"(a) Where a person acts as an arbitrator then by accepting the appointment, that person is entitled to reasonable remuneration from the parties for work done;
(b) Where a person acts as an arbitrator then the parties are jointly and severally liable for that person's fees and expenses;
(c) Where a person acts as arbitrator but does not have jurisdiction then that person may have a claim based on the fact that the useless work was carried out at the request of the parties or one of them.
I see no reason why those general principles should not apply to a person who is appointed as an adjudicator under express or implied contractual provisions for adjudication."
However, when there is a jurisdictional challenge the situation differs and a party has two options. First, it can make an assertion of lack of jurisdiction and withdraw, taking no further part in the adjudication proceedings and leaving the adjudicator and other party to proceed at their risk. In such circumstances, in the absence of any agreement with the adjudicator, it would be difficult to make that party liable for the adjudicator's fees and expenses.
Secondly, a party can make an assertion of lack of jurisdiction but continue to participate in the proceedings without prejudice to that contention. By participating in this way, whilst the party is not giving the adjudicator jurisdiction to make a binding decision, it is requesting that the adjudicator carry out the work and make a decision. Should the adjudicator make a decision, and in fact, have jurisdiction to make it, then there is no reason why the mere fact of the erroneous jurisdictional challenge should change the position. If there is a valid jurisdictional challenge and if a party has not participated in the adjudication then the party can have no liability for the adjudicator's fees. If, however, the party participated in the adjudication process, despite raising jurisdictional issues and continuing on a without prejudice basis, that party would generally be liable for the reasonable fees and expenses of the adjudicator. The Judge also stressed that this was a matter of contract between the adjudicator and the relevant party, and that should the adjudicator not have jurisdiction this would nullify any decision made by him. This would preclude one party from recovering from the other any sums based on the adjudicator's allocation of fees and expenses contained in the invalid decision.
Halliwells had invited Mr Linnett to adjudicate on the merits, albeit reserving their position on jurisdiction. Thus, Mr Linnett was proceeding with the adjudication at the request of both parties, and was therefore entitled to his reasonable fees and expenses. Further, there was no basis upon which Halliwells could resist enforcement of the adjudicator's decision by relying on an oral variation. The Judge held the following:
"In my judgment therefore, whether or not the Adjudicator had jurisdiction Halliwells are liable to pay the Adjudicator his reasonable fees and expenses of conducting the adjudication and are jointly and severally liable to the adjudicator for the payment of such reasonable fees and expenses with ISG, whose liability is limited to the fees and expenses agreed with the Adjudicator, as set out above."
It was also considered whether Mr Linnett may be able to enforce the provisions of the JCT contract under s.1(1)(b) of the Contracts (Rights of Third Parties) Act 1999, on the basis that a provision of the JCT contract purported to confer a benefit on him. The Judge considered the case of David Cartwright -v- Lydia Fay and concluded that the 1999 Act was not available to Mr Linnett in this case.
Counsel for Mr Linnett argued that the conduct in subsequent adjudication was also of relevance. In the second adjudicator's decision, Halliwells relied on the decision made in the first adjudication. The Judge held that:
"…Halliwells would have been prevented from approbating and reprobating the Decision of the Adjudicator. Having relied on it for the purpose of the Second Adjudication, and having obtained the benefit of that decision in the Second Decision, I do not consider that Halliwells could now assert that the Adjudicator did not have jurisdiction to make the Decision."