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Blue Chip Development Corporation (Cairns) Pty Ltd v van Dieman [2009] FCA 117 (13 February 2009)
Last Updated: 23 February 2009
FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
Blue Chip Development Corporation
(Cairns) Pty Ltd v van Dieman
[2009] FCA 117
PRACTICE & PROCEDURE – legislative
scheme for progress payments under construction contracts – challenge to
validity of State legislation – whether
balance of convenience favours
grant of interlocutory relief – monetary adjustment available if
application succeeds –
weakness of challenge to validity of State
legislation also relevant to whether an injunction should be granted.
Building and Construction Industry Payments Act
2004 (Qld) s 100
Federal Court of Australia Act 1976 (Cth) s
22
Judiciary Act 1903 (Cth) s 78B
Trade Practices Act 1974
(Cth) s 45D
Bullock v Federated Furnishing Trade Society of
Australasia (1985) 5 FCR 464
Carantinos v Magafas [2008] FCA 1107
Mobileworld Operating Pty Ltd v Telstra Corporation Limited [2005]
FCA 1365
Wilson Parking Australia 1992 Pty Ltd v rush [2008] FCA 1601
BLUE CHIP DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION (CAIRNS) PTY
LTD v NICCO VAN DIEMAN, IAN ERICSON TRADING AS FLEA'S CONCRETING and ALAN
STAPLETON
ACD 4 of 2009
BUCHANAN J
13 FEBRUARY 2009
SYDNEY
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IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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AUSTRALIAN CAPITAL TERRITORY DISTRICT
REGISTRY
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BLUE CHIP DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION (CAIRNS) PTY
LTDApplicant
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AND:
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NICCO VAN DIEMANFirst
Respondent
IAN ERICSON TRADING AS FLEA'S CONCRETING Second
Respondent
ALAN STAPLETON Third Respondent
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DATE OF ORDER:
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WHERE MADE:
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THE COURT ORDERS THAT:
- The
notice of motion is dismissed with costs.
Note: Settlement and entry of orders is dealt with in Order 36 of
the Federal Court Rules.
The text of entered orders can be located using
eSearch on the Court’s website.
IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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AUSTRALIAN CAPITAL TERRITORY DISTRICT
REGISTRY
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ACD 4 of 2009
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BETWEEN:
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BLUE CHIP DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION
(CAIRNS) PTY LTD
Applicant
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AND:
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NICCO VAN DIEMAN
First Respondent
IAN ERICSON TRADING AS FLEA'S CONCRETING
Second Respondent
ALAN STAPLETON
Third Respondent
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JUDGE:
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BUCHANAN J
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DATE:
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13 FEBRUARY 2009
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PLACE:
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SYDNEY
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
BUCHANAN J:
- The
matter being dealt with today concerns an application for an interlocutory
injunction. It arises in part from the operation of
the Building and
Construction Industry Payments Act 2004 (Qld) (“the BCIP Act”).
The BCIP Act established a system for entitlement to progress payments for
construction work
performed under construction contracts in Queensland. It
established a statutory regime for making claims, for responding to those
claims
and for the prompt determination of such claims. It limits the matters which an
adjudicator appointed under the BCIP Act
may take into account in dealing with
such claims. It also limits the extent to which, in proceedings to set aside an
adjudication,
there may be other matters raised for attention. But in
s 100 it expressly provides that nothing in the provisions to which
I have
referred affects rights under a construction contract or in civil proceedings
concerning a construction contract. Section 100
also provides that:
“(3) In any proceedings before a court or tribunal in relation to any
matter arising under a construction contract, the court
or tribunal –
(a) must allow for any amount paid to a party to the
contract under or for part 3 in any order or award it makes in those
proceedings;
and
(b) may make the orders it considers appropriate for the restitution of any
amount so paid, and any other orders it considers appropriate,
having regard to
its decision in the proceedings.”
- The
proceedings in this Court were commenced by application and statement of claim
each filed on 30 January 2009. The applicant
(“Blue Chip
Development”) appears from its statement of claim to have entered into a
contract with the second respondent
(“Flea’s Concreting”) to
carry out some contract concreting works. It is apparent that Blue Chip
Development and
Flea’s Concreting fell into disagreement. The first
respondent to the proceedings is said to be a subcontractor to Flea’s
Concreting but has played no part in the proceedings before me and is not
affected by the relief which is sought at the present time.
The third
respondent is an adjudicator who was appointed under the BCIP Act to deal with
the claim made by Flea’s Concreting
against Blue Chip Development for
progress payments.
- The
proceedings before the adjudicator were commenced on 6 January 2009.
Thereafter both parties participated in the adjudication,
each making
submissions to which the adjudicator referred in a decision made by him which is
dated 2 February 2009. The claim
made by Flea’s Concreting was for a
sum in the order of $3.5 million. In due course, and as explained by reasons
given in
his 56 page determination, the adjudicator found that Blue Chip
Development should pay Flea’s Concreting a sum in the order
of $250,000
referrable to matters which were identified and discussed in the determination.
There were a significant number of payments
claimed by Flea’s Concreting
which were disallowed.
- In
the first instance, Blue Chip Development sought an ex parte interlocutory
injunction from this Court. That application was dealt
with by the duty judge,
Bennett J, on 3 February 2009. Bennett J, on that day, granted an
injunction restraining the third
respondent from publishing or handing down his
adjudication prior to 4 pm on Friday 6 February 2009.
- It
appears that the adjudicator took the view that he had made his decision before
the order came into effect. Be that as it may,
there was no restraint upon
publication of the adjudication after the time identified in the Court’s
order, namely 4 pm on
Friday 6 February 2009, as no continuing
order appears to have been sought. The matter came before me today upon
a
different footing. On this occasion Blue Chip Development sought an order
restraining Flea’s Concreting from taking steps
to enforce the
adjudication.
- The
statement of claim pleads reliance upon section 45D of the Trade
Practices Act 1974 (Cth) and also seeks to raise a constitutional matter,
with respect to which, on the same day, notice was given under section 78B
of the Judiciary Act 1903 (Cth). The constitutional matter said to be
raised by the proceedings in this Court is to the effect that certain provisions
in the
BCIP Act are invalid for reason of inconsistency with s 22 of the
Federal Court of Australia Act 1976 (Cth). Section 22 of the Federal
Court of Australia Act grants to this Court power to grant all remedies to
which parties appear to be entitled, so that as far as possible matters in
controversy
may be completely and finally determined. It is a grant of power
rather than of jurisdiction (see e.g. Carantinos v Magafas [2008] FCA
1107 at [3]).
- It
appears that the application for the order which was sought from the Duty Judge
on 3 February 2009 rested upon the contention that
the adjudicator was about to
act outside his statutory authority for the reason that the provisions which
invested him with authority
were said to be ultra vires. That is not how the
matter has been advanced today. Today, the application for an interlocutory
injunction
is put upon the foundation that Blue Chip Development has an equity,
consisting of a claim for liquidated damages, which would be
pursued in an
accounting which was sought as part of the relief in the proceedings in this
Court. It was argued that the existence
of that equity is justification for an
injunction to restrain Flea’s Concreting from enforcing the adjudication
which it has
obtained under the BCIP Act.
- In
my view, there is no sufficient foundation for this Court to interfere, at this
point in time at least, with the operation of the
statutory scheme established
by the BCIP Act. Assuming for the purpose of this judgment that an arguable
case might exist that Blue
Chip Development has a claim for liquidated damages
against Flea’s Concreting (as to which I say nothing more than making the
assumption), I am not satisfied that the balance of convenience requires any
injunctive relief.
- Blue
Chip Development relies upon affidavits sworn by its Managing Director, Sidney
Charles Knell, and another officer, John William
Gates. Mr Knell’s
affidavit makes it plain that resistance to satisfying the adjudication lies in
the commercial interests
of Blue Chip Development and the fact that it is at the
moment financially extended. Not only does a claim based simply on the
commercial
inconvenience to one party, as against the other, not provide a
sufficient justification for the grant of an injunction in the present
case, it
tends to emphasise that any adjustment of the position of the parties which is
necessary at the conclusion of the proceedings
may satisfactorily proceed by
reference to a monetary adjustment rather than the necessity to restrain the
exercise of rights under
State legislation.
- The
same consideration applies to the possibility that the constitutional argument
might succeed, with the result that the BCIP Act
is declared to be invalid to
any extent. The contention upon which the latter argument rests appears to me
to be extremely weak.
Had the injunction been sought today upon that
foundation, the weakness of the argument would have been another factor against
the
grant of such an injunction (see e.g. Bullock v Federated Furnishing
Trade Society of Australasia (1985) 5 FCR 464 at 472; Mobileworld
Operating Pty Ltd v Telstra Corporation Limited [2005] FCA 1365 at [20] and
Wilson Parking Australia 1992 Pty Ltd v Rush [2008] FCA 1601 at [38]).
If in due course the contention succeeds and the adjudication is set aside then,
again, there may be a sufficient monetary adjustment
to do justice between the
parties.
- In
the circumstances, I am not prepared to grant the injunctive relief which is
sought. The notice of motion will be dismissed.
Flea’s Concreting has
sought costs. Counsel for Blue Chip Development accepted that he could not
resist an order for costs.
Accordingly the notice of motion will be dismissed
with costs.
- It
is not necessary to deal with a notice of motion which Flea’s Concreting
desired to advance because the notice of motion
sought to strike out certain of
the pleadings relating to the constitutional issue, which was not the foundation
for the relief sought
today. That may receive further attention in due
course.
- I
should say one further thing. All of the parties in this litigation are located
in Queensland. Blue Chip Development, for reasons
concerned with its own
convenience, commenced the proceedings in the ACT Registry. The proceedings
have to date been dealt with
from Sydney by duty judges in response to the
urgent nature of the applications which have been made. In the ordinary course
of
events, the proceedings will be listed for directions
on 23 February 2009 in Canberra. The parties should be prepared
at
that time to address the question of whether the proceedings should be retained
in the ACT Registry or transferred to the Queensland
Registry of this Court.
Further steps in the proceedings may include consideration of whether they
should be retained within this
Court at all or dealt with in some other court.
- The
order of the Court will be:
The notice of the motion is dismissed
with costs.
I certify that the preceding fourteen (14)
numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of the
Honourable
Justice Buchanan.
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Associate:
Dated: 20 February 2009
Counsel for the
Applicant:
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Solicitor for the Applicant:
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S & T Lawyers
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Counsel for the Respondents:
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Mr Donning with Mr Beacham
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Solicitor for the Respondents:
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Holding Redlich Lawyers
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