LM Power Engineering Corporation Vs
LM Power Engineering Corporation Vs
LM Power Engineering Corporation Vs
FACTS:
When task was completed Petitioner billed Respondent in the amount of P6.7M.
Respondent, however, refused to pay and contested the accuracy of the amount of
advances and billable accomplishments listed by Petitioner. Respondent also took
refuge in the termination clause of the Agreement. That clause allowed it to set off the
cost of the work that Petitioner had failed to undertake due to termination or take-
over against the amount it owed the latter.
Petitioner filed with the RTC of Makati a Complaint for Collection of the amount
representing the alleged balance due it under the Subcontract. Instead of submitting
an Answer, Respondent filed a Motion to Dismiss, alleging that the Complaint was
premature because there was no prior recourse to arbitration.
RTC denied the Motion to Dismiss on the ground that the dispute did not involve
the interpretation or the implementation of the Agreement and was, therefore, not
covered by the arbitral clause. The RTC ruled that the take-over of some work items by
Respondent was not equivalent to a termination, but a mere modification, of the
Subcontract. The latter was ordered to give full payment for the work completed by
Petitioner.
CA reversed on appeal the RTC ruling and ordered the referral of the case to
arbitration. The CA held as arbitrable the issue of whether Respondents take-over of
some work items had been intended to be a termination of the original contract under
Letter K of the Subcontract.
ISSUES:
2. In the affirmative, whether or not there is a need to file a request first with the
CIAC in order to vest it with jurisdiction to decide a construction dispute?
RULING:
YES. SC sides with Respondent. The instant case involves technical discrepancies that
are better left to an arbitral body that has expertise in those areas.
2.
NO. SC is not persuaded with Petitioners contention. Section 1 of Article III of the
NEW Rules of Procedure Governing Construction Arbitration has dispensed with the
requirement to submit a request for arbitration. Recourse to the CIAC may now be
availed of whenever a contract contains a clause for the submission of a future
controversy to arbitration.
In the instant case, the Subcontract has the following arbitral clause:
Clearly, the resolution of the dispute between the parties herein requires a
referral to the provisions of their Agreement. Within the scope of the arbitration clause
are discrepancies as to the amount of advances and billable accomplishments, the
application of the provision on termination, and the consequent set-off of expenses.
A review of the factual allegations of the parties reveals that they differ on the
following questions, the resolutions of which lies in the interpretation of the provisions
of the Subcontract Agreement:
2. May the expenses incurred by Respondent in the take-over be set off against the
amounts it owed Petitioner?
2.
Section 1 of Article III of the NEW Rules of Procedure Governing Construction
Arbitration provides:
Clearly, there is no more need to file a request with the CIAC in order to vest it
with jurisdiction to decide a construction dispute.
The arbitral clause in the Agreement is a commitment on the part of the parties
to submit to arbitration the disputes covered therein. Because that clause is binding,
they are expected to abide by it in good faith. And because it covers the dispute
between the parties in the present case, either of them may compel the other to
arbitrate.