Jessica Tresham
Partner
Article
When can a contractor pull the plug on an employer under clause 8.9.4 of the JCT Design and Build Contract 2016? After an adjudication, a High Court judgment, a trip to the Court of Appeal, five Supreme Court Justices and many pages of submissions later, we finally have an answer in Providence Building Services Limited v Hexagon Housing Association Limited.
In 2019, Hexagon Housing Association Limited (Hexagon) engaged Providence Building Services Limited (Providence) for the construction of a number of buildings in Purley, London, under a JCT Design & Build 2016 contract (with amendments). The dispute centred on the meaning and operation of clause 8.9 – specifically whether a contractor can terminate for a repeated employer default even if the earlier default was fully cured.
Clause 8.9 (as amended) sets out a staged process:
Providence argued that under clause 8.9.4 – based on the inclusion of the words "for any reason" – it was entitled to immediately terminate whenever an employer repeated an earlier notified breach (even if the first breach had long since been remedied), and that there was no requirement for the right to terminate to have previously accrued under clause 8.9.3. Hexagon disagreed.
The Court sided firmly with Hexagon.
The critical point: clause 8.9.4 only applies where the contractor had already acquired a right to terminate under clause 8.9.3. In other words, the right to terminate under clause 8.9.3 must have previously accrued, before clause 8.9.4 could apply, or, put more simply, the contractor only has a right to terminate for a repetition of a specified default, if the employer has failed to cure any earlier specified default within 28 days.
Providence’s interpretation would have meant that a repeated late payment would result in an automatic right to terminate, even where the first breach had been remedied. The Supreme Court considered this to be an extreme outcome, one that "might be thought to provide a sledgehammer to crack a nut".
Because Hexagon had cured the December breach within days, Providence never had a right to terminate under clause 8.9.3. Without that foundation, clause 8.9.4 simply did not engage. The May breach was not a qualifying “repetition”, and Providence’s purported termination was unlawful.
For contractors hoping to rely on clause 8.9.4, the message is clear:
For employers, there is reassurance that a late payment – remedied quickly – will not leave them exposed months later to instant termination on a repeat slip.
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