Sarah Dyer
Partner
Article
15
Two recent decisions handed down by the Court of Appeal and the Technology and Construction Court (TCC) highlight the increasing number of fire and other safety related disputes arising out of private finance initiative (PFI) contracts which are reaching expiry.
Sheffield Teaching Hospital v Hadfield Healthcare & ors [2023] [1]
In 2004, Sheffield Teaching Hospital Foundation Trust (the Trust) engaged Hadfield Healthcare Partnerships Limited (Project Co) to design, build, commission and operate the Hadfield wing at the Northern General Hospital in Sheffield. The Project Co entered into a construction contract with Kajima Construction Europe (UK) Limited (Kajima) for the design, construction and commissioning of the Hadfield wing. It also entered into a Hard Services Agreement for the provision of facilities management services from completion of construction works onwards.
In January 2023, Kajima issued an application for summary judgment and / or strike out, arguing that Project Co had no real prospect of succeeding on certain elements of its claim.
The first issues related to limitation. Kajima contended that Project Co's claims in the proceedings were not within the definition of "Dispute" in the first standstill agreement entered into between the parties, since the relevant definition in that agreement did not include the Construction Contract.
Project Co submitted that the omission of the Construction Contract from the relevant definition was a mistake which did not reflect the parties' intent as to the effect of the standstill agreement. The evidence confirmed that the intention of the parties was to include Project Co's claims against Kajima within the scope of the standstill agreement.
The Court found that Project Co's construction of the standstill agreement was "arguable", with "more than a fanciful prospect of success". Accordingly, it dismissed Kajima's application for summary judgment.
Kajima also sought summary judgment in respect of Project Co's damages claim for alleged breaches of Kajima's common law duty of care.
The relevant parts of Project Co's case were that Kajima:
Counsel for Kajima submitted that it did not owe Project Co the alleged duty of care at common law: no duty of care at common law arose in circumstances where the parties had entered into "sophisticated" contractual documents allocating risk and responsibility "with considerable care". Kajima contended that it is settled law, following the case of Robinson v PE Jones (Contractors) Ltd [2012],[2] that a contract for construction works does not amount to an assumption of responsibility so as to give rise to a common law duty of care to avoid pure economic loss.
Alternatively, Kajima submitted that if the alleged duty of care did arise (which it denied), such duty did not extend to liability in the tort of negligence in relation to defects in the building giving rise to purely economic loss caused by defective workmanship or materials.
Counsel for Project Co, on the other hand, argued that the law on these issues is far from settled. The case of Robinson v PE Jones could be distinguished from the present case since in contrast with the particular terms of the contract in that case, the Construction Contract did not include either a sole remedy clause or exclude Kajima's liability in tort to Hadfield.
As a result, it submitted that Project Co's claim had a real prospect of success and should be heard at a full trial.
The TCC agreed with Project Co that "whether a concurrent duty of care at common law not to cause pure economic loss by virtue of defective workmanship or the use of defective materials can arise in circumstances such as the Construction Contract, remains unsettled and is controversial."
Mrs Justice O'Farrell examined the extensive review of the authorities on concurrent duties of care in contract and tort set out by the Court of Appeal in Robinson v PE Jones. She held that the following principles can be derived from that judgment:
She also agreed with counsel for Project Co that it was "arguable" that Robinson v PE Jones could be distinguished on its facts.
In light of the above, the TCC held that the issue was not suitable for determination on a summary basis and dismissed Kajima's application. The full trial is expected to be heard in late 2023.
Kajima Construction Europe (UK) Ltd & Anr v Children's Ark Partnership Ltd [2023][3]
We reported on the TCC's first instance decision in this case in our insight of September 2022. In brief summary:
The judge at first instance had dismissed Kajima's strike-out application, holding that whilst the DRP was a condition precedent, it was not enforceable due to its lack of "clarity and certainty",
The Court of Appeal upheld the decision at first instance, holding that:
Accordingly, the Court of Appeal dismissed Kajima's appeal and its application for strike-out. The Court noted that the parties had settled shortly after the appeal hearing so this case will not proceed to a full trial.
In both of the above cases, the disputes arose as a result of defects in the initial construction of the building. As these cases exemplify, there is a growing number of PFI disputes coming before the courts, particularly relating to fire safety defects that were identified in surveys undertaken following the Grenfell tower tragedy in 2017. As Coulson LJ observed in Kajima Construction Europe (UK) Ltd & Anr v Children's Ark Partnership Ltd [2023], the defects that are increasingly coming to light are:
"…hidden, not deliberately, but by the nature of the building works themselves: defective or incomplete fire-stopping is a notorious problem because, once the building has been completed, it cannot usually be identified, save by way of targeted inspections which involve opening up. Such inspections are intrusive, so they usually need a trigger: something to justify them in the first place. Here, that was the Grenfell fire tragedy."
In both cases, the court dismissed the construction contractor's applications for summary judgment and / or strike-out. In another recent Public-Private Partnership (PPP) case, Resource Recovery Solutions (Derbyshire) Limited v (1) Derbyshire County Council and (2) Derby City Council, the TCC has also dismissed an application for summary judgment and / or strike-out by the councils on two issues of contractual interpretation. The TCC observed that "as is common" in PPP and PFI cases, the project agreement was "lengthy and complicated" and that a "full understanding of the technical and economic implications of the parties' competing constructions are matters that it is appropriate for the court to take into account" at a full trial.
Whilst these cases turn on their particular facts, they suggest that when dealing with complex PFI contracts, there is usually no short cut.
If you have any questions about this article, please get in touch with Sarah Dyer or Lindsay Hammond.
Footnotes
[1] Sheffield Teaching Hospital v Hadfield Healthcare & ors [2023] EWHC 644 (TCC)
[2] Robinson v PE Jones (Contractors) Ltd [2012] QB 44 (CA)
[3] Kajima Construction Europe (UK) Ltd & Anr v Children's Ark Partnership Ltd [2023] EWCA Civ 292
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