The Environmental & Process Engineering Group sank after 47 years in business last November

A Southampton-based M&E contractor which collapsed last autumn was felled by a series of payment disputes, an administrator鈥檚 report has said.

The Environmental & Process Engineering Group (TEPE), which traded under the name Working Environments Ltd, sank into administration last November after 47 years in business.

Begbies Traynor was called in towards the end of November and a progress report filed last month has now detailed the extent of the payment wrangles TEPE found itself in towards the end of its existence.

money

Source: Shutterstock

By the time administrators were called in, TEPE was in dispute over hundreds of thousands of pounds

The administrators said the firm had 30 members of staff had worked on 115 schemes at the time of its collapse and had made a 拢1.4m pre-tax profit on turnover of 拢36m in the year to September 2021.

But the report said the firm was expecting this to have fallen by around a third to 拢27m for the following year after four schemes were deferred and a main contractor went bust on a job it was working on in Bristol.

And it also laid out the scale of the disputes it was having to deal with, with the firm facing a series of payment bust-ups running into hundreds of thousands of pounds.

TEPE faced a shortfall on a hotel scheme on which it had been expected to generate revenue of more than 拢400,000 a month for five months from November last year.

But Begbies Traynor said TEPE initially received a payment certificate for 拢150,000 less than expected. A settlement was 鈥渞eluctantly鈥 agreed at 拢210,000 in order to generate cash but only 拢150,000 was received.

It also had an insurance claims dispute with 拢291,000 outstanding but, the report said, 鈥渘o monies were received鈥 while a 拢150,000 payment on another contract it had been expecting in the first week of November was delayed into the following month.

A further 拢106,000 that it had been expecting in the middle of that month 鈥渨as no longer expected to be received鈥 because of a dispute with a contractor.

And Begbies Traynor said a job in Birmingham was also at the centre of a dispute with TEPE on which it was expecting a 拢550,000 payment for work in September but was only handed 拢28,000. A revised payment certificate was issued after a challenge by the firm 鈥 but it was still 拢180,000 off the expected figure.

It was also facing a 拢5.6m payless claim for liquidated ascertained damages in relation to delays on a job in central London. 鈥淭his is despite the group being largely successful in arbitration proceedings relating to extension of time claims in 2021 and 2022,鈥 the report added.

Begbies Traynor said secured creditor NatWest was owed 拢2.8m with 拢828,000 made from the sale of TEPE鈥檚 former office in Southampton being used to eat into part of that sum. But it has told the bank that getting hold of the remaining money was 鈥渦ncertain鈥.

Employees are owed around 拢56,000 in missing wages and holiday pay with Begbies Traynor saying these payments are also 鈥渦ncertain鈥 to be made

HMRC is owed 拢168,000 while three sister firms also owe the taxman a further 拢205,000 between them. Unsecured creditors, owed over 拢2.8m, have been told they won鈥檛 be getting any of their money back.