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Checklists for Adjudication
(Subject to specific rules)
Drafting the Notice of Adjudication
- Have you described the disputes sufficiently well for it to be
clear.
- What the issues are?
- What experience the adjudicator should have had?
- Who is involved in the dispute?
- Have you described the circumstances giving rise to the dispute?
- Have you stated clearly what decision you want?
- Have you included the names of all parties to the contract?
- Have you sent the Notice of Adjudication to all parties to the
contract?
Adjudicator Selection and the Referral
Notice
- If an adjudicator is not named in the contract is there a person
named in the contract to select an adjudicator?
- If not, the Referring Party chooses an ANB and applies for a
selection.
- Nominating bodies must make a selection within 5 days.
- The Receiving Party cannot object to a selection.
- Prospective adjudicators must confirm within 2 days that they
are able and willing to accept the appointment.
- The Referral Notice is the Referring Party’s full statement of
his case.
- The Referral Notice should contain:
- All the information he wishes to bring to the attention of the
adjudicator.
- Proposals on the timetable for the adjudication.
- Proposals for any joining of disputes.
- A copy of the Notice of Adjudication.
Receipt of a Referral Notice by the Receiving
Party
- On receipt of the Notice of Adjudication:
- Check that whether you have an adjudication clause in the
contract.
- If so, check whether it complies.
- If not, check that the Act applies to your contract.
- If so, check that the Notice of Adjudication is valid.
- When the Referral Notice arrives:
- Check its contents comply with the Notice of Adjudication.
- Answer each point made in it with a denial, acceptance or
comment.
- Keep your alternative arguments separate from the responses to
the Referral Notice.
- Criticise all figures including those when you consider there is
no entitlement.
- Always aim to assist the adjudicator.
- Send a copy of all you send to the adjudicator to all other
parties.
Procedure.
- The time periods start when the Adjudicator receives the
Referral Notice.
- The Referral Notice should contain all the information the
Referring party wishes the adjudicator to have.
- The Referring Party should suggest in the Referral Notice any
procedures he wishes to be adopted.
- The Receiving Party should inform the adjudicator how long he
requires to reply, and any other procedures he wishes to be
adopted.
- The adjudicator:
- Will set the procedure for the adjudication when he receives
the Referral Notice.
- Can take the initiative in ascertaining the facts and the law.
- Will make his decision in accordance with the contractual
right of the parties.
- Can take any failure to comply with his directions into
account when making his decision.
- May make his decision when he think he has enough information.
- Can, after informing the parties, seek take advice from third
parties.
The Decision
- The adjudicator must decide all the matters in dispute.
- The adjudicator must reach his decision within the allotted
time.
- If he fails to do so the Referring Party may issue another
Notice of Adjudication.
- The adjudicator will not be entitled to any payment.
- The adjudicator can only decide matters not in the Notice of
Adjudication if
- the parties agree, and/or
- they are necessarily connected to the dispute.
- The adjudicator may open up, revise and review any decision,
certificate issued under the contract unless that decision is
stated to be final and conclusive.
- If requested by one of the parties, the adjudicator must give
reasons for his decision.
- There is no power to revise or correct a decision once made.
The Effects of the Decision
- The parties must comply with the decision of the Adjudicator.
- The decision is binding until the dispute is finally resolved by
arbitration, litigation or agreement.
- The adjudicator may order the parties to comply peremptorily
with his decision.
- Failure to comply with a peremptory order permits the courts to
enforce the decision.
- The adjudicator can state a final date for payment in his
decision.
- Failure to pay by the final date for payment entitles a party to
issue a notice of intention to suspend performance.
- The payer then has 7 days in which to pay in full.
Payment of the Adjudicator
- The adjudicator will normally be entitled to be paid his fees
and expenses reasonably incurred.
- The adjudicator can allocate the proportion of his fees and
expenses that each party bears.
- If the adjudicator resigns he will be entitled to payment if he
resigns because:
- The dispute is similar to one that has already been referred to
adjudication, or
- The dispute varies significantly from the one in the referral
notice and consequently he feels incompetent to deal with it.
- If the adjudicator resigns for other reasons he is not entitled
to any payment.
- The parties may revoke the appointment of the adjudicator at any
time.
- If his appointment is revoked he is entitled to fees and
expenses reasonably incurred.
- The adjudicator may apportion such fees and expenses between the
parties.
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