V01, V02, V03, V13, V16 and V21
The payment claim
25The total claimed for V01, V02 and V03 was a little in excess of $1.57 million. Leighton assessed the total amount payable at $773,828.00. The adjudicator allowed these three variations in the amount of Arogen's claim.
26The total claimed for V13, V16 and V21 was a little under $2.705 million. Leighton assessed these claims at nil. Again, the adjudicator allowed them in full.
27In short, this group of six variations, between them, accounted (in dollar terms) for the greater part of the variation claims, which in turn accounted for the greater part of the total payment claim.
28Each of V01, V02 and V03 was identified in the payment claim as one for: "delay and disruption due to Cooks River Heritage Issues for [a nominated month] Period (stop work issued by Ausgrid 1/12/2011)."
29V01 related to the month of December 2011; V02 related to the month of January 2012; and V03 related to the month of February 2012.
30V13, V16 and V19 were described in exactly the same way save that the relevant periods were respectively "March/April" 2012, May 2012 and June 2012. For some reason, each of these three variations includes, in its description, the words:
Cooks River Site D.
Nothing appears to turn on this.
31The payment schedule dealt with each of these variations. In relation to V01, it said (consistently with Mr Woelk's concession that the first three were properly to be regarded as variations):
LCPL disagree with Arogen's claimed amount. December stand down valued at [amount stated]. Stand down calculation is attached to this spreadsheet.
32The same substantive response was given to V02 and V03, of course with changes to the relevant month and to the amount at which Leighton varied the valuation.
33As to V13, the payment schedule stated:
LCPL disagree with Arogen's claimed amount. This is not related to the suspension of works as directed between 1/12/2011 and the 10/2/2012. Arogen were given a direction to recommence work at Cooks River on the 9/2/2012. Pursuant to cl 8.1 and 8.2 [of the works contract] the ground conditions and their impact on production are inclusive of [sic] the lump sum agreed by the parties.
34The same answer was given to V16 and V21.
The adjudication application
35The adjudication application put these claims somewhat differently. It said:
In late November 2001, during "pilot" hole drilling we encountered an "Excusable Delay" (within the meaning of Subcontract Work Contract Conditions... cls 1 and 28) in the form of heritage structures, not known at time of tender, and from which our delay and disruption entitlements flow.
36The adjudication application proceeded to explain that when Arogen drilled into those "unknown heritage structures", water gushed out which "was subsequently identified as water being retained in the structures".
37The adjudication application made it clear that Arogen relied on the letter of offer term, and noted that Leighton had accepted that V01, V02 and V03 were variations. It was at this point that the adjudication application contained the erroneous statement that Leighton's calculations for each of these variations were not attached to its payment schedule, and the reference to s 20(2)B of the Act.
38Importantly, the adjudication application then stated:
We agree with the Respondent's position that it directed suspension of the works between 01 December 2011 through 10 February 2012 on account of the unexpected existence of heritage structures.
However, during and after that period we were further and extensively delayed and disrupted due to (ongoing and atypical) inclement whether.
"Inclement Weather", and implicitly the effects thereof, is a "Cause of Excusable Delay" (WCC Clauses 1 and 28) from which our delay and disruption entitlements flow.
The unanticipated adverse "Site Condition (hydrological)" (within the meaning of WCC Clause 1) caused by the "Inclement Weather" was severe and excessive ingresses of water to the works, due to charging of subterranean aquifers and ongoing filing of the heritage structures.
The effect of these ongoing ingress of water was to severely retard the progress of the works, together with the need to undertake additional work, such as reconstitution of drilling fluid and re-conditioning of the bore hold.
In summary, portion of our claim V03 and our Claims V13, V16 and V21 are based on the effects of inclement weather, these effects being severe and excessive water ingress which diluted drilling fluid to the point where its loss of viscosity required additional work to, and delayed progress of the works, while the drilling fluid was continually reconstituted to a required level of consistency to effectively remove cuttings from the bore hole.
39Thus, Arogen appeared to accept that V01, V02 and part of V03 did relate to Ausgrid's direction to stop work. However, no doubt recognising that this direction had been lifted on 10 February 2012 and that it had been directed to resume work, Arogen suggested that the balance of V03, and the entirety of V13, V16 and V21, were variation claims for delay and disruption "due to (ongoing and atypical) inclement weather which was not foreseeable" and (obviously enough) not caused by it.
40It is I think open to infer that this change in position (for such I conclude it is) reflected Arogen's appreciation that the claim as articulated in the payment claim could not be supported in part as to V03, and in its entirety as to V13, and V21.
The adjudication response
41Leighton's adjudication response dealt with these variations. It accepted that V01, V02 and V03 (in part) were variations for which Arogen was entitled to be paid, but stated that the dispute was as to the amount. It stated also that the relevant calculations had been supplied. I have referred to this, and to Mr Woelk's statutory declaration, already.
42As to so much of V03 as was said to be the result of inclement weather rather than Ausgrid's direction to stop work, and as to V13, V16 and V21, the adjudication response noted the way in which those claims had been put in the payment claim and said, in effect, that it was not open to Arogen to put its claim on what was said to be a new basis. Further, Leighton said, it was not open to the adjudicator to consider the claims on that suggested new basis.
43The adjudication response said, in substance, that all six variations had been based, in the payment claim, on the "Heritage Issues" and consequent order to stop work, and that there had been no suggestion that any of them was based (in whole or in part) on any Excusable Delay.
44The adjudication response stated, further, that if the adjudicator were minded to consider these variations on what was said to be the new basis, there were various contractual answers.
The adjudicator's reasons
45The adjudicator dealt with these disputes at [72] to [111] of his reasons. At [75], the adjudicator referred to the calculations said to have been attached to the spreadsheet forming part of the payment schedule, and stated:
No calculation was attached.
46The adjudicator gave no clear reason for expressing that view. He did not explain why (as he appears to have done) he preferred the assertion made by Arogen to the assertion made by Leighton. However, I think, it is open to infer that the adjudicator did look at the payment schedule (or the document that Arogen said was the payment schedule) which formed part of the mass of material given to him. On a fair reading, the conclusion is consistent with his having performed some such exercise.
47Further, at [76] to [78], the adjudicator did refer to the relevant paragraphs of Mr Woelk's statutory declaration. He noted that Mr Woelk referred to annexure S2 as being his "detailed assessment of V01, V02 and V03". However, he stated (at [77]):
The respondent has not satisfied me that the detailed assessments of Mr Woelk were provided with the payment schedule.
48That was, I think, an inference that could be drawn from Mr Woelk's declaration. Although it identified the relevant calculations, it did not say that they were a copy of the calculations attached to the payment schedule. Nor (at least to the extent that I was taken to it) did it attach a complete copy, either electronic or printed, of the Excel version of the payment schedule which would have included the calculations.
49The adjudicator then said that s 20(2B) of the Act prevented (or in his word, "barred") Leighton from relying on the calculations. I do not think that this was correct.
50Section 20(2B) of the Act provides that a respondent to an adjudication application may not, in its adjudication response, rely on "any reasons for withholding payment unless those reasons have already been included in the payment schedule provided to the claimant".
51In this case, in relation to V01, V02 and V03, the stated "reasons for withholding payment" were that the variations had been valued at an excessive amount. The calculations gave details of those reasons, and set out what Leighton contended was the correct valuation of each variation. At most, those calculations constituted either a part of or an amplification of the reasons for non-payment that had been given in the payment schedule. The relevant reason was that the claims were overvalued in the payment claims. The calculations did no more show why, in Leighton's view, this was so.
52The adjudicator then said at [80] that Leighton:
.... says that I should prefer [its] calculations for V01, V02 and V03 to that of the claimant. I would be denying the claimant natural justice if I was to do so when [Leighton's] calculation was not included in the payment schedule.
53It does not appear to have occurred to the adjudicator (or if it did occur to him, it does not appear to have troubled him) that the consequence of his reasoning was that he was denying natural justice to Leighton by preventing it from relying on material that formed part of, or supported, its reason, stated in the payment schedule, for withholding part of the payment claimed for these variations.
54Nor does the adjudicator appear to have thought it appropriate to consider the propositions put, in the alternative, in the adjudication application:
... if calculations are provided in a response and the adjudicator is of a mind to consider them, we ask that he/she exercise the provisions of s 21(4) of the Act to enable us to fully explain why we do not agree with the Respondent's... "certification".
55The adjudicator did not explain why he did not adopt this obvious, and to my mind commonsense, approach to the natural justice issue.
56Be all that as it may, the adjudicator then dealt with those reasons that he thought were available to Leighton. He noted that Leighton had put that V13, V16 and V21 were not "related to the suspension of works directed between 1/12/11 and 10/2/12". He accepted that "[s]trictly speaking that is correct". However, the adjudicator said, that was not the way the costs were claimed. In this, he was referred to the way that the relevant claims had been put in the adjudication application, as being due to, or consequent upon, an Excusable Delay: namely, inclement weather.
57Having so characterised the claims, the adjudicator turned to Leighton's alternative contractual answers and said that they were barred by s 20(2B) of the Act, because they had not been raised in the payment schedule. It is of course correct that they had not been so raised. That was because the payment claim did not mention Excusable Delay, or inclement weather, in relation to any of the six variations with which I am presently concerned.
58The adjudicator then turned his mind to other points raised by Leighton, including the proposition that the claims as framed in the adjudication application were different to those put in the payment claim. He did not accept that contention.
59Further, and in relation to the contractual arguments, the adjudicator appears to have taken the view that the letter of offer term entitled Arogen to be paid the proper cost of the claims without demonstrating the cause of the delay or disruption.
60The adjudicator dealt with the question of quantum (which on any view had been noted as in dispute), very simply at [111]:
I am satisfied that the claimant is entitled to have the amounts claimed for [the six variations in question] included in the calculation of the progress payment.
61Apart from [24] of the reasons (on which Mr Nicholls of Counsel, who appeared with Mr Salama of Counsel for Arogen, relied) there is nothing in the adjudicator's reasons to explain why it was that he was satisfied that Arogen was entitled to the amounts claimed. There is no indication in the reasons that the adjudicator had turned his mind to the components of the claim, or to the underlying rates. Had he done so, he would have found that although (as he said at [24]) the letter of offer did have attached to it a "a spreadsheet with rates for supervision, crew and equipment", Arogen's calculations of its entitlements for the variations in question was based not upon those rates, but upon other, higher, rates.
62The adjudicator did not say why it was that he was satisfied that the rates on which the calculations were based were either contractually or otherwise appropriate. He did not indicate that he had in any way satisfied himself as to the propriety or accuracy of the calculations. And that is in the face of a position, noted by Leighton in both the payment schedule and the adjudication response, that the dispute was not one as to entitlement (for V01, V02 and in part V03) but as to quantum.
The parties' submissions
63Mr Rudge submitted that:
(1)Arogen had misled the adjudicator by stating that there were no calculations attached to the payment schedule, and by providing him with one only of the two versions of the payment schedule given to it;
(2)that had caused the adjudicator to disregard Leighton's calculations of the amounts of the relevant variations (as supported by Mr Woelk's statutory declaration);
(3)further, Arogen had changed the basis of its claim, in an impermissible way, from the way it was put in the payment claim to the way it was put in the adjudication application;
(4)it was not open to the adjudicator to consider the relevant claims on the basis on which they had been advanced in the adjudication application;
(5)by treating the relevant claims in that way, the adjudicator had denied Leighton natural justice, because he had relied on s 20(2B) to exclude from consideration the responses that it put; and
(6)in any event, the adjudicator had abdicated his obligation to give reasons (see s 22(3)(b) of the Act; the parties had not dispensed the adjudicator from the requirement to give reasons) in the way that he approached the question of quantum.
64Mr Nicholls submitted that:
(1)Leighton had taken an extremely narrow and technical approach to the way the payment claim was advanced;
(2)it was and always had been clear that the underlying reason for the six variations in question was the impact of an Excusable Delay - inclement weather - on, or its interaction with, the heritage structures;
(3)to the extent that the adjudicator had erred in his application of s 20(2B), that was an error within jurisdiction; and
(4)in relation to quantum, in circumstances where (on the approach taken by the adjudicator) there was no evidence from Leighton as to quantum, it was open to the adjudicator to express his satisfaction in the summary way that he did.
65In relation to (2), Mr Nicholls relied on correspondence, emanating from his client and addressed to Leighton (or to an "an alliance" of which it formed part), which appeared to suggest that the heritage issues and the inclement wether issues were intimately related. However, I am satisfied that, notwithstanding the dates those letters bear, in many cases they were not delivered on those dates; and in some cases, they were not delivered until after the payment claim had been served.
66Mr Woelk's unchallenged evidence was that Arogen had a practice (I use this term neutrally) of accumulating letters, bearing various dates, and delivering them en masse at some date which was, in many cases, substantially later than the date some of them bore. Thus, Mr Woelk said, he and Mr Lamb followed a practice of noting on each letter the date it was handed over or received, and initialling that annotation. I am satisfied, in relation to the letters on which Mr Nicholls relied, that they were not delivered on the dates that they bear; and that, on the contrary, they were delivered later (in some cases, significantly so).
67Thus, even if it is to be accepted that this practice was not one undertaken with any malign intent, nonetheless it does seriously affect both the reliability of those letters as business records and the use that Mr Nicholls sought to make of them.
68Mr Nicholls sought to rely on other correspondence (including by email) to flesh out what he submitted was the common factual background known to the parties, and which he, submitted, could be taken into account in support of the submission referred to at [64(2)] above.
Decision
69It is convenient to start with this point. It may be accepted that payment claims and payment schedules are to be understood as the parties to the relevant construction contract would have understood them. Thus, documents which appear to be extremely summary, or to the uninformed but not unintelligent observer brief to the point of incomprehensibility, may be sufficiently meaningful to the parties to enable them to know, respectively, the bases on which a particular payment claim is advanced and the bases on which it is opposed.
70In this context, it may well be appropriate to take into account, in particular factual circumstances, the background knowledge of the parties as shown (for example) by correspondence passing between them before and at the time the payment claim and payment schedule were exchanged. That material might enable the Court to have a more informed understanding of the way that the parties would have perceived, and understood, the real issues sought to be raised.
71Thus, for example, if at the time the relevant delays were said to have occurred the parties had exchanged a barrage of correspondence which showed that each understood that the real underlying problem was one of the impact of inclement weather on the underground structures, then the abbreviated references, for each of these variations, to "Cooks River Heritage Issues" might well be understood as some sort of shorthand term that included not only those issues themselves but also the (by hypothesis) intimately related impact on those heritage issues, or structures, of the inclement weather said to have amounted to a cause of Excusable Delay.
72The correspondence does not go so far. It does not, in my view, show that Leighton should be taken, contrary to the case that it has steadily propounded, to have understood that the variations in question were not to be construed as narrowly as it suggests.
73On the face of things, a delay said to be based on an order to stop work, which in turn related to the discovery of "heritage items" and the need to investigate them before work proceeds, is fundamentally different to a delay consequent upon an event of Excusable Delay caused by significant inclement weather.
74In general, underground conditions were at the risk of Arogen as subcontractor. Thus, as Leighton submitted, in general the effect of delay by reason of unexpected underground conditions is to Arogen's account, or at its risk. In the case of V01, V02 and V03, the consequential order to stop work given by the principal, Ausgrid was the contractual basis for Arogen's entitlement. That, no doubt, is why Leighton acknowledged the entitlement and disputed only the question of quantum.
75On no view did the stopwork order prevent Arogen from working beyond 10 February 2012. In particular, on no view did that stopwork order have anything to do with V13, V16 and V21.
76I have considered the correspondence on which Mr Nicholls relied in support of his submission that the parties must have understood this part of the payment claim as relating to a cause of Excusable of Delay: namely, inclement weather.
77In my view, the force of this submission is much undermined by the significant backdating of relevant parts of the correspondence (see at [66] above). But there are other difficulties.
78The correspondence on which Mr Nicholls relied did not identify any variation to which it applied, nor indeed the time period to which it related. Even allowing for the fact that Leighton and its employees, Mr Lamb and Mr Woelk, knew far more about the project than I do, there was nothing in the correspondence to suggest to them that it was intended to amplify, or provide background relevant to enable an understanding of, the relevant variation claims.
79It may be noted, further, that the adjudicator did not refer to any of the letters as informing, explaining, or providing a basis for, his view that the claim as articulated in the adjudication application was, in respect of these six variations, the same as the claim that had been articulated in the payment schedule.
80Section 13(2)(a) of the Act requires that a payment claim "must identify the construction work... to which [it] relates". The payment claim did so, in terms that seemed to me to be clear and unambiguous. If the payment claim had been intended to relate to Excusable Delay caused by inclement weather, it should have stated this. I do not think that the requirement of s 13(2)(a) is satisfied, in this case, by statements in extrinsic correspondence that are not related to the particular claims, the particular items of construction work or the particular time periods.
81Thus, in my view, Arogen did change the basis of its claim, in a significant way, for the last three variations, and for V03 insofar as it relates to the period 10 to 29 February 2012. It follows that Leighton's submission to that effect, both in its adjudication response and before me, should be (and should have been) accepted.
82In Parkview Constructions Pty Ltd & Anor v Sydney Civil Excavations Pty Ltd [2009] NSWSC 61, Brereton J said at [22] that it was established "that an applicant may not rely on, and an adjudicator may not consider, material that is included in an adjudication application which is outside the scope or ambit of the claim described in the payment claim". His Honour referred to the decision of Einstein J in John Holland Pty Ltd v Cardno MBK (NSW) Pty Ltd [2004] NSWSC 258 at [22] to [25]. Brereton J also referred to my decision in Minister for Commerce v Contrax Plumbing & Ors [2004] NSWSC 823 at [49], [50], [56] and [57]. I repeat what I said in the last two of those paragraphs, as explaining the reasoning of Einstein J in the earlier case:
56.Section 20(2B) of the Act prevents a respondent from including in its adjudication response any reasons for withholding payment that were not included in the payment schedule provided to the claimant. There is no equivalent limitation, in the case of adjudication applications, in s 17 of the Act; and, as Einstein J held in John Holland at [21], no such limitation could be implied by any process of statutory construction.
57. What Einstein J said in John Holland was that a claimant that did not provide sufficient details in its payment claim to enable the respondent to verify or reject (ie, assess) the claim could not include the missing details in its adjudication application. That was because, since the respondent was barred by s 20(2B) from replying to those details (ie, of responding in its adjudication response in a way that did deal with the merits of the claim) the result "may indeed be to abort any determination": at [23]. His Honour said, alternatively, that an adjudicator did not have power to consider materials supplied by a claimant in its adjudication application which went outside the materials provided in the payment: at [24]. Materials would go outside what had already been provided if they fell outside the ambit or scope of that earlier material.
83There is no doubt that, in general, the question of whether a submission has been "duly made" is one for the adjudicator to determine. See Giles JA in Downer Construction (Aust) Pty Ltd v Energy Australia (2007) 69 NSWLR 72 at [86] to [88]. (I note that Santow and Tobias JJA agreed with his Honour: and reference may be made as well to the cases cited by his Honour in the paragraphs in question.)
84Accepting that this is so, nonetheless, the consequence of an invalid application of s 20(2B), with the effect (as here) that the respondent is prevented from advancing reasons because the payment claim that is advanced in the adjudication application is different to the one that was advanced in the payment claim and answered in the payment schedule, is to deny the respondent natural justice.
85There is, in my view, another way of approaching the same question. Section 22 of the Act deals with the topic of the "adjudicator's determination". By subs (2), the adjudicator is commanded to "consider the following matters only": namely, the matters listed in paras (a) to (e). One of those matters (para (c)) is:
... the payment claim to which the application relates, together with all submissions (including relevant documentation) that have been duly made by the claimant in support of the claim...
86In this case, in my view, the submissions that were made by Arogen in the adjudication application, in support of the variations in question, could not be regarded as having been "duly made" in support of those aspects of its payment claim. That is because, on its fair and obvious reading, the payment claim referred to a basis of claim that was quite different to that advanced in the submissions. As I have said already, I have no doubt that the way in which this part of the adjudication application is framed reflects a clear appreciation by Arogen of the strength of Leighton's response to the claims, insofar as it relates to V03 from and after 10 February 2012, and V16, V19 and V21.
87Thus, in my view, the adjudicator failed to comply, to the extent indicated, with the mandatory requirements of s 22(2)(c). He failed to comply because he considered submissions that should not be regarded as "duly made... in support of the claim". For that reason, he did not make his determination (in respect of the relevant variations) in accordance with a condition of, or within the limits of, the jurisdiction given by the Act.
88Further, and in any event, by approaching the matter in this way, the adjudicator denied natural justice to Leighton, because he permitted Arogen to advance its claim in a way that Leighton was not able to answer (on the adjudicator's application of s 20(2B)).
89Those errors infect the determination as to V03 (in part) and as to V13, V16 and V21.
90As to what might be called the "unaffected" part of V03 - that relating to the period up to 10 February 2012, conceded to be a variation for which Arogen was entitled to be paid - and as to V01 and V02, the adjudicator's approach involved the fundamental problem that, because of the incorrect statement made by Arogen in its adjudication application (as to the alleged absence of calculations from the payment schedule) and the adjudicator's acceptance of that proposition, he excluded from consideration Leighton's detailed assessment of the proper amount of the claims, supported as it was by the relevant part of Mr Woelk's statutory declaration. Thus, in part because of the incorrect statement made by Arogen in its adjudication application, the adjudicator denied Leighton natural justice because he did not consider its calculations and Mr Woelk's statutory declaration to the extent that it supported them.
91There were of course other causes. First, Leighton failed to address the issue squarely and appropriately in Mr Woelk's statutory declaration. It would have been simple for him to say, in addition to what he did, say, that annexure S2 was an exact copy of the calculations that had been attached to the payment schedule. It would have been simple for him to annex a printed version of the complete Excel payment schedule, and to provide an electronic copy. He did neither of those things. Indeed, the way in which Leighton approached this issue facilitated the adjudicator's acceptance of the erroneous submission made by Arogen.
92Further, the issue was compounded by what in my view was the adjudicator's erroneous approach to the application of s 20(2B) on this point. For the reasons that I have given, the calculations should not have been regarded as independent reasons, separate and distinct from those advanced in the payment schedule, in opposition to this part of the payment claim.
93In those circumstances, it may be - I express no concluded view - that it would be inappropriate to deal with this particular failure to accord natural justice (i.e., that relating to the quantification dispute for V01, V02 and V03) by granting declaratory relief or relief in the nature of certiorari.
94There is however another aspect of the quantification issue. It is, simply, that in my view the adjudicator did not give any, let alone any sufficient, reasons for his adoption of Arogen's quantification of its claim. I accept that, in circumstances where (as happened) there was no effective answer to the claim, it would not have required much in the way of reasons to indicate why it was that the adjudicator was satisfied with Arogen's quantification. But there were no such reasons; there was no more than a statement of the fact of satisfaction.
95In circumstances where on any view the dispute as to quantification was within the defined area of controversy, and where (had the adjudicator considered the material to which he referred at [24]) it would have been clear that Arogen did not calculate its entitlement in accordance with the rates attached to its letter of offer, something more was needed than a mere statement of satisfaction.
96Brereton J dealt with this question in Parkview at [30] to [40]. In doing so, he referred at [33] to his own decision in Pacific General Securities Ltd v Soliman & Sons Pty Ltd (2006) 196 FLR 388 at [88], [89]. For convenience, I set out those paragraphs of his Honour's reasons:
88Because the adjudicator is obliged to include in the determination the reasons for it, and the reasons reveal no examination of whether the construction work the subject of the payment claim had been carried out, nor of what was its value, there is a compelling case that the adjudicator simply allowed the claim in full in default of any valid submission against it. As I have endeavoured to explain, that is not an adjudication, within the meaning of the Act, of the payment claim.
89 It follows that one of the basic and essential requirements of validity has not been satisfied, since there has not been an adjudication, within the meaning of the Act, of the payment claim, and accordingly the adjudicator's determination is void.
97Although Brereton J there used the language of "basic and essential requirement of validity" (see Brodyn Pty Ltd v Davenport (2004) 61 NSWLR 421), what he said is equally applicable where the question of review is considered upon the basis of jurisdictional error. The jurisdiction entrusted to adjudicators requires, as "a basic and essential condition", that unless dispensed by the parties, they give sufficient reasons to explain their conclusions. A failure to do this is a failure to exercise the jurisdiction given in accordance with the conditions on which it is given.
98Thus, in my view, the adjudicator's reasons in respect of V01, V02 and (in part) V03 are affected by jurisdictional error.
99Both for the reasons culminating at [89] and for the reasons culminating at [98], the determination of the adjudicator is amenable to the grant of declaratory relief and relief in the nature of certiorari.