HEADNOTE
[This headnote is not to be read as part of the judgment]
On 3 June 2020, the appellant, EnerMech Pty Ltd, entered into a Major Works Subcontract with Acciona Infrastructure Projects Australia Pty Ltd, Samsung C&T Corporation and Bouygues Construction Australia Pty Ltd (the respondents) to supply electrical works for part of the WestConnex project. On 8 June 2023, the appellant issued a progress payment claim (PC 29) to the respondents for just over $10 million.
The respondents served a payment schedule indicating that (subject to minor variations) there was no amount owing or payable. On 7 July 2023 the appellant made an application for adjudication, pursuant to Pt 3, Div 2 of the Building and Construction Industry Security of Payment Act 1999 (NSW) (Security of Payment Act). The respondents provided a response to this application one week later. On 25 July 2023, the adjudicator found in favour of the appellant. The adjudicator's determination was reissued on 3 August 2023 after a slip rule application making a minor correction.
The respondents commenced proceedings in the Equity Division, Technology and Construction List, to have the determination quashed and the appellant enjoined from requesting an adjudication certificate or taking any other steps to enforce the determination. It alleged that the payment claim was invalid because it was not a claim for payment for construction work, but rather sought to recover an amount of $9,230,157.40 obtained by the respondents in exercise of a contractual entitlement to have recourse to security (being bank guarantees) provided by the appellant.
On 14 December 2023, the primary judge, Stevenson J, upheld the respondents' claim and made orders in their favour. On 13 February 2023, the appellant filed a notice of appeal: the issues for determination on appeal were whether:
(i) a payment claim may be made only "for construction work", and
(ii) the Court had jurisdiction to make determine that question.
The Court (Basten AJA, Meagher JA and Griffiths AJA agreeing) allowing the appeal, held:
As to (i)
1 A payment claim must be for an amount of money; the claim must assert that an amount is payable for work done, goods supplied, or services rendered, under a construction contract. The definition of "progress payment" requires that there be a "construction contract" and that there be consideration or amounts payable under it: [9], [61].
2 When considering the objects, structure and spare language of the Security of Payment Act, as well as the judicial analysis since its inception, there is little scope for implying unstated conditions as essential to the validity of a payment claim or a payment schedule: [9], [73]. The claim stated that the claimant was owed an amount for construction work undertaken under the construction contract: it was therefore a valid payment claim: [76]. The statutory limitations on actions for enforcement and judicial review are also resistant to the implication of unexpressed conditions going to the validity of the claim: [79].
Brodyn Pty Ltd t/as Time Cost and Quality v Davenport (2004) 61 NSWLR 421; [2004] NSWCA 394; BSA Advanced Property Solutions (Fire) Pty Ltd v Ventia Australia Pty Ltd (2022) 108 NSWLR 350; [2022] NSWCA 82 applied.
As to (ii)
3 It is the role of the adjudicator to determine the proper construction of the contract, identification of the work already completed and whether payment has already been made for work completed for the purposes of ascertaining whether there an amount payable under a payment claim: [62], [79].
4 The effect of s 25(4)(a)(ii) of the Security of Payment Act is that an adjudicator's understanding of a construction contract, even if legally erroneous, is not able be challenged on a claim to enforce an adjudication certificate. Further, it cannot be challenged on judicial review for an error of law on the face of the record: [79].
Probuild Constructions (Aust) Pty Ltd v Shade Systems Pty Ltd (2018) 264 CLR 1; [2018] HCA 4 applied.
5 In these circumstances, it was inappropriate to address the appellant's challenge to the primary judge's finding that PC 29 "was not, or did not comprise, a claim for construction work": [82].