Contractor suing supply chain for 拢47m over alleged defects in Woolwich Tesco scheme

The outcome of a legal battle over allegedly defective cladding on a mixed-use scheme in Woolwich could trigger a wave of similar litigation, construction lawyers have said. 

At the beginning of the year, Willmott Dixon filed a suit against its supply chain on the Woolwich Central job in an effort to recoup 拢47m worth of remedial costs that followed the contractor鈥檚 settlement with the client, Tesco, last April. 

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Source: Shutterstock

The scheme at the centre of the dispute was completed in 2014

The co-defendants in the case 鈥 which include building envelope specialist Prater Ltd and its parent company Lindner Exteriors, architect Sheppard Robson, AIS surveyors and Aecom 鈥 have each set out their own view of where responsibility lies. 

While this is not the first cladding case to emerge in the wake of the Grenfell Tower Inquiry, construction lawyers say the profile of the firms involved means it could set the tone for similar disputes going forward. 

鈥淭here have been important cladding cases before, just not involving so many big names 鈥 Willmott Dixon, Tesco, Aecom, these are well-known businesses,鈥 said John Wallace, director at Ridgemont. 

鈥淓veryone is blaming each other and it鈥檚 a question of who is going to be left holding the baby,鈥 he said. 

While Aecom鈥檚 lawyers said all of the firm鈥檚 co-defendants bear some responsibility, Prater and Lindner single out Willmott Dixon and Sheppard Robson, the latter of which claims that Prater was 鈥渆xclusively鈥 responsible. 

鈥淭he interesting question is who is going to be held liable 鈥 will it be more than one defendant and if so, what will the contributions be?鈥 said Wallace, adding that a judgment in favour of Willmott Dixon could inspire other contractors to pursue their supply chain. 

Theresa Mohammed, partner at Watson Farley & Williams, said the huge public and political pressure surrounding flammable cladding may have paved the way for a more litigious environment, with contractors willing to accept the hit on remedial costs and subsequently attempting to recover them by legal means. 

鈥淸Contractors] won鈥檛 want to be associated with an unsafe building [鈥 particularly because of all the [secretary of state Michael] Gove announcements and the ramping up of the pressure and the stringent deadlines,鈥 she said. 

While Mohammed said the pressure to fix defects immediately was 鈥済ood鈥, she added that it could 鈥減rompt a lot of litigation鈥. 

鈥淏efore they have actually unravelled and assessed who is at fault, they are going to have to do all the remedial work, spend the money and sue,鈥 she said. 

Whether Willmott Dixon wins or not, the impact on the sector will be significant, Mohammed said. 

鈥淓very case like this is influential,鈥 she added. 鈥淓very judgment likes to preface itself by saying it is fact-dependent and contract-dependent but a lot of the sector use the same suites of standard forms and a lot of the sector use very similar amendments to the standard forms,鈥 she said. 

鈥淚f big contractors like Willmott Dixon get found liable for 拢47m worth of damages, that is going to send a ricochet through the sector and it will prompt a lot of contractors to behave differently, which might mean that they settle their claims earlier.鈥 

Last month, Lendlease made a AUS$200m provision to cover the cost of cladding repair work as ordered by the government on residential schemes 11m and above, most of which it said related to its former Crosby Homes business which it now no longer owns.

The figure, equivalent to around 拢115m, was revealed in its latest interim accounts and Lendlease said the number 鈥渄oes not include anticipated recoveries from third parties, including insurances and supply chain. We will be working to maximise third party recoveries.鈥

And Morgan Sindall confirmed last month it was making a 拢49m provision to carry out cladding repair work required by government legislation. In its results the firm said the amount 鈥渄oes not include the benefit of any potential income subsequently received for recoveries from third parties鈥.