Adjudication in Construction Law
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CHAPTER 3
Appointment and referral
Appointment and referral
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3.1 Who may act as an adjudicator
3.1.1 Individuals and the role of an adjudicator
3.1 Part II of the Housing Grants, Construction and Regeneration Act 1996 Act does not restrict the performance of the functions of an adjudicator to a particular class of person.1 Nevertheless, the role of an adjudicator is one which can only be performed by an individual. It is not possible for ‘X and Co’ or ‘Y Ltd’ to act as an adjudicator. It is a contract for the provision of personal professional services and must be undertaken by a person. The work to be done by that individual cannot be performed by someone else.2 Where the work was done by one person who happens (like many others) to practice in a partnership or limited company which administers his or her fees and recovers them for him or her, there is nothing in the Statutory Scheme that requires the adjudicator to sue for his or her fees in any personal/natural capacity.3 Any person requested or selected to act as an adjudicator in accordance with that scheme must be a natural person acting in his or her personal capacity.4 He or she must also not be an employee of any of the parties to the dispute.5 An individual adjudicator who carries on business through a firm or company may seek payment through that entity.6 3.2 It is simply a question of fact in any given case whether the adjudicator's agreement was made with an individual or with a firm or limited company. In circumstances where it is understood by all parties that the role of the adjudicator is to be personally performed by an individual, the natural starting point is likely to be that the adjudicator's agreement would also be with that same individual. It should therefore be made clear if the common intention is that the parties to the adjudication will enter into an adjudicator's agreement with a legal entity other than the individual. Whether that is the common intention depends on the words used and the background in which the contract was concluded. The adjudicator's agreement will be made with the adjudicator himself or herself where:- • The nomination letter from the adjudicator nominating body names the adjudicator personally and makes a number of references to him or her fulfilling the role;
- • A reference to the adjudicator's limited company in the nomination letter may be merely given as part of his or her professional address and the only function of the nominating body is to nominate the adjudicator, which is a role which must be performed by an individual;
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- • The terms are replete with references to the adjudicator personally and there is no hint whatsoever that the terms are to be applied to a limited company.7
3.1.2 Restriction to ‘experts'
3.3 Provisions restricting appointments to those with particular technical expertise are rare. The norm is for a person to be named or a nominating body to be named with no more. Assuming that such limiting provisions comply with the Act, the courts would be cautious not to allow such a provision to thwart the appointment of an adjudicator in the time required by the Act. Under the Statutory Scheme, where a nominating body is named or no nominating body is named, there is simply no provision for any limitation on the description of the person to be appointed as the adjudicator.8 Where the construction contract provided for an adjudicator to be appointed by the President for the time being of the Chartered Institute of Arbitrators from a panel to comprise three ‘experts in the field of biomass energy plants', and the appointees were a quantity surveyor dually qualified as a barrister (non-practising), Queen's Counsel (with a specialist practice in construction and engineering) and a practising barrister (with further technical qualifications), two issues are raised: (i) what is the meaning of ‘experts in the field of biomass energy plants’ and (ii) if the appointees do not meet that description, what is the consequence in law? If the words ‘experts in the field of biomass energy plants’ are taken in isolation, one would be surprised if a lawyer were to profess such expertise. But if the expression were used in the context of expertise in contracts related to or disputes related to the field of biomass energy plants, the answer might be different. To take an example, a specialist barrister who has acted as advocate and arbitrator in numerous cases about the construction of bridges would not naturally refer to themselves as an expert in bridges but as an expert in cases about bridges or disputes about bridges or even projects about bridges. But much would depend on the context. If an inquiry was being made of the same counsel's clerk along the lines of whether he or she had expertise in bridges, the answer might well be ‘yes’ because, in context, the nature of the expertise would be a given. The use of ‘expert’ is similarly opaque. In the context of court proceedings, an expert would be someone giving expert evidence, not the lawyers, but in a dispute resolution scenario where different expertise may be relevant, a lawyer may well be an expert and the word is clearly not being used here as if it refers to expert evidence. The words ‘in the field of’ themselves suggest that something wider than a specific technical expertise is intended. Context is material here in two respects. The context is that of dispute resolution and that militates in favour of a meaning which relates the nature of the expertise to dispute resolution. That does not mean that additional words about expertise in dispute resolution should be read in but rather that who may be an expert in the field of disputes is wider than those who havePage 96
3.2 Appointment
3.2.1 Statutory requirements
3.4 The Act requires a construction contract to provide a timetable with the object of securing the appointment of an adjudicator and referral of a dispute to him or her within seven days of notice of intention to refer, but does not specify a mechanism by which an adjudicator can be appointed.10 The Statutory Scheme refers to an adjudicator being selected.11 In the case of a person specified in the construction contract, the referring party must request that person to act as adjudicator.12 If no person has been named in the construction contract or the person named has already indicated that he or she is unwilling or unable to act, and the contract provides for a specified nominating body to select a person, the referring party must request the nominating body named in the contract to select a person to act as adjudicator, or where neither of those situations applies, or where the named adjudicator has already indicated that he or she is unwilling or unable to act and the contract does not provide for a nominating body, the referring party must request an adjudicator nominating body to select a person to act as adjudicator.133.2.2 Non-compliance
3.5 Given that the Statutory Scheme adjudication provisions apply by operation of section 108(5) of the Act, it can be argued that the Statutory Scheme itself gives priority to a contractually specified nominating body to nominate the adjudicator. However, the question arises as to whether this circular reversion by the Statutory Scheme back to what is specified in the contract is, so to speak, ‘trumped’ by section 108(5). On balance, it is because that is consistent with the overall statutory purpose of incorporating the Statutory Scheme as a whole when there are key non-compliances with section 108. Put another way, one disregards the adjudication provisions agreed by the parties in thesePage 97
3.2.3 Procedure
3.6 A person requested to act as adjudicator in accordance with the provisions of the Statutory Scheme shall indicate whether or not he or she is willing to act within two days of receiving the request,16 which must be accompanied by a copy of the notice of adjudication.17 The request must doubtless be in writing since it must be so accompanied.18 An ‘adjudicator nominating body’ means a body (not being a natural person and not being a party to the dispute) which holds itself out publicly as a body which will select an adjudicator when requested to do so by a referring party.19 The nominating body named in the contract or the adjudicator nominating body must communicate the selection of an adjudicator to the referring party within five days of receiving a request to do so. Where the nominating body named in the contract or the adjudicator nominating body fails to do so, the referring party may agree with the other party to the dispute to request a specified person to act as adjudicator or request any other adjudicator nominating body to select a person to act as adjudicator. The person requested to act as adjudicator in accordance with the provisions of the scheme must indicate whether or not he or she is willing to act within two days of receiving the request.20 3.7 Where an adjudicator who is named in the contract indicates to the parties that he or she is unable or unwilling to act, or fails to respond within two days, the referring party may request another person (if any) specified in the contract to act as adjudicator, request the nominating body (if any) referred to in the contract to select a person to act as adjudicator or request any other adjudicator nominating body to select a person to act as adjudicator. The person requested to act shall indicate whether or not he or she is willing to act within two days of receiving the request.21 Any unwillingness or inability to act should be indicated to all parties22 Non-compliance with the provisions of the Statutory Scheme deprives the adjudicator of jurisdiction unless the parties have submitted to thePage 98
3.2.4 Contacts between parties and adjudicators and nominating bodies
3.9 It is better for all concerned if parties limit their unilateral contacts with adjudicators both before, during and after an adjudication; the same goes for adjudicators having unilateral contact with individual parties It can be misconstrued by the losing party, even if entirely innocent. If any such contact, it is felt, has to be made, it is better if done in writing so that there is a full record of the communication. Nominating institutions might sensibly consider their rules as to nominations and whether they do or do not welcome or accept suggestions from one or more parties as to the attributes or even identities of the person to be nominated by the institutions If it is to be permitted in any given circumstances, the institutions might wish to consider whether notice of the suggestions must be given to the other party.25 3.10 A fair-minded observer would conclude that it was inappropriate for a decision-maker who knows about, and fails to disclose, a material but unilateral conversation, subsequently to say that it was not disclosable because it had taken place with his or her practice manager/wife/husband, not him or her personally. That might be regarded as the sort of artificial distinction beloved of lawyers, but not a proper approach to the business of decision-making.26 What also matters is not what the timing is, but what the conversation is about. If the conversation is, amongst other things, about the very same claim, which the adjudicator is just about to adjudicate upon, the fact that there is a two-month gap betweenPage 99
3.2.5 Invalid appointments
3.11 An adjudicator appointed by a body other than the contractually specified nominating body will have no jurisdiction.29 Unless the adjudicator is appointed under the correct contractual provisions, his or her appointment would be a nullity. The jurisdiction of the adjudicator derives from the agreement of the parties, as reflected by the terms of the contract they have entered into. An adjudicator cannot be validly appointed under a contractual provision that does not in fact exist. He or she would have no jurisdiction to take up the appointment and, in consequence, any decision that he or she might make would not be capable of enforcement.30 On the other hand, it may be linguistically and even technically correct to describe one party's various alternative formulations as different contracts from the contract alleged by the other. But that difference should not be determinative when it is remembered that the court is concerned with one contracting process, with the only question being which party has correctly identified where in that process the relevantly binding contract was formed. Where it is agreed that each of the alternatives was sufficient to found jurisdiction under the identical route of the Statutory Scheme, to rule the referring party out of court because it may have misidentified the contractual provisions that would give the adjudicator jurisdiction under the Statutory Scheme is to return to a formalistic obstacle course. The court bears in mind:- • that the adjudication system was and is meant to provide quick and effective remedies to parties, equally accessible to those who are legally represented as to those who are not; and
- • that the system now covers not only written contracts but also oral contracts which increase the likelihood that they may be misdescribed.31
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3.3 Contract of appointment
3.3.1 Contractual relationship between adjudicator and parties
3.13 Neither the Act nor the Statutory Scheme requires parties to a construction contract who wish to refer a dispute to adjudication to enter into a contractual relationship with an adjudicator. Contractual adjudication provisions do, however, generally prescribe the execution of such a contract, and it is the practice of adjudicators requested or selected in accordance with the provisions of the Statutory Scheme to stipulate the terms under which they are prepared to act, to be agreed by the parties. 3.14 The ability of an adjudicator to obtain fees depends on there being a contractual right to payment under the adjudicator's agreement with one or both of the parties. There is nothing in section 108 of the Act which gives the adjudicator a right to payment. The adjudicator's contractual right to payment does not arise under and is not affected by the terms of the decision by which the adjudicator decides which party is to pay his or her fees and expenses. That decision determines who, as between the parties, is to bear those sums but it does not affect any contractual right to payment which the adjudicator may have or provide a right to payment if he or she has no contractual right. It may, in practice, lead to the relevant party making payment direct to the adjudicator but it gives the adjudicator no enforceable rights to payment.333.3.2 Unilateral appointments
3.15 The process of adjudication requires a rapid appointment of an adjudicator. Under the provisions of the Housing Grants, Construction and Regeneration Act 1996, section 108(2)(b) states that the construction contract shall ‘provide a timetable with the object of securing the appointment of the adjudicator and referral of the dispute to him within 7 days of such notice'. The fact that the appointment of the adjudicator is intended to be rapid means that the referring party is likely to be the one who seeks the appointment and who is keen for the objective of early appointment to be met. The referring party is therefore likely to be the party which responds positively to the adjudicator's terms and conditions and may do so unilaterally if the responding party is slow to react or raises an objection to the adjudication on jurisdictional or other grounds.34 3.16 In such circumstances, it is not uncommon for the adjudicator's agreement to be entered into only with the referring party and not with the responding party. This raises questions as to the liability of the responding party for the fees and expenses of the adjudicator.35 3.17 Where one party agrees to the adjudicator's terms but the other does not, then, except for such terms as might require the agreement of the other party in order to become binding, the adjudicator can enforce those terms against the party with whom he or she has a contract. There is nothing objectionable in an adjudicator being appointed unilaterally and, indeed, it is not uncommon for this to happen in arbitrations with three arbitrators.36Page 101
3.3.3 Contract with neither party
3.18 In general terms, absent any jurisdictional objections, if an adjudicator is appointed and neither party makes a contract with the adjudicator, the parties by participating in the adjudication and thereby requesting the adjudicator to act, enter into a contract with the adjudicator who acts in that capacity as a result of that request. Such a contract would be formed by conduct. There would be implied terms that the party would be liable to pay the reasonable fees and expenses of the adjudicator and would be jointly and severally liable with the other party to do so. There would also be an implied term that the adjudicator would act in accordance with the terms of the Adjudication Agreement between those parties37 3.19 In principle, there is no reason why the position should not be similar where only one party makes a contract with the adjudicator but the other one does not. In those circumstances, the party who does not make a contract but participates in the adjudication thereby requests the adjudicator to act and there is a contract made by conduct with the adjudicator who acts in that capacity as a result of that request. There would similarly be implied terms that the party would be liable to pay the reasonable fees and expenses of the adjudicator, that the party would be jointly and severally liable with the other party to make payment and that the adjudicator would act in accordance with the terms of the Adjudication Agreement between those parties.383.3.4 Joint and several liability
3.20 The question of joint and several liability might give rise to some difficulties in the case where one party agrees to the rates of remuneration with the adjudicator, but the other party does not and has to pay a reasonable remuneration. In Merkin on Arbitration Law at paragraph 10.61, a similar issue is raised in relation to the statutory provision in section 28(1) of the Arbitration Act 1996 that the parties are jointly and severally liable to pay to the arbitrators’ reasonable fees and expenses. How does this apply where there is an agreed sum? In Merkin, it is suggested that it might be possible to argue that joint and several liability only applies to the amount regarded as reasonable. That seems to be the view of the Departmental Advisory Committee at paragraph 123 of their Report on Arbitration Law. If one party agreed fees and the other party was liable for a reasonable fee then generally joint and several liability would apply only to the reasonable fee which could, in principle, be lower or higher than the agreed fee. However, in practice, the agreed fee is likely to be the same as or accepted to be a reasonable fee.393.3.5 Effect of jurisdictional challenge
3.21 Whilst the position as set out above would apply where there is no jurisdictional issue, such issues are frequently taken, and some succeed. What then is the position?Page 102
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3.3.6 Resignation
3.24 The Housing Grants, Construction and Regeneration Act 1996 makes no provision for an adjudicator to resign from his or her appointment. The Statutory Scheme provides that an adjudicator may resign at any time on giving notice in writing to the parties to the dispute,44 and must resign where the dispute is the same or substantially the same as one which has previously been referred to adjudication and a decision has been taken in that adjudication.45 In addition, it is implicit that an adjudicator can resign where a dispute varies significantly from the dispute referred in the referral notice and for that reason he or she is not competent to decide it.46 The Statutory Scheme can be taken to have provided comprehensively for an adjudicator's method of resignation. If, in any event, an adjudicator can resign by serving notice on one of the parties only, there can have been no obvious reason to provide specifically for an adjudicator to serve notice on each party unless this was to take separate advantage of the provision for the service of fresh notices where an adjudicator ceases to act. However, it is difficult to discern any logic in drawing such a distinction for this limited purpose. Moreover, it is obviously good practice for adjudicators to serve notice of resignation on each party and it is difficult to see why adjudicators should be entitled to resign by serving notice on only one of the parties.47 Such a notice is to be objectively construed in accordance with the principles in Mannai v Eagle Star 48Page 104
3.4 Referral
3.4.1 Meaning of ‘referral'
3.26 ‘Referral’ bears three different meanings within the context of adjudication. The first is the step at the beginning of an adjudication whereby the dispute comes before the adjudicator after he or she has been appointed.55 Second, some standard forms use the word to describe a document setting out the referring party's case.56 Finally, it is used more colloquially of the whole process of the adjudication of a dispute, just as the term 'reference’ is used in relation to arbitration and the word ‘action’ in relation to court proceedings.3.4.2 Method of referral
3.27 The requirement in the Act57 that a construction contract should provide a timetable with the object of securing the appointment of an adjudicator and referral of a disputePage 105
3.4.3 Late referral
3.29 In the overall scheme of things, it might be difficult to say that the delay of one day in the provision of the referral notice should be accorded great significance and that it would be harsh to rule that the whole adjudication was a nullity because of that one day's delay. But, on a more detailed analysis, this is not so easy to justify. Indeed, all kinds of difficult questions arise if the failure to comply with the time period is ignored: What if the delay was not one day, but one month? What if important events occurred during the period of any delay in the provision of a referral notice which put the responding party in a much worse position as against the referring party than it would have been if there had been no delay? If the words ‘not later than seven days’ are to be qualified in some way, then how is such a qualification to be formulated, let alone assessed? ‘Not later than seven days and perhaps one or two more'? ‘Not later than a period that seems just and equitable in the circumstances'? The whole point of adjudication is that speed is given precedence over accuracy. What matters is a quick decision, not necessarily a correct one. There is a summary timetable with which both the parties and the adjudicator must comply. If the swift timetable is kept to, the vast majority of adjudicators’ decisions are then enforced by the court in accordance with the 1996 Act. If the timetable can be extended without consent either at the beginning of the process or, at the end of the 28 days, there is a great danger of uncertainty and of a watering-down of the critical importance of the tight timetable on which the entire adjudication process is based. In other words, if it is a correct statement that a decision reached outside the 28 days is a nullity,61 the same principle must also apply to the event which signals the commencement of the same 28-day period, namely the provision of the referral notice within seven days of the intention to refer.62Page 106
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3.4.4 When does referral take place?
3.33 ‘Referral’ in section 108(2)(c) of the Act does not mean despatch of the notice of referral. Receipt might occur later. A thing is not referred to another unless that other receives it. It may be sent with the intention of referring it but never received. It has then not been referred. The word is unambiguous. Referral takes place upon receipt of the notice by the adjudicator.67 Similarly, in paragraph 19 of the unamended Statutory Scheme, the ‘date of the referral notice’ meant the date of despatch of that notice.68 Particularly because a referral notice may be undated and given an interpretation of section 108(2)(c) to similar effect, the date of the referral notice means the date of its receipt by the adjudicator. There seems to be no reason why the Scheme should provide a lesser time than is permitted by the Act.693.5 Accompanying documents and contents of the referral notice
3.5.1 Non-compliance
3.34 Apart from the requirement the referral notice must be accompanied by copies of, or relevant extracts from, the construction contract and such other documents as the referring party intends to rely upon, the Statutory Scheme does not specify what the contentsPage 108
3.5.2 Effect of referral notice on jurisdiction
3.36 A referral notice under the Statutory Scheme or a ‘referral’ under a contractual scheme, which comes into existence following the notice of adjudication, does not cut down or, indeed enlarge, the dispute unless the parties agree so to do. The adjudicator is appointed to decide the dispute which is the subject of the notice of adjudication and that notice determines his or her jurisdiction. The adjudicator's jurisdiction does not therefore derive from the referral notice, although the referral notice is likely to help the adjudicatorPage 109
3.5.3 Effect of notice of adjudication
3.37 A party which identifies the dispute in simple or general terms in the notice of adjudication has to accept that any ground that exists which might justify the action complained of is comprehended within the dispute for which adjudication is sought. It takes the risk that its bluff may be called in an unexpected manner.77 An adjudicator's decision must be made on the basis of the facts as they are at the time of the decision. If a final certificate is issued during the adjudication, depending upon what the adjudicator has been charged to decide, it may have to be taken into account as impacting on the parties’ dispute. This may in particular be the case if the certificate stands unchallenged. Where, however, the final certificate was immediately disputed by a formal notice and by provision of the claimants’ calculations for the final account, the adjudicator is entitled to treat it as of little weight.78 3.38 The assertions that it is necessary to set out in a notice of adjudication, if it is to be effective, particulars of a dispute which disclose what amounts in law to a cause of action and show not only what the dispute is about, but also in detail how it has arisen, are misconceived. What precisely must be set out in a notice of adjudication for it to be effective as such depends upon what is required by the relevant rules agreed by the parties as a matter of contract, or by the Scheme, as the case may be. Where agreed rules require only that the notice includes a brief statement of the issue or issues which it is desired to refer and the redress sought, the notice has to state what the dispute is about and what remedy was desired, but is not required to disclose on its face what in law would amount to a cause of action. Equally, it is not required to specify the nature of the dispute intended to be referred to in a form similar to that in which preliminary issues are often drafted in the Technology and Construction Court. If the notice of adjudication identifies a dispute as to whether the responding party is in law liable to the referring party for deficiencies alleged in the operation of works designed by the responding party, and it is then made clear in the referral notice that the contention advanced is that the responding party has failed to perform its contractual duty with reasonable skill, care and diligence, the disputePage 110
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3.5.4 Contents of referral and subsequent submissions
3.41 One has to be very careful in comparing documents which are exchanged between the parties in adjudication with pleadings in court, or indeed even in arbitration. That is because they are not pleadings as such, but they are documents in terms of the referral, the response, the reply and, if there is one, a rejoinder, which should set out in comprehensible form what each party's case and defence respectively is. But they should not be construed as if they were commercial contracts or as if they were pleadings in the court sense of the term. There are no strict rules in adjudication as to how these documents should be drafted.853.5.5 Limitation of the length of referral
3.42 An adjudicator's powers when dealing with complex matters include the power to limit the amount of documentation placed before him or her. A fortiori the parties can agree in advance to limit the extent of documentation constituting a referral. There is nothing in a provision in a construction contract limiting the length of the referral notice to 20 single-sided A4 pages which is contrary to section 108 of the Act. Neither is there anything in such a provision which conflicts with paragraph 17 of the Statutory Scheme which obliges the adjudicator to consider evidence put before him or her by the parties following a properly constituted reference in accordance with the contract and the Statutory Scheme. Such a provision is prescriptive as to the form of the referral notice the parties have agreed to, which founds the adjudicator's jurisdiction. Until there is receipt by him or her of a referral in proper form, he or she has no jurisdiction.86Page 112
3.6 Nominating bodies
3.43 The contract may provide for a specified nominating body to select a person to act as adjudicator. In addition, the Scheme provides for selection by an ‘adjudicator nominating body', which means a body (not being a natural person and not being a party to the dispute) which holds itself out publicly as a body which will select an adjudicator when requested to do so by a referring party.87 There is no requirement for either type of nominating body to be accredited by any public body or non-governmental organization. The leading nominating bodies are the Centre for Effective Dispute Resolution (‘CEDR', pronounced ‘cedar'), the Chartered Institute of Arbitrators (‘the CIArb'), the Institution of Civil Engineers (‘the ICE'), the Royal Institute of British Architects (‘the RIBA'), the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (‘the RICS'), the Technology and Construction Bar Association (‘TECBar') and the Technology and Construction Solicitors Association (‘TeCSA').3.7 Declarations of interest
3.7.1 Adjudicator's duty of impartiality
3.44 A construction contract subject to the provisions of the Housing Grants, Construction and Regeneration Act 1996 must include provision in writing so as to impose a duty on the adjudicator to act impartially,88 just as an arbitrator is obliged to act fairly and impartially as between the parties.89 An adjudicator, like an arbitrator and a judge, must always be alive to the possibility of apparent bias and of actual but unconscious bias. The possibility of unconscious bias on the part of a decision-maker is known, but its occurrence in a particular case is not. The allegation of apparent unconscious bias is difficult to establish and to refute. One way in which an adjudicator can avoid the appearance of bias is by disclosing matters which could arguably be said to give rise to a real possibility of bias. Such disclosure allows the parties to consider the disclosed circumstances, obtain the necessary advice and decide whether there is a problem with the involvement of the adjudicator in the reference and, if so, whether to object or otherwise to act to mitigate or remove the problem. When, on being asked to accept an appointment, an adjudicator knows of a matter which ought to be disclosed to the parties to the reference, prompt disclosure to those parties of that matter provides the safeguard as the quality of impartiality is shown to have been there from the beginning. But the obligation of impartiality continues throughout the reference and the emergence during the currency of the adjudication of matters which ought to be disclosed means that an arbitrator's prompt disclosure of those matters can enable him or her to maintain the ‘badge of impartiality'.90Page 113
[T]o take two opposite extremes, disclosure could not avoid an objection to a judge who in the light of the matter disclosed clearly ought not to hear the case; and non-disclosure could not be relevant, if a fair-minded and informed observer would not have thought that there was anything even to consider disclosing.