Harmon CFEM Facades (UK) Ltd v The Corporate Officer of the House of Commons: TCC 29 Jun 2000

The company began a claim for damages for the failure to complete an award of a contract, but then went into voluntary liquidation. The defendant refused payment claiming that it would be used only for payment of the insolvency practitioner’s costs. The new CPR rules disapplied old assumptions, and the overriding objective should apply. An interim payment was ordered limited to reflect the risk of a failure to secure recovery in the case of a failure of the action.

Citations:

Gazette 20-Jul-2000, [2000] EWHC Technology 84

Links:

Bailii

Citing:

CitedStreet v Mountford HL 6-Mar-1985
When a licence is really a tenancy
The document signed by the occupier stated that she understood that she had been given a licence, and that she understood that she had not been granted a tenancy protected under the Rent Acts. Exclusive occupation was in fact granted.
Held: . .
See AlsoHarmon CFEM Facades (UK) Limited v The Corporate Officer of The House of Commons TCC 28-Oct-1999
The claimant said that the respondent had awarded a contract for works at the House of Commons disregarding its obligations under European law as regards open tendering. . .

Cited by:

See AlsoHarmon CFEM Facade (UK) Ltd (In Voluntary Liquidation) v Corporate Officer of the House of Commons QBD 15-Nov-2000
If an award of interim damages was properly payable, then it remained payable notwithstanding that the claimant was impecunious, and that in principle the damages might be come repayable where the claimant could have become unable to repay. It was . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Insolvency, Company, Litigation Practice, Landlord and Tenant

Updated: 13 June 2022; Ref: scu.201812