DD12: Quantifying delay costs – an introduction
Robert Gemmell is a Partner and Co-founder of DD Quantum Expert and is also a Director at DD Quantum Expert Services.
This article, DD12, introduces the quantification of delay costs. To access my previous 11 articles, and others, please click on the following link: DD Blogs.
Delay costs
Generally, it is the contractor who claims delay costs from the employer due to delay which is an employer-risk delay,[1] with the basis of the claim being that:
· the work took longer to complete than it would have done as a result of the alleged delay; and
· the contractor incurred additional costs which it would not have incurred had it not been delayed.
It is more usual to assess the contractor’s financial entitlement due to delay on the basis of cost, that is, loss and/or expense under the contract or damages at common law. However, the parties may have instead agreed a ‘delay rate’ or the contract may provide for ‘reasonable rates’ or other to apply, for example, where the delay is assessed pursuant to the variation provisions of the contract as opposed to the loss and expense provisions.[2]
I will assume for the purposes of this article that the contractor’s entitlement is to loss and expense / actual cost.
Claim under the contract or for common law damages?
When a contractor makes a claim for delay costs, it may be necessary to distinguish between:
· a claim made under the contract pursuant to a term, or terms, of the contract; and
· a claim for a breach of contract where the contract does not provide a means of recovery in which case the contractor’s claim would be for damages at common law.
Most modern construction contracts provide a remedy by an express term which otherwise would have been subject to a contractor’s claim for common law damages for breach of contract. Clear words will be required in the contract to exclude a claim for common law damages[3] and contractual rights are generally in addition to a common law remedy.[4]
The purpose of damages is to, as far as money can, put the party who has suffered a breach of contract in the same position as it would have been in had the breach had not occurred.[5] Note, however, that the injured party is not entitled to an amount that would leave it in a better position.[6] Damages are therefore compensatory, although there is a limit to the amount of loss that can be recovered based on whether the loss is “too remote”.[7]
Duty to mitigate loss
A contractor suffering loss and/or expense due to delay has a duty to take reasonable steps, but no more, to mitigate its loss and/or expense. Insofar as the loss and/or expense could have been mitigated but was not, there is no entitlement to recover that loss and/or expense.[8] Any loss and/or expense incurred as a result of taking those reasonable steps may also be recoverable.[9] It is also for the employer to prove that the contractor failed to mitigate,[10] although it will obviously be prudent for the contractor to show that it did mitigate.
Critical and non-critical delay
A claim for delay costs may be in relation to critical and non-critical delay insofar as the costs claimed are recoverable.
Most, if not all, standard form construction contracts give the contractor an entitlement to an extension of time and delay damages where the employer causes delay to the project completion date. However, there may be delays not caused by the employer but, under the contract, the employer takes the risk for time but not for loss and/or expense suffered, for example, force majeure events.
Even though a contractor will not be entitled to an extension of time for delay to a non-critical activity (on the basis that there will be no delay to the project/contract completion date), a contractor may suffer loss and/or expense due to the increased time taken to complete that non-critical activity. This is because, although the date for completion may not have been impacted by the delay, the time-related resources in relation to that activity may have been affected. Many contracts do not give the contractor an entitlement to further payment for loss and/or expense due to non-critical delay and therefore the claim would have to be made for general damages at common law.
However, in CMC v WICET,[11] CMC was successful in its recovery of financial loss as a result of delay to a non-critical activity caused by a series of directions issued by WICET and valued as a variation.
Calculation of delay costs – the primary heads of claim
A contractor’s claim for delay costs is generally made under the following heads:
1. Direct labour costs;
2. Preliminaries (site overheads/indirect job costs);
3. Claims from subcontractors;
4. Off-site/Head office overheads;
5. Loss of profit;
6. Increased costs of resources/inflation; and
7. Finance charges and interest.
In a loss and expense claim under the contract, or a general damages claim at common law, a contractor is generally entitled to reimbursement of the additional costs and/or loss it has suffered and no more.[12] The contractor must demonstrate, on the balance of probabilities, the additional costs and/or loss it has suffered.
My next article will examine each of the above heads of claim.
Keeping records
The contractor claiming loss and/or expense due to delay will need to identify and record the labour, plant and administration costs incurred in relation to the delayed activities and cross-reference these costs to the amounts claimed.
In relation to demonstrating the loss and/or expense incurred, it is therefore necessary for a contractor to set up its cost recording system in a way that will to show the loss and/or expense suffered and importantly ‘why’ the loss and/or expense claimed was incurred.
Modern construction accounting systems allow the contractor to record costs in such a way. The key is being able to assess the recoverable amount which is why a contractor needs to know ‘why’ costs were incurred and not just simply that costs were incurred.
It will be necessary for a contractor to be able to separately identify the head office, administrative and support costs caused by an instructed change and/or breach of contract where the basis of assessment is actual loss and/or expense suffered. If these costs cannot be separated from the costs the contractor would have incurred had there been no delay, the contractor will find it almost impossible to separate the costs it has incurred through its own mistakes and/or mismanagement. The contractor will therefore be unable, or at the very least find it very difficult, to demonstrate the amount it is entitled to and recover the amount for which the employer would otherwise be liable.
Next article
My next articles on delay costs will examine each head of a delay cost claim.
Finally
If you have any queries in relation to any matter in these articles, or any other issue, please do not hesitate to contact us: [email protected]
Access to articles
This and previously published DD articles are:
DD01: Why is it necessary to distinguish between delay and disruption? What’s the distinction?
DD02: A global claim is doomed to fail, unless…
DD03: Comply with the notice provisions in the contract, or else…
DD04: ‘Prevention’ causing ‘time at large’: what does this all mean?
DD05: Float: what is float, who owns the float and how is float different to contingency?
DD06: Construction project delays 101 – plus concurrency!
DD07: What is concurrent delay? An overview
DD08: Concurrent delay: it is not parallelism or pacing
DD09: Concurrent delay and the prevention principle
DD10: Approaches to assess contributory causes of delay and additional cost
DD11: Concurrent Delay and the AS Forms
DD12: Quantifying delay costs – an introduction
To access any of the above articles please click on please click on the following link: DD Blogs.
About DD Quantum Expert & DD Quantum Expert Services
Under DD Quantum Expert Services the author offers his usual services, being expert witness, arbitrator, expert determiner, dispute board member, adjudicator, claims preparation and analysis, and his general dispute avoidance / resolution advice to contractor and employer organizations.
DD Quantum Expert is a separate company and was set up to develop an App that, using the data inputted by the user, quantifies a contractor’s entitlement to delay and disruption costs. DD Quantum Expert also carries out research on a world-wide basis on how delay and disruption costs are being assessed by other recognized industry experts (for example, many of the quantum experts recognized by Who’s Who Legal), expert advisors and consultants to contractor and employer organisations and construction lawyers, and this research can soon accessed by viewing the research page on the DD Quantum Expert website (www.ddquantumexpert.com).
The DD Quantum Expert website also has a library and a blog page. The library page lists and provides a summary of the cases that are applicable to each head of a delay and disruption claim plus more. The blog page provides all the articles the author has posted on LinkedIn.
[1] Delays for which the employer takes the time and financial risks under the contract.
[2] See Civil Mining & Construction Pty Ltd v Wiggins Island Coal Export Terminal Pty Ltd [2017] QSC 85
[3] Holloway v Chancery Mead [2007] EWHC 2495 (TCC); (2007) 117 Con LR 30 at 57.
[4] Modern Engineering v Gilbert Ash [1974] AC 689 (HL).
[5] Victoria Laundry Ltd v Newman Ltd [1949] 2 KB 528 at 528 (CA).
[6] C&P Haulage v Middleton [1983] 1 WLR 1561 at 1467 (CA).
[7] Hadley v Baxendale (1854) 9 Ex 341. For further explanation on remoteness of damages see Stephen Furst and Vivian Ramsey, Keating on Construction Contracts (10th ed, Sweet & Maxwell, 2016), [9-004]–[9-017].
[8] British Westinghouse v Underground Railways Co [1912] AC 673 at 689 (HL).
[9] British Westinghouse v Underground Railways Co [1912] AC 673 at 691 (HL).
[10] British Westinghouse v Underground Railways Co [1912] AC 673 at 673 (HL).
[11] Civil Mining & Construction Wiggins Island Coal Export Terminal [2017] QSC 85
[12] The rule as to what is recoverable as damages in contract is known as the rule in Hadley v Baxendale (1854) 9 Ex 341 and reference should be made to this case and Victoria Laundry [1949] 2 KB 528.
Adjudicator and Dispute Resolver
3 年Well done Robert, thanks.
Looking forward to receiving my first navy passport
3 年Thank you for posting.
Expert Delay Analyst & Quantum Consultant
3 年Good clear article. But first you have to establish your entitlement. Get the time award before claiming costs. On international projects I would include a cost head on currency exchange rates. Also I would welcome a discussion on Hudson. I have been successful twice on this heading but I accept that it is usually included as a negotiation give away. I look forward to the rest of your articles.