Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Changes to the Construction Act
- Local Democracy, Economic Development and Construction Act 2009 comes into force on 1 October 2011
- Act amends the existing Housing Grants, Construction and Regeneration Act 1996 known as the Construction Act
- improve payment practices within the UK construction industry
- Scheme for Construction Contracts (England and Wales) Regulations 1998 is the secondary legislation which supplements the construction Act
- Scheme has also been amended
- All contracts entered into after 1 October will be governed by the amended Act
- 3 main changes
- Unwritten contracts
- provisions of the Construction Act have in the past applied only to construction contracts entered into “in writing”
- 1 October 2011 this restriction will no longer apply.
- any construction contract made orally or part-orally, as well as in writing, will be covered by the Construction Act.
- Adjudication procedures
- result of the changes, disputes arising from oral or part-oral
contracts may be referred to adjudication
- Parties should also take care to ensure that pre-contract
negotiations are marked as being “subject to contract”
- Adjudication agreement must be “in writing”
- if there is a written contract
- must satisfy each of the nine requirements for adjudication
- timetable to secure adjudicator and refer the
dispute within 7 days of such notice;
- adjudicator to reach a decision
within 28 days of referral (or
such longer period as is agreed
by the parties)
- adjudicator to extend the period of 28 days
by up to 14 days with the consent of the
referring party
- Impose a duty on the
adjudicator to act
impartially;
- adjudicator to take the initiative in
ascertaining the facts and the law
- decision of the adjudicator is binding until the
dispute is finally determined by legal proceedings
or arbitration or by agreement
- adjudicator is not liable for anything done or omitted
in his role as adjudicator unless the act or omission
is in bad faith
- adjudicator to correct his decision so as to
remove a clerical or typographical error caused
by accident or omission
- Under the revised Scheme, the adjudicator must correct
the decision within 5 days of delivery of the decision to
the parties.
- if each and every one of these requirements are not agreed in writing
- all of Part 1 of the Construction Scheme will apply by default.
- Enable a party to give notice at any time of
its intention to refer a dispute to
adjudication;
- Timetable
- Scheme now
clarifies
- 28 day period for
adjudication runs
from the date the
adjudicator receives
the referral notice
and not the date of
dispatch by the
referring part
- Costs
- clause allocating parties’ liability for the costs of
adjudication will be ineffective subject to two
exceptions
- Parties may give the adjudicator power
to determine who pays his fees and
expenses
- Parties may agree the allocation of
adjudication costs but only after the
notice of intention to refer has been
issued
- clause for payee or referring party to pay all of
the payer’s or responding party’s legal costs +
adjudicator’s fees and expenses = outlaw
- Payment terms
- payment provisions within the Construction Act have been rewritten
- Adequate Payment mechanism
- Act requires every construction contract to contain an
adequate mechanism for determining when payments
become due under the contract
- from 1/10/11 any contract which determines date for payment by
reference to a notice given to the payee by the payer is not an
“adequate mechanism'
- Pay-when-certified and pay-when-paid clauses
- prohibit “pay when certified” clauses pursuant to which
payment is due only upon certification of payment
under another contract
- only exception is where the clause is contained in a contract
providing for construction work by others as is the case with Man
Contracting
- A “pay when paid” is clause is permitted were a payer is not paid due
to another payer’s insolvency (known as “upstream insolvency”)
- Payment Notices
- new system of payment notices has
been introduced
- payer must send notice to the payee of the sum considered
due at the payment due date and the basis on which that sum
is calculated
- notice must be given even if the sum due is zero
- if the payer does not send notice
within 5 days of the due date
- payee to send its own payment
notice or default payment notice
- if the payee has submitted an application for
payment before the date on which the payer’s
notice was required
- no requirement for a second notice.
- application for interim payment
will act as the payee’s notice