Adjudication in Construction Law
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CHAPTER 7
Other jurisdictions
Other jurisdictions
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7.1 Introduction: Republic of Ireland and other common law jurisdictions
7.1 Part II of the Housing Grants, Construction and Regeneration Act 1996 applies to the United Kingdom and Northern Ireland.1 Statutory provision for adjudication relating to construction contracts in the Republic of Ireland is contained in the Construction Contracts Act 2013.2 Under this legislation ‘construction contract’ means an agreement (whether or not in writing) between an executing party (a contractor or sub-contractor) and another party, where the executing party is engaged for: carrying out construction operations by the executing party; arranging for the carrying out of construction operations by one or more other persons, whether under sub-contract to the executing party or otherwise; providing the executing party's own labour, or the labour of others, for the carrying out of construction operations. ‘Construction operations’ has the same meaning as that under the UK legislation,3 although without the exemptions for work connected to oil, gas, minerals and sites relating to nuclear processing, water or effluent treatment, chemicals, pharmaceuticals, oil, gas, steel or food and drink, and it includes making, installing or repairing sculptures, murals and other artistic works that are attached to real property. Contracts for architectural, design, archaeological or surveying work, engineering or project management services, or advice on building, engineering, interior or exterior decoration or on the laying-out of landscape, are included.4 Contracts with residential occupiers are outside thePage 309
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7.2 Australia: Overview
7.2.1 Previous legislation
7.4 Existing Australian legislation directed to the security of payment (SOP) for contractors and sub-contractors consisted of the New South Wales Contractors Debt Act 1977, the Queensland Subcontractors’ Charges Act 1974, the Australian Capital Territory Contractors Debts Act 1897, the Northern Territory Workmen's Liens Act 1893, the South Australia Worker's Liens Act 1893 and the Tasmania Contractors’ Debtors Act 1939. Each of these Acts provided a mechanism for a contracting party to recover an outstanding debt from a party higher up the contractual chain by allowing an unpaid sub-contractor to take a charge, lien or other form of security over payments to the principal contractor from the contractor or client which had engaged the principal contractor. Thus, if A had contracted with B for the latter to complete some construction work and if B owed C money for work completed relating to that work, then C could take action under the relevant Act to recover from A the debt owed by B.207.2.2 Recent legislation
7.5 Recent security of payment legislation for the construction industry in Australian is based on two different models, the East Coast Model, used by New South Wales, Victoria, Queensland, Tasmania, the Australian Capital Territory and South Australia, and the West Coast Model, employed by Western Australia and the Northern Territory, both of which are based on the UK Housing Grants, Construction and Regeneration Act 1996. Both models seek to provide a speedy dispute resolution mechanism for payment disputes by defining the rights of the parties and giving access to rapid adjudication for the resolution of payment disputes.21 Within the East Coast Model states, a divergence has occurred between Victoria and New South Wales derived from section 85 of the Victorian Constitution Act 1975, whereby it has been held that the Victorian Building and Construction Industry Security of Payment Act 2002 does not limit the court's jurisdiction by excluding orPage 311
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7.2.3 Australia: East Coast Model
- (a) Payment schedules
- (b) Failure to pay and adjudication
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- • The ‘rubber stamp’ approach engenders intractable litigation: In a very significant proportion of cases, there is no determination on the merits at all. Statistics show that the vast majority of claims are ‘waved through’ with 100% of the sum claimed being awarded, often for technical not substantive reasons. Interstate experience demonstrates that mandating payments without assessment of the substantive merits tends to lead to the aggrieved party taking an intransigent attitude in subsequent litigation, exacerbating disputation and encouraging costly litigation.
- • No freedom to agree on adjudicators: The East Coast Model's inflexible rules relating to adjudication selection has created a parasitic industry of adjudicators with a monopoly over adjudication. This leads to:
- (1) Poor quality adjudicators;
- (2) Unhealthy forum shopping;
- (3) Inadequate processes; and
- (4) Unhealthy effect of ‘closed shop'.
- • Restrictions on hearings: Because hearings are restricted, the decisions lack finality (thereby necessitating further litigation) and promote poorer decision-making by the adjudicators.
- • Timescales: Requiring the entire adjudication process to be completed within 10 days is too short for all but the simplest of cases. This time frame gives the respondent less than a week to properly assess and respond to a claim.
- • Ambush claims: An applicant can take many months to prepare a claim but the respondent only has days to respond. This unfair practice can reinforce an intransigent approach to subsequent litigation.
- • One way street: The East Coast Model only permits damages claims allowable by way of defence, but not attack. This distorts the adjudication process and encourages subsequent litigation.
- • Exclusion of financial institutions: In recent years, there has been an explosion in tripartite agreements for construction work between financiers, head contractors and clients, driven from the Eastern states.