Practical Law

Ask the team: does my contract need a priority of documents clause?

Some forms of contract include a priority of documents clause, others do without them. So what is the correct approach? Should your building contract, sub-contract or professional appointment include a priority of documents clause? Does the recent TCC decision in RWE Npower Renewables v J N Bentley have anything to add?

Why use a priority clause?

Construction and engineering is a complex, technical business. On anything but the smallest project, it is all but impossible to distil all the information relevant to a party’s role into a single document. Against that background, it is easy to see the scope for inconsistency or room for argument between one or more documents.

One way of safeguarding against the danger of an unresolvable argument is by including a priority of documents clause. This is a clause that lists the contract documents in order of precedence. In the case of any inconsistency or ambiguity, the document that is higher on the list carries the day.

…and why not?

The idea of using a priority of documents clause seems rather sensible, but do they always work in practice? For example, in RWE Npower Renewables v J N Bentley, the parties chose to include a priority of documents clause in their NEC3 form of agreement, yet still found themselves in adjudication and litigation over precisely what was included in a particular section of the works.

There are several reasons why you might not include one in your contract: