Cardinal Project Services Pty Ltd v Hanave Pty Ltd
[2011] NSWCA 399
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Court of Appeal (NSW)
Decision date
2011-11-14
Before
Basten JA, Macfarlan JA
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Judgment (13 paragraphs)
Background to statutory scheme 6For more than a decade there has been legislation in this State (and more recently in all other States and Territories) permitting builders to make claims for work done under construction contracts, on an interim basis, pending final determination of any dispute as to their respective rights and liabilities. Keane JA has noted that the Queensland statute "seeks to preserve the cash flow to a builder notwithstanding the risk that the builder might ultimately be required to refund the cash in circumstances where the builder's ... inability to repay could be expected to eventuate": R J Neller Building Pty Ltd v Ainsworth [2008] QCA 397; [2009] 1 Qd R 390 at [40]. Adopting that understanding in Chase Oyster Bar v Hamo Industries [2010] NSWCA 190; 272 ALR 750, McDougall J described the Security of Payment Act as operating "to alter, in a fundamental way, the incidence of the risk of insolvency during the life of a construction contract": at [207], Spigelman CJ agreeing at [52]. 7The Security of Payment Act permits a builder to make a claim for a progress payment (known as a payment claim), to which the developer may respond by service of a document (known as a payment schedule) disputing, in part or in whole, the amount of the claim. In the case of a dispute, the claimant may apply for an adjudication, to be undertaken by an adjudicator appointed by a specified authority. Despite the complexity of some disputes, and in the absence of agreement between the parties to extend time, the adjudicator is required to make a determination within 10 business days after notifying the parties that he or she has accepted the adjudication application. The adjudicator's determination must be in writing and must include reasons for the decision. 8The Security of Payment Act imposes short and apparently mandatory time constraints on each stage of the process for making claims, disputing liability, applying for adjudication and for determination. In certain circumstances, a claimant may withdraw an adjudication application and make a further adjudication application. 9If a determination remains unpaid by the developer, the claimant may obtain an adjudication certificate, file it in a court of competent jurisdiction, and sue on it to enforce the debt. (The claimant may also suspend work under the contract.) The power of the respondent developer to have the judgment set aside is limited: it may not challenge the determination. However, the limits on the developer's rights are expressed only in reference to proceedings brought by it to have a judgment based on the adjudication certificate set aside. 10The tightly constrained scheme of the Security of Payment Act suffers from a significant omission: there is no provision dealing with the possibility (or consequences) of proceedings by either party challenging the validity of any earlier (pre-judgment) step taken under the Act, including, as in this case, an adjudicator's determination. 11The consequence of such an order will partly depend on the basis upon which it is made. For example, if the Court were to hold that the document purporting to be a payment claim was not in fact a payment claim within the meaning of the Act, the process would have to start afresh, assuming that the right to make a payment claim subsisted. On the other hand, if the determination were invalid because of some error on the part of the adjudicator, one would expect that the matter might be returned to the adjudicator to make a fresh determination, according to law. 12Because the consequences of a declaration of invalidity will depend upon the ground, even if made by consent, it is desirable, if not essential, that the declaration should state the ground. In the present case, the parties were content to work on the assumption that the determination was invalid because the adjudicator had rejected the claim on a basis not relied on by the respondent. The result in that circumstance of setting the determination aside, or declaring it void would be to leave unresolved an outstanding adjudication application. However, determination of the extant application was said to be unavailable because the adjudicator was required to determine an adjudication application as expeditiously as possible and, in any case, within 10 days after notifying both parties of acceptance of the application: s 21(3). Almost inevitably, that period had long since expired at the time that the declaration was made. 13The alternative course, relied upon by the builder, was, upon the Court making its declaration, to seek to withdraw the adjudication application and make a new adjudication application. That course, it was asserted, was permitted by s 26 of the Security of Payment Act, which was (and is) in the following terms: "26 Claimant may make new application in certain circumstances (1) This section applies if: (a) a claimant fails to receive an adjudicator's notice of acceptance of an adjudication application within 4 business days after the application is made, or (b) an adjudicator who accepts an adjudication application fails to determine the application within the time allowed by section 21(3). (2) In either of those circumstances, the claimant: (a) may withdraw the application, by notice in writing served on the adjudicator or authorised nominating authority to whom the application was made, and (b) may make a new adjudication application under section 17. (3) Despite section 17(3)(c), (d) and (e), a new adjudication application may be made at any time within 5 business days after the claimant becomes entitled to withdraw the previous adjudication application under subsection (2). (4) This Division applies to a new application referred to in this section in the same way as it applies to an application under section 17." 14It was not suggested that s 26(1)(a) was engaged, but rather that the adjudicator had failed to determine the adjudication application within the time allowed by s 21(3) which, in the absence of agreement between the parties to allow further time, was the period of 10 business days. That provision was engaged because, the builder submitted, the purported determination (made within time) was not a determination for the purposes of that provision which, it must be inferred, refers to the adjudicator validly determining the application. That submission may be accepted. 15Accepting that submission, the builder faced a further difficulty in relying upon s 26, namely that the new adjudication application was required to be made within five business days after the builder became entitled to withdraw the previous application: s 26(3). There were three possible ways of calculating that limitation period. First, the builder became entitled to withdraw the adjudication application immediately upon the expiration of the 10 business days within which time the adjudicator had to make a valid determination and failed to do so. Secondly, the right to make a fresh adjudication application ran for five days after the builder became aware that it was entitled to withdraw the previous adjudication application. Thirdly, for the purposes of s 26, it was not correct to say that the entitlement to withdraw the first adjudication application arose prior to the order of the Court setting the purported determination aside or declaring that it was void or invalid. 16The first reading was relied on by the respondent, but rejected by the builder. The builder sought to support the second approach, though concededly it required reading words into the terms of s 26(2) or (3) which were simply not there. Further, since it was the builder who asserted all along that the determination was invalid, and brought proceedings on the basis of invalidity, whatever words were to be read in must be such that they did not require the builder to act on its own view as to invalidity until a court had made an order to that effect. 17The third approach may appear to be inconsistent with the general assumption in the authorities that a decision infected by jurisdictional error is "void ab initio", being a form of legal nullity which does not require a court declaration or order: the effect of the declaration or order is merely to confirm that which is automatically achieved by the operation of the law.