18 février 2025
Lending Focus - February 2025 – 2 de 10 Publications
The High Court has provided a useful restatement of the legal principles applicable to performance bonds, namely that the bond must be honoured according to its terms without reference to the underlying contract between the parties except where there is a clear fraud of which the surety (the guarantor) has notice.
The November 2024 judgment in Power Projects Sanayi Insaat Ticaret Limited Sirketi v Star Assurance Company Limited [2024] EWHC 2797 (Comm) was delivered in response to an application for directions brought by the defendant Star Assurance Company Limited (Star).
Power Projects Sanayi Insaat Ticaret Ltd Sirketi (PP), a contractor specialising in the construction of large-scale energy projects, entered into a contract with Early Power Limited for constructing a power-generation plant in Ghana, valued at approximately US$363 million.
PP subcontracted part of the works to Glotec Engineering Limited (Glotec Ghana) and Glotec Korea Limited (Glotec Korea and collectively with Glotec Ghana, Glotec) through two separate subcontracts dated 10 May 2018 (the Subcontracts). Pursuant to the terms of the Subcontracts, Glotec was required to provide on-demand performance bonds to secure its obligations.
Star issued an irrevocable, unconditional on-demand bond in favour of PP on 22 November 2018, securing the performance of Glotec under the Subcontracts (the Bond). The Bond was governed by English law and included, amongst other things, an undertaking from Star to pay PP within three business days of receipt of written demand and provided that:
"[Star’s] obligation to make payments under this Bond shall arise upon receipt of a demand made in accordance with provisions of this Bond, without any further proof or condition and without any right of set-off or counterclaim, and [Star] shall not be required or permitted to make any other investigation or enquiry."
PP alleged a number of failures by Glotec under the Subcontracts; a matter disputed by Glotec Ghana on several grounds including that:
Glotec Korea similarly considered that it had complied with its obligations.
Notwithstanding Glotec's position of alleged compliance under the Subcontracts (of which PP had knowledge), PP proceeded to make a written demand under the bond for cUS$6.3 million on 9 November 2021 (the Demand).
Star contended, amongst other things, that the Subcontracts had been performed and that PP had failed to comply with its obligations thereunder in respect of payment of a final 2% instalment of the contract price. It therefore expressed its surprise that PP had issued the Demand and invited PP to arrange a meeting to discuss the issue.
On 30 November 2021, PP notified Star that it considered its refusal to honour the Demand and investigation of the claim to be a breach of the Bond and made a final demand for payment failing which it stated it would commence proceedings.
In December 2021, Glotec issued proceedings in the Ghanian courts for the indebtedness it alleged as owing by PP although the Ghanian courts stayed proceedings on PP's application for arbitration pursuant to the mandatory arbitration terms of the relevant Subcontract.
In considering whether it was inappropriate to manage the claim in the manner contended by Star, Richard Millett K.C. (sitting as Deputy High Court Judge) set out the basic principles of performance bonds, considered well established through existing case law.
In particular it was noted that:
The Deputy High Court Judge noted that as per the cases above the only legal defence that Star could raise was that the Demand was fraudulent (ie that PP knew that it had no right to make the Demand, and that Star knew that it was fraudulent at the time when its obligation crystallised, namely on the making of the Demand). Star was not entitled to fail or refuse to pay pending investigation of the state of the underlying account or relationship between PP and Glotec. Nor was Star entitled simply to rely on Glotec’s case against PP, however confident it was that Glotec’s case was well founded.
Dismissing the arguments presented by Star it was not considered that the facts alleged by it met the threshold to refuse performance of the Demand. In particular, they were not considered facts that if true (and nor could any inference be drawn to that effect), proved that PP knew that it was not entitled to make the Demand nor that Star knew that the Demand was fraudulent. They were considered not to be inconsistent with an honest demand under the Bond.
Star's submission that PP knew Glotec's position that it had complied with its obligations under the Subcontracts (a position Star had aligned itself with) did not amount to a case that PP knew for a fact that Glotec’s position was right, and that its own position in the dispute was wrong, and that it therefore had no right to make the Demand.
Nor was the High Court satisfied that Star knew at the time of the Demand that PP’s claim was fraudulent. It was noted in any event that the terms of the Bond (as outlined above) precluded any investigation or enquiry by Star into the underlying statement of account. Glotec's alleged cross-claim was legally irrelevant unless Star knew that it was unanswerable and that PP had no right to make any claim for any amount.
Star's submission that the refusal of payment by Star was itself a basis for any inference that Star knew that the Demand had been made by PP fraudulently was also dismissed. It was considered that a refusal to pay was based on no more than Star's perception of the strength of Glotec’s case against PP.
Star also sought to rely on a decision of the Court of Appeal (Balfour Beatty Civil Engineering v Technical & General Guarantee Co Ltd (2000) CLC 252) as evidence that the issuer can rely on evidence of fraud that it obtains later than the time of the demand in order to resist payment; an argument similarly dismissed as follows:"The modern cases on performance bonds require evidence of actual knowledge on the part of the issuer at the time of the demand, even if the evidence about that knowledge is incomplete and may be augmented later."
To discuss the issues raised in this article in more detail, please contact a member of our Banking and Finance team in London.
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