A Helpful Guide to Adjudication for Contractors
Costigan King
Full Service Commercial Law Firm | Construction | Energy | Fintech | Gaming | Dispute Resolution | Corporate
This guide aims to provide contractors and subcontractors with a practical overview of adjudication to assist them in navigating the process in the event of a dispute.
What is Adjudication?
Adjudication gives the parties to a construction contract (as defined by statute) the right to have a dispute decided by an adjudicator.? Its guiding principle is to recognise that cashflow is "the very lifeblood of the construction industry”.? It is intended to put "broadly the right amount of money in the right pocket" quickly and cheaply pending a final determination of the dispute.? Introduced by the Housing Grants Construction and Regeneration Act 1996 (“the Act”), its prominent features are:
?
Initiating an Adjudication
?
Applicable Rules?
Unless the parties have agreed the rules to be applied in an adjudication, the Scheme for Construction Contracts (England and Wales) Regulations 1998, as amended apply. The parties may, for example, incorporate their own rules into their underlying contract: but they must comply with the Act.?
?
The Adjudication Process
领英推荐
?
Decision
The adjudicator must issue a decision within 28 days of the Referral Notice, unless the Referring Party agrees to a 14-day extension.
The adjudicator’s decision is binding and must be complied with immediately, even if a dissatisfied party intends to challenge it through arbitration or litigation later.
?
Pros and Cons
Adjudication offers a much swifter and (often) cheaper resolution of disputes, and a route to money, than arbitration or litigation.? Although adjudicators' decisions can be reversed, they have to be honoured in the meantime, and the reality, in practice, is that most decisions are not in fact challenged. ?Further, each side bearing its own costs, the risks of proceeding and losing are minimised, and it becomes commercially possible to advance cases which might be too low in value to start off in litigation or arbitration.
Downsides are that there is no limit on the size of adjudication which can be brought.? Therefore, costs can be quite high but are irrecoverable.? Also, the limited timescale means that decisions can amount to "rough justice" and, since the referring party dictates the timing of commencement, a respondent can be ambushed with large amounts of material to process and respond to in an unrealistically short time.? It has also been noted that there is a very great variety of quality of adjudicator.? The reported cases show that some produce decisions which are just plain wrong; but they are nevertheless held to be valid if the correct process was followed.
The process is highly technical, and time-limits are absolute.? For example, applying for an adjudicator to be nominated before serving a Notice of Adjudication invalidates the entire process. Taking professional advice is strongly recommended.
?
For advice on construction disputes, please contact Julian Critchlow at [email protected]
?
?
https://www.costiganking.com/insights-2/adjudication-guide-for-contractors