Injunctions
Injunctions can be an effective way of restraining adjudications from proceeding. The situations where an injunction could be required may include:
- An irregularity in the nomination process rendering the adjudication a nullity from the start
- Preventing a party from adjudicating on a dispute that has already been decided in a previous adjudication
- Where there is no right to adjudicate
We will act for the Responding Party seeking to obtain the injunction or for the Referring Party seeking to challenge the injunction. In the circumstances of an injunction being obtained by others, we can represent adjudicators who might also become bound by the terms of the injunction.
Witney Town Council v Beam Construction - Dispute or Disputes? - A Question of Linkage
The case, heard in the TCC on 11 August 2011, considered ... >
Hyder –v- Carillion: Adjudicator did not need to seek submissions on Target Cost Methodology
Carillion appointed Hyder to undertake design works for ... >
Court Clarifies Position with Disputed Adjudicator’s Fees
A recent Judgment of His Honour Judge Waksman QC in The ... >
Unsolicited preliminary views rendered Adjudicator’s decision a nullity
In a recent case heard before His Honour Judge Waksman ... >
