Disputes over extensions of time (EOT) and loss and expense (L&E) are an everyday reality of construction contracts. The often-intricate contractual procedures for such claims are a major source of these disputes. Non-compliance with what project managers, engineers or architects may regard as a “mere” formality can render ineffective a contractor’s otherwise deserving EOT or L&E claim, or an otherwise legally justifiable rejection of such claims. For all construction industry players grappling with EOT and L&E, therefore, the questions will generally be: (1) what notices must be given; (2) when they must be given; and (3) what they must contain. On 1 March 2022, the Court of Appeal of Malaysia examined some of these issues in PSI Incontrol.[1]
The parties in PSI Incontrol were a main contractor (“employer”) and a subcontractor (“contractor”) under a construction contract. The contract adopted the Conditions of Contract for Design and Build Contract PWD Form DB (PWD Form DB), a standard form of the Malaysian Public Works Department. Following certain claimed events of disruption, the contractor submitted claims against the employer for an EOT and for L&E. The Project Director (PD) granted the EOT, but not the claim for L&E. The contractor commenced court proceedings to pursue its L&E claim.
The key findings of the Court of Appeal on the PWD Form DB in this case can be summarised as follows:
EOT Finding 1: The PWD Form DB requires a contractor seeking to claim an EOT to give written notice to the PD of the cause of delay, and relevant information with supporting
documents, “forthwith” (without delay) once the claimed delay becomes “reasonably apparent”. On the facts of PSI Incontrol, the contractor’s written notice approximately one month after the claimed delay event satisfied the “forthwith” requirement.
The Court of Appeal concluded by granting the contractor’s L&E claim in full.
The outcome of PSI Incontrol is arguably contractor-friendly for parties to a PWD Form DB contract. PWD Form DB can be contrasted with other standard forms like those of PAM, IEM, and FIDIC. Below are four practical takeaways for construction industry players, including employers/developers, contractors and subcontractors, and contract administrators (“Engineers” or “Architects”):
Practically, employers/developers sometimes bargain to forgo claims for liquidated damages, in exchange for a contractor forgoing L&E claims. To record such a “bargain”, employers/developers may prefer a separate or supplemental “settlement” agreement which is expressly independent of the original contract’s EOT and L&E provisions.
The PWD Form DB’s position is positive for contractors who may be facing a continuous cause of delay and may not know their exact L&E incurred (including their own mitigation) until after practical completion. However, employers/developers without even an estimate may be left in prolonged suspense and uncertainty about the scale of the L&E ultimately payable (potentially a year or two later) which may complicate financial/cashflow planning.
REFERENCES:
1 PSI Incontrol Sdn Bhd v Ircon International Limited (Court of Appeal Civil Appeal No W- 02(NCVC)(W)-2168-11/2019, 1 March 2022) (PSI Incontrol).
2 PWD Form DB, Clause 49.1(a).
3 PAM Contract 2018 (Without Quantities), Conditions of Contract (PAM), Clause 23.1(a) and
(b) and 23.4.
4 IEM Form of Contract for Civil Engineering Works (Second Edition, July 2011, IEM. CE 2011) (IEM CE), Clause 44.2(2)(a).
5 FIDIC Conditions of Contract for Construction (Second Edition, 2017) (FIDIC Red Book), Clauses 8.5 and 20.2.
6 The Court of Appeal in PSI Incontrol was not required to discuss proof of quantum in detail. 7 IEM CE, Clauses 6.4(1)(b), 12.2(1)(b), 17.1(5)(b), 17.2(2)(b), 24.2(3)(b), 26.2(3)(b), 33.1(9)(b), 41.2(1)(b), 42.2(1)(b), 57.2(4)(b), 57.2(7)(b), 57.4(8)(b), 58.4(5)(b). See also
Clause 4.3(1).
8 PAM, Clause 24 on L&E; cf Clause 23 on EOT.
9 FIDIC Red Book, Clause 20.2.5, which uses “and/or”.
10 PAM, Clause 24.1(a).
11 IEM CE, Clause 53.1(3).
12 FIDIC Red Book, Clause 20.2.1.
13 PAM, Clause 24.1.
14 IEM CE, Clauses cited in footnote 7 above and Clause 53.1.
15 FIDIC Red Book, Clause 20.2.4.
16 IEM CE, Clause 53.3(3)–(4); FIDIC Red Book, Clause 20.2.6.