Practical completion: an update

Cases about what constitutes practical completion are perhaps surprisingly rare. The term is generally understood within the construction industry to mean the stage at which the works are reasonably ready for their intended use. Jatinder Garcha looks at a dispute on a PFI project when one of the parties sought to take a prescriptive view of the contractual definition of practical completion.

The traditional view of the courts can be summarised by the words of Judge John Newey in the case of HW Neville (Sunblest) Ltd v William Press & Sun Ltd1 where the Judge said that:

“I think that the word ‘practically’ in Clause 15(1) gave the Architect a discretion to certify that William Press had fulfilled its obligation under Clause 21(1) where very minor de minimis works had not been carried out, but if there were any patent defects in what William Press had done the Architect could not have given a certificate of practical completion.”

In the earlier House of Lords’ judgment in City of Westminster v Jarvis, Viscount Dilhorne had said:

“The Contract does not define what is meant by ‘practically completed’. One would normally say that a task was practically completed when it was almost but not entirely finished; but ‘Practical Completion’ suggests that that is not the intended meaning and that what is meant is the completion of all the Construction work that had to be done.”

Recently Mr Justice Edwards Stuart had to consider the role of the independent tester in clarifying practical completion.

Laing O’Rourke Construction v Healthcare Support2

On 4 May 2005 the Newcastle upon Tyne Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust (“the Trust”) entered into an agreement (“the Project Agreement”) with Heath Support (Newcastle) Ltd (“HSN”) for the design, construction and finance of hospital facilities in Newcastle. On the same date HSN engaged Laing O’Rourke Construction Ltd (“Laing”) to design and build the facilities (“the Construction Contract”).

Under a separate contract Faithful & Gould were appointed Independent Tester and required to carry out various inspection and certification functions under the Construction Contract and the Project Agreement. The hospital facilities were divided into nine phases to be completed sequentially. Clause 22.5.1 of the Project Agreement (which was stepped down into the Construction Contract as clause 22.12) provided that:

“Pursuant to the terms of the Independent Tester Contract, the parties shall procure that the Independent Tester shall, when he is satisfied, subject to clause 22A.3.4 that completion of a Phase has occurred in accordance with the Completion Criteria, issue a Phase Certificate of Practical Completion to that effect…”

The Completion Criteria for Phase 8, which comprised office facilities for hospital staff, included fifteen particular requirements including the “Clinical offices blocks 1 and 2 being available and ready for Trust use” and “Link bridges… available and ready for use by the Trust”. As part of the completion process clause 22.5 of the Construction Contract required Laing to give the Independent Tester three months’ notice of the date on which it considered the phase would be complete “in accordance with the Trust’s Construction Requirements, the Completion Criteria and this Contract”.

During mid-2012 Laing contended that Phase 8 was complete but Faithful & Gould identified five grounds preventing the issue of the completion certificate as follows: toilet areas too small, daylight levels not meeting relevant British Standards, inadequate window restrictors, incorrect link bridge steelwork and potentially inadequate cooling systems. Laing disagreed, contending that these issues were not expressly included within the Completion Criteria. The Trust responded that under clause 22.5 of the Construction Contract completion required compliance not only with the Completion Criteria but also with the Trust’s Construction Requirements and all other terms of the Construction Contract.

The Trust therefore maintained that in assessing whether practical completion had been achieved, wider failures to meet the specifications should be taken into consideration, not just compliance with the tests expressly set out in the Completion Criteria. Laing contended that:

(i) the wording of the Project Agreement was absolutely clear so that when certifying completion the Independent Tester had to consider whether the Completion Criteria had been met and nothing else;

(ii) that there was no provision in the Project Agreement that required the Independent Tester to be satisfied that all work had been carried out strictly in accordance with the contract before completion could be certified; and

(iii) that in any event, expressions such as “available” and “ready for Trust use” should be construed as meaning that a breach of specification which did not have any materially detrimental effect on the amenity and functional use of the building should not prevent the issue of the completion certificate.

The issue

The issue at the heart of this case was whether any breach of contract relating to quality or conformity of works was grounds for preventing the issue of the completion certificate by the Independent Tester, or whether all that was required was compliance with the Completion Criteria set out in Part 2 of Schedule 12 to the Project Agreement.

The decision

As a matter of interpretation the Judge concluded that practical completion should be assessed by reference to the requirements under clause 22.5.1 of the Project Agreement, i.e. satisfaction of the Completion Criteria only. There was no justification for importing a requirement that any breach of the specification, however technical or minor, could prevent completion from being certified.

As regards Laing’s third point, the Judge held that expressions such as “available and ready for use by the Trust” were not precise but must relate to the anticipated use of the Phase 8 offices. The Independent Tester was required to ignore the parties’ disagreements and decide for himself/herself whether or not any alleged non-conformity was likely to have a materially adverse effect on the use of the building by the Trust in the manner contemplated by the agreements. If not, the Independent Tester could issue the completion certificate and leave the Trust to its remedy in damages for any such non-conformities.

Conclusion

The unsurprising conclusion of the Judge was that unless the wording of a particular contract points to a contrary conclusion, then the general rule is that practical completion can be achieved notwithstanding minor non-compliances.

The case does, however, stand as a useful reminder that the certifier must exercise professional judgement in assessing whether any non-compliances can be considered material to the intended use of the building.

Back to the previous page | Next article

  • 1. [1981] 20BLR78
  • 2. [2014] EWHC 2595 (TCC)