Title: Adjudication
1Adjudication What the Bill Should
ConsiderAnthony Hussey
2Is Adjudication to be Binding Pending Arbitration?
- Bill says no.
- RIA suggests two pillared approach.
- Cost of bond effect on smaller contractors.
- Possible tiered approach?
3Should Adjudication Apply to Contracts with Value
of Less Than 200,000?
- Bill says no.
- RIA says yes.
4Should Adjudication Apply to Suppliers?
- Bill says no.
- RIA in principle seems to favour adjudication
applying in respect of products manufactured
specifically for the project but sees the wording
of such a provision as being problematic.
5Should Dispute Be Defined so as to Avoid Ambush?
- UK experience / legislation says no.
- Edmund Nutall v RG Carter 2002 EWHC 400 Open
exchange of views. - Constitutional Implications?
6Should the Adjudicator be Entitled to Correct
Obvious Errors?
- Bill allows for correcting clerical or
typographical errors only (Section 6(13)). - Bouygues (UK) Limited v Dahl-Jensen (UK) Limited
2000 BLR 49 and Geoffrey Osborne Limited v
Atkins Real Limited 2009 EWHC 2425 - Constitutional Implications?
7Should the Bill Outlaw Tolent Clauses?
- No such provision in the Bill.
- Section 21 of the Arbitration Act 2010.
- Current provision in the Public Works Contracts.
- Such provisions are outlawed under the Local
Democracy Economic Development and Construction
Act 2009.
8Should the Act Provide for Enforcement of
Adjudicators Decision Through Fast Track Court
Process?
- Not addressed in the Bill.
- Not addressed in the UK statutory provisions.
- Recent article by James Bowling in TechBar Review
(Winter 2011) suggests that issue is by no means
clear (Macob v Morrisson 1999 BLR 93).
Enforcement may have to be referred to an
Arbitrator.
9Should the Adjudicator be Entitled to Award
Interest?
- Not addressed in the Bill.
- Entitlement in UK is confined to contractual
interest. Carillion Construction Limited v
Davenport Royal Dockyard Limited 2005 EWHC 778. - Court of Appeal recognised that this was not
commercially sensible.
10Should the Adjudicator be Obliged to Give Reasons
for his Decision?
- Not addressed in current Bill previous draft of
the Bill required that a party seeking reasons
pay the additional cost involved in providing the
reasons. - In UK reasons are to be provided if either party
requires them. - Perhaps the reasons could be furnished outside
the twenty-eight day period?
11Should the Bill (Codes of Practice) Allow
Confidential Information be Given to the
Adjudicator?
- Regulation No 18 of the Scheme for Construction
Contracts (England and Wales) Regulations 1998
does permit the adjudicator to receive
information in confidence which he will not
disclose except to the extent that it is
necessary for the purposes of, or in connection
with the adjudication. - Not addressed by the Bill.
- The rules of natural justice apply to
adjudication this would suggest that the
adjudicator should not be permitted to receive
confidential information.