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[2011] NSWSC 195
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Siemens Ltd v Origin Energy Uranquinty Power Pty Ltd [2011] NSWSC 195 (23 March 2011)
Last Updated: 18 April 2011
Case Title:
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Siemens Ltd v Origin Energy Uranquinty Power Pty
Ltd
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Medium Neutral Citation:
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Hearing Date(s):
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Decision Date:
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Jurisdiction:
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Decision:
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Defendant's motion filed on 17 February 2011
dismissed with costs
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Catchwords:
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Legislation Cited:
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Cases Cited:
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Texts Cited:
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D C Pearce and R S Geddes, Statutory Interpretation in
Australia, 5th ed (2001) Butterworths New South Wales Legislative Assembly,
Parliamentary Debates (Hansard), 29 June 1999 K Lewison, The Interpretation
of Contracts, Sweet & Maxwell, London, 2007, 4th ed, 275f
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Category:
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Procedural and other rulings
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Parties:
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Siemens Ltd (ACN 004 347 880 (Plaintiff) Origin
Energy Uranquinty Power Pty Ltd (ACN 120 384 938) (Defendant)
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Representation
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Counsel: Mr SA Kerr SC
(Plaintiff/Respondent) Mr TJ Breakspear (Plaintiff/Respondent) Mr J
Rowland QC (Defendant/Applicant) Mr RC Scruby (Defendant/Applicant)
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- Solicitors:
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Solicitors: Norton Rose
(Plaintiff/Respondent) Clayton Utz (Defendant/Applicant)
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File number(s):
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Publication Restriction:
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Judgment
- This
is an application by the defendant, Origin, for the stay of these proceedings
under s 8 of the Commercial Arbitration Act 2010 (the CA Act
2010). In the proceedings, the plaintiff, Siemens, seeks to recover
amounts that were the subject of two payment claims made in accordance
with the
Building and Construction Industry (Security of Payment Act) 1999 (the
SOP Act ). It does so on the basis that that Origin failed to provide a
payment schedule in response to the claims within the time specified
in s 14(4)
of the SOP Act and that, as a result, it is entitled to recover the claimed
amounts as a debt due to it under s 15(2)(a)(i)
of that Act.
- The
application for a stay under s 8 of the CA Act 2010 raises two issues. The first
is whether the parties agreed to refer the dispute
arising under s 15(2)(a)(i)
of the SOP Act to arbitration. The second is whether that dispute is arbitrable.
If the answer to both
those questions is yes, it is clear that s 8 of the CA Act
2010 requires the court to stay these proceedings.
- In
the alternative to a stay under s 8 of the CA Act 2010, Origin seeks an order
either pursuant to s 67 of the Civil Procedure Act 2005 or in the
exercise of the court's inherent jurisdiction staying the proceedings. Finally,
Origin submits that, if the proceedings
are not stayed, the court should refer
the matter out to the arbitrators chosen by the parties pursuant to UCPR rule
20.14.
Factual background
- On
18 December 2006, the parties entered into a contract by which Siemens agreed to
provide four gas turbines and associated equipment
and services in connection
with the construction by Origin of the Uranquinty power station located in the
Riverina region of New
South Wales.
- The
contract, which was amended on a number of occasions, provided in cl 8.6 for
progress payments for the work to be performed by
Siemens.
- The
final payment (aside from a bonus payment) was to be made when the power station
achieved what was described in the original contract
as "Commercial Operation
Unit 14", but which in an amendment to the contract made on 30 April 2007 is
referred to as "Practical Completion
Unit 14". Under cl 16.7(e) of the contract,
the works, in order to achieve that milestone, were required to achieve
"Environmental
Guarantees". The Environmental Guarantees included guarantees in
relation to how much noise would be emitted from the power station
under what
were described as "base load conditions". The contract set out how and under
what conditions the noise would be measured
and the maximum permissible level of
noise under those conditions. Those requirements were amended by the parties by
the amendment
agreement entered into on 30 April 2007. The precise details of
what was agreed are not important to the present application.
- Clause
36 of the contract sets out a dispute resolution procedure. The parties are
first required by clause 36.2 to have without prejudice
meetings in an attempt
to resolve any dispute. Clause 36.3 provides that, in the event the parties fail
to resolve the dispute, "either
Party may refer the Dispute to arbitration by
providing the other Party with an Arbitration Notice". "Dispute" is defined in
clause
36.1(b) to mean:
... any dispute, difference, issue or disputed Claim between the
parties concerning or arising out of or in connection with or relating
to this
Contract or the subject matter of this Contract or the existence, breach,
termination, validity, repudiation, rectification,
frustration, operation or
interpretation of this Contract, including, without limitation, any claim:
(i) in contract, tort (including negligence), equity (including unjust
enrichment) or otherwise;
(ii) pursuant to any applicable state, territory, Commonwealth, foreign or
international statute or law; or
(iii) for damages, compensation, restitution or adjustment of the Contract
Price.
"Claim" is defined in the same terms in clause 35.1 - that is, as being any
claim submitted by the Contractor in writing "concerning
or arising out of or in
connection with or relating to this Contract or the existence, breach" etc.
"Arbitration Notice" is defined
in clause 36.1(a) to mean:
... a notice in writing specifying the Disputes(s) to be referred to
arbitration and attaching a copy of the relevant Dispute Notices(s).
"Dispute Notice" is defined in clause 36.1(c) to mean:
... a notice in writing providing sufficient details about the Dispute for
the other Party to reasonably understand the:
(i) alleged facts on which the claim is based;
(ii) legal basis on which the claim is made; and
(iii) relief that is claimed.
- Clause
36.3(d) provides:
The arbitration shall:
(i) take place in Brisbane in the State of Queensland; and
(ii) be governed by the laws of Queensland, including the Commercial
Arbitration Act 1990 (Qld).
- Clause
36 has been amended by the parties in circumstances that I will describe below.
- Clause
43.5 of the contract provides:
(a) This Contract will be construed in accordance with and be
governed by, and the rights of the parties construed in accordance with
the laws
of New South Wales.
(b) The Parties hereby submit to the non-exclusive jurisdiction of the courts
of the State of New South Wales.
- On
23 December 2008, Siemens wrote to Origin enclosing an acoustical test report
which indicated that the power station met the acoustic
requirements of the
Environmental Guarantees (as amended).
- On
24 December 2008, Origin issued a Commercial Operation Certificate in respect of
Unit 14. One consequence of that certificate is
that, under clause 16.11(b) of
the contract, Origin is not entitled to liquidated damages from the time the
certificate was issued.
- On
7 January 2009, Siemens delivered a Request for Payment in respect of Practical
Completion of Unit 14. The amount claimed was expressed
in various currencies
and totalled approximately $6 million. The accompanying tax invoice stated that
the claim was made under the
SOP Act.
- On
2 February 2009, Origin obtained a copy of a draft report prepared by Heggies
Pty Ltd, an acoustic consultant retained by ERM Power,
the consultant engaged by
Origin. According to that draft report, the power station did not meet the
acoustic requirements of the
contract. Subsequent testing supports the
conclusions of Heggies' draft report.
- On
6 February 2010, Siemens made a second payment claim. The claim, which was for
approximately $100,000 and which again was expressed
in various currencies, was
for interest on the first claim. Again, the accompanying tax invoice stated that
the claim was made under
the SOP Act.
- After
receiving the draft Heggies report, Origin, on 2 March 2009, served a Dispute
Notice on Siemens under cl 36 of the contract.
In that Dispute Notice, Origin
asserted in substance that:
- the power
station did not comply with acoustic requirements of the contract;
- by providing
Origin with the report dated 23 December 2008, Siemens engaged in misleading and
deceptive conduct which caused Origin
to issue the Commercial Operations
Certificate in respect of Unit 14 and that, as a consequence, Origin was
entitled to an order
pursuant to s 87 of the Trade Practices Act 1974
adjusting the contractual rights of the parties so that they were to be
determined as if no certificate had been issued and to damages
under s 82 of
that Act.
- There
were then discussions and correspondence between the parties. On 1 June 2009,
Origin issued a notice under cl 22.3 of the contract
to the effect that the
power station was non-conforming and requiring Siemens to rectify it. Siemens
subsequently agreed to undertake
remediation work, which it did during the later
part of 2009 and the early part of 2010. On 25 June 2010, it advised Origin that
it had completed the remediation work. Origin arranged for further acoustic
testing to be conducted. It maintains that, according
to those tests, the power
station still does not comply with the acoustic requirements set out in the
contract; and it appears that
it now proposes to undertake the remediation work
itself.
- Following
further correspondence between the parties, the parties agreed on or about 21
December 2010 to amend cl 36 of the contract.
The amended cl 36.3(a) provides:
- (a) Any dispute
arising prior to 20 December 2010, is hereby referred to arbitration. Any other
dispute shall be resolved by the parties
taking the steps set out in clause 36.1
to 36.2. After these steps, if:
- (i) the Dispute
remains unresolved following the meeting of the Designated Officers referred to
in clause 36.2(d); or
- (ii) the
meeting of the Designated Officers referred to in clause 36.2(d) does not take
place for whatever reason within forty (40)
Business Days (or such longer period
as may be agreed by the Parties) of delivery of the Dispute Notice,
either Party may refer the Dispute to
arbitration by providing the other Party with an Arbitration Notice.
The clause goes on to provide how the arbitration is to occur. Clause 36.3(d)
provides that the arbitration is to take place in Melbourne
and is to be
governed by the laws of Victoria (rather than in Brisbane and by the laws of
Queensland). Clause 36.4 gives the arbitral
tribunal power to issue interim
awards.
- Siemens
then commenced these proceedings on 31 January 2011.
Did the parties agree to submit the current dispute to arbitration?
- Before
answering this question, it is necessary to say something more about the current
proceedings.
- The
structure of the SOP Act is that a contractor who becomes entitled to a progress
payment may serve a payment claim under s 13.
Under s 8 of the Act, the right to
a progress payment only accrues on and from each "reference date" - that is,
relevantly, a date
determined in accordance with the contract as a date on which
a progress payment is due. The claim must state that it is served under
the Act
and must be served within 12 months after the construction work to which the
claim relates was last carried out or within
the period specified by the
contract, whichever is the later. The respondent to the claim then has 10 days
(or such lesser time as
is provided in the contract) to serve a payment schedule
indicating the amount that the respondent is willing to pay and, if it is
not
willing to pay the full amount claimed, the reasons. Section 15 applies if the
respondent does not serve a payment schedule within
time. Section 15(2) provides
that the claimant may either recover the amount claimed "as a debt due to the
claimant, in any court
of competent jurisdiction" (s 15(2)(a)(i)) or make an
adjudication application under s 17(1)(b) in relation to the payment claim
(s
15(2)(a)(ii)). Section 15(4) provides:
If the claimant commences
proceedings under subsection (2)(a)(i) to recover the unpaid portion of the
claimed amount from the respondent
as a debt:
(a) judgment in favour of the claimant is not to be given unless the court is
satisfied of the existence of the circumstances referred
to in subsection (1)
[that is, that the time for serving a payment schedule has expired and the claim
has not been paid in full],
and
(b) the respondent is not, in those proceedings, entitled:
(i) to bring any cross-claim against the claimant, or
(ii) to raise any defence in relation to matters arising under the
construction contract.
- Siemens
commenced the current proceedings seeking relief under s 15(2)(a)(i). Origin
seeks to defend the proceedings on two bases.
First, it says that there was no
relevant reference date because the acoustical requirements set out in the
contract had not been
met. Second, it says that it was induced not to serve a
payment schedule by Siemens' misleading and deceptive conduct in serving
what is
said to be an erroneous acoustical test report. In doing so, it relies on the
decision of the Court of Appeal in Bitannia Pty Ltd v Parkline Constructions
Pty Ltd [2006] NSWCA 238; 67 NSWLR 9. In that case, the Court of Appeal held
that it was possible to raise misleading and deceptive conduct as a defence
to a claim under s 15(2)(a)(i) (and not simply by way of cross-claim) and
that that defence did not arise under the construction contract
and so was not
prohibited by s 15(4)(b)(ii). Siemens takes issue with these defences. It points
out that the entitlement to make
a payment claim is given " not just to someone
... entitled to a progress payment but to someone who claims to be so entitled"
(to
use the words of McDougall J in Energetech Australia Pty Ltd v Sides
Engineering Pty Ltd [2005] NSWSC 801 at [20]). As a result, it says that
there can be no merit in the first defence. Nor can there be any merit in a
defence that relies on the
Trade Practices Act to vitiate the reference date,
since the existence of a reference date is not necessary to enforce the
statutory debt arising from
the payment claim. Whether that is a correct
characterisation of the defence based on the Trade Practices Act is doubtful. In
any event, it is not an issue that needs to be resolved in the context of the
current application. The essential
point is that, in light of the decision of
the Court of Appeal in Bitannia , there is an arguable case that Origin
has a defence to Siemens claim that is not barred by s 15(4)(b)(ii) of the SOP
Act. The question
is whether the parties agreed to submit the dispute raised by
Siemens' claim and that defence to arbitration. In my opinion, they
did.
- Although
the seat of the arbitration is Melbourne and the laws of the arbitration are
those of Victoria, both parties accepted that
the arbitrators are bound to apply
New South Wales law, including the SOP Act.
- The
nature of the disputes that may be submitted to arbitration is expressed very
broadly in cl 36.1(b) of the contract. It includes
any dispute "concerning or
arising out of or in connection with or relating to this Contract or the subject
matter of this Contract".
Each of the expressions "concerning", "arising out
of", "in connection with" and "relating to" are expressions of wide meaning.
Moreover,
arbitration clauses are generally construed widely. As Allsop J (with
whom Finn and Finkelstein JJ agreed) explained in Comandate Marine Corp v Pan
Australia Shipping Pty Ltd [2006] FCAFC 192; 157 FCR 45 at [165]:
This liberal approach is underpinned by the sensible commercial
presumption that the parties did not intend the inconvenience of having
possible
disputes from their transaction being heard in two places. ... The benevolent
and encouraging approach to consensual alternative
non-curial dispute resolution
assists in the conclusion that words capable of broad and flexible meaning will
be given liberal construction
and content.
Similarly, Gleeson CJ (with whom Meagher and Sheller JJA agreed) said in
Francis Travel Marketing Pty Ltd v Virgin Atlantic Airways Ltd (1996) 39
NSWLR 160 at 165:
Where the parties to a commercial contract agree, at the time of making the
contract, and before any disputes have arisen, to refer
to arbitration any
dispute or difference arising out of the agreement, their agreement should not
be construed narrowly. They are
unlikely to have intended that different
disputes should be resolved before different tribunals, or that the appropriate
tribunal
should be determined by fine shades of difference in the legal
character of individual issues, or by the ingenuity of lawyers in
developing
points of argument.
- On
its face, it seems to me that a dispute about whether Origin should make a
progress payment under the contract is a dispute concerning
etc the contract or
the subject matter of the contract. The fact that it could also be said to be a
dispute that arises out of the
SOP Act does not make the dispute any less one
that is concerned with or connected with the contract or its subject matter. The
arbitration
clause only requires the dispute to have a particular character (or,
perhaps more accurately, one or more of a number of characters).
The fact that
it may be possible to characterise the dispute in other ways does not deprive it
of the character required by clause
36.1(b) of the contract.
- There
is a question in this case whether disputes under the SOP Act are arbitrable. I
deal with that question below. Generally, where
a contract is ambiguous, a court
will prefer an interpretation which makes the contract lawful to one that does
not: see K Lewison,
The Interpretation of Contracts, Sweet & Maxwell,
London, 2007, 4 th ed, 275f; Global Network Services Pty Ltd v Legion
Telecall Pty Ltd [2001] NSWCA 279 at [102] per Mason P, dissenting. In this
case, however, there is no ambiguity in cl 36.1(b). It is expressed in broad
terms; and, in my opinion,
the parties intended by that clause to refer all
disputes concerning the contract and its subject-matter to arbitration.
- It
is true that the Court of Appeal held in Bitannia at [124] that a defence
under the Trade Practices Act that service of a payment claim was not effective
because it involved misleading and deceptive conduct was not a defence in
relation
to matters arising under the construction contract for the purposes of
s 15(4)(b)(ii) of the SOP Act. However, the dispute in this
case must take its
character not simply from the defence, or one of the defences, raised by Origin.
It must also take its character
from Siemens' claim. That claim is a claim
connected with the contract, since it is a claim for money said to be due under
the contract.
Moreover, the fact that the Court of Appeal held that the words "a
matter arising under the construction contract" as used in s 15(4)(b)(ii)
of the
SOP Act were not sufficiently broad to catch a defence based on the Trade
Practices Act does not mean that the words "concerning or arising out of or in
connection with or relating to this Contract or the subject matter
of this
Contract" as they appear in an arbitration clause were not sufficiently broad to
do so. The use of a series of connectors
in the arbitration clause, each
generally regarded as being broad, is a clear indication that the parties
intended the clause to
operate as broadly as possible.
- Siemens
says that, at the time the arbitration clause was drafted, a dispute under the
SOP Act could not be made the subject of arbitration
and that cl 36 must be
interpreted in that light. At the time the original contract was entered into,
arbitrations were governed
by the Commercial Arbitration Act 1984 (the
CA Act 1984 ). Section 3(8) of that Act (which was inserted by the SOP
Act at the time it was passed) provided:
Nothing in this Act
affects the operation of Part 3 of the Building and Construction Industry
Security of Payment Act 1999 .
There is no equivalent provision in the CA Act 2010.
- Siemens
submits that the effect of s 3(8) of the CA Act 1984 is that a dispute
concerning the SOP Act was not arbitrable at the time
the contract was entered
into and that cl 36 should not be interpreted as an agreement to submit to
arbitration a dispute that was
not arbitrable at that time.
- In
my opinion, there are three difficulties with that submission.
- First,
as I have already said, there is no ambiguity in cl 36.1(b) that would permit
the court to read the clause down in the way
contended for by Siemens.
- Second,
it is not obvious that s 3(8) of the CA Act 1984 has the meaning contended for
by Siemens. The SOP Act provides for a right
to obtain progress payments and
provides a procedure for resolving disputes concerning that right. Section 3(8)
of the CA Act 1984
states that that Act does not affect that right or that
procedure. That might have been thought to have been necessary because both
Acts
provide for a form of dispute resolution, and the legislature may have been
concerned to make sure that the procedure under
the CA Act 1984 could not be
used as a substitute for the procedure available under the SOP Act. But it does
not follow that s 3(8)
prevents the parties from agreeing to refer to
arbitration an issue concerning that right or procedure that would otherwise be
justiciable
in a court.
- Third,
in my opinion, clause 36 should be interpreted as having an ambulatory effect.
The clause requires the parties to submit to
arbitration any dispute of the type
described in the clause. It is not restricted to disputes that could have been
arbitrated at
the time the contract was entered into; and there is no reason to
restrict the clause in that way. To take and example, cl 36.1(b)(ii)
defines
"Dispute" to include any claim "pursuant to any applicable state, territory,
Commonwealth, foreign or international statute
or law". If legislation were
passed during the course of the contract that altered the parties' rights and
obligations arising from
the contract, then a claim arising under that
legislation would be still be a claim falling within cl 36.1(b)(ii). Similarly,
if
a dispute of a particular type were not arbitrable at the time the contract
was entered into but became arbitrable as a consequence
of a legislative change,
then, if a dispute of that type arose after the legislative change, there is no
reason why cl 36 should
not be interpreted as an agreement to refer that dispute
to arbitration if it was of a type described by the clause. That leaves
open the
question whether the current dispute is arbitrable having regard to the terms of
the CA Act 2010. I return to that question
below.
- In
my opinion, the dispute that is the subject of these proceedings is one that the
parties agreed to refer to arbitration by the
amendment agreement entered into
on or about 21 December 2010. By the amended clause 36.3(a), the parties agreed
to refer to arbitration
"[a]ny dispute arising prior to 20 December 2010".
Although the word "dispute" is not capitalised in the introductory words, it is
capitalised elsewhere in the clause and, in my opinion, it was intended to have
the same meaning on each occasion when it was used
in the clause. Consequently,
what was referred to arbitration was anything meeting the description of a
"Dispute" as defined in the
contract that arose prior to 20 December 2010. For
the reasons I have given, the dispute the subject of the current proceedings
falls
within the definition of "Dispute". In my opinion, it is also a dispute
that arose prior to 20 December 2010. The heart of the dispute
in these
proceedings is that Siemens is seeking to enforce a payment claim in respect of
Practical Completion of Unit 14 (and a subsequent
payment claim for interest)
and Origin is disputing its entitlement to do so. That dispute arose when
Siemens served two payment
claims that were expressed to be under the SOP Act
and Origin refused to pay them on the ground that Siemens had engaged in
misleading
and deceptive conduct. The fact that, as a result of what has
happened, Siemens' specific claim is under s 15(2)(a)(i) of the SOP
Act and
Origin seeks to defend that claim does not mean that the dispute that is the
subject of these proceedings is different from
the one that arose prior to 20
December. The dispute is still concerned with whether Siemens should be entitled
to recover the amounts
claimed in its payment claims.
- Even
if the conclusion of the previous paragraph is incorrect, for the reasons I have
given, the parties have agreed that disputes
of the current type will be dealt
with in accordance with cl 36 of the contract. That clause requires the parties
to refer the dispute
to arbitration if it cannot be settled in without prejudice
negotiations. In those circumstances, and subject to the question of
arbitrability, it would be appropriate to stay the proceedings in order for that
dispute resolution mechanism to operate.
Is the dispute arbitrable?
- Section
8(1) of the CA Act 2010 provides:
A court before which an action is
brought in a matter which is the subject of an arbitration agreement must, if a
party so requests
not later than when submitting the party's first statement on
the substance of the dispute, refer the parties to arbitration unless
it finds
that the agreement is null and void, inoperative or incapable of being
performed.
In my opinion, an arbitration agreement is "inoperative or incapable of being
performed" if, among other things, its subject-matter
is not capable of
settlement by arbitration under the laws of New South Wales. That conclusion is
support by section 34(2) of the
CA Act 2010, which relevantly provides:
An arbitral award may be set aside by the Court only if:
(a) ...
(b) the Court finds that:
(i) the subject-matter of the dispute is not capable of settlement by
arbitration under the law of this State, or
(ii) the award is in conflict with the public policy of this State.
It would be odd to interpret s 8(1) of the CA Act 2010 as requiring the court
to refer to arbitration a dispute if any award arising
from that reference was
not enforceable under s 34(2)(b).
- Whether
a particular dispute is capable of settlement by arbitration or not depends on
the subject matter of the dispute and, in some
cases, the mechanism that has
been established to resolve it. In general, an arbitrator is required to resolve
a dispute according
to the laws of the relevant jurisdiction - which is normally
the jurisdiction selected by the parties to the arbitration agreement
to govern
the resolution of their dispute. As Stephen J explained in Government
Insurance Office of New South Wales v Atkinson-Leighton Joint Venture
[1981] HCA 9; (1979-81) 146 CLR 206 at 235:
The principle to be extracted
from this line of authority is that, subject to such qualifications as relevant
statute law may require,
an arbitrator may award interest where interest would
have been recoverable and [sic] the matter been determined in a court of law.
What lies behind that principle is that arbitrators must determine disputes
according to the law of the land. Subject to certain
exceptions, principally
related to forms of equitable relief which are of no present relevance and which
reflect the private and
necessarily evanescent status of arbitrators, a claimant
should be able to obtain from arbitrators just such rights and remedies
as would
have been available to him were he to sue in a court of law of appropriate
jurisdiction.
Applying this principle, courts have held that, as well as a claim for
interest, an arbitrator has power to determine various statutory
claims such as
those arising under ss 82 and 87 of the Trade Practices Act for contraventions
of s 52 of that Act (see Comandate Marine Corp and IBM Australia Ltd v National
Distribution Services Ltd (1991) 22 NSWLR 466) and those under ss 175, 233, 247A
and 1071B of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) ( ACD Tridon v Tridon Australia
[2002] NSWSC 896).
- However,
in certain circumstances, it may be apparent from the nature of the subject
matter or the way that it is dealt with by the
legislature that it is
appropriate for disputes concerning that subject matter to be resolved by the
courts, or specialist tribunals
established for that purpose. What normally
distinguishes this class of case is the existence of some legitimate public
interest
in seeing that disputes of the type in question are resolved by public
institutions or in accordance with structures that are established
by parliament
rather than institutions and structures established by the parties: see
Comandate Marine Corp at [200] per Allsop J. Examples include proceedings
to recover fines, proceedings relating to insolvency and competition law claims:
see ACD Tridon v Tridon Australia at [189]-[194] per Austin J;
Comandate Marine Corp at [200] per Allsop J. In Metrocall Inc v
Electronic Tracking Systems Pty Ltd [2000] NSWIRComm 136, the Full Bench of
Industrial Relations Commission sitting in Court Session thought that the same
approach should apply to claims
under s 106 of the Industrial Relations Act
1996. In reaching that conclusion, the Full Bench pointed to the fact that
jurisdiction in respect of claims under s 106 was conferred on a specialist
tribunal and the matters that that tribunal is required to take into account in
determining whether
to grant relief under that section include matters such as
whether the contract is "against the public interest".
- There
are a number of aspects of the SOP Act that suggest that it establishes a
particular regime for the recovery of progress payments
which cannot be made the
subject of arbitration.
- First,
the Act reflects a legislative policy that there should be a swift mechanism for
contractors to recover progress payments.
That was thought to be socially
desirable having regard to a particular problem in the construction industry in
New South Wales which
meant that frequently small contractors were not paid. As
Mr Iemma, then Minister for Public Works, said in the second reading speech
for
the relevant bill (New South Wales Legislative Assembly, Parliamentary
Debates (Hansard), 29 June 1999 at 1594):
The Building and
Construction Industry Security of Payment Bill is a key component of the
Government reform package for security of
payment in the New South Wales
construction industry. It follows the 15 February announcement by the Premier of
the Government's
intention to stamp out the un-Australian practice of not paying
contractors for work they undertake on construction. It is all too
frequently
the case that small subcontractors - such as bricklayers, carpenters,
electricians and plumbers - are not paid for their
work. Many of them cannot
survive financially when that occurs, with severe consequences for themselves
and their families.
- Second,
to achieve that goal, the legislature established a public, statutory dispute
resolution scheme. Section 32 of the SOP Act
provides that that scheme is not to
affect the parties' rights under the relevant construction contract. The parties
are still at
liberty to pursue those rights, and any order made under the Act is
not to affect them. In particular, s 32(3) provides:
In any
proceedings before a court or tribunal in relation to any matter arising under a
construction contract, the court or tribunal:
(a) must allow for any amount paid to a party to the contract under or for
the purposes of this Part [that is, the Part providing
for adjudication of the
claim] in any order or award it makes in those proceedings, and
(b) may make such orders as it considers appropriate for the restitution of
any amount so paid, and such other orders as it considers
appropriate, having
regard to its decision in those proceedings.
It is noteworthy that this section specifically recognises that the
underlying contractual dispute may be the subject of an arbitration,
and it
gives an arbitrator power to adjust the rights of the parties under the contract
having regard to any amount that the contractor
has recovered in accordance with
the SOP Act.
- Third,
section 34(1) of the Act says that the Act takes effect despite any provision to
the contrary in any contract. Section 34(2)
provides:
A provision
of any agreement (whether in writing or not);
(a) under which the operation of this Act is, or is purported to be,
excluded, modified or restricted (or that has the effect of excluding,
modifying
or restricting the operation of this Act), or
(b) that may reasonably be construed as an attempt to deter a person from
taking action under this Act,
is void.
- It
follows from these provisions that arbitration cannot be a substitute for an
adjudication under the Act. In addition, in my opinion,
the supervisory
jurisdiction the court exercises over the adjudication process cannot be the
subject of an arbitration. In exercising
that jurisdiction, the court is
exercising a public function of ensuring the integrity of a dispute resolution
system established
by parliament. It is not simply resolving disputes between
private litigants. The degree to which the court should exercise that
function
has been the subject of some debate. Most recently, the circumstances in which
the court will intervene have been expanded
so that the court will now grant
relief in the nature of certiorari where the adjudicator has exceeded his or her
jurisdiction: Chase Oyster Bar Pty Ltd v Hamo Industries Pty Ltd [2010]
NSWCA 190. However, whatever the precise scope of that jurisdiction, it is not
one that in my opinion can be made the subject of an arbitration.
- The
question remains whether a dispute concerning s 15(2)(a)(i) of the SOP Act is
arbitrable. Origin pointed to two matters to suggest
that it was. First, it
pointed to the fact that the CA Act 2010 does not contain an equivalent to s
3(8) of the CA Act 1984. That
was said to be an indication that some disputes
under the SOP Act, at least, are arbitrable. Second, Origin pointed to the fact
that,
where the legislature intends that disputes of a particular type are not
arbitrable, it specifically says so - such as s 43 of the Insurance Contracts
Act 1984 (Cth) and s 7C of the Home Building Act 1989. In addition,
proceedings under s 15(2)(a)(i) are not part of the adjudication process. Nor
are they part of the court's supervision of that process. They are simply
proceedings
to recover a statutory debt that can be brought in any court of
competent jurisdiction. There is no reason why disputes of that type
should not
be arbitrable.
- Despite
these considerations, I do not think that a claim under s 15(2)(a)(i) is
arbitrable. I accept that the fact that the CA Act 2010 does not contain an
equivalent of s 3(8) of the CA Act 1984 is one matter
that can be taken into
account in interpreting the CA Act 2010: see Geaghan v D'Aubert [2002]
NSWCA 260; (2002) 36 MVR 542 at [22]- [23], quoting D C Pearce and R S Geddes,
Statutory Interpretation in Australia , 5 th ed (2001) Butterworths.
However, it seems to me that the failure to include in the CA Act 2010 a similar
provision to s 3(8)
of the 1984 Act can be explained on the basis that the
provision was though to be unnecessary having regard to the terms of ss 8(1)
and
34(2) of the 2010 Act and the particular nature of the SOP Act. Provisions such
as s 43 of the Insurance Contracts Act and s 7C of the Home Building
Act are necessary precisely because, on the face of it, disputes under
contracts of those types are arbitrable. The same could not be
said of disputes
under the SOP Act. Moreover, s 15(2)(a)(i) is part of the mechanism established
to give effect to the adjudication
process and the policy underlying it. It
seems odd if one aspect of that process could be made the subject of an
arbitration when
all other aspects of it could not. Finally, s 15(2)(a)(i)
specifically says that the claimant may bring proceedings in any court
of
competent jurisdiction. In doing so, it gives the claimant a right. Section 34
of the SOP Act makes it clear that the claimant
cannot contract out of that
right. Elsewhere, the Act recognises that disputes under construction contracts
may be the subject of
arbitration. In particular, as I have said, s 32(3)
confers powers on arbitrators (as well as courts). However, s 15(2)(a)(i)
confers
a right to bring a claim in a court. It makes no reference to
arbitration. If the legislature had intended the section to include
an
arbitration, it would have specifically said something about arbitration in the
section, as it did in s 32(3). In my opinion,
a provision of an arbitration
agreement that prevents a party from exercising a right under s 15(2)(a)(i) to
bring proceedings in
a court of competent jurisdiction is, to that extent, void
under s 34 of the SOP Act.
Should the court nonetheless stay these proceedings?
- Origin
submits that it should. It gives three reasons. First, it says that it is an
abuse of process for Siemens to seek the same
relief in concurrent proceedings.
Second, it says that Siemens should be held to its agreement to arbitrate.
Third, it submits that
a stay is in the interests of justice because there is a
significant overlap in the issues in these proceedings and the issues in
the
arbitration.
- I
do not accept these submissions.
- In
my opinion, there is no overlap in the relief sought in the two proceedings. In
these proceedings, Siemens seeks to enforce a statutory
right to a progress
payment. However, as s 32 makes plain, that right is a right to an interim
payment. It does not affect the contractual
rights that are the subject of the
arbitration.
- As
to Origin's second reason (that Siemens should be held to its agreement), the
effect of a stay would be to deprive Siemens of its
rights under the SOP Act in
circumstances where that Act specifically says that those rights are available
notwithstanding the parties'
agreement. The court should not by the grant of a
stay seek to achieve that result simply because that is what the parties have
agreed.
- As
to the question of overlap, that is a matter that the court can take into
account in exercising its discretion. However, it is
not a matter that can be
determinative. It is also necessary to take into account the fact that the
effect of a stay would be to
deprive Siemens of a right conferred by the SOP
Act, since, on the conclusions I have reached, a claim under the SOP Act is not
arbitrable.
In this case, the overlap arises because Origin seeks to defend the
claim under the SOP Act and to defend the claim under the contract
on the basis
that Siemens engaged in misleading and deceptive conduct by serving an erroneous
acoustical test report. Four points
may be made about this. First, the question
whether Siemens engaged in misleading and deceptive conduct is only one aspect
of the
dispute between the parties. Determination of that issue by the court
will not render the parties' agreement to submit their disputes
to arbitration
otiose. Second, there was no suggestion that the issue is peculiarly suitable
for resolution by arbitration rather
than by the court. Third, there is no
suggestion that, if the court were to determine the issue, that would unduly
prejudice Origin
because, for example, the same witnesses would need to give
evidence twice. Fourth, there does not seem to be a real risk of inconsistent
findings. If the issue is determined by the court, then that is likely to create
an issue estoppel between the parties: see Kuligowski v Metrobus [2004]
HCA 34; (2004) 220 CLR 363 at [21]. The result will be that it will be
unnecessary for the arbitral tribunal to determine the issue itself. Origin's
real objection
was that the parties had agreed that the issue whether Siemens
engaged in misleading and deceptive conduct would be referred to arbitration
and
the effect of not granting a stay is to undermine that agreement. But it could
equally be said that Siemens has a statutory right
to pursue its claim in court
and granting a stay would undermine that statutory right. That is particularly
so where, as I have held,
the claim is not arbitrable. Taking these matters into
account, I think that the balance is in favour of not granting a stay in this
case.
Should there be a referral under UCPR rule 20.14?
- For
similar reasons, I do not think that this is an appropriate matter in which to
refer the question whether Siemens engaged in misleading
or deceptive conduct or
other questions raised under the SOP Act to the arbitrators chosen by the
parties. A reference would permit
the arbitrators to determine Siemens' claim
under s 15(2)(a)(i) of the SOP Act. However, in the circumstances of this case,
there
is no particular advantage in referring the issue to the arbitrators,
except that it would go some way to giving effect to the parties'
agreement. On
the other hand, it seems to me that a referral would introduce complications and
delays of the very sort that the SOP
Act is intended to avoid.
Orders
- Origin's
motion filed on 17 February 2011 should be dismissed with costs.
**********
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