"Mr Hyam submits that, where the factual matrix demonstrates an intention on both sides to be bound by written contractual terms of a building contract, the subject matter of which is certain and evidenced by extensive communications between the parties; where the work is complete but there remains a residual dispute as to the terms under which the work was carried out, an adjudicator or judge is entitled to conclude that there is no realistic prospect of the defendants establishing that there was no contract in existence, and thus no jurisdiction of the adjudicator to adjudicate. I agree that a judge would be entitled so to conclude in appropriate circumstances, but I do not consider that these are such circumstances. It seems to be at least arguable either that there was a contract here, but upon JCT Prime Costs Terms, or, perhaps more likely, that there was no concluded written construction contract. The judge's recitation of the facts and the analytic contortions evidenced in paragraphs 30 and 31 of his judgment, including his characterisation of the situation as "a construction contract whose terms cannot be readily ascertained" suggests to me a real possibility that there was no written construction contract."
He did not accept that the identification of the precise terms of the construction contract was a "matter of detail which did not impinge the existence of the contract...". A submission that Lord Justice May considered was "palm tree contractual analysis."
The appeal was allowed and the Judge's order set aside. Lady Justice Hale agreed, as did Mr Justice Hooper. Lady Justice Hale added:
"...my view is that the most likely analysis of the legal relationship between the parties was either a contract or a quasi-contractual claim under which, the price not having been agreed, a quantum meruit was payable. Neither of those analyses is a contract in writing under the Section 107, and accordingly Section 108 did not apply"