International Construction Law Review
CONCURRENCY, CAUSATION, COMMONSENSE AND COMPENSATION (PART 2)
IAN BAILEY, SC
Barrister, Sydney, Australia
1
1. INTRODUCTION
This paper considers the proper analysis of the element of compensation by way of liquidated damages to an owner and delay costs to a contractor, when the delay concerned has arisen from concurrent delay events. It is in one sense a companion piece to the paper by Andrew Stephenson at page 166, above. Consideration is given to a presumed contractual intention and risk allocation of general application to the right to compensation when the delay to completion involves concurrency. Two significant legal uncertainties which impinge upon the principled interpretation and drafting of contracts and the assessment of damages or costs for delay are also reviewed.
2. ENTITLEMENT TO AND ASSESSMENT OF COMPENSATION FOR DELAY TO COMPLETION
The legal issues which impact upon the entitlement to and assessment of damages for late completion and for costs and expense for delay are complex and, in many respects, difficult to reconcile. They are addressed in this paper. Consideration has been given by Andrew Stephenson in Part 1 to the analysis of the causal connection between delay and a contractor’s entitlement to additional time to complete (see pages 167–171). The last section of this paper adopts that analysis and considers how the correct common law principles of causation should apply to the assessment of compensation for delay.
Much has been written as to the application of the prevention principle to an owner’s entitlement to recover liquidated damages both generally,2
1 Barrister, Sydney, Australia; Professorial Fellow and Co-Director of Studies for Construction Law, Melbourne Law School, The University of Melbourne.
2 Ian Duncan Wallace, “Prevention and Liquidated Damages: a Theory Too Far?” (2002) 18 BCL 82; Ellis Baker, James Bremen and Anthony Lavers, “The Development of the Prevention Principle in English and Australian Jurisdictions” [2005] ICLR 197; Stephen Rae, “Prevention and Damages: Who Takes the Risk for Employer Delays?” (2006) 22(5) Const LJ 307; Crispin Winser, “Shutting Pandora’s Box: the Prevention Principle after Multiplex v. Honeywell” (2007) 23(7) Construction Law Journal 611.
The International Construction Law Review [2010
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