1. That there was no agreement as required by Section 107 of the Act;
2. MJ no longer had a right to adjudicate as it had been repudiated; and
3. MJ’s Notice of Adjudication was an abuse of process as the issues between the parties had been settled.
HHJ Havery QC held:
1. That Connex’s instruction to proceed with the work in the minutes of the meeting of 15th September 2000 constituted an acceptance of MJ’s tender. The minutes were in writing and were therefore sufficient evidence within Section 107 (4) of the Act;
2. It was well established that adjudication can occur after completion of the works. The right to adjudicate at any time survived repudiation as would an arbitration clause; and
3. The 11th February 2002 letter was not particularly clear and did not relate to an existing claim. It could not, therefore, amount to a settlement agreement. As a result MJ’s Notice of Adjudication was not an abusive process.
He therefore declined to make the declarations sought.