE ABERDEENSHIRE COUNCIL

 

Pursuers and Appellants

 

against

 

BRUCE PLANT LIMITED

 

Defenders and Respondents

 

 

 

 

 

Act: Mr Robin Taylor, solicitor, Aberdeenshire Council

Alt: Mr D Graeme Walker, solicitor, Brown & MacRae, Fraserburgh

 

 

Banff: 8th February 2008

 

The sheriff principal, having resumed consideration of the cause, allows the appeal and recalls the interlocutors of the sheriff dated 5 July and 9 August 2007; repels the second plea-in-law for the defenders and respondents and finds them liable to the pursuers and appellants in the expenses of the appeal and of the debate before the sheriff and allows an account thereof to be given in and remits the same when lodged to the auditor of court to tax and to report; quoad ultra remits the cause to the sheriff to proceed as accords.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Note

 

[1] In this case the pursuers and appellants crave the court to grant decree against the defenders and respondents for payment of the sum of £77,178.84 with interest and expenses. The defenders tabled a plea-in-law to the effect that, their obligation to make payment having been extinguished by the operation of prescription in terms of section 6(1) of the Prescription and Limitation (Scotland) Act 1973, the action should be dismissed. After a debate on 21 May 2007, the sheriff by interlocutor dated 5 July 2007 sustained this plea-in-law and dismissed the action. Subsequently, by interlocutor dated 9 August 2007 she found the pursuers liable to the defenders in the expenses of the cause insofar as not already determined. On 22 August 2007 a note of appeal was lodged on behalf of the pursuers, and in short they maintain that the sheriff erred in dismissing the action upon the basis that the defenders' obligation to make payment to them had been extinguished by prescription.

 

[2] Section 6(1) provides inter alia that if, after the appropriate date, an obligation to which the section applies has subsisted for a continuous period of five years ...... (b) without the subsistence of the obligation having been relevantly acknowledged, then as from the expiration of that period the obligation shall be extinguished. Section 6(2) provides that schedule 1 to the Act shall have effect for defining the obligations to which the section applies, and the effect of paragraph 1(g) of schedule 1 is that the section applies to any obligation arising from, or by reason of any breach of, a contract. Section 6(3) provides in the context of the present case that the reference in section 6(1) to the appropriate date is a reference to the date when the obligation became enforceable. Section 10(1) provides that the subsistence of an obligation shall be regarded for the purposes of section 6 of the Act as having been relevantly acknowledged if, and only if, either of the two following conditions (a) and (b) is satisfied. It is accepted that condition (a) does not apply in this case. Condition (b) is that there has been made by or on behalf of the debtor to the creditor or his agent an unequivocal written admission clearly acknowledging that the obligation still subsists.

 

[3] The facts of the case so far as material to the issue of prescription are not in dispute. Between September 1996 and September 1997 the pursuers carried out various works on behalf of the defenders at Garvocklea, Laurencekirk, Gardenston Meadows, Laurencekirk and Charleston Park, Cove. These works were carried out by the pursuers as sub-contractors to the defenders who were themselves the main contractors in a contract in which Scotia Homes Limited were the employers. The works carried out by the pursuers were the subject of various invoices raised by them in December 1997 and October 1998. But it is agreed that the date upon which the defenders' obligation to make payment to the pursuers for these works became enforceable was September 1997.

 

[4] There was evidently a dispute between the defenders and Scotia Homes Limited over payments due by the latter to the defenders in terms of the main contract. In due course the defenders raised an action against Scotia Homes Limited for payment of a sum in excess of £200,000. Scotia Homes Limited counterclaimed against the defenders for payment of the sum of £473,000. One element in this counterclaim related to the works which had been carried out by the pursuers as sub-contractors on behalf of the defenders. It was evidently in light of this action that the defenders disputed the amounts brought out as due by them to the pursuers in terms of the invoices raised in December 1997 and October 1998.

 

[5] On 29 January 2001 the defenders' managing director, Mr Ian J Bruce, wrote to a representative of the pursuers, namely Mr Stuart Calderwood, in the following terms:

 

Dear Sir

We are in receipt of your letter of 27 December 2000.

Your ledger shows claims of £86,403.35.

We believe this figure should be a gross of £80319.81 as per attached details. This is subject to retention of 5% leaving a net due of £76,303.82. You have previously been paid £36,566.83 towards this sum thus leaving a balance of £39,736.99 due.

As you are aware we are still suing Scotia Homes for a sum in excess of £ 200k. In this action works carried out by yourselves form part of this claim. Scotia have hinted that they have contra charges against both DLO and Bruce albeit we obviously contest this.

At this moment we do not feel comfortable passing any further payments on the basis of the above paragraph but should you wish to discuss this further, we are willing to meet with you and display the basis of our figures and the situation with our claim.

Yours faithfully,

 

It is accepted that the initials "DLO" in the penultimate paragraph of this letter referred to the pursuers' direct labour organisation.

 

[6] On 16 May 2001 the pursuers' contracts manager, Mr Ralph Singleton, wrote to a representative of the defenders (who appears to have been a Mr Peter Simpson) referring to a meeting which had taken place between them on 14 May 2001. After detailing various aspects of the parties' respective claims the writer concluded:-

 

To summarise, the undisputed sums are as follows ;­

 

Net Retn

 

Garvocklea 3759.18 1643.35

Gardenston Meadow 18041.71 2415.68

Charleton Park Ph 1 6043.38 1522.56

Charleton Park Ph2 39161.99 4590.99

67006.26 10172.58 77178.84

 

There is a further disputed sum of £33697.34 plus £1773.54 retention.

 

I would be grateful if you could advise me when you will be able to pay some or all of the undisputed sum.

 

[6] On 20 September 2001 Mr Bruce again wrote to Mr Calderwood in the following terms:-

 

OUTSTANDING ACCOUNTS

Dear Sir

Apologies for the delay in responding to your letter.

We note your concerns regarding the magnitude and age of this matter. You are aware that there are various counter claims levelled at us, which encompasses yourselves, about workmanship, levels and regulating materials. These are matters are not news, the only difference now being that Scotia have now been forced to put figures to those items through the Court.

In essence, this is repetitive, albeit some progress has been made in court, as we outlined our position earlier in the year detailing what we believed you would be paid pending recovery from Scotia Homes.

The figures you quote do not tie up with those agreed with our Mr Peter Simpson & your Mr Ralph Singleton, that being close to £ 40K.

We take on board the position that you would like some reduction in the debt. This in itself is not a problem but defer this until we receive a fuller response from our lawyers regarding the position until next week when we will contact you directly by phone.

Although we respect that this response may not be satisfactory, please do not hesitate to contact us if you wish to clarify any of the above points in the meantime.

Yours faithfully,

 

[7] On 14 February 2003 Mr Calderwood sent an email to Mr Bruce asking for confirmation that he agreed with the calculations which had been put forward by the pursuers in the letter of 16 May 2001. Mr Calderwood indicated that on receipt of this confirmation he would arrange for the existing invoices to be cancelled and fresh accounts raised on the basis of the calculations in this letter. The email ended:

 

I have been requesting this since November 02 and this is now getting to be ridiculous. It is imperative that this matter is progressed. I think there has been enough procrastination on your part. All I need is a one line "reply with history" to this e-mail and I will do the necessary.

 

[8] On 24 February 2003 Mr Calderwood sent a reminder to Mr Bruce asking for an early response, to which Mr Bruce responded on 3 March 2003:-

 

As we have reached an impass at the moment. Please amend your invoices as proposed.

 

[9] This e-mail was acknowledged by Mr Calderwood later the same day, and he asked Mr Bruce to keep him updated on the progress of the defenders' action against Scotia Homes Limited.

 

[10] On 2 May 2003 the defenders raised four invoices for works carried out by them at Charleston Park Phase 1, Charleston Park Phase 2, Gardenston Meadows and Garvocklea. The total amount brought out as due in terms of these invoices is £77,178.84 which is the sum sued for.

 

[11] On 22 October 2003 Mr Bruce wrote again to Mr Calderwood in the following terms:-

 

Dear Stuart

With reference to our recent discussions.

We refer to our previous correspondence, where we highlighted the difficulty we have in paying any monies over due to the potential contras being levied against us in addition to monies already unpaid. This is evident in the Court Summary, of which you have a copy. The monies agreed, circa £70K, will be paid on a completely successful result of the case on the measured works.

The advice we are given is not to enter a payment scheme, even it is without prejudice.

We recognise your right to raise a writ but in the event of that unfortunate turn of events we would obviously defend it on several counts as outlined previously.

Please find attached a copy of our Lawyers letter referring to the next Court date.

You are in receipt of all the information regarding the case.

Yours sincerely,

 

It is accepted that the reference in the second paragraph of this letter to the "Court summary" was a reference to the action which the defenders had raised against Scotia Homes Limited.

 

[12] The present action was raised on 27 October 2006 when warrant was granted to cite the defenders. Accordingly some nine years had elapsed since the defenders' obligation to the pursuers became enforceable.

 

[13] Parties were at one on the law to be applied in determining the issue between them. It was accepted that section 10(1)(b) of the Act required that there should have been an admission in writing by or on behalf of the debtor, and further that this must have been unequivocal - see Fortunato's Judicial Factor v Fortunato 1981 SLT 277 at page 282 and Lieberman v G W Tait & Sons 1987 SC 213 at page 216. Given that the prescriptive period admittedly began to run in September 1997 and that section 6(1) referred to a continuous period of five years, it was accepted too that the defenders' obligation to the pursuers had been extinguished unless both at least one of the letters sent by Mr Bruce in 2001 and the letter sent by him in 2003 had constituted relevant acknowledgements within the meaning of section 10(1)(b). Finally, it was agreed that, in construing each of these letters, it was legitimate to set it in the context of the prior correspondence between the parties, and further that it was enough that a debtor should have acknowledged that the obligation in principle still subsisted even if he did not acknowledge that a specific sum was due to the creditor.

 

[14] In a careful note appended to her interlocutor dated 5 July 2007 the sheriff set out the circumstances of the case and the submissions made to her in the course of the debate. She then considered various authorities which had been cited to her and examined the correspondence to which reference has already been made. She concluded:-

 

Applying the Section l0(l)(b) requirements to these letters, they do not contain an unequivocal admission "clearly acknowledging" the subsistence of an obligation to pay. In each letter from the Defender to the Pursuer reference is made to ongoing litigation in the Court of Session. That litigation involves counterclaims against the Defender. The counterclaims relate to elements of the work carried out by the Pursuer on behalf of the Defender. The quality of the workmanship is a disputed issue. Any payment which may require to be made by the Defender to the Pursuer is contingent upon the outcome of that Court of Session litigation. There is a distinction between an agreement on quantum on the hypothetical successful outcome of a related litigation and an unequivocal admission clearly acknowledging that an obligation still subsists.

It was not suggested by either party that the email of 3 March 2003 interrupts prescription. In any event whether read in isolation or in the context of the surrounding correspondence it is indeed difficult to comprehend. In my view it does not meet the Section 10(1)(b) requirements.

In my opinion the action is time-barred and should be dismissed. I shall sustain the Defender's second plea-in-law.

 

[15] Opening the appeal, the pursuers' solicitor submitted in short that the letters sent by Mr Bruce in 2001 and 2003 all satisfied the criteria set out in section 10(1)(b) with the result that the defenders' obligation to the pursuers had been relevantly acknowledged both in 2001 and again in 2003. It followed that there had not been a continuous period of five years between September 1997 and October 2006 without the subsistence of the obligation having been relevantly acknowledged, and accordingly this had not been extinguished by prescription. The appeal should therefore be allowed, the interlocutors of the sheriff dated 5 July and 9 August 2007 recalled, the defenders' second plea-in-law repelled and the cause remitted to the sheriff to proceed as accords.

 

[16] In response, the defenders' solicitor submitted in short that in none of the three letters sent by Mr Bruce in 2001 and 2003 had there been an unequivocal admission by or on behalf of the defenders clearly acknowledging that their obligation to the pursuers still subsisted. It followed that the pursuers' claim against the defenders had indeed prescribed with the result that the sheriff's decision should be affirmed and the appeal dismissed.

 

[17] In my opinion the submissions for the pursuers are to be preferred. In order to interrupt the prescriptive period of five years section 10(1)(b) requires in the context of this case that both one of the letters sent by Mr Bruce in 2001 and the letter sent by him in 2003 should have constituted unequivocal written admissions clearly acknowledging that the defenders' obligation to the pursuers still subsisted. This begs the question what this obligation was in the first place. The terms of the sub-contract between the parties have not been pleaded, nor has the sub-contract itself been produced. But for present purposes I think that it is clear enough from the pleadings and the correspondence which has been produced (and which was agreed) what the obligation was. In answer 3 it is admitted that between September 1996 and September 1997 the pursuers carried out various works on behalf of the defenders at the four sites in question on a sub-contracting basis, that invoices were raised by the pursuers in December 1997 and October 1998 and that the defenders disputed the value of these invoices. Then in article 6 of the condescendence it is admitted that the obligation incumbent on the defenders related to an obligation to pay money in respect of services rendered by the pursuers to the defenders. It is not said in the pleadings how much the pursuers were to be paid in terms of the sub-contract, but it is I think perfectly clear from the correspondence that they were to be paid the measured value of the works carried out by them. In short therefore the defenders' obligation to the pursuers as at September 1997, when it is agreed that the prescriptive period began to run, was to pay to the pursuers the measured value of the works carried out by them at the four sites. So the question comes to be whether, in writing to the pursuers as he did in 2001 and again in 2003, Mr Bruce gave an unequivocal admission clearly acknowledging that this obligation still subsisted. I think that he did and indeed, if his position when he wrote these letters had been that the obligation no longer subsisted, he had only to say this rather than go to the length of explaining to the pursuers, as he did, why the defenders were not at that stage prepared to make payment to the pursuers in fulfilment of the obligation.

 

[18] In his letter of 29 January 2001 Mr Bruce referred to the fact that the pursuers' ledger showed claims of £86,403.35 and he indicated that the defenders believed that "this figure should be a gross of £80319.81 as per attached details". He referred then to a retention of 5% "leaving a net due of £76,303.82" and pointed out that the pursuers had previously been paid £36,566.83 "thus leaving a balance of £39,736.99 due". It may be asked upon what basis Mr Bruce supposed that this balance was due to the pursuers if it was not on account of the obligation to make payment which the defenders had incurred to the pursuers in terms of the sub-contract between them. It is true that Mr Bruce went on in his letter to explain why, in light of the defenders' continuing action against Scotia Homes Limited, they were not willing to make any further payment to the pursuers in the meantime. It is true too that, although it is not stated explicitly, the import of the letter was to the effect that at the end of the day the outcome of the action against Scotia Homes Limited might be that nothing would be paid to the pursuers. At the same time there is no suggestion here that, if (as they evidently hoped) the defenders were successful in their action against Scotia Homes Limited, the pursuers would not be paid what was due to them for the works carried out by them. In short therefore I think that in this letter Mr Bruce was clearly saying to the pursuers that in principle the defenders' obligation to them still subsisted, albeit that they were not prepared to obtemper it until the outcome of their action against Scotia Homes Limited was known.

 

[19] The import of the letter dated 20 September 2001 is essentially to the same effect. I refer here in particular to the statement in the third paragraph which reads, "..... we outlined our position earlier in the year detailing what we believed you would be paid pending recovery from Scotia Homes". I refer also to the comment in the penultimate paragraph that the pursuers "would like some reduction in the debt". In my opinion in these passages Mr Bruce was again clearly acknowledging that in principle at least the defenders' obligation to the pursuers still subsisted and would be obtempered provided that the action against Scotia Homes Limited was successful.

 

[20] The same I think is true of the letter dated 22 October 2003. In the second paragraph Mr Bruce stated: "The monies agreed, circa £70K, will be paid on a completely successful result of the case on the measured works". Here too it may be asked upon what basis Mr Bruce was accepting that these monies would be paid to the pursuers if it was not that he acknowledged that at least in principle the defenders remained indebted to the pursuers in pursuance of the original obligation. Again I think that it is nothing to the point that the defenders were here saying that they would defend any action raised against them by the pursuers "on several counts as outlined previously" or, as the sheriff pointed out, that any payment which might require to be made by the defenders to the pursuers was contingent upon the outcome of the action against Scotia Homes Limited. Neither of these considerations served to undermine Mr Bruce's clear acknowledgement that the defenders' obligation to the pursuers still subsisted.

 

[21] On the whole matter therefore I am respectfully of the opinion that the sheriff was wrong to have sustained the defenders' second plea-in-law and to have dismissed the action. I have allowed the appeal accordingly, recalled the sheriff's interlocutors, repelled the defenders' second plea-in-law and remitted the cause to the sheriff to proceed as accords.

 

[22] It was agreed that, if the appeal were successful, the defenders should be found liable to the pursuers in the expenses of the appeal and also of the debate before the sheriff.

 

[23] In addition to the authorities which I have already mentioned, I was referred to Greater Glasgow Health Board v Baxter Clark & Paul 1990 SC 237, Richardson v Quercus Limited 1999 SC 278, Bradford & Bingley plc v Rashid 2006 1WLR 2066 and Harper v John C Harper & Co 2003 SLT (Sh.Ct.) 102.

 

 

 

 

 

 


BAILII: Copyright Policy | Disclaimers | Privacy Policy | Feedback | Donate to BAILII
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotSC/2008/2.html