MR Roger Ter Haar KC Approved Judgment
MR Roger Ter Haar KC Approved Judgment
Approved Judgment
Before:
Between:
- and –
Defendant
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Approved Judgment
Mr Roger ter Haar KC PvB
Approved Judgment
This judgment was handed down remotely at 10.30am on Tuesday 18th June 2024 by
circulation to the parties or their representatives by e-mail and by release to the National
Archives.
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1. In this action and an associated action, I have previously handed down four
judgments:
4. This judgment is the judgment following the trial of the disputes between the Parties.
Representation
6. As I have set out above, there have been a number of previous judgments following
hearings (previously all remote) on interlocutory and other matters.
8. J&BH has been represented at all the hearings before me by Mr James Frampton, a
member of the English Bar.
9. At the trial of this action, A & V has been represented by Mr. Paduraru, a director and
shareholder in A & V. He was accompanied by Mr. Judd, who is a surveyor, but not
an officer of, or shareholder in, A & V.
10. On a previous occasion, Mr. Frampton, for J&BH, drew my attention to the helpful
guidance in the judgment of Hildyard J. in Bank St Petersburg v Arkhangelsky (No.
2)5 at paragraphs [73] to [76]:
1
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[2015] EWHC 2997 (Ch.); [2016] 1 WLR 1081
Mr Roger ter Haar KC PvB
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74. Though no authority has been found, that Note (for which I
am very grateful) helpfully sets out the applicable framework
as regards McKenzie friends. It suggests the conclusion that,
given that CPR 39.6 does now allow an employee of a body
corporate duly authorised to do so by it to appear at trial on its
behalf with the permission of the Court, the Court does have
jurisdiction to allow a body corporate the assistance of a
McKenzie friend, and in appropriate (and exceptional)
circumstances to allow that McKenzie friend a right of
audience on an ad hoc basis. The Note also identifies a case
where it appears that the Court assumed that to be so:
namely, Tracto Teknik GmbH v LKL International [2003]
EWHC 1563 (Ch);
75. I agree that the Court has such jurisdiction, as part of its
power (in the absence of specific restriction) to regulate its own
proceedings and, in circumstances where otherwise the body
corporate would have no-one capable of speaking for it, to
prevent a failure in the administration of justice (and see
also A.L.I. Finance Ltd v Havelet Ltd [1992] 1 WLR 455 at
460-461). I agree further that the Legal Services Act 2007 at
Schedule 3 assumes and recognises such jurisdiction (as did its
predecessor, the Courts and Legal Services Act 1990) even if it
does not expressly confer it. Thirdly, I consider that since the
jurisdiction is inherent, neither Rule 39.6 nor Practice Direction
39A is an exclusive and complete code, so that the Court may
give permission in exceptional cases even where neither that
rule nor the Practice Direction (which prescribes the form of
the evidence of authority which must be provided where a
company or corporation is to be represented by an employee)
has been complied with.
that the A.L.I. Finance case was cited in either of the two cases.
In my view, there is nothing in either of those cases which
binds me to hold that the jurisdiction of the Court, as
propounded in the A.L.I. Finance case at a time before
the CPR, has been restricted by rules intended to introduce, not
less but greater, flexibility. I also consider that it is unlikely that
the jurisdiction should be so limited in the case of a body
corporate, but unconfined in the case of a litigant who is an
individual.
11. During this trial, A & V has been principally represented by Mr Paduraru but I
permitted Mr. Judd to cross-examine J&BH’s accountancy expert and to make closing
submissions on A&V’s behalf, as I considered this to be in the interests of justice.
12. Both Mr Paduraru and Mr Judd acted in a careful and measured way.
13. I pay tribute also to Mr Frampton, who dealt with the difficulties presented by this
method of representation with courtesy and efficiency.
14. The claim relates to a new student accommodation development, known as the
Moulsecoomb Campus, for the University of Brighton (“the Project”).
17. BYUK engaged J&BH as its Main Contractor for the project by a sub-contract dated
30 September 2019.
19. The Sub-Contract Works were labour only. Free issue materials were to be supplied
by J&BH.
20. Whilst the Sub-Contract Works did not initially include works to Tower 3, works to
that Tower were added by a variation, so that A & V’s works were to Towers 1, 2 and
3 and to Podiums 1 and 2.
21. After the addition of Tower 3, the sub-contract sum was £447,800.
22. The plumbing installation works for Towers 4 and 5 were carried out by a different
sub-sub-contract, Watertight.
23. A & V left the Project in March 2021, at a time when it accepts the sub-contract
works were incomplete.
24. This claim involves the taking of a final account under the sub-contract requiring the
determination of
Mr Roger ter Haar KC PvB
Approved Judgment
(a) The value of A & V’s works at the time it left the Project
(b) Claims by A & V for losses allegedly suffered before it left the
Project;
Summary of Account
Contractual Provisions
Clause 4.8: Free Issue Material shall become the responsibility of the
Sub-Contractor upon delivery to it either at the Site or the Sub-
Contractor’s premises. The Sub-Contractor shall assume all risks and
insurance obligations in Free Issue Materials upon such delivery to it
until Practical Completion. Title in Free Issue Materials shall be
retained at all times by J & B Hopkins.
Clause 7.1: The Sub-Contractor shall carry out and complete the Sub-
Contract Works in conformity with the requirements of these
conditions plus the Agreement and in such a manner as to avoid
hindrance to the progress of others.
(3) The value of the adjustment to the Sub-Contract Sum for any delay
and/or disruption likely to be caused to the regular progress and/or
completion of the Sub-Contract Works by reason of the instruction
to carry out the additional work;
Clause 9.5: The Contractor may not later than five days after the due
date in Appendix 6, give a notice (“Payment Notice”) to the Sub-
Contractor specifying:
Prior to the First Retention Release Date the Contractor will retain the
percentage as stated in Appendix 6.
the carrying out of the Sub-Contract Works except where and to the
extent such liability, loss or expense is caused by an act or omission of
J & B Hopkins.
Clause 10.4: The Sub-Contractor warrants that it will carry out and
complete the Sub-Contract Works in such a way so as not to directly or
indirectly cause J & B Hopkins to be in breach of any provision of the
Principal Contract and/or any other Contract made by J & B Hopkins
in connection with the Works or incur any other liability thereunder.
The Sub-Contractor hereby acknowledges that any breach or default by
it of the Sub-Contract may result in J & B Hopkins committing
breaches and/or becoming liable in damages under the Principal
Contract and/or any other Contract made by J & B Hopkins in
connection with the Works and may occasion further loss and/or
expense to J & B Hopkins in connection with the Works and J & B
Hopkins and the Sub-Contractor hereby acknowledge that any such
damages, loss and expense are hereby agreed to be within the
contemplation of the parties as being probable results of any such
breach and/or default.
Hopkins and caused by such failure including, but not limited to, J & B
overhead charges and supervision and liquidation damages payable by
J & B Hopkins under the Principal Contract. J & B Hopkins is hereby
authorised to deduct or set off any amount payable under this clause
from any payment which may at ant time be due or have become due to
the Sub-Contractor whether under the Sub-Contract or otherwise.
(2) The order of any variation to the Sub-Contract Works under clause
8; or
(2) Without reasonable cause suspends the carrying out of the Sub-
Contract Works; or
then, without prejudice to any other rights and remedies it may have J
& B Hopkins may except in the case of sub-clause (4), by written
notice (the “Notice”) to the Sub-Contractor require the Sub-Contractor
to remedy such failing and/or breach within 7 days from the date of the
Notice. In the case of sub-clause (4), or if the Sub-Contractor fails to
remedy its failing and/or breach within 7 days from the date of the
Notice, J & B Hopkins may forthwith determine the Sub-Contractor’s
employment under the Sub-Contract and may elect to employ a third
party to complete the Sub-Contract Works or complete the Sub-
Contract Works itself.
Clause 20.3: The decision of the adjudicator shall be binding until the
dispute is finally determined by legal proceedings or [by] agreement.
Appendix 2
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Mr Roger ter Haar KC PvB
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27. The witnesses for A&V were Mr Paduraru and Mr Judd, to whom I have made
reference above.
28. Mr Paduraru was cross-examined at some length. Apart from minor and
understandable exceptional moments when he expressed concern at the time that
cross-examination was taking and when his answers were not fully responsive to
questions which he was asked, particularly when he was keen to make sure that the
Court was aware of relevant documentation, he answered questions in a straight
forward manner and demonstrating an impressive recollection of the documentation
when the questions related to the progress of the sub-contract works and events on
site. In those respects, I found his evidence generally reliable. I found his answers
upon the financial aspects of A&V from the Spring of 2021 onwards less satisfactory.
29. Mr Judd’s evidence was most significant in respect of a meeting held on 11 May
2021, to which I refer below. I found him to be an honest, open and reliable witness.
30. J&BH called four witnesses. I found all of them to be honest, although in cross-
examination their evidence departed from their written statements. My conclusion
was that where the evidence differed, their oral evidence was more reliable than the
witness statements.
31. The first witness called was Mr Alan Giles, a Site Supervisor at J&BH. His role was
principally dealing with issue of materials. I formed the impression that he had
limited visibility of A&V’s works and methods of working on Site.
32. The second witness was Mr Ian Davidson. He was a Senior Site Supervisor at J&BH
brought to site to help with supervision of A&V’s works. It seems probable that he
started work on the Site on or about 8 March 2021.
33. The third witness was Mr Dominic Harman, a major projects director at J&BH. It
became apparent that his involvement with the Sub-Contract was generally at too high
a level to provide useful evidence as to the detailed issues which I must decide:
however he did provide useful evidence as to the nature of the Project.
34. The final witness was Mr Richard Niziolek, a commercial director at J&BH. Again,
his role was generally at too high a level to provide useful evidence as to the issues
which I must decide.
35. Where those witnesses gave relevant evidence I have commented upon it below: in
particular there are disputes about who from A & V was on Site and for how long on
19 and 22 March 2021.
36. What was significant was the absence of certain J&BH employees whose evidence
would have been of interest:
Expert Evidence
37. As I have said, A&V called Mr Judd to give evidence. Although he is a surveyor, his
evidence was essentially factual rather than opinion evidence.
38. J&BH called Mr Geale, a Chartered Accountant. In advance of the hearing A&V had
raised issues as to the form of his reports and the nature of his instructions. In the
event, I found Mr Geale to be helpful and willing to consider alternative hypotheses in
a manner appropriate for an independent expert witness.
39. The Sub-Contract was entered into on 18 December 2019. Prior to the Sub-Contract
being finalised, A & V provided J&BH with answers to a Sub-Contract
Questionnaire. In those answers, A & V gave details of its previous three years’
turnover (£420,035; £494,930; £537,906)6. There was also a Pre-Order Meeting held
on 19 September 2019, the minutes of which were placed before me7.
9.1 The present Programme for the sub-contract works is as per J&B
Hopkins construction programme Moulsecoomb draft M&E
programme and is subject to revision as the contract proceeds – key
dates and short term look aheads will be issued throughout the duration
of the works.
….
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9.17 The Sub-Sub-Contractor will attend site, execute and resource the
works in accordance with J&B Hopkins key dates requirements,
including for all necessary visits, whilst complying with all reasonable
requests and directives issued by J&B Hopkins.
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Mr Roger ter Haar KC PvB
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42. In his witness statement, Mr Harman gives a useful description of A & V’s
subcontract works:
8.1 The main contractor, Bouygues ("BYUK") built walls and single
side boarded walls in advance of A&V's works to allow pipes to be
installed within the fabric of the walls before being double side
boarded and fully enclosed. In the case of plumbing installation works
within the service risers, A&V's 1st fix works required the walls to be
boarded and fire tape sealed to allow the pipe brackets and surface
pipework including the HDPE drainage soil stack installation to
commence.
8.4 A&V had to connect plumbing and soil wastes to bathroom pods
associated with each student bedroom. Bathroom pods were pre-
constructed fibreglass units which were free issued and positioned
completed in bathrooms. A&V had to make external connections to
pre-installed pipework connections on these pods for hot and cold
water and waste connections for the WC, shower and sink.
8.5 There were a small number of DDA bathrooms which had services
and sanitaryware connected to in a traditional way with 1st fix
pipework, soil pipe and wastes installed, followed by wall closures and
QA checks/handovers, The drylining subcontractor would follow on to
board and close walls. Once closed, subsequent trades included the
decorators, ceramic wall tilers, flooring installation and the installation
of vanity units. Once these works had been completed, A&V's 2nd fix
works could be carried out which included the fixing of sanitaryware
including basins WC's and shower rails.
8.6 Handovers for 1st and 2nd fix works were generally managed via
meeting minutes issued by BYUK. If areas handed over to JBH were
not in a satisfactory condition, we recorded this in the 1-Auditor
software and identified why the M&E works were not able to proceed.
This would normally result in BYUK rectifying the issue or, as we call
it, removing a "blocker" to enable works to commence. An example
would be materials of others left in the workspace or an incomplete
wall area stopping A&V from making a meaningful start. This system
was also used to hand back areas when A&V had completed its works.
This process was managed by our freelance QA Manager Wayne Reed
and BYUK.
8.9 A&V's 2nd fix works consisted of the installation of radiators and
final connections to kitchen sinks, testing and filling of services. Once
completed there was a further transition period for QA checks and
clearing the floorplate for handover back to BYUK.
8.10 A&V's Final Fix, also referred to as 3rd Fix, included TRV Heads.
These are the thermostatic mixing valves which control the heat output
on the radiators.
Mr Roger ter Haar KC PvB
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Commissioning
43. Mr Giles’s evidence in paragraph 9 of his witness statement was that A & V came
onto site in late February 2020. Mr Paduraru’s evidence in paragraph 12 of his “Trial
Witness Statement” is that:
44. Insofar as there is a difference of recollection as to when A & V started work on Site,
it seems to me that Mr Paduraru’s recollection is more likely to be correct. There is
no dispute between the Parties as to the fact that J&BH awarded a second contract to
A & V.
45. Soon after the works began, BYUK closed the Site from 27 March 2020 because of
Covid. In paragraph 5.0 (c) of the Particulars of Claim it is pleaded that the closure
was from 30 March to 1 June 2020. In paragraph 47 of the Defence it is pleaded:
47.2 The Claimant had already halted its Works and left the site on 24
March 2020, before the closure of the site. On 24 March 2020, Mr
Paduraru sent an email stating that the Claimant had “all decided to
stay at home for at least 2 weeks”.
47.4 In any event, it is denied that any such breach could have caused
the Claimant any loss. Under clause 11.1, if the Defendant exercises
its right to suspend, the Claimant is not entitled to any adjustment to
the Sub-Contract Sum or additional payment.
46. Thus there is agreement that work ceased for about two calendar months. I consider
the contractual consequences of this below.
47. Mr Harman describes the working methods adopted when works recommenced:
Mr Roger ter Haar KC PvB
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10. The initial effects of Covid-19 on the site meant that the works had
to be managed differently by BYUK. BYUK reduced its main
contractor site labour levels, which led to corresponding changes to
staffing and adjustments to programmes. However, with the work faces
available, A&V and our other subcontractors were able to maintain
their labour levels when we returned after the site lockdown while still
achieving the required safety protocols that the government had in
place at the time. Site conditions changed with the implementation of
one-way systems. For example, some staircases changed to either up or
down only. Workfaces were made available to one trade at a time to
reduce the chance of spreading the virus. Toilet facilities were reduced
on site as well, with additional facilities added by BYUK to mitigate
the risks associated with cross-contamination via other trades. Works
had to be planned more carefully as a result of Covid-19 restrictions
but, once these were bedded in, we generally found that the single trade
access requirements meant that the works progressed more
productively than they would have done if several trades were working
on workfaces at the same time.
48. I consider below the evidence as to the extent to which A & V’s works were disrupted
by the working practices adopted on the Site.
Julian with all my respect you can not keep asking us to jump on
something straight away within the last moment, this is a Directed
Acceleration Work!
On the other side you accelerate the program on upper floors or any
others area of work without giving us a reasonable time notice and this
is a bit frustrating.
Delaying and accelerating the work in a same time it’s not good for us,
but I will discuss all this matters and more with Adam on our minutes
meeting.
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Mr Roger ter Haar KC PvB
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51. That email exchange refers to a “2 week look ahead”. That was a reference to the
arrangement made between the various parties to the Project whereby BYUK would
inform J&BH of areas which would become available for J&BH to work in over a
two week period. J&BH would then in turn pass that information on to its sub-sub-
contractors. This seems to have worked reasonably well as a practical solution to the
fact that BYUK were falling behind with its structural and other works which were
essential precursors to J&BH’s works. However, this was not what had been
envisaged at the outset of the project and did cause some problems as I discuss below.
52. Thus, for example, on 7 August 2020 Mr Smart sent an email saying that in the
following week (week commencing 10 August 2020) three areas would be available –
level 5 in tower 3 and levels 6 and 7 in Tower 110.
53. By email on 10 August 2020 Mr Paduraru notified Mr Smart that level 7 of Tower 1
was “not ready for us yet, drilliners [sic] are still working on the floor”11. That was a
reference to a company called Hepburn who were carrying out dry lining works. Mr
Smart responded12:
HepBurns will still be on the floor as the floor hasn’t been handed over
to us but you can make a start, although saying that you already did last
week.
Just to let you know, based on your 2 weeks look ahead we can not do
the following:
I'm [recording] all this days since we start in Moulsecoomb, until now
we are almost 2 months delayed on floor plate 1st fix and 2nd fix day
by day!
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11
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Mr Roger ter Haar KC PvB
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55. Mr Smart responded by commenting in red on the email14, accepting the specified
areas were not then available. Two of the areas would not be available until the
following week, and one (level 3 in Tower 1) would, he said, be available on
Thursday 3 September.
56. Whilst the number of complaints made by A & V in writing from June to December
2020 was limited, it seems to me that the 2 week look ahead system was liable to
cause unproductive working:
1. The system itself appears to have been created to deal with the
problems caused by BYUK’s failure to provide working areas in
accordance with pre-Covid expectations;
2. It was inherent in the system that A & V would only know on the
Friday before a two week period what working areas would be
made available to them;
4. Often A & V would go into an area to carry out work ahead, for
example, of the dry lining work, but would then be required to
revisit areas once the dry lining work had been completed.
57. Mr Paduraru emphasised to me on more than one occasion that until March 2021
there were no complaints about the quality of A & V’s works, its productivity or
about any delays said to be attributable to A & V.
58. There is some evidence before me which suggests that there were concerns on
J&BH’s part about A & V’s performance before March 2021.
59. Firstly, Mr Giles in his witness statement said at paragraphs 15 and 16:
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16. During the course of the works, I recall a recurring issue with
A&V's installation of pan floats (soil pipes running from the back of
the toilet plan to main vertical soil stack) which had not been clipped as
required. This resulted in waste pipes running up hill. When I raised
this with A&V, A&V instructed one of its operatives (who went by the
name of Martinez) to clip the pan floats. This was a basic task that
should not have been missed by A&V and resulted in re-work. Despite
some improvements being made by A&V initially, the quality and
attention to detail in A&V's works dropped off and I ended up clipping
a number of floats on different floor plates myself together with other
JBH operatives.
60. When he gave oral evidence, it became apparent that Mr Giles’s involvement with
A&V’s work was substantially to do with supply to A&V of the free issue materials
which A&V needed to carry out its works. As to the suggestion that “A&V’s labour
levels were up and down throughout his involvement on the Project, and they
regularly left site early which caused problems with progress”, there is nothing to
corroborate this suggestion at any time prior to March 2021, and I find it difficult to
accept that this could have been a significant problem without there being some
reflection in some form of contemporaneous record, most probably in an email (as
there were in respect of some defective work). It seems to me likely that in giving
this evidence Mr Giles had in mind the email exchanges in March 2021 to which I
refer below.
61. As to the suggestion in paragraph 16 that there were waste pipes “running up hill”:
this was repeated by Mr Giles in the course of his oral evidence, but I was not taken to
any contemporaneous documentation showing that this was a significant problem.
Asked about this, his evidence was that these problems concerned “some leaks in
Tower 2”. He also confirmed at the end of cross-examination that he had no concerns
about A & V’s productivity or quality before March.
62. The second witness, Mr Davidson, only came to site in the early part of March 2021.
13. Another recurring issue with A&V was its use of materials. I
remember raising a concern as to why A&V were using large numbers
of copper crimped pipe fittings unnecessarily in pod service risers for
offsets and changes in pipe direction. Installing these fittings was time
consuming and expensive, and also added to the risk of leaks due to
excessive jointing. The other subcontract mechanical installation team
on Towers 4 & 5 (Watertight) were installing the pod risers using a
pipe bender rather than large amounts of crimped fittings. Watertight's
method was the correct/preferable way to install as this reduced the
number of joints and potential weak points in the system. The team did
challenge A&V on this, but A&V didn't choose to change their
installation methods. I was told this was to do with the skill base of
their operatives.
64. This passage suggests that there were concerns on the part of J&BH about A & V’s
performance before March 2021. In his oral evidence Mr Harman was asked whether
any issues were raised prior to March 2021. His answer was that there were standard
issues. Later he said that in December there was “just general talk – not a major
issue in December” and later he said that he didn’t see any major issue with quality.
As to the issue of crimping, he confirmed that this was an acceptable, if not
preferable, way of carrying out the work.
65. In the light of those clarifications, I do not regard Mr Harman as suggesting that there
were any significant problems with A & V’s performance before March 2021.
Mr Roger ter Haar KC PvB
Approved Judgment
66. The final witness was Mr Niziolek. It was clear in his oral evidence that he was
entirely reliant upon what he heard from others and could therefore not give any
evidence from his own knowledge as to A & V’s performance.
67. As I have already pointed out, I did not hear from some potentially significant
witnesses: Messrs Hill, Smart, Macey and Brown.
68. Importantly, as I have already emphasised, there was no documentation recording any
significant concerns on the part of J&BH as to A & V’s performance. That is
powerful negative evidence, but as important if not more important is what happened
during a telephone conversation between Mr Paduraru and Mr Hill on 5 March 2021.
70. On the basis of this evidence, and Mr Paduraru’s own evidence, I firmly conclude that
A & V was not responsible for any significant failure of performance up to the
beginning of March 2021.
71. Payment Application 11 was submitted with a Valuation Date of 20 December 2020.
Payment Certificate 11 was issued on 18 January 202115.
72. The amount claimed in respect of the unvaried works was £336,479 against which
J&BH certified £333,518.70. In respect of variations, the claim was £39,700 and the
certified sum £33,225.
73. Payment Application 12 was submitted with a Valuation Date of 20 January 2021.
Payment Certificate 12 was issued on 18 February 2021.
74. The amount claimed in respect of the unvaried works was £370,012 against which
J&BH certified £352,390.40. In respect of variations, the claim was again £39,700
and the certified sum £31,725.
75. One significant change was that in Application 11 the Contract Sum was stated to be
£368,000 (which was the original Contract Sum before Tower 3 was added to the
Sub-Contract Works). In Application 12 the Contract Sum was stated to be £447,800
(which was the varied Contract Sum after Tower 3 was added to the Sub-Contract
Works).
76. I return to details of the applications and certificates and stated levels of completion
below.
77. Both Parties’ valuations in broad terms show the Towers as being very largely
complete. Some progress had been made on Podium 1 commercial, but otherwise
Podiums 1 and 2 were to a greater or lesser extent incomplete.
78. Mr Harman told me that at the end of February 2021 into March the Project was
beginning to ramp up. He said that BYUK was concerned about the Podiums.
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Mr Roger ter Haar KC PvB
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79. His evidence was that A&V was falling behind the two weekly look ahead
programmes.
80. Certainly, the relationship between the Parties deteriorated very rapidly during March
2021.
81. It was Mr Paduraru’s evidence that A&V had first been asked to carry out works to
the Podiums in September 2020 and afterwards, despite the Podiums not having been
handed over by BYUK to J&BH. In its written Closing Submissions, A&V submitted
as follows:
3.1 JBH by not accepting the Towers and Podiums Floor Plates (the Areas
of Work) from Bouygues UK, and timely release in accordance with
the Contract Programme [Trial Bundle 1, page 308 - 345] has caused
major delays for A&V.
3.2 In fact, during A&V's time on site, JBH never accepted the Podiums
levels from Bouygues UK and formally rejected them, on 22 February
2021 [Trial Bundle 3, page 1176 - 1180].
3.3 However, despite the fact that the Podiums levels were never accepted
by JBH, A&V was asked by JBH to carry out the plumbing
installation works in those areas [Trial Bundle 4, pages 1541; 1542;
1543; 1544; 1545; 1546; 1547; 1548; 1549; 1550; 1551; 1554; 1555;
1556; 1557; 1558; 1559; 1560; 1561; 1562; 1563]
3.4 Consequently, on the 12th of March 2021 (A&V's date for completion
of the Sub-Contract) [Trial Bundle 1, page 333] small elements of
work remained incomplete on Podium 1- Level 1 (East); Podium 2 –
Level 1 (East and West) only, as demonstrated by JBH in [Trial
Bundle 5, page 2208 - 2010].
3.5 These details are confirmed in the JBH witness statement of Mr Ian
Davidson dated 29 February 2024 paragraph 17 [Trial Bundle 1, page
180] and were further confirmed by Mr Davidson, at the Trial, in his
oral witness statement under oath.
3.6 After a period of three years and two months, the truth finally came
out, and it has been conclusively confirmed by JBH now, that A&V's
position, consistently maintained as correct and true, is affirmed by the
fact that as of 22 March 2021, Tower 1; Tower 2; Tower 3 and
Podium 1 - Level 1 (West); Podium 1 - Level 0 (East and West);
Podium 2 Level 0 (East and West) were indeed fully completed, this
being confirmed by Mr Davidson, at the Trial, in his oral witness
statement under oath.
3.7 During A&V's time on site, A&V repeatedly informed JBH of the
delays they were experiencing, which were not due to their own fault,
as documented in the emails listed in [Trial Bundle 4, page 1524;
1529; 1532; 1673; 1674; 1675; 1676; 1799; 1801; 1804]. A&V's
emails have never been disputed by JBH (up until March 2021) but
Mr Roger ter Haar KC PvB
Approved Judgment
3.9 Consequently, in fact the Contract was completed only on 4/5 October
2021 [Trial Bundle 4, page 1565, 1566] which is six months and
twenty-three days beyond A&V’s completion date, also confirmed by
Mr Harman in his oral statement.
82. A & V’s obligation under the Sub-Contract (absent any extension of time) was to
complete its sub-contract works by 12 March 2021.
83. As set out above, as at the beginning of March 2021 the most significant areas of
work left to be completed were the works in the Podiums.
84. The documentation before me confirms that generally the Podium areas had not been
formally accepted by J&BH as having been handed over to it by BYUK – the Trial
Bundles contain a number of J&BH documents formally rejecting areas in the
Podiums which BYUK has purported to hand over to it16.
85. What appears to have happened is that despite the formal position being that J&BH
had not accepted formal handovers, J&BH accepted that specified areas were
sufficiently complete to enable J&BH (and its sub-sub-contractors) to carry out
works, the available areas being those specified in the two week look ahead
programmes.
Are you available this Thursday morning (at Brighton office) to discuss
and carry out an account review to try and get this realigned?
87. In his oral evidence, Mr Paduraru made it clear that A & V was suffering a substantial
cash flow problem at this stage. It is apparent that J&BH was aware of A & V’s
problems. On 25 February 2021, Mr Paduraru sent an email to J&BH18:
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Hi Adam / Seth
Just to let you know I did think about increasing labourer on site.
To supply those numbers is not a problem for me, I will get more
plumbers in on Monday the 1st of March. But what I will need extra is
another supervisor, I must have 2 supervisors between them.
Please let me know if you agree with what I have mention above.
In regard with the delay thing and value of it, I will come back to you
by end of play tomorrow.
Have you got anymore costs that we need to review? I am very keen to
get this resolved today or tomorrow.
89. The reference to “Martyn” was a reference to the representative on Site of the sub-
contractor working on Towers 4 and 5, Watertight. It is not clear on what basis J&BH
took the view that it could instruct works in A & V’s working area (podium 2) to be
executed by another sub-contractor. Mr Paduraru responded to that email on the same
day20:
Hi Adam,
You will receive the 2 weeks look ahead back dates since we start with
the proposal dates,and all the floor plates acceptance and rejections,
then you can see exactly how big is the gap ( time) that we been pushed
back (which I am sure you JBH have all this [information] already).
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But just to give you an idea of the cost for direct loss and expense
incurred, by the time you get the info sent across to you tonight or early
in the morning tomorrow is around 45k.
This is because the progress of our work has been affected by a matter
for which your client is responsible for all the delays that BYUK
created as you all are aware, by failing to give us the possession of the
floors plate and others site areas on the proposal date agreed in the
program or in the 2 weeks look ahead.
We have been delayed week by week since we start our 1st fix on site.
With the instruction work I never refuse to do it. I don’t know what
made you think there is a financial stress for that.
To review the labour and workfaces. Introduce the new JBH supervisor
we have bought to
We have to walk away from this meeting with a clear plan on how to
complete the job.
91. The reference to the “new JBH supervisor” appears to be a reference to Mr Davidson.
Thus, it appears that J&BH had responded positively to Mr Paduraru’s request in his
25 February email.
This would mean your time at the workface was limited to roughly 5
hours per day. Please can you review this and increase your hours on
site. On average all your labour spends about 90 to 120min less on site
(per person per day) then all the other subbies/contractors.
Hi Adam,
Our working hours are 8:am to 15.30 which are 8.5h a day. Not 6h
Thank you
94. Mr Paduraru was asked about working hours in cross-examination. He accepted that
his direct workforce came from London,and would leave at 15.30 to get back to
London. His evidence was that they made up time by working through the lunch
hour.
Hi Alex,
earlier in the week, when we sat down with Adam, I spoke about
productivity. just noting you guys have left site today 2pm.
I asked if you would look at your team site hrs. where are you with
that?
concern that you are not getting the full production from your team,
and losing valuable to complete the works.
can you confirm the site working hrs for AV. if you need help
monitoring your guys hrs. let me know.
96. I have already referred to a telephone call which took place between Mr Paduraru and
Mr Hill on 5 March 2021. In that call Mr Hill told Mr Paduraru that J&BH was going
to provide A & V with extra labour. There was no suggestion that A &V would be
charged for this labour. Mr Paduraru expressed his gratitude for A & V’s assistance.
97. Notwithstanding that positive conversation, on the following Monday, 8 March 2021,
Mr Hill resent Mr Macey’s email set out above and said as follows25:
I am also concerned that you still haven’t got the correct level of labour
on site. We spoke on Friday about Watertight helping where they
could. At the moment they are busy completing rad pipework in the P2
L00 SU, and haven’t got spare resources. I believe Martyn is trying to
get additional labour from tomorrow so he can achieve the completion
dates in P2 L00. These are works that A&V should be doing. Martyn
(Watertight) will be directed by JBH to work in areas that are available,
and A&V are behind on programme. These areas will have a QA
inspection before any works commence. Martyn isn’t there to subsidise
your labour, he is there to make sure areas are completed in line with
the 2 weekly look ahead (as sent by Julian).
It is starting to feel like you are expecting JBH to pick up works you
don’t want to do, this can’t be the case. We need A&V completed, and
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to do this we expect A&V to increase working hours (in line with the
contract), productivity and labour.
98. The tone of this email was in marked contrast to the helpful tone of the conversation
before the weekend.
99. Mr. Hill’s email was timed at 14.28. It followed hard on the heels of another email
from Mr Macey sent at 14.2026:
I am still concerned labour levels are not covering all the workfaces.
I have taken a snapshot for 3 or your men. over the recent 20 working
days. the daily average time on
site is
man 1 – 07:04 hrs less 00:30 hrs lunch = 06:34 Productive hrs.
man 2 – 06:47 hrs less 00:30 hrs lunch = 06:17 Productive hrs.
man 3 - 07:22 hrs less 00:30 hrs lunch = 06:52 Productive hrs.
you are losing well in excess of 1 hrs production time per man every
day
this means your men are only 79% productive, when using 8 hrs work
for the standard day. 21% of your
100. In the meantime, on Sunday 7 March 2021 Mr Paduraru had sent an email as
follows27:
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Also as a [proof] that the floor plates start dates in this schedule are
real once I have attached the Handover Inspection Report, where now
you can see the gap between them.
This doesn’t really tell JBH anything regarding cost and delay. JBH
can’t see that this contributes to a £30,000.00 variation. I understand
that you are struggling and we want to help A&V complete this project
but we also need to be very cautious of your current situation. JBH are
very concerned that A&V will not complete the project due to
cashflow.
I understand you were down on labour today again, this means that
JBH we not complete on time in areas as per the 2 weekly overhead.
1. Justify your claim for your variation. To formulate a plan and advise
JBH on how you are going to complete the project with the remaining
monies.
2. Complete the towers and fill the systems and test. JBH will take the
remaining work within the Podiums 1 & 2 (Level 1 and 2) from A&V.
3. Walk away from the project and have JBH value your works. JBH to
take over your works and take to completion.
102. Thus, at this point matters had moved fast over a period of a little over a week. From
a position where J&BH had raised no significant criticisms of A & V as it completed
the greater part of its sub-contract works, now J&BH was expressing considerable
concerns about A & V’s progress. In parallel, A & V was putting forward claims for
extra monies.
Yesterday 8no Labour and Today 7no as it stands it seems you don’t
have sufficient Labour to get areas which were released to us Monday
08/03 complete by 12/03. Can you resource sufficient labour to ensure
all work accepted is complete by Friday 12/03.
Due to the issues and lack of labour on site JBH will start to subsidise
you’re labour so key dates are not missed.
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As discussed last night please can you review your options. Also you
need to increase productivity on site. I’m being total that you have
local labour on site now and they are being told by A&V to finish up at
3pm.
105. The oral evidence before me suggests that A & V interpreted this as meaning that
J&BH would provide labour and then re-charge A & V for that labour.
Correspondence which followed on 11 March 2021 to which I refer below confirmed
that understanding. I accept Mr Judd’s submission in closing that this does not fit
with the sub-contract. This appeared to involve J&BH carrying out at its total
discretion parts of A & V’s sub-contract works, without any clarity as to who would
take responsibility. Mr Paduraru’s evidence was that he had understood from the
telephone conversation on 5 March 2021 that the labour which J&BH was going to
provide would be under A & V’s control and direction. This proposal was a very
different proposition.
106. On 10 March 2021, Mr Paduraru set out A & V’s position in an email sent to Mr Hill
and copied to Mr Brown and Mr Macey31:
The problem is with the programme that has been accelerated not with
us!
In regard with your options and all others enquires and problems, JBH
will receive by this Friday my final decision in written about
[Moulsecombe].
I gave you the cost for delays, I gave you the evidences for that too
(where for you are not enough) I did ask for a solution of what we
gonna do with this acceleration programme (no solutions, no plans) just
waiting for me to increase labourer without any kind of deal.
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Trust you will find this self-explanatory however, should you have any
questions please do let us know.
108. The email attached a letter dated the previous day, 10 March 202133:
Due to this, J&B Hopkins Ltd. are left with no alternative but to
supplement A&V Building Solution ltd. on-site labour with that of our
own. We request that A&V Building Solution ltd. continue to work to
deliver their contracted works and obligations to the best of their
endeavours and advise by return as to how A&V Building Solution ltd.
propose to complete such.
Please note; In accordance with clause 7.4 of the Sub-Contract all costs
associated with the supplementation of on-site labour and its associated
management costs will be contra charged to A&V Building Solution
ltd. and as such will therefore contribute to the forming of the Sub-
Contract final account.
109. Within 2 hours Mr Paduraru responded copying his response not only to Mr Brown
but also to Messrs Hill, Macey and Harman34:
Thank you for your response and letter as this comes as a surprise to
me.
First of all can you identify the areas where we are delaying the
project?
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Currently I have 9 men on site today in all the areas that work is
available to me.
I just want to make it clear that there has never been a delay from A&V
on site and we have … are constantly keeping up with our works.
I am happy to walk on site with you so that you can show me exactly
where we are delaying you!?
Also last week Adam Hill phoned me and told me that he know that
A&V never delay the project and he also said as of good gesture that
he will send out some men on the project at no cost or contra charge for
A&V to help us out which I appreciated and agreed to.
110. This email did not receive a direct response from any of its four recipients: in
particular the sensible suggestion to walk the site received no response.
111. At 16.07 on 12 March 202135, Mr Macey wrote an email stating that A & V’s
workforce had left by 15.30 that day leaving various specified areas incomplete.
112. Another email from Mr Hill to Mr Smart on the same day suggested that A & V was
reducing its workforce36. In cross-examination Mr Paduraru accepted that he had
reduced his workforce: his reasoning was that the sub-contract period had ended on
12 March 2021 so that he was no longer obliged to work on site – however he only
released his agency labour and kept his direct employees.
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113. I have referred above to Mr Macey’s email sent at 16.07 on 12 March 2021. At 10.07
on 13 March 202137 Mr Paduraru annotated that email setting out A & V’s position
that certain areas were not available, some areas had not been formally handed over
and that other areas were more complete than Mr Macey’s email suggested. Mr
Paduraru’s evidence before me was that in the areas available to A & V the physical
works were complete and that what remained to be done was only the QA (Quality
Assurance) inspections.
SVP and RWP form essential works that help a) weather the building,
b) sequence with the other trades for building walls, thus releasing the
work areas to JBH 1st Fix etc. we must continue to progress SVP and
RWP.
reducing labour, and by not maximising the site hours, at this stage
where all works in Towers and Podiums must be advancing on the
dates provided and in the sequence of working, this does not provide
sufficient resource to cover all of the available work.
the QA closing of areas remains due on the last day of each agreed
duration.
I understand and have been discussing with you the issues AV have
and how that needs to be presented to us.
if you can get me the Names over the weekend I can review the Biosite
actions needed.
116. On 15 March 2021 A & V sent J&BH a lengthy letter39. This was comprehensive. It
started by commenting upon the works in the Towers:
As you are aware our contract period for carrying out and completion
of the Sub-Contract Works on site was for 52 weeks. The Key Date for
Completion and handover of all works on or before 12th March 2021
and that period has now expired and the works are still incomplete.
The reasons for the delays have previously been detailed to you but in
brief terms the areas your programme detailed to us as being available
were in fact incomplete. A schedule previously sent to you detailed the
locations and time periods of delay marked in red. We attach a further
schedule particularising the critical delays and these total 74 days.
The effect of the above is that the return visits and uneconomical
working from that which Hopkins programmed to be available but was
in fact not available once on site has incurred us in additional costs. In
respect to Hopkins delays we consider that we have only been 65%
efficient with our operative installation works. As such £268k of the
£413k claimed to date for our works have been installed in the manner
that we were anticipating. Unfortunately, the remaining 35% (£144k)
has not been SO productive and has resulted in a 33% additional time
period to complete those works. On this basis in real terms this is a
£45K cost that we have incurred to which we would request is paid for
by Hopkins as loss and expense. This cost we have included in our
current valuation application but would be grateful of your
confirmation and/or instruction that this issue of increased costs for
delays and the sum claimed will be paid.
117. As I have already recorded, until the beginning of March 2021 there had been no
significant complaints about A & V’s performance. I also accept Mr Paduraru’s
evidence that the sub-contract works had been carried out in a non-productive way as
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a result of late release of working areas by BYUK. I return below to the contractual
consequences of these matters and to the claim for additional payment.
The Podium works similar to the Towers have not been made available
as Hopkins's programme due to delays beyond our control and thus we
have been working uneconomically with return visits. The value
remaining for the works to the podiums is circa £34k from an original
sum of circa 120k but this as we understand is planned to be installed
over a further 5-month period. The original works were for a 10-week
period, so it is a little unclear as to why we are expected to continuing
installing our works over a longer period. The remaining balance of
£34k of labour from our contract to complete this section of the works
is approximately 136-man days so effectively 6 men for 4 weeks. Once
the 4 weeks has elapsed if the works are incomplete this will require
additional instructions for the additional labour.
119. This part of the letter reflected a real problem affecting A & V. The letter accurately
recorded J&BH’s view at that time that it would take five months to complete the
works (in the event it took slightly longer than that). However, the works which
remained for A & V to complete were substantially only the Podium works. Thus A
& V was faced with the prospect of a long period of unproductive working.
121. The letter now put forward a request for an extension of time and payment of
additional preliminaries:
In addition to the above the works have overrun the 52-week and key
date period and A&V request an extension of time to cover the overrun
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123. I have already set out above the terms of Mr Brown’s letter dated 10 March 2021 40. A
& V’s letter addressed this:
Hopkins to pay A&V within 7 days of the dated letter the sums
detailed within the current
I trust that the above meets with your approval and look forward to
your response/instructions accordingly so that this matter can be
progressed to an amicable conclusion.
126. The letter was sent under an email dated 15 March 202141:
Please note that A&V Building Solution will be working on site for the
next 7 days of the dated letter.
127. The letter was accompanied a schedule detailing the delays of which A & V was
complaining42. Mr Paduraru explained that schedule to me. It distinguishes between
the works to each of the Towers, with a column for each Tower, and the works to the
Podiums.
128. The schedule sets out the date when the sub-contract programme planned for works to
start and then, in respect of the Towers, where the works had not started in a particular
week, that week was highlighted in red. In respect of the Podiums, the delay in
commencement of the works is highlighted in a similar way but in orange.
129. The two right hand columns represent A & V’s claim as to unproductive labour on
site.
131. On the following day, 16 March 2021, there was a flurry of emails, particularly from
J&BH complaining of a shortage of labour from A & V on site. My conclusion on the
evidence before me is that there were some A & V plumbers on site, but not enough
to maintain the progress that J&BH was demanding. The reason, as Mr Paduraru’s
emails made clear, was in part that A & V was waiting for “instructions” from J&BH.
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But it was also said by Mr Paduraru that there was a shortage of clear areas in which
A & V could work. It seems to me that there is truth in what both parties were
saying, i.e. that J&BH were right that there were areas in which A & V could work,
but access in those areas was not clear of obstructions.
132. The week passed with no answer to A & V’s requests for instructions until the end of
the week, Friday 19 March 2021. It was Mr Paduraru’s evidence that he was awaiting
a response to A & V’s letter of 15 March 2021.
133. There is a dispute as to what workforce was on site on that Friday and for how long. I
accept Mr Paduraru’s evidence that 6 of his plumbers attended site first thing that day,
probably at about 07.30 which was the time when by this date they usually attended
site. It seems to me clear that they left site by about midday having handed in tools
and materials which had been supplied by J&BH.
134. At some point on the same day, J&BH dealt with the shortage of labour and relied
upon Clause 7.4 of the Sub-Contract44:
Please note; In accordance with clause 7.4 of the Sub-Contract all costs
associated with the supplementation of on-site labour and its associated
management costs will be contra charged to A&V Building Solution
ltd. and as such will therefore contribute to the forming of the Sub-
Contract final account.
135. The second letter was considerably longer and answered A & V’s letter of 15 March
202145:
Further to the letter issued on the 17th of March 2021 J&B Hopkins
Ltd. hereby offer formal response to A&V Building Solution Ltd.
Whilst the duration has indeed changed the scope and works
themselves as tendered by A&V Building Solution Ltd. have not. We
therefore see no reason as to why A&V Building Solution Ltd. have
any entitlement to additional monies for such. We would remind
yourselves that A&V Solutions Ltd. [have] an obligation to manage
productivity of staff and adjust numbers to suit programme.
The records you have submitted neglect to show the other work faces
your operatives were working on at the time, at no stage have A&V
Building Solution Ltd. been placed in a situation [where] there were no
workfaces available to progress.
Throughout the duration of the project J&B Hopkins Ltd. have worked
very closely with all our subcontract supply chain including A&V
Building Solution Ltd. to ensure that sufficient workfaces are available,
whilst this is not always within our control, J&B Hopkins Ltd. have
gone to great lengths to provide A&V Building Solutions ltd. with
visibility of workface availability & works that will be coming
available, in turn putting additional pressure on our own preliminary
resource. We would also like to remind you that the 2 week look ahead
is a fluid programme initiated by the client and referenced within the
head contract that A&V Building Solution Ltd. are deemed to be fully
aware of at time of tender and subsequent contract agreement.
With reference to J&B Hopkins Ltd. letter dated 10th March 2021 in
relation to the subsidisation of A&V Building Solution Ltd. labour. We
acknowledge that any labour subsidised prior to the 17th of March
2021 can and will not be counter charged to A&V Building Solution
Ltd. However, we disregard your claim that A&V Building Solution
Ltd. have not contributed to the delays on site nor the requirement for
J&B Hopkins Ltd. having to initiate such clause. At the time of writing
A&V Building Solution Ltd. Have multiple areas of incomplete works,
both physical works on site and subsequent Q&A signs off that are
now in delay. A&V Building Solution Ltd. have neglected to supply
sufficient labour to allow the close out of these works, therefore, J&B
Hopkins Ltd. Have been left no alternative on the matter to maintain
programme and the pace of the project.
Insufficient labour for the available workfaces & defect closures has
been continuously highlighted over the past months by J&B Hopkins
Ltd. and A&V Building Solution Ltd. have refused to act in accordance
with the site requirements. Alongside this A&V Building Solution Ltd.
have been asked multiple times to maximise their own productivity by
ensuring their operatives work full days on site. Upon review of the
Biosite login it is clear that a vast majority of A&V Building Solution
Mr Roger ter Haar KC PvB
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Ltd. labour are leaving site between 3-4pm each day, that is a loss of 2-
3 hours productivity per person, per day that only further compounds
A&V Building Solution Ltd. inability to close out available workfaces
and control its own labour.
Given the above we are unable to agree with either of your requests for
additional monies at this stage
136. On the following Monday (22 March 2021), none of A&V’s labourers attended site.
However, I accept Mr Paduraru’s evidence that he did attend site intending to carry
out QA assessments.
137. Before that day, J&BH had required A & V to use its IAuditor system to record
completion of its works. When Mr Paduraru attended on 22 March 2021 he found
that his access to IAuditor system had been withdrawn.
23. I-Auditor is a piece of electronic software that JBH selected for our
QA manager to use as an inspection tool so that the JBH site
management team and its subcontractors could use it for inspections, to
flag up any issues and resolve problems together. The system worked
to capture and provide a corrective action platform for the installation
teams. The system shares and stores digital checklists. For example, on
plumbing systems we need to pressure test the pipework using a
pressure gauge and this system helps log and record that test functions
have been successful, and that the pipework was tested to and held the
agreed pressure. I remember that there was a concern when Alex
Paduraru left site that he could still access l-Auditor and potentially
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tamper with the records on the system. As a precaution, his access was
therefore removed. Alex would have had a level of access to allow him
to add information and sign documents and modify information
previously submitted.
139. It is A & V’s case that withdrawal of access to the IAuditor was a breach of the sub-
contract: I return to that below.
140. In an email sent at 11.20, Mr Paduraru complained about the withdrawal of access to
the system47. Mr Hill’s response was48:
We were told you wouldn’t carry out any further QA works so we had
to employ another supervisor and give him your licence in the
meantime.
141. In the absence of evidence from Mr Hill, it is unclear upon what basis Mr Hill said
that A & V had indicated that A & V would not carry out any further QA works. I
accept Mr Paduraru’s evidence that far from saying that he would not carry out QA
works, he attended to do so: to do so made sense from A & V’s point of view since
the more completed works there were, the greater the value of the works for which
J&BH would have to pay. I also note that Mr Harman’s explanation for withdrawal
of access to the system was for a different reason from that given by Mr Hill in this
email: namely to prevent Mr Paduraru modifying the information on the system rather
than a need to give the licence to another sub-contractor.
142. What appears to have happened then is that A & V did not return to Site and J&BH
used other labour to complete the sub-contract works.
143. J&BH’s pleaded case is that A & V was in repudiatory breach of contract by
abandoning the works49, which repudiatory breach was accepted by J&BH “by its
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letter dated 16 April 2021 and/or engaging others to complete the works.” 50
The
letter of 16 April 2021 stated51:
We hereby confirm that A&V Building Solution Ltd. are now deemed
to be in breach of their contractual obligations, as such J&B Hopkins
Ltd. will continue to undertake A&V Building Solution Ltd. works on
their behalf.
All incurred loss and expense to J&B Hopkins Ltd. associated with this
breach of contract will be continually tracked and recorded for
recovery from A&V Building Solution Ltd.
144. By this time Mr Judd had been involved for some time, advising Mr Paduraru. He
tried to see if an amicable settlement could be reached, writing letters on 1 April
202152 and 20 April 202153.
146. Paragraph 5 of the Particulars of Claim alleges various breaches of the sub-contract.
50
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148. As set out above, Clause 7.4 entitles J&BH if “in the opinion of the Contractor, the
Su-Contract Works are failing to progress in line with the Contract Programme
requirements, then after due notice of 7 days being given, and if resultant actions are
not undertaken” to “supplement the on-site labour requirements for the Sub-
Contractor”.
149. The earliest date when notice was given under Clause 7.4 was 11 March 2021 when
the 10 March 2021 letter was sent. Thus the 7 day notice period expired on 18 March
2021.
150. It follows that the case is made out by A & V that J&BH’s actions in deploying other
labour to carry out A & V’s works on the basis that A & V would have to pay for such
labour was a breach by J&BH of Clause 7.4.
151. On its own, this breach can be seen as doing no more than disentitling J&BH from
recovering any costs of the supplementary labour before 18 March 2021. A & V
submitted through Mr Judd that this matter needs to be read together with the other
matters alleged. I return to this below.
152. The second part of this allegation is reliance upon Clause 15.1. In my judgment there
was no breach of Clause 15.1. Clause 15.1 provides J&BH with a remedy, namely a
right to terminate, in the event of breaches on the part of A&V. As J&BH did not
purport to exercise any remedy under Clause 15.1, no claim for breach of Clause 15.1
can be sustained.
155. The terms of the sub-contract are weighted in J&BH’s favour. Whilst there is an
extension of time clause (Clause 13), that Clause does not expressly allow the sub-
contractor to recover its losses arising out of delays.
156. Whilst Clause 8 does provide for a variation to be issued which would compensate the
sub-contractor for both time and expense flowing from a variation, the quotation
mechanism in that Clause is ill-suited to a situation where delays for which the sub-
contractor causes that sub-contractor to suffer loss which cannot be quantified for
some time to come.
157. In my view A & V has not made out a claim for breach of Clause 8.5 or 8.6.
158. I consider below the claims under Clause 13 for an extension of time.
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160. As I have pointed out above, the Parties are agreed that the works were suspended by
reason of Covid.
161. That suspension was ordered by BYUK, but, as it seems to me, as between A & V and
J&BH, it should be treated either as being a suspension ordered by J&BH or a
suspension which ought to have been ordered by J&BH: it would be a nonsense for
there to be an ordered suspension of work as between BYUK and J&BH, but not as
between J&BH and A & V.
162. As a matter of common sense, I infer that J&BH informed A & V of BYUK’s
suspension and thereby instructed A & V to suspend its works.
163. Thus I come to the conclusion that the breach on the part of J&BH was a failure to
formalise the suspension by written notice under Clause 11.1, and accept that that was
a breach of the sub-contract.
164. However, that breach in itself takes the matter nowhere: what matters is A & V’s case
that the suspension was not reflected in J&BH’s treatment of A & V. This is the
subject of the next alleged breach or group of breaches.
Failure and/or breach of clause 13.2 and 13.3 to extend the contract
period for delays clause 11.1 above and issue of revised programmes
and 2 weeks look ahead programmes … and unreasonably and
deliberately preventing any further works being undertaken by A&V
by employing others to complete A&V works and removing A&V
from the IAuditor system.
166. This paragraph rolls together a number of different strands, but seems to me to bring
together the core of the case as to the termination of the sub-contract and as to
whether A & V lawfully ceased work.
167. The first strand is “failure and/or breach of clause 13.2 and 13.3 to extend the contract
period for delays clause 11.1 above”. The wording is a little garbled, but I read this
as being an allegation that there had been a suspension in accordance with Clause
11.1 entitling A & V to an extension of time under Clause 13.2(3).
168. As I have accepted above, there does not appear to have been a formal suspension by
J&BH under Clause 11.1, but there was a de facto suspension. In my judgment,
J&BH cannot rely upon its failure to operate the machinery of the sub-contract to
deny the extension of time which ought to have been given by J&BH.
Mr Roger ter Haar KC PvB
Approved Judgment
169. J&BH rely upon the absence of formal notices in accordance with Clause 13.3 –
however, given that J&BH did not comply with the suspension machinery, it seems to
me that it cannot rely upon the failure to give notice.
170. I also note that in March 2021 no point was taken by J&BH as to a failure to comply
with Clause 13.3.
171. The second strand relates to “issue of revised programmes and 2 weeks look ahead
programmes”. I have set out above Mr Harman’s evidence as to the procedures
followed on site once the suspension was over: those procedures inevitably made the
works slower and less productive. Further, as I have found as a matter of fact, BYUK
was late in handing over working areas and/or areas were handed over with
obstructions. All of this would have hindered A & V and, as between A & V and
J&BH, amounted to acts of prevention by J&BH falling within Clause 13.2(3), and
were having a continuing effect right up to the 19th March 2021.
172. Whilst A & V were slow to make formal application for an extension of time, on 15
March 2021 it did do so. At that stage J&BH knew that the sub-contract works (on its
own estimation) were likely to take 5 months to complete, against a background when
until March 2021 there had been no significant complaints about A & V’s progress
and, to the contrary, Mr Hill had accepted in the telephone conversation on 5 March
2021 that A & V had not missed any dates.
173. In those circumstances, in my judgment J&BH was obliged to consider A & V’s
legitimate application for an extension of time in respect of acts of prevention which
were continuing through March 2021 and was in breach of the sub-contract in not
issuing any extension of time.
174. The penultimate strand is “unreasonably and deliberately preventing any further
works being undertaken by A&V by employing others to complete A&V works”. If
J&BH is right that A & V was in repudiatory breach of contract in leaving site on 19
March 2021 (and that J&BH accepted that repudiation), it (J&BH) was not in breach
of contract in employing others to complete A&V’s works. If, on the other hand, A &
V was entitled to cease work on 19 or 22 March 2021, the fact that J&BH used other
contractors to complete its works is irrelevant.
175. However, I do regard J&BH’s use of other contractors to carry out part of A & V’s
works as being a significant part of the background to A & V’s withdrawal from Site.
176. The final strand is “removing A&V from the IAuditor system”.
177. I have set out at paragraph 138 above Mr Harman’s evidence as to the functions of the
IAuditor system.
178. It is correct, as J&BH submits, that the use of and access to the IAuditor system was
not a contractual requirement under the sub-contract, nor did A & V have any
contractual right of access to it.
179. However, on the evidence before me, J&BH had required A & V to use that system,
and it was a convenient way of recording progress and, importantly, completion of the
QA process for parts of the works, and one upon which the whole QA process
Mr Roger ter Haar KC PvB
Approved Judgment
depended. The centrality of the IAuditor system was shown firstly by an email sent
by Mr Wayne Reed of J&BH to its sub-contractors on 11 February 202054:
180. Specifically in respect of A & V, Mr Reed’s email of 10 July 2020 illustrates the
importance of the IAuditor system55:
This was carried out for tower 1 level 3. As you can see photos are
taken of everything under the sections that they are pertaining to and
notes attached to strengthen the position taken. This is all evidence
gathering to prevent any comebacks further down the line. This
document protects yourselves as well as JBH.
We need to set aside time for any training that you and Ian require to
accomplish this level of QA checking. I feel that you guys are onboard
now with the testing we just need to get the QA sorted.
Please be aware that this is not a box ticking exercise it is important for
handing over areas on time snag free and demonstrating a rigorous
process of QA.
181. In the circumstances, removal of access to the IAuditor system evinced J&BH’s
intention that A & V should not complete its sub-contract works particularly after Mr
Paduraru’s protest on 22 March 2021 at being excluded from access to that system.
182. Tying all these threads together: firstly, by the beginning of March 2021 the sub-
contract was significantly in delay for reasons which were in no way A & V’s
responsibility. Secondly, at the beginning of March 2021, only 12 days of the original
sub-contract period remained, but on J&BH’s estimation, months of work remained to
be done. Thirdly, it must have been obvious to J&BH that progress of the works had
been disrupted not only by the suspension, but also by the working methods adopted
once works resumed and by BYUK’s delays in making working areas available.
Fourthly, it was J&BH’s belief (well-founded despite A & V’s contemporaneous
denials, as I discuss in greater detail below) that A & V was in cash flow difficulties.
183. It was against that background that the actions of J&BH are to be judged. Firstly,
after initially offering on 5 March to supply labour free of charge, J&BH committed a
volte face and insisted on providing labour at A & V’s expense. Not only was this not
in compliance with Clause 7.4, but it introduced problems of responsibility for the
54
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Mr Roger ter Haar KC PvB
Approved Judgment
works, and was likely to make A & V’s financial problems worse. Secondly, as I
have found above, J&BH failed to grant an extension of time which was obviously
justified. Thirdly, when on 11 March 2021 A & V asked for particulars of the alleged
delays, and sensibly suggested a joint walk through of the Site 56, there was no direct
response to A&V’s request, and a failure to respond in any way to the suggestion of a
walk through the Site. Finally, on 22 March 2021 J&BH excluded A & V from
access to the IAuditor system.
184. As is often the case, the only circumstance referred to in the sub-contract expressly
entitling A&V to terminate the sub-contract was if the main contract was terminated
(Clause 16) whilst granting J&BH relatively wide rights of termination in Clause 15.
185. The question arises as to whether either party retained common law right to terminate
the sub-contract. It seems to me impossible to construe the sub-contract as removing
or restricting A & V’s common law rights to bring the sub-contract to an end in
circumstances where the sub-contract conferred no rights for A & V to do so for
J&BH’s breaches of the sub-contract. (I also accept that J&BH’s common law rights
to terminate for repudiatory breach were not excluded.)
186. As to A & V’s right to treat the sub-contract as having been terminated, Mr Frampton
drew my attention to the decision of H.H. Judge Coulson Q.C., as he then was, in
Tombs v Wilson Connolly Ltd57. In that case the learned judge first considered the
effect of the imposition upon a sub-contractor of additional labour. At paragraph [45]
he referred to the earlier case of Sweatfield Ltd v Hathaway Roofing Ltd 58, in which it
had been held that the bringing to site of additional labour by the main contractor, in
the teeth of the sub-contractor’s objections, was found to be repudiatory. By contrast,
in the case before him, the sub-contractor had not withdrawn his labour in
consequence of the decision to engage other sub-contractors to carry out part of the
work, hence that action had not caused the repudiation of the sub-contract by the main
contractor nor the acceptance of repudiation by the sub-contractor.
187. This part of the decision in Tombs is helpful in illustrating that taking work away
from a sub-contractor and giving it to another sub-contractor may amount to
repudiation of the sub-contract by the main contractor, but will not necessarily do so.
Mr Frampton argues that in this case what J&BH did was purportedly carried out in
exercise of rights granted by Clause 7.4 of the sub-contract, even if no right to
supplement labour would arise until the seven day notice period had expired.
188. I do not regard the imposition of labour by J&BH as being on its own repudiatory
conduct.
189. Secondly, in Tombs, the learned judge considered the implications of an alleged
failure by the main contractor to pay the sub-contractor. This was considered in
paragraphs [46] to [58] of the judgment. The learned judge held, first of all, that the
main contractor was not in breach of the payment provisions in the sub-contract
(paragraphs [47] to [53]). Secondly, the learned judge accepted a submission that
generally a failure by an employer to pay one instalment would not amount to
repudiation (paragraphs [54] and [55]). Finally, the learned judge held that the sub-
56
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[2004] EWHC 2809 (TCC); 98 ConLR 44
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[1997] CILL 1235
Mr Roger ter Haar KC PvB
Approved Judgment
contractor had failed to give seven days’ notice required under s. 112 of the Housing
Grants, Construction and Regeneration Act 1996 (paragraphs [51] and [52]).
190. In this case, I accept that there was no failure by J&BH to pay a certified sum. I also
accept that the intent of the Scheme set up under the 1996 Act is that rather than a
payment dispute resulting in a repudiation of a contract, generally a failure to pay or
to certify payment would not be a repudiatory breach, since the unpaid contractor or
sub-contractor has a remedy through adjudication.
192. I recognise that this conclusion is contrary to the position adopted in J&BH’s two
letters of 19 March 2021, which were demanding that A & V complete its works.
However, the position adopted in those letters, that A & V should return to site and
complete its works, is entirely contrary to the practical position evinced by the
exclusion from the IAuditor system.
193. It is necessary for me to consider whether the exclusion from that system was
contractually justified. In my view it was not: it was in my view a clear drawing of a
line in the sand: thereafter the works would not be carried out by A & V. That
position could be justified if J&BH already had a right to refuse A & V carrying out
its works: but it did not have such a right. Thus there is some similarity between this
case and the case of Sweatfield Ltd v Hathaway Roofing Ltd distinguished by H.H.
Judge Coulson in Tombs.
194. Firstly, J&BH had no right to terminate the sub-contract under Clause 15.1 as it did
not purport to operate the machinery of that Clause.
195. Secondly, at common law for a party to bring a contract to an end because of the other
party’s alleged repudiatory breach, there must be an acceptance of that repudiation:
J&BH’s pleaded case was that the repudiation was accepted on 16 April. This could
not justify refusal of access to the IAuditor system on 22 March 2021. J&BH pleads
in the alternative that it accepted the repudiation by engaging others to complete the
works, but there is no pleading of any election communicated to A & V before 16
April 2021.
196. For the above reasons, I accept A & V’s case that the removal of A & V from the
IAuditor system, taken with the background facts to which I have referred, amounted
to repudiatory breach of the sub-contract which A & V was entitled to accept and did
accept by refusing to return to Site and resume work.
197. It follows from this that I reject J&BH’s case that as at 22 April 2021 A & V was
guilty of a repudiatory breach of contract which J&BH was entitled to accept.
198. For the above reasons, I substantially accept A & V’s case pleaded at paragraph 5.0
(d) of the Particulars of Claim.
Mr Roger ter Haar KC PvB
Approved Judgment
Failure and/or breach of Contract clause 9.8 and 9.10 to certify the
Practical Completion of the works and the subsequent release of
retention monies and the process of the final account. Practical
Completion was not achieved until 5/10/21 …. 6 months and 3 weeks
after AS&V completion date.
200. The simple fact is that A & V did not achieve Practical Completion and therefore is
not entitled to a Certificate of Practical Completion.
202. I have accepted A & V’s case that removal from the IAuditor system amounted to a
repudiatory breach of contract. Paragraph 5.0 (f) adds nothing to paragraph 5.0 (d).
204. In order to consider this allegation, it is necessary to set out the history of the
adjudications which took place in respect of this sub-contract.
205. I have set out above that on 15 March 2021 A&V submitted Application No. 13. On
22 March 2021, A & V submitted Application No. 14. That application was dated the
previous day, 21 March 2021, which was a Sunday. That application claimed
£211,773.60 net of VAT. J&BH responded with a certificate showing £68,946.25 due
from A & V to J&BH.
207. J&BH argued that Application 14 was invalid because it as issued a day late.
210. Mr Blizzard’s decision dated 19 January 2022 found that interim application 14 was
valid. He identified a net sum due to A & V of £138,010.86 to which he added
interests, costs and his fees.
211. Notwithstanding Clause 20.3 of the sub-contract, J&BH failed to pay any part of this
sum to A & V.
212. On 2 December 2021, at a time when the Blizzard adjudication was ongoing, J&BH
issued Part 8 proceedings against A & V in which, amongst other things, J&BH
sought declarations as to the invalidity of Application 14.
213. The Part 8 proceedings came before Eyre J on 12 April 2022. He held that
Application 14 was a day late and therefore invalid60.
214. On 26 May 2022 Coulson LJ granted A & V permission to appeal against Eyre J’s
decision.
215. In June 2022 A & V commenced a second adjudication before Mr Smith. This did
not go well for A & V: on 6 July 2022 Mr Smith issued a decision holding that the
true value of the sub-contract works was less than A & V had already been paid. He
ordered A & V to pay J&BH a net sum of £82,956.88.
216. The Court of Appeal heard the appeal against Eyre J’s decision on 17 January 2023.
217. Two days later, on 19 January 2023 I heard argument on J&BH’s claim for
enforcement of Mr Smith’s adjudication.
218. On 27 January 2023 the Court of Appeal handed down its judgment. In the course of
that judgment Coulson LJ made the following comment in paragraph [23], which is
what is referred to in paragraph 5.0 (g) of the Particulars of Claim:
So, as at the hearing on 12 April 2022, the position was that JBH were
in breach of contract because they had not paid the first adjudicator’s
decision and that, in the light of the ‘pay now, argue later’ mantra, that
should have been the first order of business. Having determined the
enforcement position, the secondary question for the judge was
whether AVB should lose their entitlement to enforce the decision in
the first adjudication on the basis of JBH’s Part 8 claim.
220. The Court of Appeal rejected A & V’s submission that the Part 8 proceedings were an
abuse of process. However, the Court of Appeal decided that, contrary to Eyre J’s
decision, Application 14 was valid.
221. To that extent A &V was successful, but in the final paragraph of his judgment
Coulson LJ said:
74. Although I consider that AVB were entitled to enforce the first
adjudicator’s decision back in April 2022, that entitlement has long
since been overtaken by events and, in particular, by the result of the
second Final Account adjudication, which result JBH have applied to
enforce. Moreover, as Mr Frampton correctly noted, no part of this
appeal sought the payment of any sum by JBH to AVB, so this court
does not have the power to award any such sum in any event. This all
reflects the largely academic nature of this appeal, to which I referred
at the outset of this judgment.
223. Thereafter, on 1 June 2023 I heard a number of cross-applications, but importantly for
present purposes, I heard an application by A&V for a stay of my 15 February 2023
judgment. On 16 June 2023 I handed down judgment in which I granted the stay62.
224. Against that recital of the complicated procedural history, I return to paragraph 5.0 (g)
of the Particulars of Claim.
225. The importance of this allegation appears to be twofold: firstly, it was suggested by
Mr Judd in cross-examination of Mr Geale that the decision of Mr Blizzard showed
that £138,000 should have been paid to A & V in May 2021. Whilst that is correct
insofar as it goes, the failure to pay at that time was not a breach of Clause 20.3. That
breach only occurred upon failure by J&BH to comply with Mr Blizzard’s January
2022 Decision: however in the events which happened, that was only effective until
Mr Smith issued his decision 6 months later. Secondly, it is said that the Smith
adjudication was only necessary because of J&BH’s failure to honour the Blizzard
decision. That is right up to a point, but as the Court of Appeal pointed out, the usual
procedure is to seek enforcement in this Court of the adjudicator’s decision, which
procedure A & V did not invoke.
226. In the circumstances, whilst A & V are correct to say that J&BH was in breach of
Clause 20.3, that breach does not sound in damages save to the extent that A & V may
be entitled to interest, a matter considered below.
61
[2023] EWHC 301 (TCC)
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[2023] EWHC 1483 (TCC)
Mr Roger ter Haar KC PvB
Approved Judgment
Conclusion on breaches
227. For the reasons set out above, I conclude that A & V has established:
228. I now turn to consider the separate heads of claim in the Scott Schedule.
Measured Works
229. After earlier iterations of the pleading, with which parts of my previous judgments are
concerned, A & V’s claims are pleaded in the Scott Schedule which is at Section 8.1
of Volume 1 of the Trial Bundle.
230. The Measured Works claims are set out at pages 1/50 to 1/52 under item nos. 1.0 to
47.0.
48.1 7 items (1.0, 2.0, 3.0, 32.0, 33.0, 34.0 and 37.0) account
for £63,000 (c.84%) of the £73,256.66 difference between the
parties. Save for item 37, these relate to the Podium works.
48.4 For 6 items (12.0, 13.0, 14.0, 44.0, 45.0 and 46.0) relating
to the installation in the top 2 floors of Towers 1 and 3 (and
follow on testing fir all floors), JBH does not have evidence
that the physical works were incomplete. However, A&V had
not completed the quality assurance paperwork or sign off,
Mr Roger ter Haar KC PvB
Approved Judgment
232. A & V’s workforce left site on 19 March 2021, in circumstances discussed in detail
above. Mr Paduraru’s evidence, which I have accepted, was that he last attended at
site on 22 March 2021.
233. On Mr Paduraru’s evidence it was clear by the time he left site on the morning of 22 nd
March 2021 that the sub-contract had come to an end and the actions of J&BH were
consistent with that having been the de facto position (I have analysed the legal
position above).
234. Shortly before the events of 19 March 2021, on 15 March 2021, A & V submitted its
Application for Payment 13 which claimed the value of work done up to the end of
February 2021. It was the figures for completeness of the Measured Works which
found their way into the Scott Schedule and which found the basis for A & V’s claims
at pages 50-52 of the Scott Schedule.
235. In his oral evidence, Mr Paduraru explained that for the purpose of that payment
application, he had walked the site and assessed the level of completeness of each part
of A & V’s sub-contract works.
236. This was the same procedure as had been adopted in respect of all previous
applications.
237. What did not happen, as happens on many projects, was a joint exercise in assessing
progress on a monthly basis.
238. On JBH’s part, monthly assessments of completeness were also carried out, which
resulted in payments being made on a monthly basis against JBH’s assessments.
239. Those assessments are set out in the third column on pages 50-52 of the Scott
Schedule.
240. On 22 March 2021, surveys were carried out by Mr Ian Davidson and Mr Julian
Smart to assess the level of completeness of the works. Mr Davidson’s evidence in
paragraph 17 of his witness statement was as follows:
I went around the site with Julian Smart (JBH’s Site Manager) to
establish what works remained outstanding and what labour levels
would be needed to complete the outstanding works. In order to help
manage the remaining works, we made sure that photographs were
taken of incomplete works and the status of A&V’s works was
recorded by reference to the drawings.
241. In March 2021 marked-up drawings were prepared by Mr Seth Brown (the J&BH
Quantity Surveyor) and Mr Paul James. These are in the Trial Bundle at pages 5/2208
to 2209.
Mr Roger ter Haar KC PvB
Approved Judgment
242. Mr Davidson said that the photographs which are inserted into the marked-up
drawings and which are also helpfully included elsewhere in the Trial Bundle in full
size were taken by Mr Smart on the walk around.
243. When he gave oral evidence, Mr Davidson accepted that the drawings at 5/2208 to
2210 were the drawings of the areas where there were incomplete works. On that
basis he accepted that the sub-contract works to Towers 1 to 3 were complete, and
also the works to level 0 in both Podiums (although he said that these works were
limited in nature. He also accepted that the works to the East Side of Podium 1 were
complete.
244. In respect of the works to level 1 in the West Side of Podium 1, and to both West and
East sides of Podium 2 were partially complete, although he said that most areas of
the Podium works were to be completed.
245. Mr Davidson made it clear in his oral evidence that he had no part in assessing the
percentage completeness of any parts of the works. His job was to assist Mr Smart in
his walk round. Mr Smart himself does not appear to have carried out the
assessments: my impression is that these were carried out by Mr Brown, which would
be appropriate in his role and profession of quantity surveyor. However, Mr Brown
was not called as a witness, and there is no evidence before me as to the way in which
he calculated his assessments.
246. The same criticism can be made of Mr Paduraru’s assessments (i.e. that there is no
evidence as to precisely how he came to his various assessments) but he was at least
available to answer questions, and I formed the impression that overall his
assessments seemed reasonable, albeit that I had little firm basis upon which to test
some of his assessments. I would comment that had Mr Paduraru had access to the
IAuditor system on 22 March 2021, then A&V’s position as to the completeness of
the Project would have been on the contemporaneous record.
247. Further, it will be seen below that in many cases J&BH’s assessments in the Scott
Schedule of the completeness of parts of the sub-contract works depart significantly
from its earlier assessments.
Item 1.0 – Podium 1 Commercial, Level 00, Install lateral out runs
249. This item relates to the lateral out runs for Level 00 in Podium 1. The description
“commercial” is potentially misleading. This item does not concern a particular
commercial area. Rather, it refers to all the pipework running laterally from the
energy centre to the bottom of each of the risers, so that the services can move up the
floors of the Podiums and the Towers. The reference to “commercial” signifies that it
does not include the pipework in the rooms themselves.
250. The scope of works was set out in Appendix 2 of the sub-contract:
251. While this refers to “levels 1 and 2”, there are only 2 levels in the podiums: ground or
street level and an upper level. The Tower floors are above the upper level. The
reference to levels 1 and 2 in Appendix 2 is therefore to Levels 00 and 01 respectively
in A&V’s quote and the Scott Schedule.
252. The total sum allowed for “Podium 1 Commercial” works in Appendix 8 was
£38,00063, split as to £25,000 for level 00 and £13,000 for level 01.
253. A & V claims that these works were 80% complete, and therefore claims 80% of
£25,000, namely £20,000.
254. J&BH’s present position is that these works were 40% complete, thus allowing
£10,000. It is to be noted that in Payment Certificate 11 (measuring the position as at
December 2020) J&BH had assessed these works as being 50% complete, accepting
A & V’s assessment. Since that date A & V had been working in the Podium areas,
right up to the date works stopped.
255. In paragraph 4.2 of A & V’s written closing submissions, reliance is placed upon the
evidence given by Mr Davidson:
(a) JBH [Trial Bundle 5, page 2208-2213] JBH does not detail any
evidence of outstanding works for this item and/or area.
256. In my judgment it was too late in closing submissions to put forward what was in
essence an application to amend the Scott Schedule.
257. However, the evidence referred to casts doubt upon accuracy of the assessment put
forward by J&BH (40%) and raises questions as to the basis upon which Mr Brown
carried out his exercise.
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258. This evidence also suggests to me that A & V’s assessments may be an underestimate
of the amount which should be allowed.
259. I am prepared to accept J&BH’s case that these works were not complete, but I accept
A & V’s case that they were at least 80% complete by 19 March 2021.
Item 2.0 – Podium 1 Commercial, Level 01, Install lateral out runs
261. The issues here are the same as in respect of item 1.0, except here the works were to
level 01 and the contract allowance was only £13,000.
262. Again, A & V claims that the works were 80% complete, thus claiming £10,400.
263. Again, J&BH puts forward an assessment of 40%, having previously accepted 50% in
Payment Certificate 11.
(a) JBH [Trial Bundle 5, page 2208 (drawing with 16 photographs) and
2213 (list of 16 items)] JBH does not detail any outstanding works for
half of the floor area to this item and only to drawing sheet 1of 2.
(b) [Trial Bundle 5, page 2213] with its list of items JBH only refers to
issues of outstanding works to 9 of the items.
(d) A&V contract value for this item is £13,000.00 so therefore based
on Mr Davidson evidence, the maximum value outstanding for works
remaining could only be half of that in the sum of £6,500.00.
(f) A&V continued with works to the podiums into February and
March 2021 therefore the level of install would have increased.
265. I accept the above submissions as justifying the pleaded valuation in the sum of
£10,400.
266. I do not accept that there should now be a re-assessment of this item on the basis of
carrying out an assessment of the cost to complete the works, this being a case of
which J&BH should have had notice before the evidence was complete.
267. I also do not accept the case that the item should be valued at 100% on the basis that
J&BH prevented A & V from completing the work. There is a separate claim which I
consider below for loss of profit/recovery of overheads as a result of the sub-contract
coming to an end, which is the appropriate legal basis for such a claim.
268. I am prepared to accept J&BH’s case that these works were not complete, but I accept
A & V’s case that they were at least 80% complete by 19 March 2021.
Item 3.0 – Podium 1, Level 01, Install risers per room with Heating, Domestic and
SVP and
Item 4.0 – Podium 1, Level 01, Connect radiators in each room 1st and 2nd fix
270. In respect of both these items A &V claims 80% completeness. The contract sum for
item 3.0 is £22,800 and for item 4.0 is £1,000. Accordingly, the amount claimed for
3.0 is £18,240 and for item 4.0 £800.
271. In respect of item 3.0, J&BH allows 30%, i.e. £6,840 and in respect of item 4.0 J&BH
allows nil.
272. In respect of item 3.0, in Payment Certificate 11 allowed 30% for item 4.0 (the same
figure as claimed then by A&V) and nil for item 4.0 (in this instance A&V then
agreed with the nil assessment).
273. I do not accept that A & V did not make any further progress after December 2020,
although it is to be noted that in Payment Application 12 A & V did not suggest that
there was any increase in level of completeness up to 20 January 2021.
(a) [Trial bundle 5, page 2208 (drawing with 16 photographs) and 2213
(list of 16 items) JBH does not detail any outstanding works for half of
the floor area to this item and only to drawing sheet 1of 2.
(b) [Trial bundle 5, page 2213] with its list of items JBH only refers to
issues of outstanding works to 9 of the items.
(d) A&V contract value for this item is £22,800.00 so therefore based
on Mr Davidson evidence, the maximum value outstanding for works
remaining could only be half of that in the sum of £11,400.00.
(f) A&V continued with works to the podiums into February and
March 2021 therefore the level of install would have increased.
275. As I read Certificate 12, the valuation was for 30%, not 50%, as suggested in
paragraph (e) above.
276. However, I accept the above submissions as justifying the pleaded valuation in the
sum of £18,240.
277. I do not accept that there should now be a re-assessment of this item on the basis of
carrying out an assessment of the cost to complete the works, this being a case of
which J&BH should have had notice before the evidence was complete.
Mr Roger ter Haar KC PvB
Approved Judgment
278. I also do not accept the case that the item should be valued at 100% on the basis that
J&BH prevented A & V from completing the work. There is a separate claim which I
consider below for loss of profit/recovery of overheads as a result of the sub-contract
coming to an end, which is the appropriate legal basis for such a claim.
279. I am prepared to accept J&BH’s case that these works were not complete, but I accept
A & V’s case that they were at least 80% complete by 19 March 2021.
280. Item 4.0 is a small item, in respect of which I see no reason to doubt Mr. Paduraru’s
assessment.
281. Accordingly, I accept Mr Paduraru’s assessments in the Scott Schedule, and allow
£18,240 for item 3.0 and £800 for item 4.0.
Item 5.0: Level 01, Test SVP – Domestic and Heating pipe
Item 32.00: Podium 2 Commercial, Level 00, Install lateral out runs
283. I agree with J&BH’s suggestion in Mr Frampton’s written Opening Submissions that
it is convenient to deal with all the Podium issues before turning to the Towers works.
284. This is the same work as item 1.0, save that it relates to Podium 2 (instead of Podium
1).
285. In the Scott Schedule, A & V claims 50% completeness against a contract allowance
of £20,000, thus claiming £10,000.
286. In its written Closing Submissions, A&V points out that in the marked up drawings at
TB 3/2208-2213 J&BH does not detail any evidence of outstanding works for this
item and/or area. The submission at paragraphs 4.8 (b) and (c) of those submissions
was:
287. In my judgment it was too late in closing submissions to put forward what was in
essence an application to amend the Scott Schedule.
Mr Roger ter Haar KC PvB
Approved Judgment
288. However, the evidence referred to casts considerable doubt upon the accuracy of the
assessment put forward by J&BH (10%) and raises questions as to the basis upon
which Mr Brown carried out his exercise.
289. This evidence also suggests to me that A & V’s assessments may be an underestimate
of the amount which should be allowed.
290. As mentioned above, J&BH puts forward a figure of 10%, allowing £2,000.
292. Given Mr Davidson’s evidence, I have no hesitation in accepting A & V’s case that
these works were at least 50% complete by 19 March 2021.
Item 33.00 Podium 2 Commercial, Level 01, Install lateral run outs
294. This item is the same as item 32.00, save that it relates to Level 01.
295. A & V claims 80% completeness against a contract allowance of £10,000, thus
claiming £8,000.
298. In paragraph 4.9 of its written Closing Submissions, A&V submitted as follows:
(d) A&V contract value for this item is £10,000.00. A&V have claimed
80% complete. These works being major runs of brackets and
pipework’s above corridor areas. Mr Frampton and I having a long
discussion regarding this during my questioning. The court has since
been provided with a video taken by myself of the podiums on the 12 th
March 2021 showing these completed pipe runs etc.
(f) A&V continued with works to the podiums to this level January into
February and March 2021 therefore the level of install would have
increased.
Mr Roger ter Haar KC PvB
Approved Judgment
(h) Many of the items refer to pod connections, this an item relating to
the install of the connections being separately fabricated by A&V
within variation item 22 to which I explained within my cross
examination by Mr Frampton.
299. I accept the above submissions as justifying the pleaded valuation in the sum of
£8,000.
300. I do not accept the case that the item should be valued at 100% on the basis that
J&BH prevented A & V from completing the work. There is a separate claim which I
consider below for loss of profit/recovery of overheads as a result of the sub-contract
coming to an end, which is the appropriate legal basis for such a claim.
Item 34: Podium 2 level 01 Install risers per room with Heating, Domestic and SVP
and
Item 35: Connect radiators in reach room 1st fix and 2nd fix
302. These items are the same work scope as items 3.0 and 4.0, save that they relate to
Podium 2 rather than Podium 1.
303. Item 34 claims 70% of a contract allowance of £26,400, namely £18,480. Item 35
claims 70% of £1,000, namely £700.
304. J&BH has an allowance of 10% for each item, therefore £2,640 and £100.
Mr Roger ter Haar KC PvB
Approved Judgment
305. This contrasts with the valuations in Certificates 11 and 12 (0% for both items in each
certificate).
306. Thus these are instances where, albeit modestly, J&BH’s position is more favourable
to A & V than the earlier Certificates.
307. The difference between the Parties in respect of this Item is particularly marked –
hardly any progress on J&BH’s case, moving towards completion on A & V’s case.
308. A & V’s submissions in respect of these items, as in respect of other items considered
above, concentrate on Mr Davidson’s evidence.
(a) Trial bundle 5, page 2209 and 2210 (2 drawings with photographs) and
2211 and 2212 (list of 39 items)
(b) Trial bundle 5, page 2211 and 2212 with its list of items JBH refers
to issues of outstanding works to 49 of the items.
(d) A&V contract value for this item is £26,400.00. A&V have claimed
70% complete.
(e) A&V continued with works to the podiums at this level from
January into February and March 2021on an uneconomical basis at the
behest of JBH and their 2 weeks look ahead therefore the level of
install would have increased.
(f) The evidence of photographs and schedule of the 22nd March 2021
[Trial bundle page 5, 2211 and 2212] details comments for 49 items
outstanding for the entire podium 2 level 1and in A&V opinion these
all likely to be a cost of approximately £5,000.00 to complete. From
the photographs presented at trial and reviewed and evidenced by Mr
Frampton these clearly show quite an element of A&V works already
installed. In many instances the pipes were installed, just final
connections with crimping etc. Mr Frampton and I having quite a
discussion about crimping pipes. Mr Harman later during his cross
examination confirming that crimping was acceptable but not his
preferred method of pipe joints.
(g) Many of the items refer to pod connections, this an item relating to
the install of the connections being separately fabricated by A&V
within variation item 22 to which I explained within my cross
examination by Mr Frampton.
Mr Roger ter Haar KC PvB
Approved Judgment
310. A & V’s submission in paragraph 4.11 in respect of Item 35 was similar:
(a) Trial bundle 5, page 2209 and 2210 (2 drawings with photographs)
and 2211 and 2212 (list of 39 items)
(b) Trial bundle 5, page 2211 and 2212 with its list of items JBH refers
to issues of outstanding works to 49 of the items.
(d) A&V contract value for this item is £1,000.00. A&V have claimed
70%.
(e) A&V continued with works to the podiums into February and
March 2021 therefore the level of install would have increased.
(f) The evidence of photographs and schedule of the 22nd March 2021
[Trial bundle 5, page 2211 and 2212] details comments for 49 items
outstanding for the entire podium 2 level and do not generally detail
incomplete radiator works.
311. In my view, if these works were as incomplete as J&BH contends, that this would
have been reflected in the marked-up drawings. Accordingly, A & V’s reliance upon
Mr Davidson’s evidence appears to me to be justified.
312. However, as in respect of the other items considered above, I do not think it
appropriate at this stage to allow A & V to put forward an amended case, I do not
regard it as appropriate to rely upon a late case as to the cost to complete the works,
nor to assess these items on the basis of 100% of the contract allowance for works
which were not complete.
313. In the circumstances I accept the valuations put forward in the Scott Schedule, namely
£18,480 for Item 34 and £700 for Item 35.
Item 36: Podium 2 Level 01, Test SVP – Domestic and Heating Pipe Contract
A&V have not undertaken this item, A&V would contend that they
should be paid in full for this contract item as by JBH acts of
prevention in taking over A&V works without permission and not
awarding further time from the contract period of 12 th March 2021
prevented this from being completed.
316. I do not accept this submission: the works were not completed and therefore payment
on the basis that they should be treated as having been completed is inappropriate. It
is another matter as to whether A & V can recover loss of profits and overhead
recovery in respect of this work.
317. It is convenient to consider these Items together as they raise the same issues.
318. Items 6.0 to 31.00 relate to Towers 1 and 2 and total £225,280. Items 38.00 to 45.00
relate to Tower 3 and total £74,240.
319. In Certificate 12, J&BH had accepted that levels 1 to 7 were 100% complete. Levels
8 and 9 were treated as 98% complete with a note saying “Value held for kitchens and
snag completion”. There was a separate line item for “Levels 2-9 test” which was
also assessed at 98% on the same basis.
320. In respect of Tower 2, Certificate 12 was recorded as 100% and other items at 98% on
the same basis (“Value held for kitchens and snag completion”).
322. In the Scott Schedule, J&BH still accepts that levels 2 to 11 of Tower 1 and levels 2
to 7 of Tower 3 were 100% complete.
323. In respect of Tower 1, J&BH’s position changed in the Scott Schedule as follows:
level 8 went from 98% to 95%; level 9 from 98% to 93% and the testing item from
98% to 89%.
324. In respect of Tower 2, J&BH’s position changed in the Scott Schedule as follows:
level 2 went from 100% to 94%; level 3 from 98% to 94%; levels 4, 5, 6, 7 8, 910, 11,
12, 13, 14 level 8 went from 98% to 95%; levels 15, 16, and 17 from 98% to 94%
and the testing item from 98% to 84%.
325. In respect of Tower 3, J&BH’s position changed in the Scott Schedule as follows:
level 8 went from 98% to 95%; level 9 from 98% to 93% and the testing item from
98% to 89%.
326. There is no evidence before me as to how precisely the revised figures were
calculated, but three main issues of principle emerged in the course of the trial: firstly
that there were some incomplete works in some kitchens; that there were some
defective works; and that the QA process remained outstanding.
327. In respect of the issue as to kitchens, this was explained carefully and fully in
paragraphs 125 to 139 of Mr Frampton’s written Opening Submissions. The total
deduction sought is £6,783.75.
329. As to the defective works, these were mentioned in respect of J&BH’s counterclaim
for costs to complete as consisting of leaks to pipework, which had to be fixed (see
paragraphs 19 and 20 of Mr Ian Davidson’s witness statement64).
330. In paragraph 4.7 of A & V’s written Closing Submissions, it is submitted in respect of
Towers 1 and 2:
(a) Trial bundle 5, page 2208-2213 JBH does not detail any evidence of
outstanding works for this item and/or area.
(b) Prior to the dispute JBH had valued many of these items as
complete or a high percentage complete.
64
TB 189-190
Mr Roger ter Haar KC PvB
Approved Judgment
331. In respect of Tower 3, paragraph 4.14 of A & V’s written closing submissions was to
like effect.
332. As set out above, the total claimed by A & V for all three towers was £299,250
(£225,280 + £74,240).
333. The amount contended for by J&BH in respect of the kitchens is £6,783.75. That is a
little over 2% of the contract allowance for the direct works in the Towers. There is
evidence of incomplete works in the kitchens as analysed by Mr Frampton in his
written Opening Submissions, and as explored in cross-examination of Mr Paduraru.
334. In my view there should be a reduction of that sum (£6,783.75) to reflect those
outstanding works, but otherwise I accept A & V’s case that the works to the Towers
were substantially complete.
335. As to the alleged leaks, it seems to me that J&BH was correct to treat the costs of
dealing with these leaks as being an element of the cost to complete, and I make no
reduction for those defects.
336. As to the QA elements, it seems to me that the costs of Mr Paduraru attending site to
carry out QA assessments would have been minimal. Whilst in respect of other items
I have declined to award monies upon the basis that A & V would have carried out
100% of the works but for J&BH’s acts of prevention, my reason for not doing so
(namely that A & V’s approach does not allow for the costs which would have been
incurred in completing the works) does not apply in respect of Mr Paduraru’s time,
given that he was a full-time employee of A & V whose cost A & V would have
incurred in any event. Accordingly, I make no reduction for the outstanding QA
exercise: I would add that I had and have no basis upon which to test whether the
reductions made by J&BH could be justified – they appeared to be somewhat
arbitrary as well as conflicting with the assessments in Certificate 12 and Mr
Davidson’s evidence as to overall completion, which must have included elements of
QA carried out before 19 March 2021.
337. Accordingly, I assess the value of the works in the Towers in the sum of £299,250
less £6,783.75, namely £292,466.25.
A&V value this at 100% based upon the value for this item as it
directly relates to the contract period on site being to the 12th March
2021. Any time thereafter would require additional preliminaries and
thus an instruction.
A&V’s position
163. A&V claims that item 37.0 was 100% complete and values it at
£22,240.
164. A&V does not properly justify or evidence its position. A&V’s
comment in the Scott Schedule is the same, verbatim, as for Item 1.0
(see paragraph 57 above).
165. This comment only goes to why the Works were incomplete. It
does not address the extent of the Works which were incomplete.
167. As the claimant, and particularly when it accepts that the Works
were incomplete, the burden is on A&V to demonstrate the extent and
value of the Works it did complete.
JBH’s position
168. JBH assesses that item 37.0 was 75% complete, £16,680.
171. Specific tasks covered by the preliminaries which A&V had not
completed included:
344. As set out above, I have accepted A & V’s case save as to £6,783.75. Accordingly,
on a percentage of completion basis A & V would be entitled to about £20,000 for
these preliminaries.
345. However, I accept A & V’s case that, having been on Site for the full contract period,
A & V is entitled to the full amount of £22,240.
348. J&BH says that the figure should be 98%, namely £5,448.80 giving rise to a
difference of £111.20.
349. As with Item 37.00, I accept A & V’s claim to be entitled to 100%, namely £5,560.
350. For the above reasons, I value the Measured Works at £6,783.75 less than the sum
claimed of £413,940, namely £407,156.25.
Variations
Variations 6 and 21
Mr Roger ter Haar KC PvB
Approved Judgment
354. These two variations are conveniently considered together. Variation 6 claims £6,000
in respect of claimed suspension of the works. Variation 21 claims £8,000 in respect
of the value of execution of the relevant works. Thus these two variations together
explain just over 50% of the difference between the Parties on the variation account.
355. The dispute between the Parties turns upon works required to install protective
coverings to close off gaps created where holes were cut in floor slabs to allow piping
to pass from one floor level to the next.
356. The holes themselves were not part of A & V’s works. Photographs show that the
holes were relatively substantial – sufficiently large that if left uncovered, such items
as tools could fall from one floor to the floor below with an obvious safety risk.
357. The solution was that wooden boards were cut to cover the holes.
358. However, those boards had no holes to allow pipes to go through. A & V was
required to solve this problem. The solution was to create boards with slots in them
which could be placed around the pipes once installed.
359. Variation 6 concerns a suspension of work in connection with this, and Variation 21
concerns payment for the work done.
360. Originally J&BH agreed to make some allowance for the time, allowing £3,000 (50%)
in Certificate 12. JBH now says nothing is payable.
(a) This was discussed at some length at the trial. This item must not be
confused with variation item 21 which relates to the separate
instruction to cover the holes/slots in the concrete slabs, that not being
part of A&V works. I explained that the service holes/slots holes to the
concrete floor slabs were required to be covered as a result of a
suspension by BYUK at the beginning of July 2020. This suspension
required A&V and all other subcontractors of BYUK and JBH to
attend a 2-day tool box talk specific to debris falling through floor
service holes (trial bundle 4, page 1678). The creation of the initial
holes, materials falling through the holes by others and the covering of
the holes was not my responsibility. The talk was undertaken
specifically because the works were suspended for 2 days by BYUK
not by any of my actions.
(b) Previously Adam Hill / JBH had agreed with me to pay for this
item. It is only as a result of JBH actions in March 2021 that they
purport to change their mind regarding payment.
JBH’s position
Mr Roger ter Haar KC PvB
Approved Judgment
194.4 Adam Hill provided the following evidence in his first witness
statement in the Final Account Adjudication [1700-1701]:
Mr Roger ter Haar KC PvB
Approved Judgment
194.6 In any event, A&V has failed to comply with the condition
precedents in clause 8.9 and 8.10 to any payment related to this stop
work notices.:
b. A&V has failed to comply with this clause. The only written
instruction identified by A&V is an instruction to attend a
toolbox talk, not to suspend.
d. A&V has failed to comply with this clause. A&V has not
provided full and proper substantiation and information for the
alleged variation.
195. As to quantum:
363. In my judgment, J&BH accepted contemporaneously that this was a legitimate claim,
and clearly understood the nature of the claim sufficiently to make an interim
payment of £3,000, so that I see no substance in the arguments based upon Clause 8.9
and 8.10. Whilst this does not bind J&BH in the final account exercise which I am
now carrying out, it seems to me to carry great weight.
364. I allow the £6,000 claimed for the reasons given by A & V.
A&V never contested that there should be a cover over the open holes
between the slabs for Health and Safety purporse, [sic] but the way
JBH instructed A&V to undertake this was a variation. JBH agreed to
provide A&V with plywood and carpenters tools (inappropriate for a
plumbing firm). However, as a good gesture A&V did accept to do this
work as per JBH instruction, unfortunately [sic], JBH failed to supply
A&V with the mentioned items and A&V was physically forced to
undertake this work [AP3/ page 354 - 362] A&V undertook the new
process works including revisits as instructed by Andrew Macey.
Hopkins failed to supply the plywood and multitool and A&V was
forced to look on site after any small pieces of wood in order to cover
those open holes between the slabs and utilising their own tools not
JBH multitool as promised. A&V had no allownce [sic] for such work,
as this Penetration Cover works was not included within the Scope of
Works of the Sub-Contract. A&V consider that this variation should be
honoured and paid in full in the sum of £8,000.00.
Mr Roger ter Haar KC PvB
Approved Judgment
366. Paragraph 4.9.1 of the Particulars of Claim repeats the comments from the Scott
Schedule. Paragraph 4.9.2 then states65:
J&BH do not deny this works was undertaken. However, Hopkins’s commentary
in the adjudication confuses the forming of holes through non-structural elements
with that of providing additional temporary protection between concrete floors to
be H&S compliant as requested by J&BH prior to completion of other works by
other trades and the fire stopping company to the riser cupboards. The forming of
holes through non-structural walls etc has been extensively undertaken by A&V
throughout the works in partitions, ceilings and the like and that was included.
The timber covers and hole forming is purely a Health and Safety requirement
requested by J&BH for A&V to undertake. The floor aperture where this was to
be undertaken was a concrete structural floor and A&V consider that this
variation should be honoured and paid in full as this works was not part of their
Sub-Contract scope of work.
367. In respect of Variation 21, in its written Closing Submissions at paragraph 5.8 A & V
submits:
JBH’s position
65
TB 31
Mr Roger ter Haar KC PvB
Approved Judgment
369. I accept the justification for this Variation put forward in the Scott Schedule and
Particulars of Claim.
Mr Roger ter Haar KC PvB
Approved Judgment
370. However, it does seem to me that the amount claimed is rather high, particularly given
the earlier claim for £4,000.
371. Whilst I accept this is a somewhat rough and ready approach, I allow £2,000 for this
Variation.
372. Thus the total allowed for Variations 6 and 21 together is £8,000.
Variation 14: Kitchen copper pipework extension in T1, T2 and T3 on every floor
374. In Certificate 12, J&BH accepted that 90% was then payable on an interim basis. It
now allows only £1,028.
375. J&BH accepts that there was a variation, but contends that it only related to Tower 1.
J&BH also challenges the amount claimed.
376. I can deal with this variation shortly: J&BH’s acceptance of this as a Variation in
Certificate 12 in a figure of £3,600 was a clear acceptance a) that it related to all three
Towers, and (b) that the figure of £4,000 was reasonable.
377. Whilst that acceptance was on an interim basis, I take the view that J&BH must have
considered that it had sufficient information to accept the Variation in full and the
reasonableness of the amount claimed, and was content to proceed on that basis.
378. In the circumstances, I accept this Variation in full as claimed and value it at £4,000.
Variation 16: P1 L1 North Corridor High level install: 2 operatives @ £250/D: revisit
380. The justification for this Variation in the Scott Schedule is as follows:
A&V had installed the Corridor high level pipework without having
the side wall installed (as per JBH 2 weeks look ahead email 6 Nov
2020) [AP3/ page 118] Then the dry liners could not install the corridor
side walls because of the A&V's installed pipework. So JBH instructed
A&V to remove the pipework and to come back as a revisit to re-install
the high level pipework once the walls were ready. A&V was first
instructed to commence the works on Podium 1 Level 1 [which was
H/L (high level) corridor] on 6 Nov 2020 [AP3/ page 118] A&V
installed the high level pipework at that time as instructed, but then
A&V had to go back and remove the pipeworks as this was clashing
with dry liners and re-install the work again on 12 February 2021 as
instructed by Paul James email [AP3/ page 130]. A&V consider that
this variation should be honoured and paid in full in the sum of
£2,500.00.
382. The issue here is firstly whether there was any relevant instruction and secondly as to
the amount claimed.
383. Where, as here, the allegation is as to an instruction to revisit and redo works, it is
reasonable (quite apart from the sub-contract provisions) to see some written record of
the instruction, and the time taken (even if in the form of unsigned time sheets).
384. The instructions referred to in the Scott Schedule do not refer to revisits or
reinstallation.
Variation 17: P1 L1 Main Riser Boosted meter set changed 1 Operative for 2 days @
£250/D
A&V had installed the booster pipework set within the Riser as per the
drawings received at the tender stage. Then after installation JBH
changed the design and asked A&V to change the install as per new
(hand) drawing. Paul James (JBH) issued the new (hand) drawing via
the Whattsapp [sic] Group on the 16 February 2021 [AP3/ page 352].
A&V had to remove the set from the inside of the Riser and re-install
the set outside the Riser as per the Paul James (JBH) hand drawing.
A&V consider that this variation should be honoured and paid in full in
the sum of £500.00.
JBH’s position
214. JBH accepts rejects this item as a variation and values it at nil:
389. I accept J&BH’s submissions at paragraphs 214.1 to 214.5 and for those reasons
reject this part of the claim.
Variation 18: Repositioning of Heating IV; 1 Operative for 8 days @ £250/D (which
is half of the actual 16 days as agreed with Mr Macey
391. In respect of Variation 18, there is no dispute that there was a variation.
392. There is no dispute between the Parties that A & V agreed to accept 50% of its
valuation of £2,000.
393. As with other items, although I accept that on a final account it is open to both Parties
to seek to re-open interim valuations, I place considerable weight upon such interim
valuations.
Mr Roger ter Haar KC PvB
Approved Judgment
Variation 19: Kitchen SVP-HDPE stack (batweld) extension and install extra 6 PRV
on Domestic services in all 3 Towers (28 floors in total) A&V charged this work @
£258.07 per floor
396. J&BH accepts that this was a variation, but values it at £2,752.
JBH’s position
224.3 Spons suggests a rate of 0.29 per hour for a 22mm valve
(the rate is for a 25mm diameter ball valve at [4558], a PRV
would take the same time) and 0.92 hrs to install a metre of
HDPE and a set (0.47 hrs per metre of 40mm HDPE pipe at
[4556] plus 0.45 hrs for a 40 mm bend at [4557]). This equates
to 2.66 hours per floor (0.29 x 6 plus 0.92), which suggest that
Mr Roger ter Haar KC PvB
Approved Judgment
three floors should have been completed per day (as part of a
continuous installation) this totals 11 days.
(a) JBH accept this as a variation but not for the sums claimed. During
my cross examination by Mr Frampton, I corrected him on the amount
of work required to undertake this. There were 4 sinks per floor in
various locations. The time claimed was for finding materials,
collecting materials making the pipes to the correct bends and then
installing including that of the valves. Each of these were individual
and over all towers floors and not just in one location. I did not
recognise the application of Spons to value this work as this assumes
continuous work in one location and/or a larger run of work, it was
based on actual labour of 1 man per day per floor whom I saw
undertaking the works during my site visits.
(b) I repeated that we had asked JBH managers to sign time sheets, but
they refused. My claims were therefore based on the simple labour
time spent on this item.
400. I accept Mr Paduraru’s evidence, reflected in A & V’s Closing Submissions that the
figure put forward of £8,000 is reasonable.
Variation 22: Prefabrication of SVP for P2 L1. A&V charged for 1 Operative – 10
days of work @ £250/D.
403. J&BH accepts that there was a variation, but values it at £750.
235. JBH accepts that this item was a variation but challenges
quantum:
Mr Roger ter Haar KC PvB
Approved Judgment
235.1 A&V claims that it carried out 10 days’ work, but the
instruction was at midday on Friday 5 March 2021. A&V left
the site on Friday 19 March 2021. That was 10 days later.
However, A&V only made a notional start on the works subject
to variation 22 in that period (see paragraph 55 of Adam Hill’s
first witness statement in the Final Account Adjudication
[1704]).
(a) JBH accept this as a variation but not for the sums claimed. During
my cross examination by Mr Frampton, I advised that there had to be
no joints, so these had to be made up on benches. These were not
installed as Mr Frampton had assumed but just a variation to
prefabricate some svp pipework. As there were numerous hold ups on
the to the podiums and as we were waiting for instructions this work
was good to keep an operative engaged. This was an actual instruction
from JBH, and the works started on the 5th March 2021and I saw this
undertaken.
(b) I repeated that we had asked JBH managers to sign time sheets, but
they refused. My claims were therefore based on the simple labour
time spent on this item.
407. At first sight, the points made by Mr Frampton at paragraphs 235.1 and 235.2 of his
submissions appeared very powerful. However, I accept Mr. Paduraru’s evidence,
reflected in A & V’s Closing Submissions, (a) that the work started on 5 March 2021
and continued thereafter until 19 March 2021 and (b) that accordingly the valuation
put forward in Application 13 of 15 March 2021, did not reflect the work done in the
week commencing 15 March.
Variations: Conclusion
410. At pages 54 to 56 of the Scott Schedule. A & V puts forward 10 claims for “A & V
Loss and Expense/Breaches Cost Recovery. The amounts claimed total £662,500.45.
None are conceded by J&BH.
411. The first two items claim respectively £53,300 and £35,000.
412. Item 1 relates to delay and disruption in the Towers and Item 2 relates to delay and
disruption in the Podiums.
413. Standing back and considering the conclusions I have reached thus far, in the period
of one week more than the sub-contract time for completion, A & V had completed
work to a value of £407,156.25 of the original contract value of £447,800, that is
about 91% of those works. The contract value of the works left outstanding was
£40,643.75.
414. If the variations are added in, the varied sub-contract sum becomes £501,000, of
which work to a value of £460,356.25 (£53,200 plus £407,156.25) had been done
bringing the total done to about 92%.
Mr Roger ter Haar KC PvB
Approved Judgment
415. These two claims for disruption amount together to £88,000, which is equivalent to
almost 20% of the original sub-contract sum.
416. It seems to me that these figures cannot stand together. Had the works been disrupted
to the extent of 20%, it could be expected that the level of completion would have
been significantly less than 91 or 92%.
417. The claims for disruption, which is what these claims are, were put forward at a very
late date. This makes it very difficult to assess the claims particularly in the absence
of any significant contemporaneous correspondence or documentation to support the
claims. The best basis for the claims is the table sent with the letter of 15 March
202166, but that falls a long way short of establishing the actual losses suffered by A &
V.
419. This makes it clear that no claim for financial recompense can be based upon a
suspension ordered under Clause 11.1.
420. I have considered whether a claim might be pursued on the basis of an implied term
obliging J&BH to provide unimpeded access to A & V for A & V to carry out its
works. However, it would be very late to introduce such a claim, and the evidentiary
difficulties would persist.
Interest
423. I will invite submissions following the handing down of this judgment.
Mr Blizzard’s Fees
424. This claim is for £17,400 under item 4. Item 5 concerns interest.
425. Mr Frampton helpfully set out the relevant background facts, issues and J&BH’s
position in his written Opening Submissions:
Issues
66
TB 2129
Mr Roger ter Haar KC PvB
Approved Judgment
360. The issue for the Court to determine is whether there was a
binding settlement as to the sums due under the Blizzard Decision
which included Mr Blizzard’s fees?
Was there a binding settlement as to the sums due under the Blizzard
Decision?
the covering letter to the seller’s prior quotation did “not bring
into the contract the small print conditions on the back of the
quotation.”
426. In my judgment the key issue is the effect of A & V’s letter of 14 April 2022. That
letter was short and said:
427. In my view this was a counteroffer to J&BH’s offer in respect of the withdrawal of
action HT 2022-000101. The effect was that neither party would pursue any
application for costs of those proceedings. But there was no agreement that A & V
could not pursue a claim for recovery of the fees paid to Mr Blizzard.
428. The consent order which followed upon the agreement between the Parties did not
affect the validity or otherwise of Mr Blizzard’s Decision, subject to J&BH’s
continuing jurisdictional objection, which has been held to be invalid by the Court of
Appeal.
429. In this judgment I am considering the merits of Mr Blizzard’s Decision in the sense
that I am deciding what sum or sums is due from the one to the other. That will have
the effect of reviewing and revising his decision.
430. In my judgment, the appropriate course to adopt is to invite the submissions of the
Parties on this head of claim after they have had the opportunity to consider this
judgment.
Mr Roger ter Haar KC PvB
Approved Judgment
Mr Smith’s Fees
432. This concerns the fees charged by Mr Smith for rendering his Decision in the sum of
£13,962.
433. When I rendered my judgment enforcing Mr Smith’s decision, I ordered in the usual
way that A & V should pay his fees in the usual way.
434. That judgment was subsequently stayed by me pending this trial and judgment
following that trial.
435. In this judgment I have reached a different conclusion as to the balance due between
the Parties from that reached by Mr Smith.
438. In considering this claim there are two different limbs. The first relates to loss of
profits on the remaining contract works. The second relates to loss of profits or
potential profits.
65. The claim for loss of profits on the incomplete work at paragraphs
5.6 to 5.6.4 is denied:
66. As to quantum:
440. As to paragraph 65.1, I have held above that J&BH was in breach of the sub-contract.
Having heard Mr Paduraru, I accept his evidence that he intended his letter of 15
March to be a seven day notice, and he was hoping and expecting to get a response
from J&BH. I accept his evidence that he took the exclusion from IAuditor as being
the final indication that J&BH did not wish A & V to continue with the works.
441. As to paragraph 65.5, I accept that if A & V was not ready and willing and able to
continue the sub-contract works, this claim could not succeed. Whether A & V was
so ready willing and able is fiercely contested by J&BH.
442. I consider first the claim for lost profits on the outstanding sub-contract works. On
my findings above, the value of the outstanding sub-contract works was £40,643.75
(£447,800 less £407,156.25).
443. I fully accept the evidence of Mr Geale that by March 2021 A & V’s finances were
not in a happy state.
444. The exact state of A & V’s finances is not easy to determine because there are some
uncertainties contained in its accounts. These are set out by Mr Geale in his first
Mr Roger ter Haar KC PvB
Approved Judgment
report. Thus, a table in paragraph 5.4 of his first report 68 compares draft accounts for
2022 with the comparator in the draft 2023 accounts, which show a difference in the
first of a profit of £119,478 and in the second a loss of £105,846. In a table in
paragraph 5.669, a similar exercise of comparison is carried out: there is an entry under
creditors falling due within one year of “(254,908)” in the draft 2022 accounts which
become £8,396 in the draft 2023 accounts. There is no obvious explanation for these
changes. In the entry for creditors falling due after more than one year, the figure is
the same in both accounts: “(141,259)”. These negative figures are extremely
important since they have the effect of reducing the creditors figure, producing a
positive balance sheet in the draft 2022 accounts, which without those two entries
would show a significant balance sheet deficit. As I have said, there is nothing before
me to explain this unusual accounting treatment of the credits provision.
445. Thus it is difficult to be sure what the actual financial position of A & V was.
However, it is clear that it was unsatisfactory.
446. Firstly, A & V had substantial loans from its banker, NatWest. There was some
questioning of Mr Paduraru as to the propriety of the method by which some of the
loans were obtained, but all I need to determine and record is that as at 31 January
2022 A & V was indebted to NatWest in the sum of £170,67370.
448. Thirdly, the manner in which the company was being run was financially
unsatisfactory, in that not insignificant sums were being paid out for purposes
seemingly unrelated to A & V’s business – Mr Geale identifies £35,000 of such
payments72.
449. Thus, the company was not in a healthy position. However, crucially, a loan of
£100,000 taken out in May 2021 placed A & V’s bank account in a positive cash
position73.
450. It is a matter of fact that A & V had managed to survive long enough to take out that
loan, and indeed is still not in liquidation.
451. I have no doubt that if A & V had been given the opportunity to complete the sub-
contract works it could and would have done so.
452. In making that assessment, I should note one of the curiosities of the case – as I have
said, on my findings the amount of outstanding work was to a value of £40,643.75.
The sub-contract sum (once Tower 3 was added in) was £447,800, to be executed
over a 12 month period. In fact, as I have found, work to a value of £460,356.25 had
been done by 19 March 2021. After taking away the ten week suspension period, this
had been done on 43 weeks (the 52 week contract period, less 10 weeks for the
suspension, plus one week after the end of the sub-contract period on 12 March 2021).
68
TB 209
69
TB 210
70
Mr Geale’s first report, paragraph 5.59 at TB 219
71
Mr Geale’s first report, paragraph 5.60 at TB 219
72
Mr Geale’s first report, paragraphs 6.21 and 6.22 at TB 228
73
Mr Geale’s first report, paragraph 6.25 at TB 229
Mr Roger ter Haar KC PvB
Approved Judgment
Thus, A & V had managed to do work to an average value of £10,705 per week. On
that basis, if A & V had unimpeded access to working areas, it should have been able
to complete the outstanding works within 4 weeks.
453. Thus, the question on the first limb of this claim is whether A & V could have
survived and paid its work force for about 4 weeks: I have no doubt that it could and
would have done.
454. Of course, that evaluation is based upon my assessment of the value of the work done.
However, on J&BH’s own Certification, the figures are also revealing as to A & V’s
productivity. Taking Certificate 12, this values the works as at 20 January 2021,
which is after approximately 44 weeks of the sub-contract, of which 10 weeks were
the period of suspension. In that 34 week period, on J&BH’s valuation A & V had
carried out work to a value of £384,115, a weekly value on average of £11,297.
455. It was J&BH’s case that there was outstanding work to a value of £109,117. On that
basis if A & V maintained its rate of progress up to 20 January 2021, it would take
about 10 weeks to complete the works.
456. Again, looking at the cashflow position, that was manageable, and in my judgment
would have been achieved, by A & V if it had continued the works to completion.
457. For the above reasons, I hold that, had J&BH not repudiated the sub-contract, A & V
could and would have completed the original sub-contract works.
458. A & V claims a figure for overheads and profit of 15%. Mr Geale came to a figure on
the basis of the accounting records he saw of 17%. In my view a figure of 15% seems
a reasonable assessment.
459. Accordingly, on the first limb of this claim I hold that A & V is entitled to recover
15% of £40,643.75, namely £6096.56.
460. The second limb of this claim is more difficult factually and legally.
461. The background to this part of the claim is that in the Blizzard adjudication, J&BH
put forward a claim for the costs to complete in the sum of £405,353.
462. It is hard to see how that claim could have been put forward if more than a moment
had been taken by J&BH to consider it: on J&BH’s case the sub-contract value of the
works outstanding was £109,117. To claim that costs closing on 4 times the amount
outstanding had been incurred should have given J&BH pause for thought.
463. By the time that J&BH put forward its evidence in the Smith adjudication, J&BH had
re-thought its position. A witness statement from Mr Hill was submitted saying that
the correct figure was £177,396.8974.
74
Paragraph 83 at TB 1709
75
Paragraph 84 at TB 1709
Mr Roger ter Haar KC PvB
Approved Judgment
465. Thus, Mr Hill’s explanation for the £228,000 difference between the two figures was
that there were post-termination variations to that value.
466. Faced with that explanation, A & V has put forward a claim contending that if A & V
had stayed on Site, it would have been instructed to carry out variations to a value of
£228,000 upon which it would have earned overheads and profit at a rate of 15%.
468. I find it very surprising that in the Smith adjudication as in the Blizzard adjudication
material was placed before the adjudicator which was liable to be misunderstood (in
the Blizzard adjudication, the £405,353 figure: in the Smith adjudication where it was
said that the £405,353 figure was overstated entirely because of variations).
469. The position is surprising in another respect: I have already pointed out that the time
to complete the sub-contract works based on A & V’s past performance would be
between 4 and 10 weeks. However, before A & V left Site, J&BH was suggesting
that there were 5 months of work left to do, and on the evidence before me it took
over 6 months for J&BH to complete its contract works. This suggests that the scope
of J&BH’s works changed significantly.
76
TB 80
Mr Roger ter Haar KC PvB
Approved Judgment
470. Unsatisfactory as this is, with consequences as to the reliability of J&BH’s assessment
of the cost incurred by it to complete A & V’s sub-contract work, it leaves it difficult
for me to conclude that there were changes after 19 March 2021 in what would have
been A & V’s scope of works amounting to a value of £228,000 – nor can I assess on
any reliable basis what any lesser valuation of such works might have been.
471. Even were that not so, I accept J&BH’s submission that there is a fundamental legal
problem with this claim. In paragraph 287.1 of Mr Frampton’s written Opening
Submissions he submitted:
473. The consequence is that A & V succeeds on the first but not the second limb of this
claim, in respect of which I award £6,096.56.
474. Claim 7 is a small claim for £2,084 for loss of the ability to earn preliminaries in the
period after 22 March 2021.
475. In my judgment this is duplicative of the claim just considered and I dismiss it.
476. Claim 8 is a claim for £40,573.80. Of this £16,573.80 relates to Mr Judd’s time and
£24,000 to Mr Paduraru’s time.
295. For the reasons set out above, A&V has not established any of the
breaches on which it seeks to rely or that it was ready and willing to
carry out the works.
296. These alleged losses are not, in any event, as a matter of principle
recoverable:
478. The costs are claimed as having been incurred after March 2021. I accept that these
amounts must therefore have been incurred principally or exclusively in connection
with the adjudications and/or the court proceedings.
479. I agree with the submission above that costs occasioned by or connected with the
adjudications are not recoverable as damages nor as costs.
480. I also agree that the costs occasioned by or connected with the court proceedings are
not recoverable as damages.
481. Insofar as actions other than this present action are concerned, the costs have already
been the subject of orders in those proceedings, and it would not now be appropriate
for me to make any order in respect of costs in other proceedings in this action.
Mr Roger ter Haar KC PvB
Approved Judgment
482. As to the costs of this action, these will be dealt with in the normal way, otherwise
this claim is dismissed.
484. The claim is calculated on the basis that A & V lost the opportunity to attract
contracts to a value of £889,326.16 upon which it would have earned 20% profit.
485. The basis of this head of claim is set out helpfully in paragraph 6.9 of A & V’s written
Closing Submissions:
a) JBH were aware and accept that A&V were solely working for JBH,
and all of their resources were with JBH.
b) Adam Hill email 1st March 2021 12:42 (Trial bundle 4, page 1672)
Mr Hill and Seth Brown specifically were aware of A&V financial
position as it noted: -
e) The QS responsible for valuing the works was Seth Brown and he
and Adam Hill worked closely together. As a result of Seth Brown
incorrectly and deliberately undervaluing A&V works as a result of:-
f) Judd letter 3rd Feb 2022 refers to the impact that JBH actions were
having on A&V cash flow (trial bundle 3, pages 1453 and 1454)
g) Judd letter 26/05/22 (trial bundle 3, page 1455) noted that JBH due
to the breaches had a duty of care and were causing harm and damage
to A&V.
i) The actions of JBH in March 2021, in the knowledge that they knew
of A&V financial stress and that BYUK / JBH were behind
programme, and were in the process of issuing significant variations,
deliberately denied A&V the opportunity to undertake those works and
thus would have removed the “financial stresses” upon A&V. The
additional works A&V could have undertaken in the following 6
months to completion have been discussed during trial in the confirmed
variations by Adam Hill of £228k and/or further works up to £405k
(trial bundle 4, page 1709).
j) At the trial I have demonstrated attempts to gain work for A&V but
to no avail. This is a direct consequence of JBH actions and breaches.
Any monies I did have were subsequently used for legal actions against
JBH, so I had no real working capital, this being directly caused by
JBH wrong actions and the consequences thereto.
k) These actions were not remote from the contract but a direct result
of the actions from the breaches of contract.
Judd noted that but advised that they would rely on A&V higher
figures and commentary.
487. That was said in the context of an application for permission to appeal against my
judgment handed down on 6 October 202378. In order to set what I said in context, it is
necessary to see what I said in the judgment in respect of which such permission was
sought. At paragraph 117 I had said this:
(1) The Court of Appeal has ruled in paragraph [43] of its judgment
(A&V Building Solution Ltd v J&B Hopkins Ltd [2023] EWCA Civ 54;
206 ConLR 184) that as at April 2022 J&BH was in breach of contract
because it had not paid the first adjudicator’s decision “that should
have been the first order of business”;
(2) The Court of Appeal held (at paragraph [17]) that “the first
adjudication was made more complicated than it needed to be, in
particular because JBH’s solicitors raised a number of unmeritorious
jurisdictional challenges and generally failed to provide the sort of
assistance to a lay adjudicator that I would expect”;
77
[2023] EWHC 2576(TCC) paragraph [16]
78
[2023] EWHC 2475 (TCC)
Mr Roger ter Haar KC PvB
Approved Judgment
(4) Whilst these actions were not the sole cause of A&V’s financial
difficulties, I am satisfied on the evidence before me that the costs
arising from these actions exacerbated A&V’s financial difficulties …
488. The terms of sub-paragraph 117(4) are important in understanding the context of what
I said in the later judgment.
489. In considering the claim for loss of business opportunity, it is necessary first to
consider the legal bases upon which the claim is put forward.
490. In the Scott Schedule reliance is placed upon Clauses 7.4, 8.5, 8.6, 9.8, 9.10, 13.2,
13.3 and 15.1.
492. Clause 7.4 relates to the bringing to site of additional labour. The breach which I
have held existed could not justify a claim for loss of business opportunity.
493. Clauses 8.5 and 8.6 relate to variations. I have held that A & V’s case as to the
variation account has succeeded in part, but not to an extent that could be said to have
caused significant loss of business opportunity.
494. Clauses 9.8 relates to retentions and 9.10 to the usual final account exercise. There is
no breach of contract proved in respect of these clauses.
495. Clause 13.2 and 13.3 relate to extensions of time: I have held that an extension of time
should have been granted, but if it had been granted, it would probably only have
been in respect of the period of suspension. A grant of an extension of time for 10
weeks or so would have made no appreciable difference to A & V’s business
prospects.
497. Accordingly, none of the breaches pleaded in the justification for Claim 9 can support
a claim for loss of business opportunity.
498. However, I have held, firstly, that the measured works were worth significantly more
than J&BH’s assessment, and, secondly, I have held that J&BH was in repudiatory
breach of the sub-contract.
499. As to the first, whilst it would undoubtedly have eased A & V’s cashflow position had
more monies been certified, that certification in itself would not have transformed A
& V’s position and made the difference between continuing in business profitably or
not.
500. As to the second, the practical effect of J&BH’s breach was to prevent A & V
continuing to complete its works, thereby earning further profit of £6,396.56: this
cannot sensibly be said to have led to the loss of business opportunity claimed.
Mr Roger ter Haar KC PvB
Approved Judgment
501. I return to the passages from my judgments set out above. It is important to note that
what I said in paragraph 117(4) of the 6 October 2023 judgment was “whilst these
actions were not the sole cause of A&V’s financial difficulties, I am satisfied on the
evidence before me that the costs arising from these actions exacerbated A&V’s
financial difficulties”.
502. I have no doubt that the time and money expended by A & V in the two adjudications,
and the various twists and turns in the court cases, has been considerable, but that
cannot be attributed to any aspects of the dispute resolution process before Mr
Blizzard delivered his decision in January 2022. This is significant since for most
practical purposes A & V had stopped gaining any significant new work after March
2021: that cannot be attributed to the dispute resolution process.
503. The conclusion I come to on the evidence is that A & V did make efforts to win fresh
work but was generally unsuccessful. It is probably the case that A & V suffered
significant problems because it had put all its eggs in the J&BH basket which perhaps
inevitably would cause problems if that relationship got into difficulties, as it did.
504. In my view A & V has failed to establish a significant loss of business opportunity as
a result of any breach on J&BH’s part.
505. Apart from that factual conclusion, I accept J&BH’s contention that the losses
claimed are too remote in law to be recoverable. This was put by Mr Frampton in his
written Opening Submissions as follows:
506. In his oral submissions, Mr Frampton emphasised, correctly as a matter of law, that
the issue of foreseeability is to be determined at the time that the contract was entered
into (see the passage from Hadley v Baxendale cited above). In this case, the due
diligence carried out by J&BH was intended to, and did, satisfy J&BH as to A & V’s
financial stability. I agree with J&BH that it was not within the reasonable
contemplation of J&BH at that time that the sort of disputes as to performance and
contract value which emerged (and which are common in the construction industry)
would be such as to threaten A & V’s commercial viability.
507. For these reasons I reject A & V’s claim for damages for loss of business opportunity.
508. Claim 10 is a claim for damages to A & V’s business and loss of reputation in the sum
of £273,333.33.
509. I cannot see any circumstances in which this claim could succeed when Claim 9 has
failed for the reasons I have given above.
The Counterclaims
510. The following matters are raised as counterclaims or contracharges in the account.
511. Firstly, payment of Mr Smith’s fees: I have indicated that I will seek further
submissions on this in due course.
512. Secondly, the list of disputed items set out in the table at paragraph 25 above includes
an item for “enforcement procedure costs” in the sum of £20,822. These are the
subject of an existing order. I have no jurisdiction in this action to do anything about
that order, although I can see that there may be arguments in due course about the stay
on enforcement which I have previously ordered.
513. Thirdly, there is a claim for the cost of completing the works. This is pleaded in the
sum of £88,089.61, which is calculated by taking the costs said to be attributable to
completing the works by a different sub-contractor and others (said to be
Mr Roger ter Haar KC PvB
Approved Judgment
£191,186.26) less £109,116.65 which would have been paid to A & V to complete the
works79.
514. I accept that if J&BH had succeeded in establishing that A & V repudiated the sub-
contract this would have been the appropriate method of calculating this head of
counterclaim (subject to A & V’s waiver/estoppel argument in paragraph 6.2 of the
Particulars of Claim). However, as I have held that it was J&BH which was in
repudiatory breach of sub-contract, this counterclaim must fail in any event.
515. I should say that if I had to assess the reasonable and attributable costs of completing
the sub-contract works, I would not have accepted the figure of £191,186.26 or
anything like that figure. Firstly, I have recorded that J&BH’s figures for the costs to
complete and the linked figure for costs of post March 2021 variations have changed
in very surprising ways. Secondly, A & V carried out an exercise for the purpose of
the Smith adjudication which appeared to show that the invoices which truly related
reliably to the costs to complete totalled £31,12080. This was shown to me and relied
upon by A & V in the enforcement proceedings before me, but despite that no witness
was called by J&BH who could answer those criticisms. Thirdly, on my finding that
the value of outstanding works was £42,643.75 a figure of £191,000 (or £177,000 to
which Mr Frampton reduced it in the course of his submissions) would need a very
full explanation - even if the outstanding value was £109,116, explanation would have
been called for.
516. Finally, there is a claim for £6,000 for stolen copper. As to this, it is undoubtedly the
case that one of A & V’s plumbers was caught red-handed trying to steal copper.
However that attempt failed.
517. Understandably, J&BH is suspicious that this might have been but one instance in a
series of thefts. Unfortunately for J&BH, as Mr Frampton recognises in paragraph
326 of his written Opening Submissions, J&BH is unable to accurately identify the
value of all copper and other materials taken by A & V’s operatives.
518. As I understand the position, Mr Hill tried to assess a figure and came up with the
figure claimed of £6,000. However, he has not been called nor has any other witness
who could prove that this was a reasonable estimate.
519. In those circumstances I have no basis upon which I can award the sum claimed or
any sum, and the counterclaim is dismissed.
Conclusion
520. I understand that the Parties are agreed that the amount paid to date is £364,909.64.
Less
paid -£364,909.64