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Slip & Slide: two lessons from adjudication

1 Mar 21 A dispute over a waterpark shows how slippery adjudication can be. Report by Ben Couldrey, solicitor in the Irwin Mitchell construction and engineering team.

Benchmark employed Aqua to carry out works at the Alpamare waterpark in Scarborough (image from Alpamare Scarborough Facebook)
Benchmark employed Aqua to carry out works at the Alpamare waterpark in Scarborough (image from Alpamare Scarborough Facebook)

The decision of the Technology &Construction Court on 18th December 2020 in Aqua Leisure International Ltd v Benchmark Leisure Ltd [2020] EWHC 3511 (TCC) offered two reminders in one case that the terrain of adjudication can be slippery 鈥 in more ways than one.

Benchmark Leisure Ltd employed Aqua Leisure International Ltd to carry out works at the Alpamare waterpark in Scarborough. A dispute arose concerning Aqua鈥檚 final interim application for payment and Benchmark was ordered to pay Aqua the unpaid sums but also 拢12,500 in respect of Aqua鈥檚 legal costs under section 5A of the Late Payment of Commercial Debts (Interest) Act 1998.

This decision did not conclude all matters between the parties (retention and the warranty works still remained) so the parties sought to discuss settlement of their entire dealings as follows:

  • Aqua sent Benchmark an email on 31st August 2017 setting out a proposed 鈥榩ayment resolution鈥 stated to be 鈥榳ithout prejudice and subject to contract鈥. This provided for Aqua to be paid instalments both before and on completion of the warranty works, a percentage of said instalments being guaranteed by Benchmark鈥檚 parent company.
  • Benchmark said the 鈥榩ayment resolution鈥 was 鈥榓greed鈥.
  • Aqua advised by email of 1st September 2017 that it would prepare the draft agreement which would be 鈥榯he binding agreement once signed by all the parties鈥.
  • Aqua issued the deed of settlement and guarantee for execution in December 2017 at which point some instalments had been made but Benchmark had not signed the deed and had advised Aqua that there would be no guarantee.

Aqua sought to enforce the decision in April 2019 as Benchmark had still not signed the deed, nor paid the full sums due. Benchmark contested the enforcement.

The settlement deed

Benchmark argued that the decision was superseded by the 鈥榩ayment resolution鈥 as Aqua鈥檚 conduct had effectively waived the 鈥榮ubject to contract鈥 condition as Aqua had:

  1. performed the warranty works;
  2. required Benchmark to comply with the settlement deed, even when it was not signed; and
  3. given credit for Benchmark payments made when the deed of settlement was being drafted.

Aqua submitted that the 鈥榩ayment resolution鈥 was not binding unless confined to writing (which it never was).

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The court鈥檚 view was clear: Aqua made it clear that there would be no binding agreement until it was reduced to writing and signed as a contract. There was nothing in Aqua鈥檚 behaviour that pointed to the existence of a new contract as distinct from the underlying construction contract. Judge Bird stated that the 鈥case is a paradigm example of why the court 'will not lightly hold' that a condition that negotiations and agreements are 'subject to contract' has been superseded鈥 especially when the parties (as they did here) clearly 鈥set their own rules of engagement鈥. The decision could be enforced.

Legal costs

Benchmark argued the adjudicator had no power to award Aqua its legal costs given the post-decision judgment in Enviroflow v Redhill [2017] EWHC 2159 (TCC). Benchmark sought a declaration that the adjudicator had been wrong in law to award costs.

Notwithstanding the lack of jurisdiction, Aqua argued that as Benchmark had engaged with Aqua鈥檚 costs claim in the adjudication without reserving its position, it had waived its right to challenge the decision on that basis.

The power to award legal costs under the act arose as an implied term of contract. However, sections 108A(1) and (2) of the Housing Grants, Construction & Regeneration Act 1996 makes any such implied term a nullity as any purported agreement about the costs of adjudication had to be:

  • in writing in the underlying construction contract and confer power on the adjudicator to allocate his fees and expenses as between the parties; or
  • in writing in an agreement between the parties after the giving of notice of intention to refer the dispute to adjudication.

As there was no such agreement, the court found that the parties were barred from relying on the act. The adjudicator had no jurisdiction to make the award as the act plainly had no application to the case. While the court acknowledged that conduct may give rise to a waiver of a jurisdictional challenge, this point was incapable of being waived because the absence of jurisdiction arose from statutory provisions that could not be overridden by agreement or conduct.

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