Klin engaged Barr to design and construct a number of flats. Barr commenced three adjudications against Klin, each with a different adjudicator. In the first adjudication, Barr requested a declaration that Klin had failed to serve either a payment notice or a withholding notice and claimed monies owing under Interim Application 22. Klin argued that it had served both in the form of a combined payment notice and withholding notice within the specified time, and that no money was due. The adjudicator found in Klin’s favour but did not assess Klin’s entitlement to withhold sums.
Barr commenced a second adjudication in relation to Interim Application 22 identifying the dispute as whether or not Klin was entitled to withhold/pursue LADs. The adjudicator agreed with Barr’s argument and that the LADs provision was “unworkable and void and unenforceable”. The adjudicator considered she did not have jurisdiction to consider the amount due in relation to Interim Application 22 as the amount payable had already been decided in the first adjudication.
The third adjudication concerned Interim Application 23. It was submitted after the Employer’s Final Account and Final Statement had been issued. Klin, having written to Barr disputing Barr’s right to submit an application at this stage, nevertheless and without prejudice to that position issued a payment notice for £375,600. Klin then issued a withholding notice in respect of the same amount on the basis that since the second adjudication determined that the LADs provision was not enforceable, Klin was able to claim for the actual loss suffered it suffered as a result of Barr’s late completion of the works.
Barr commenced an adjudication on the basis that £375,600, by Klin’s own admission, was due to Barr and that any actual loss Klin claimed to have suffered, if there were any loss, would be suffered by parties other than Klin who could not sue Barr.
Klin responded stating that the £375,600 had been the subject of the second adjudication which decided Barr was not entitled to recover the money. Klin argued that issuing a new Interim Application in relation to this money did not avoid the problem. The adjudicator rejected this jurisdictional challenge. Klin also argued that it was permissible for it to recover the money for other parties (in this case, a company wholly owned by Klin), even if it had suffered no direct loss itself.
The adjudicator found that: (1) the withholding notice lacked the clarity required to give Barr notice of the reasons why it was withholding payment; (2) no causative link between the breaches and loss suffered had been made apparent to Barr; and (3) the withholding notice did not state the loss was not suffered by Klin but by others; and it did not state how Klin could claim any losses on behalf another. The £375,600 was therefore due to Barr.
Barr sought enforcement of the adjudicator’s decision.
The Judge found: