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Nazero Group Pty Limited v Top Quality Construction Pty Limited [2015] NSWSC 232 (17 March 2015)
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Nazero Group Pty Limited v Top Quality Construction Pty Limited [2015] NSWSC 232 (17 March 2015)
Last Updated: 25 March 2015
Case Name:
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Nazero Group Pty Limited v Top Quality Construction Pty Limited
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Medium Neutral Citation:
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Hearing Date(s):
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11 March 2015
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Decision Date:
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17 March 2015
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Jurisdiction:
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Equity Division - Technology and Construction List
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Before:
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Hammerschlag J
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Decision:
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The proceedings be stayed unless the plaintiff pays into Court the unpaid
portion of the adjudicated amount
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Catchwords:
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BUILDING AND CONSTRUCTION – Building and Construction Industry
Security of Payment Act 1999 (the Act) – s 25(4)(b) of the Act requires
a person who commences proceedings to have a judgment based on an adjudication
certificate set aside to pay into
Court as security the unpaid portion of the
adjudicated amount – where a person commences proceedings seeking to
challenge
an adjudication where there is no judgment – whether an order
should be made requiring the person to pay money into Court
– approach
to be taken HELD: In the present circumstances the amount should be paid into
Court pending the challenge
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Legislation Cited:
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Cases Cited:
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Category:
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Procedural and other rulings
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Parties:
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Nazero Group Pty Limited - Plaintiff Top Quality Construction Pty
Limited - First Defendant
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Representation:
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Counsel: B. DeBuse - Plaintiff S. Goldstein - First
Defendant
Solicitors: Sachs Gerace Lawyers - Plaintiff CCS Legal
Pty Limited - First Defendant
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File Number(s):
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2015/65404
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JUDGMENT
- HIS
HONOUR: The Building and Construction Industry Security of Payment Act
1999 (NSW) (the Act) seeks to ensure, amongst other things, that those who
perform construction work pursuant to construction contracts
have enforceable
rights to progress payments. There is a statutory right to progress payments
despite any contractual provision to
the contrary. In the event of disagreement,
there is a statutory mechanism, called adjudication, for the interim
determination of
entitlements to progress payments: Chase Oyster Bar Pty Ltd
v Hamo Industries Pty Ltd [2010] NSWCA 190; (2010) 78 NSWLR 393 (Chase) at
[110].
- The
Act provides for a claimant to make a payment claim for a progress payment on
the person who, under a construction contract, is
or may be liable to make the
payment (s 13(1)). A claimant cannot serve more than one payment claim in
respect of each reference
date under the construction contract (s 13(5)). A
reference date in relation to a construction contract is a date determined under
the contract as the date on which a progress payment may be made, or if the
contract makes no express provision, the last day of
the named month on which
the construction work was first carried out under the contract, and the last day
of each subsequent named
month (s 8).
- The
respondent to a claim may reply by providing a payment schedule, which must
indicate the amount of the payment (if any) that the
respondent proposes to make
(s 14). Where no payment schedule is served, the claimant may recover the unpaid
portion of the claimed
amount as a debt due in a court of competent
jurisdiction, or make an adjudication application in relation to the claim.
Where the
payment schedule indicates a scheduled amount which the respondent
proposes to pay, and the respondent does not pay it, the claimant
has the same
option with respect to the unpaid portion of the scheduled amount (s 17). It is
not uncommon for a respondent to indicate
a nil amount.
- The
adjudication process entails the making of an adjudication application by the
claimant and the appointment by an authorised nominating
authority of an
adjudicator (s 19). The respondent may lodge an adjudication response (s 20).
The Act provides for adjudication procedures
(s 21) and for the adjudicator to
determine the amount of the progress payment (if any) to be paid by the
respondent to the claimant
(s 22) and the issue of an adjudication certificate
(s 24).
- The
statutory mechanism to make the claimant’s rights enforceable includes s
25(1) of the Act which provides that an adjudication
certificate may be filed as
a judgment for a debt in any court of competent jurisdiction and is enforceable
accordingly.
- Not
unsurprisingly, the Act has spawned a significant amount of litigation.
Proceedings are regularly commenced in this List for orders
including quashing
an adjudication, restraining enforcement of a judgment resulting from the filing
of an adjudication certificate,
and setting a judgment aside.
- Section
25(4) of the Act provides:
If the respondent commences proceedings
to have the judgment set aside, the respondent:
(a) 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, or
(iii) to challenge the adjudicator’s determination,
and
(b) is required to pay into the court as security the unpaid
portion of the adjudicated amount pending the final determination of
those
proceedings.
- On
3 January 2014, the first defendant (Top Quality) and the plaintiff (Nazero)
entered in to an agreement under which Top Quality
would do formwork and
concreting for Nazero at 507 Military Road, Mosman.
- In
January 2014, Top Quality served what Nazero says were two payment claims in
respect of the same reference date. Nazero responded
with a payment schedule for
a nil amount where upon Top Quality made an adjudication application to the
second defendant nominating
authority which appointed the third defendant as the
adjudicator (the adjudicator).
- Nazero
contended that Top Quality has impermissibly served two payment claims in
respect of the same construction work and reference
date. It is well established
that because of the prohibition in s 13(5) of the Act, a document purporting to
be a payment claim in
respect of the same reference date as a previous date is
not a payment claim under the Act and does not attract its statutory regime:
Dualcorp Pty Limited v Remo Constructions Pty Ltd [2009] NSWCA 69; (2009) 74 NSWLR 190 at
[13] – [14].
- On
13 February 2015, the adjudicator made an adjudication determination in favour
of Top Quality for $199,163.00, concluding that
there was only one payment claim
embodied in two invoices.
- Nazero
contends that the adjudicator wrongly concluded “by way of jurisdictional
error” that there was only one payment
claim when in fact there were two
payment claims, or in the alternative, that he wrongly concluded that he had
jurisdiction to determine
the two payment claims in a single adjudication
application or two payments in respect of a single reference date.
- On
3 March 2015, Nazero sued out of this Court a Summons and accompanying
Technology and Construction List Statement seeking the following
relief:
1. A declaration that the adjudication
application made on 23 January 2015 pursuant to the Building and Construction
Industry Security of Payment Act 1999 (“the Act”) was for the
adjudication of two payment claims dated 24 December 2014 in respect of two
construction contracts
and was an abuse of the processes of the Act.
2. A declaration that the adjudication determination dated
13 February 2015 of the Second and Third Defendant (“Adjudication
Determination”) be quashed and is void and of no effect.
3. An order restraining the First Defendant from relying or
seeking to enforce any judgment based upon the Adjudication Determination.
4. An injunction or permanent stay of the enforcement of the
Adjudication Determination or any certificate issued by the second
defendant in
respect of that determination.
5. Such further order as the Court deems fit.
6. Costs.
- The
relief in prayer 3 is no longer sought.
- Up
to now, Top Quality has not, under s 25(1) of the Act, filed an adjudication
certificate as a judgment for a debt in any court of competent jurisdiction. It
has indicated that,
pending final determination of the proceedings, it does not
intend to do so.
- Where
a respondent to an adjudication determination commences proceedings to have a
judgment based on an adjudication certificate
set aside, s 25(4)(b) of the Act
requires it to pay into court, as security, the unpaid portion of the
adjudicated amount pending the final determination
of those proceedings. There
is no discretionary element. The requirement is mandatory.
- However,
these are not proceedings to have the judgement set aside and s 25(4)(b) does
not apply.
- Top
Quality, however, moves for an order pending the final determination of the
proceedings requiring Nazero to pay the unpaid portion
of the adjudicated amount
(being the whole of it) as security, and in the alternative, an order staying
the proceedings unless Nazero
pays the sum into Court.
- Mr
B. DeBuse of counsel appeared for Nazero, and Mr S. Goldstein of counsel
appeared for Top Quality.
- In
Filadelfia Projects Pty Limited v Entirity Business Services Pty Ltd
[2010] NSWSC 473 (Filadelfia) (which was during the Brodyn
era - see later) a plaintiff sought an interim injunction in relation to a
determination restraining reliance on an adjudication where
no adjudication
certificate had been filed, and accordingly no judgment for debt obtained. At
[11], McDougall J said:
In the ordinary way injunctive relief would
be granted on condition that the amount in dispute, including the cost of the
adjudication
and some allowance for interest, be paid into Court pending a final
resolution of the dispute. That is generally done firstly where
s 25(4) of the
Act applies, simply because that is a requirement of the section. Where (as
here) s 25(4) does not apply in terms (and it does not apply in terms because
there has been no adjudication certificate, and hence no judgment
for a debt)
the Court nonetheless, taking into account the clear objects of the Act and its
underlying policy, generally orders payment
into Court by analogy with s
25(4).
- Earlier,
in Tombleson v Dancorell Constructions Pty Ltd [2007] NSWSC 1169
(Tombleson), a plaintiff brought proceedings seeking orders in the
nature of a writ of certiorari (certiorari) quashing an adjudication based
on
which the defendant had judgment entered in the District Court. It sought
declarations that the determination was void as well
as injunctions restraining
the first defendant from taking any action in order to enforce the adjudication
determination or any judgment
based on any adjudication certificate issued
pursuant to the determination. The relief claimed did not extend to an order
that the
judgment be set aside. The defendant sought an order that the
proceedings be stayed until the plaintiff paid the adjudicated amount
into Court
as security. Section 25(4) of the Act did not apply. However, Bergin J (as her
Honour then was) found that the plaintiff was seeking to avoid triggering the
section, but nevertheless prevent the defendant from enforcing the judgment by
injunction. Her Honour considered that just resolution
of the proceedings
(including that the legislation under which the proceedings were brought was not
circumvented) warranted the proceedings
being stayed until the plaintiff
provided a bank guarantee or paid money into Court, slightly reduced from the
adjudicated amount
because of a concession by the defendant that there was an
issue about possible defects in the work done; see too Lanmac (NSW –
ACT) Pty Ltd v Wallace [2010] NSWSC 976.
- Mr
DeBuse put that rather than there being policy reasons favouring requiring a
plaintiff to put up the money pending the proceedings
where s 25(4)(b) of the
Act does not apply, there were policy reasons against it, particularly post
Chase.
- In
Chase, the Court of Appeal declined to follow the approach earlier
sanctioned by that Court in Brodyn Pty Ltd t/as Time Cost and Quality v
Davenport [2004] NSWCA 394; (2004) 61 NSWLR 421 (Brodyn) with respect to
challenging adjudications, in particular, with respect to the availability of
prerogative relief in the nature of
certiorari.
- Mr
DeBuse put that this change justifies “reconsideration of the approach of
the Court to the application of section 25(4)(b)
[of the Act] and the purposive
approach given to the protection of the contractor... in the circumstances of
the claim for prerogative
relief.” He put that Chase recognised
that there are areas “of appropriate attack... on those administrative
decisions which have been obtained in excess
of jurisdiction” and that
there is no reason to consider that the legislature intended that the exercise
of such a right required
payment into Court, particularly where such relief is
only available from this Court, and ordinarily such matters will be heard
quickly,
involve little factual dispute, and are focused on matters specific to
the Act.
- He
put further that s 25(4)(b) of the Act does not address the situation where the
party with the benefit of the determination has
not obtained judgment and that
the staying of the judgment or of “anterior enforcement” is not
addressed by the section,
and that imposing a requirement to pay into Court
gives a defendant greater security than that provided by the Act, and is an
impermissible
restriction on the availability of prerogative relief.
- Finally,
he put that the present proceedings have better than reasonable prospects of
success because they are based on a relatively
apparent departure from the
processes of the Act.
- Mr
Goldstein pointed out that in its Summons, Nazero originally sought
interlocutory injunctive relief restraining Top Quality from
relying or seeking
to enforce any judgment based on the adjudication. He put that the Court’s
discretion to order payment into
Court is unfettered and that in appropriate
circumstances, it need not be the full amount. He put that payment into Court is
consistent
with the object of the Act to ensure that those who undertake
construction work are entitled to receive progress payments, and that
unless and
until the determination is quashed, there is a valid determination in existence
on which Top Quality is entitled to obtain
judgment. He put that Nazero is not
at risk, because if it succeeds, the funds will be returned, and that Nazero has
not given any
evidence that payment into Court will cause it any particular
hardship.
- For
the reasons that follow, I consider that an order should be made that the
proceedings be stayed unless the plaintiff pays into
Court the unpaid portion of
the adjudicated amount.
- Nazero
correctly concedes that the Court can make either order sought. An order that
Nazero pay the unpaid adjudicated amount into
Court pending final determination
is purely interlocutory and procedural. It will not finally determine any
party’s rights.
The Court has power to make such orders as part of its
inherent power to control its own processes. In addition, s 16(1) of the
Civil Procedure Act 2005 (NSW) (the CPA) provides that “In relation
to particular civil proceedings, the court may give directions with respect to
any
aspect of practice or procedure for which rules of court or practice notes
do not provide.” The Uniform Civil Procedure Rules 2005 (NSW) make
no express provision for such an order.
- Sections
61(1) and (2) of the CPA provide:
(1) The court
may, by order, give such directions as it thinks fit (whether or not
inconsistent with rules of court) for the speedy
determination of the real
issues between the parties to the proceedings.
(2) In particular, the court may, by order, do any one or
more of the following:
(a) it may direct any party to proceedings to take
specified steps in relation to the proceedings,
(b) it may direct the parties to proceedings as to the time
within which specified steps in the proceedings must be completed,
(c) it may give such other directions with respect to the
conduct of proceedings as it considers appropriate.
- Additionally,
s 67 of the CPA provides that “Subject to rules of court, the court may at
any time and from time to time, by order, stay any proceedings
before it, either
permanently or until a specified day.” The court possesses inherent power
to stay proceedings and an incidental
power to control and to ensure the proper
and fair use of its jurisdiction: Batistatos v Roads and Traffic Authority of
New South Wales [2006] HCA 27; (2006) 227 ALR 425.
- Sections
56(1) and (2) of the CPA are also pertinent. They provide:
(1)
The overriding purpose of this Act and of rules of court, in
their application to civil proceedings, is to facilitate the just,
quick and
cheap resolution of the real issues in the proceeding.
(2) The court must seek to give effect to the overriding
purpose when it exercises any power given to it by this Act or by rules
of court
and when it interprets any provision of this Act or of any such rule.
- A
principled approach as to whether a plaintiff should be required to pay money
into Court (and if so, how much) where it challenges
an adjudication
determination, but there is no judgment, requires, because it involves the
exercise of discretion, that regard be
had to the particular circumstances of
the case. For this reason, such orders should not be made by rote, and it is not
correct to
say that they are required whenever a person brings proceedings to
challenge an adjudication and s 25(4)(b) of the Act is not in
play; c.f.
Surfabear Pty Ltd v GJ Drainage & Concrete Construction Pty Ltd
[2009] QSC 308 at [38] – [42].
- Although
Chase marked a significant change in the jurisprudential landscape which
had earlier existed with respect to proceedings such as these,
in my opinion
that change has no impact on the present circumstances.
- I
observe that Tombleson was decided pre Brodyn.
- Put
briefly, and perhaps over simplistically, early first instance decisions in
cases where impeachment of an adjudication was sought
for non-compliance with a
requirement of the Act were approached on the basis of distinguishing whether
the non-compliance was jurisdictional
or non-jurisdictional error, holding that
prerogative relief in the nature of certiorari was available for jurisdictional
error of
law, but not for non-jurisdictional error of law; see for example
Musico v Davenport [2003] NSWSC 977.
- In
Brodyn, the Court of Appeal departed from this approach. The Court eschewed
an analysis requiring examination of whether the error was jurisdictional
or
non-jurisdictional, holding instead that there were some conditions laid down by
the Act as essential for there to be a determination,
and if a determination did
not meet these requirements, then it was not in truth any determination and was
void, in which event,
a court of competent jurisdiction could grant relief by
way of declaration or injunction without the need to quash the determination
by
certiorari.
- Brodyn
lasted for six years until the Court of Appeal in Chase declined to
follow it. Chase concerned s 17 of the Act. Section 17(1)(b) provides
that a claimant may apply for adjudication of a payment claim if the respondent
fails to provide a payment schedule, and
fails to pay the whole amount or any
part of the claimed amount by the due date of the claimed amount. Section
17(2)(a) provides that such an adjudication application cannot be made unless
the claimant has notified the respondent, within the period
of 20 business days
immediately following the due date for payment, of the claimant’s
intention to apply for the adjudication
of the payment claim. This requirement
was not fulfilled. The point was taken in the adjudication response and the
adjudicator decided
that it had been. The Court held that the requirements of s
17(2)(a) are jurisdictional, being a condition of the right to make an
adjudication application pursuant to s 17(1)(b), that the adjudicator’s
conclusion that the requirements of the section had been met was wrong, that
there was no valid adjudication
application, and that the adjudicator had no
jurisdiction to make a determination. The Court held further that it may, and in
an
appropriate case should, grant certiorari to quash a determination that is
vitiated by jurisdictional error and that decisions of
adjudicators are amenable
to relief in the nature of certiorari for jurisdictional error of law.
- The
difference in analytical approach between Brodyn and Chase to
determining a dispute as to whether an adjudication can stand or not has little
or nothing to do with the procedures adopted by
this Court to ensure just, quick
and cheap disposition of the issue. The different approach in the Brodyn
era did not mean that there were not areas of appropriate attack available
to a respondent. Perhaps against Nazero’s position
is the consideration
that under Brodyn, adjudications which did not pass muster were void,
whereas under Chase they need to be quashed.
- The
starting point in the exercise of the discretion to make the orders sought here
is the general policy aims of the Act, and specific
aims of particular pertinent
sections. A general policy aim of the Act is to give enforceable rights to
progress payments. Another
is to ensure the speedy and effective determination
of disputes about them. Specific provisions of the Act aim to put a claimant
who
has the benefit of an adjudication in its favour in a strong position, so much
so that it is entitled to automatic judgment.
Section 23(2) of the Act imposes a
statutory obligation to pay an adjudicated amount before the relevant date.
Coupled with this is the burden
placed by s 25(4)(b) of the Act on a respondent
who commences proceedings to have a judgment set aside to pay into Court, with
the
corresponding benefit of the security such payment gives the claimant. Where
the claimant has not yet obtained judgment, the respondent
remains under the
statutory obligation to pay. McDougall J’s reference in Filadelfia
to “analogy with s 25(4)”, is recognition of the fact that from
a policy point of view, such a respondent has no less
an obligation to pay than
one against who judgment has been obtained.
- The
presence in the Act of s 25(4)(b) gives rise to no implication that the
discretion of the Court to make the kind of orders sought
here is narrowed. If
anything, the fact that discretion is removed in only the particular
circumstances where the section applies,
indicates that there is discretion in
all other circumstances.
- The
policy of the Act, as reflected in s 25(4)(b), is that a claimant is to be given
protection of payment into Court when a respondent
seeks, whether by injunction
or otherwise, to inhibit the claimant’s enforcement of an adjudication in
its favour. Pendente
lite, Top Quality is being held out of payment, with the
risk attendant on delay, notwithstanding the statutory obligation on Nazero
to
pay. It is open to Top Quality to file the adjudication certificate, in which
event Nazero would have little option but to seek
to have the judgment set aside
to protect its position, in which event, s 25(4)(b) of the Act would mandate
payment into Court. Here,
by happenstance, the section does not apply because
the further step has not yet occurred. Top Quality would have to take that step
to enforce its statutory right to payment. The only difference is that these
proceedings have intervened. The policy of the Act is
not served by removing Top
Quality’s protection pending determination of Nazero’s challenge
even though s 25(4)(b) of
the Act does not apply in terms.
- The
present position might also be thought to be a close analogue to injunctive
proceedings where, pending final determination, Top
Quality is practically being
held out of its payment. Were it an actual injunction, the usual undertaking as
to damages would have
to be given.
- It
is not apt to describe a requirement to pay into Court an amount the subject of
a statutory obligation to pay, pending a challenge
to that obligation, as a
fetter on the right to make the challenge. It may be a practical inhibition,
depending on the specific financial
circumstances of the challenger. This could
be a factor relevant to the exercise of discretion, but in the present case,
Nazero leads
no evidence of hardship.
- The
proceedings will be disposed of expeditiously. They already have a provisional
final hearing date on 23 March 2015, having been
commenced on 3 March 2015.
- I
accept as relevant that the challenge has reasonable prospects of success.
Nevertheless, in my view and in all the present circumstances,
it would be a
manifestly unfair use of the Court’s process to permit Nazero to mount its
challenge without having to pay the
money into Court.
- I
will hear the parties on the appropriate form of
orders.
**********
Amendments
17 March 2015 - Para 33 insert not after the word should in the second
sentence
18 March 2015 - Paragraphs 31 and 32 moved to follow paragraph 19
18 March 2015 - Paragraph 20 - added in the brackets "- see later"
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