Marubeni Corporation v Sea Containers Ltd: ComC 17 May 1995

Procedure – set-off – contract for supply of containers – construction of contract – clear words to exclude right of set-off – equitable set-off – abatement – defective containers. The words ‘without deduction’ have been held in the context of a purely commercial contract to exclude the right of set-off. The court was concerned with a clause which incorporated the word ‘deduction’ with payment: ‘… without any deductions or withholdings whatsoever.’
Held: The words were not terms of art: ‘It is unlikely either could be described as a clear word. At the end of the day therefore, the question is one of construction in the context of the contract as a whole and it is to that I shall now turn.’ The right of set-off was excluded.

Judges:

Waller J

Citations:

Unreported, 17 May 1995

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedConnaught Restaurants Ltd v Indoor Leisure Ltd CA 17-Sep-1993
The lease provided the tenant would pay the rent ‘without any deduction’.
Held: The words ‘without any deductions’ in a lease were ambiguous and were insufficient to exclude the tenant’s right to claim a set off. Clear words are needed before . .

Cited by:

CitedEdlington Properties Limited v J H Fenner and Co Limited CA 22-Mar-2006
The landlord had assigned the reversion of the lease. There was an outstanding dispute with the tenant defendant who owed arrears of rent, but sought to set these off against a claim for damages for the landlord’s failure to construct the factory in . .
CitedBOC Group Plc v Centeon Llc and Centeon Bio-Services Inc CA 29-Apr-1999
The court was asked whether a clause in a share sale agreement setting out the payment obligation worked to preclude the purchaser from exercising a right of set-off when the time comes to pay a later instalment of the price.
Held: The appeal . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Litigation Practice, Contract

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.182577

Kum and Another v Wah Tat Bank Ltd: HL 1971

‘Negotiable’, when used in relation to a bill of lading, means simply transferable. A negotiable bill of lading is not negotiable in the strict sense; it cannot, as can be done by the negotiation of a bill of exchange, give to the transferee a better title than the transferor has got, but it can by endorsement and delivery give as good a title. The bill of lading obtains its symbolic quality from the commercial custom which makes bills of lading ‘negotiable and transferable’ by endorsement and delivery or transmission.
Lord Devlin said:
‘It is well settled that ‘Negotiable’, when used in relation to a bill of lading, means simply transferable. A negotiable bill of lading is not negotiable in the strict sense; it cannot, as can be done by the negotiation of a bill of exchange, give to the transferee a better title than the transferor has got, but it can by endorsement and delivery give as good a title. But it has never been settled whether delivery of a non-negotiable bill of lading transfers title or possession at all. The bill of lading obtains its symbolic quality from the custom found in Lickbarrow v. Mason and that is a custom which makes bills of lading ‘negotiable and transferable’ by endorsement and delivery or transmission. To the same effect the Bills of Lading Act, 1855, recites that a bill of lading is by the custom of merchants ‘transferable by endorsement’. There appears to be no authority on the effect of a non-negotiable bill of lading. This is not surprising. When consignor and consignee are also seller and buyer, as they most frequently are, the shipment ordinarily serves as delivery (Sale of Goods Act, 1893, sect. 32(1) and also as an unconditional appropriation of the goods (sect. 18, rule 5(2)) which passes the property. So as between seller and buyer it does not usually matter whether the bill of lading is a document of title or not.’

Judges:

Lord Devlin

Citations:

[1971] AC 439, [1971] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 439

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedJ I MacWilliam Co Inc v Mediterranean Shipping Company S A, ‘The Rafaela S’ CA 16-Apr-2003
Machinery was damaged whilst in transit, on the second of two legs. The contract described itself as a through bill of lading, but the port of discharge was not the final destination.
Held: The contract was a straight bill of lading. A . .
CitedBorealis Ab v Stargas Limited and Others and Bergesen Dy A/S Berge Sisar Dorealis Ab v Stargas Limited and Others HL 27-Mar-2001
The ship came to port, and samples of the cargo proved contaminated. The carrier asserted that the consignee was to be deemed to have demanded delivery, and had so assumed the risk. The court found that the mere taking of samples was not such a . .
CitedJ I MacWilliam Company Inc v Mediterranean Shipping Company SA; The ‘Rafaela S’ HL 16-Feb-2005
A US company bought a printing machine and ancillary equipment on CIF terms from an English company. The sellers consigned the goods to the buyers. The carriers were a container liner operator and the demise charterers of the vessels ‘Rosemary’ and . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Transport, Contract

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.181891

Mersey Steel and Iron Co v Naylor, Benzon and Co: HL 1884

The House explained the doctrine of repudiation of a contract: ‘where there is a contract which is to be performed in future, if one of the parties has said to the other in effect, ‘If you go on and perform your side of the contract I will not perform mine’ . . that in effect amounts to saying, ‘I will not perform the contract.’ In that case the other party may say, ‘You have given me distinct notice that you will not perform the contract. I will not wait until you have broken it, but I will treat you as having put an end to the contract, and if necessary I will sue you for damages, but at all events I will not go on with the contract’.’

Judges:

Lord Blackburn

Citations:

(1884) LR 9 App Cas 434

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedDymocks Franchise Systems (NSW) Pty Limited v Todd and Todd, Bilgola Enterprises Ltd and Lambton Quay Books Ltd PC 7-Oct-2002
PC (New Zealand) The claimants asserted that the respondents had wrongly terminated their franchise licence. The agreement was subject to the New South Wales law requiring good faith, but the court had not had . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.182396

The Owners And/Or Demise Charterer Of The Ship Or Vessel ‘Starsin’ v The Owners Of The Cargo Lately Laden Aboard The Ship Or Vessel ‘Starsin’: ComC 2000

Judges:

Colman J

Citations:

[2000] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 85

Cited by:

Appeal fromThe Owners And/Or Demise Charterer Of The Ship Or Vessel ‘Starsin’ v The Owners Of The Cargo Lately Laden Aboard The Ship Or Vessel ‘Starsin’ CA 23-Jan-2001
. .
At First InstanceHomburg Houtimport BV v Agrosin Private Ltd (the ‘Starsin’) HL 13-Mar-2003
Cargo owners sought damages for their cargo which had been damaged aboard the ship. The contract had been endorsed with additional terms. That variation may have changed the contract from a charterer’s to a shipowner’s bill.
Held: The specific . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Transport, Contract

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.180512

The Okehampton: CA 1913

The plaintiff, sub-charterer of the Okehampton had issued bills of lading under their own name. They sought to recover their loss of freight from the defendants who were owners of a third party vessel which, by negligence, had sunk the Okehampton.
Held: they had a sufficient possessory interest in the Okehampton to do this: ‘I think that it may be inferred as a matter of fact that the goods were in the possession of the [plaintiffs], the contracting carriers, performing their contract by means of a hired ship, so long as they were discharging their obligation with regard to the payment of hire; but the passage cited from Pollock and Wright on Possession in the Common Law, at p.166 par.4 is, I think quite sufficient authority for saying that even if the shipowners had possession so as to make them sub-bailees to [the plaintiffs], such bailment was revocable at pleasure, and there was no adverse right in the shipowners, so long as the time-hire was paid by [the head charterers]. Accordingly, there was interest enough in the plaintiffs to entitle them to bring this action.’ The court must construe the whole instrument before it in its factual context, and cannot ignore the terms of the contract. But it must seek to give effect to the contract as intended, so as not to frustrate the reasonable expectations of businessmen. If an obviously inappropriate form is used, its language must be adapted to apply to the particular case.

Judges:

Hamilton LJ

Citations:

[1913] P 173

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Contract, Transport

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.180646

Wood (John D) and Co v Dantata; Beauchamp Estates v Dantata: CA 1987

The purchaser liked inspecting houses and the vendor had appointed ten firms to act for him as estate agents. Each of the estate agents was approached by this purchaser and each of the estate agents took the would be purchaser over the property of the vendor. An estate agency’s clients resisted payment of his fees. Two agents were saying they were entitled to commission. The result depended upon whether the agent had introduced the purchaser. The parties had accepted that ‘in order to succeed one or other of the two firms had to show that they introduced the ultimate purchaser and that such introduction was the (my emphasis) effective cause of the purchase.’
Held: The familiar meaning of the word introduction was the bringing together of two people who have not previously met, and the phrase ‘introduction of a purchaser’ could only mean the ‘introduction of the person who ultimately purchases, not to the property, but to the purchase, or, if you look at it from the vendors angle, to the sale; in either case to the transaction that takes place’. The fact that one agent introduces a person who ultimately purchases after a later introduction by another agent will not necessarily entitle the first agent to commission. In such a case the court must determine which of the two agents was the effective cause of the transaction taking place.
Nourse LJ: ‘As I have said, the learned judge recorded an acceptance by all three counsel that in order to succeed one or other of the two firms had to show that they introduced the ultimate purchaser and that such introduction was the effective cause of the purchase. That would seem to suggest that there are two questions to be answered, and it would certainly explain the importance which the learned judge attached to the chief’s retention of a lively interest in the property when he went there again on September 9. In truth I think that there is but a single question to be answered: which of the two firms introduced the chief to the sale? Both language and authority establish that that question must be answered by answering this further question: which of the two firms was the effective cause of the sale? Here I would gratefully adopt the following statement of the law in Bowstead on Agency , 15th ed, at p230, to which the learned judge referred:
… the fact that one agent introduces a person who ultimately purchases after a later introduction by another agent will not necessarily entitle the first agent to commission. In such a case the court must determine which of the two agents was the effective cause of the transaction taking place.
The difficulties in clarifying the mind on this question are, I think, caused by the familiar meaning of the word ‘introduction’ as the bringing together of two people who have not previously met. Thus it is natural, when looking at the word in its present context, to attach significance to the first bringing together of the property and the person who ultimately purchases it. But the full phrase is ‘the introduction of a purchaser’ and I think that that can only mean the introduction of the person who ultimately purchases, not to the property, but to the purchase or, if you look at it from the vendor’s angle, to the sale: in either case to the transaction which ultimately takes place. And if you then apply the primary dictionary meaning of ‘introduction’, you find that what you are looking for is the leading or bringing in of the purchaser to that transaction. That makes it clear that first acquaintance is not paramount and it explains why the test is expressed by reference to the effective cause of the transaction.
Which of the two firms was the effective cause of the sale to the chief?’

Judges:

Nourse LJ

Citations:

[1987] 2 EGLR 23

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedHarwood T/A RSBS Group v Smith and Smith and Bedwell Watts and Company (a Firm) CA 14-Nov-1997
An estate agent with sole selling rights was not entitled to claim commission on a sale where he had contributed no act to the sale, even though his terms were specific enough to deal with the particular circumstances which had arisen here. Such a . .
CitedNahum v Royal Holloway and Bedford New College CA 12-Nov-1998
An estate agent was entitled to his commission when he could show that it was he who had brought about the relationship of buyer and seller. Delay and actions of others intended to hide that causation did not defeat the claim. The defendant asked . .
ConsideredChasen Ryder and Co v Hedges CA 1993
The vendor first instructed the plaintiffs to sell his residential home. They introduced several people, but no offers were made. The vendor went to another firm of agents. An extended planning consent was obtained, and one of the original enquirers . .
CitedBurney v The London Mews Company Ltd CA 7-May-2003
The defendant sought to appeal judgment against him for his estate agent’s commission. They had been appointed sole agents. A second firm obtained the particulars for their own retained clients, but then copied the particulars onto their own . .
CitedStandard Life Assurance Company (Incorporated Under Laws of Scotland By Act of Parliament) v Egan Lawson Limited CA 21-Nov-2000
The defendant appealed against judgment in favour of his (buyer’s) estate agent for his commission in finding the property for it. A previous offer was rejected by the seller, but a subsequent agent of the buyer obtained the acceptance of a further . .
CitedBecerra v Close Brothers ComC 25-Jun-1999
ComC Claim for fee for introducing successful bidder at a controlled auction – no express contract – no implied contract based on City practice – claim for quantum meruit failed because no express or implied . .
CitedFoxtons Ltd v Pelkey Bicknell and Another CA 23-Apr-2008
The defendant appealed against a finding that she was liable to pay her estate agent, appointed as sole agent, on the sale of her property. The eventual purchasers had visited but rejected the property. The agency was later terminated, and the . .
CitedMSM Consulting Ltd v United Republic of Tanzania QBD 30-Jan-2009
The claimants sought commission or a quantum meruit for the part they had taken in finding a suitable site for the defendant’s High Commission in London.
Held: The works undertaken were consistent with the claimant seeking work from the . .
CitedCharania v Harbour Estates Ltd CA 27-Oct-2009
The defendant appealed against the award of the estate agent’s fees, acting under a sole agency agreement. The agreement had been terminated. A buyer who had seen the property first under the agency later returned and negotiated a purchase.
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Agency, Contract

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.180396

Reigate v Union Manufacturing Co (Ramsbottom) Ltd: CA 1918

Scrutton LJ said that ‘[a] term can only be implied if it is necessary in the business sense to give efficacy to the contract’. He added that a term would only be implied if ‘it is such a term that it can confidently be said that if at the time the contract was being negotiated’ the parties had been asked what would happen in a certain event, they would both have replied ”Of course, so and so will happen; we did not trouble to say that; it is too clear”.

Citations:

[1918] 1 KB 592

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedMarks and Spencer Plc v BNP Paribas Securities Services Trust Company (Jersey) Ltd and Another SC 2-Dec-2015
The Court considered whether, on exercising a break clause in a lease, the tenant was entitled to recover rent paid in advance.
Held: The appeal failed. The Court of Appeal had imposed what was established law. The test for whether a clause . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.616750

Atkins International HA v Islamic Republic of Iran Shipping Lines (The APJ Priti): CA 1987

The APJ Priti was chartered but on the voyage, was struck by a missile, towed to port, and discharged. The ships owners argued for a breach of warranty, saying that the nominated port was unsafe. The arbitrator had found that there was no warranty from the charterers that the approach to the port was safe.
Held: The owner’s appeal failed. A warranty to nominate a safe port cannot be broken before the duty to nominate has arisen. Moreover the warranty was as to the port only, and not its approach.
Bingham LJ rejected an argument that a warranty, to the effect that the port declared was prospectively safe, could be implied into a voyage charter-party: ‘because the omission of an express warranty may well have been deliberate, because such an implied term is not necessary for the business efficacy of the charter and because such an implied term would at best lie uneasily beside the express terms of the charter’.

Judges:

Bingham LJ

Citations:

[1987] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 37

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedMarks and Spencer Plc v BNP Paribas Securities Services Trust Company (Jersey) Ltd and Another SC 2-Dec-2015
The Court considered whether, on exercising a break clause in a lease, the tenant was entitled to recover rent paid in advance.
Held: The appeal failed. The Court of Appeal had imposed what was established law. The test for whether a clause . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.616751

Hatton v Car Maintenance Co Ltd: 1915

In order to exercise a lien over a car taken in for repair, the fact that labour had been expended in maintaining the article was not enough to give rise to a lien for charges. What was required was improvement in the condition of the article.
Sargant J said: that there could be no lien over a motor car ‘by virtue of the arrangement under which the owner was to be at liberty to take the car away, and did take the car away, as and when she pleased. The existence of a lien seems to me to be inconsistent with an arrangement under which the article is from time to time entirely out of the possession and control of the contractor’.

Judges:

Sargant J

Citations:

[1915] 1 Ch 621

Cited by:

CitedYour Response Ltd v Datateam Business Media Ltd CA 14-Mar-2014
The claimant employed the defendant to manage subscription lists for the claimant’s magazines. The claimant came to seek damages, and the defendant for non-payment of its invoices. The court was now asked whether it was possible to assert a common . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.559375

Inland Revenue Commissioners v G Angus and Co: CA 1889

Lord Esher MR rejected an argument that a specifically enforceable contract or agreement for the sale of land is in truth a conveyance: ‘And it is said that, when an agreement is such that equity will grant specific performance of it, it is to be considered as a conveyance in equity, or an ‘equitable conveyance.’ If that were true, it would be an equitable conveyance of a legal property or a legal right. But let us consider what the doctrine of specific performance is. If the instrument is a ‘conveyance’ in itself, why do you want a decree for specific performance? If the instrument has conveyed the property to the purchaser, he does not require specific performance of an agreement with reference to his own property which has been already conveyed to him. The fact that the instrument is one of which equity will decree specific performance, fixes it at once as an ‘agreement,’ and not as a ‘conveyance.’ It would be a contradiction of terms to say that that which requires a decree for specific performance is in itself a ‘conveyance’ which has conveyed the property to the purchaser. If there has been a ‘conveyance’ of the property, you do not require specific performance. If property sold is conveyed by an instrument to the purchaser, and after that conveyance the vendor keeps it, the purchaser’s remedy would not be by way of specific performance, but, if the property be personal property, by an action of trover; or, if it be real property, by an action of ejectment. In my opinion, therefore, however clear it may be that an instrument is an agreement of which a Court of Equity would instantly decree specific performance, if it were not performed by the vendor, such an instrument is not a ‘conveyance on sale’ within the meaning of the Act, but is only an ‘agreement’.’

Judges:

Lindley LJ, Lord Esher MR

Citations:

(1889) 23 QBD 579

Statutes:

Stamp Act 1870 70

Citing:

CitedTasker v Small 3-Jun-1836
The words in a Settlement to raise Money by ‘Mortgage, Annuity or otherwise,’ authorises a Sale of a reversionary Estate.
Lord Cottenham LC said that the rule by which a purchaser becomes in equity the owner of the property sold ‘applies only . .

Cited by:

CitedScott v Southern Pacific Mortgages Ltd and Others SC 22-Oct-2014
The appellant challenged a sale and rent back transaction. He said that the proposed purchaser had misrepresented the transaction to them. The Court was asked s whether the home owners had interests whose priority was protected by virtue of section . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land, Contract, Stamp Duty

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.553538

B and B Viennese Fashions v Losame: CA 1952

Jenkins J considered tha illegal performance of a valid contract saying: ‘It is plain from Anderson Ltd. v. Daniel that illegality in the performance of a contract may avoid it although the contract was not illegal an initio. That being so, one has to consider whether the mode in which the contract was performed or purported to be performed, in this way suffice to turn it into an illegal contract.’

Judges:

Jenkins LJ

Citations:

[1952] 1 All ER 909

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedColen and Another v Cebrian (UK) Limited CA 20-Nov-2003
The company paid the claimant sales commission. Part was diverted and paid to his wife to reduce the tax payable. The employer had appealed a finding of unfair disamissal, the company arguing that the contract was illegal.
Held: The contract . .
CitedParkingeye Ltd v Somerfield Stores Ltd CA 17-Oct-2012
The claimant company operated parking management for the defendant, charging customers for overparking. The defendant came to believe that the claimant’s behaviour was over-aggressive, and the use of falsehoods, and terminated the contract. The . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.536186

Association of British Travel Agents Ltd v British Airways Plc: CA 2000

Sedley LJ described the common-law rule of contra preferentem, that any doubt as to the meaning of contractual words will be resolved by construing them against the party that put them forward, as ‘a principle not only of law but of justice’ and said that its origin and first purpose was ‘to limit the power of a dominant contractor who is able to deal on his own take-it-or-leave-it terms with others’.

Judges:

Sedley LJ

Citations:

[2000] 2 Lloyd’s LR 209

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

Appeal fromABTA Ltd v British Airways Plc ComC 26-Nov-1999
IATA Airlines standard agency agreement – implied terms – whether travel agents can be lawfully instructed to give the public misleading documentation describing the passenger service charge at UK airports as a tax-whether the passenger service . .

Cited by:

CitedAJ Building and Plastering Ltd v Turner and Others QBD 11-Mar-2013
An insurance company had engaged a main contractor to handle repairs to houses insured under its policies. The contractor had engaged the claimant subcontractor to carry out the works at the defendants’ homes, but then went into insolvent . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.471871

Smith v Lucas: CA 1881

Jessel MR said: ‘What is the effect of such a covenant in equity? It has been said that the effect in equity of the covenant of the wife, as far as she is concerned, is that it does not affect her personally, but that it binds the property: that is to say, it binds the property under the doctrine of equity that that is to be considered as done what ought to be done. That is in the nature of specific performance of the contract no doubt. If, therefore, this is a covenant to settle the future-acquired property of the wife, and nothing more is done by her, the covenant will bind the property’.’ and
‘The settlement is one which I cannot help thinking was never intended by the framer of it to have the effect I am going to attribute to it; but, of course, as I very often say, one must consider the meaning of the words used, not what one may guess to be the intention of the parties.’ and ‘It is a cardinal principle of construction of the terms of contracts that the meaning of a document or a particular part of a document is to be sought in the document itself: ‘one must consider the meaning of the words used, not what one may guess to be the intention of the parties”.

Judges:

Jessel MR

Citations:

(1881) 18 Ch D 531

Cited by:

CitedPullan v Coe ChD 1913
A marriage settlement settled property on the husband, wife, and prospective children. The wife also promised to settle after-acquired property on the same trusts. She later received andpound;285 which she invested in part in bearer bonds which . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Trusts, Contract

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.471502

Thomson v Christie Manson and Woods Ltd and Another: QBD 2004

Two urns had been auctioned as ‘a pair of Louis XV porphyry and gilt-bronze two-handled vases’. The buyer claimed that this was false. The parties agreed Christie’s had impliedly represented that it had reasonable grounds for its opinion.
Held: Jack J said: ‘The representation is not simply that the urns were Louis XV because that is a matter of opinion. The representation is that that was Christie’s opinion and that Christie’s had reasonable grounds for that opinion. This approach was not in issue between Ms Thomson and Christie’s and in my view is sound in principle’.

Judges:

Jack J

Citations:

[2004] EWHC 1101 (QB), [2004] PNLR 42

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

Appeal fromThomson v Christie Manson and Woods Ltd and Another CA 12-May-2005
Claim against auctioneers – antique vases – possible copies. Both parties appealed against elements of the judgment. . .
CitedAvrora Fine Arts Investment Ltd v Christie, Manson and Woods Ltd ChD 27-Jul-2012
The claimants had bought a painting (Odalisque) through the defendant auctioneers. They now claimed that it had been misattributed to Kustodiev, and claimed in negligence and misrepresentation.
Held: Based on the connoisseurship evidence, the . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract, Professional Negligence

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.463308

Howe v Smith: CA 1884

A contract for the sale of land required the purchaser to pay andpound;500 ‘as a deposit and in part payment of the purchase money’, and that if the purchaser failed to complete on time the vendor should be free to resell and recover any deficiency in price as liquidated damages. The purchaser failed to complete and the vendor resold the property for the same price. The question for the Court of Appeal was whether the vendor was entitled to retain the andpound;500, having suffered no loss.
Held: The court considered the contract and, in particular, what was meant by the words ‘as a deposit and in part payment of the purchase money’. The contract meant that the payment was not to be merely a part payment but also a guarantee of performance, entitling the vendor to forfeit the payment if the purchaser failed to complete.
Bowen LJ said: ‘The question as to the right of the purchaser to the return of the deposit money must, in each case, be a question of the conditions of the contract. In principle it ought to be so, because of course persons may make exactly what bargain they please as to what is to be done with the money deposited. We have to look to the documents to see what bargain was made.’

Judges:

Bowen, Cotton, Fry LJJ

Citations:

(1884) LR 27 Ch D 89

Cited by:

CitedChillingworth v Esche CA 1923
The purchasers agreed in writing to purchase land ‘subject to a proper contract to be prepared by the vendors’ solicitors’ accepting andpound;240 ‘as deposit and in part payment of the said purchase money’. A contract was prepared by the vendor’s . .
CitedSharma and Another v Simposh Ltd CA 23-Nov-2011
The parties created an oral (and therefore void) contract for a development, the claimants paid a deposit, expressed to be non-refundable, and the defendant builders completed the building work. The buyers backed out. The developer now appealed . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract, Land

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.451288

Llanelly Railway and Dock Company v London and North Western Railway Company: 1873

The parties had entered into a contract, in part to secure repayment of a loan, providing permission for the defendant to run its trains over the plaintiff’s tracks. The contract made no provision for termination.
Held: All the provisions of the agreement showed it to be non terminable. A decision as to whether it could be determined could not be itself determined by an arbitration arising n the service by one party of a notice determining the contract. If the notice was valid, there was no contract under which a reference could be made.

Judges:

Lord Selbourne

Citations:

[1873] 8 Ch App 942, (1873) 42 LJ Ch 884, (1873) 29 LT 357, (1873) 21 WR 889

Citing:

Appeal fromLlanelly Railway and Dock Company v London and North Western Railway Company CA 1872
James LJ said: ‘I start with this proposition that prima facia every contract is permanent and irrevocable and it lies upon a person who say that it is revocable or determinable to show either something special in the contract itself, or something . .

Cited by:

CitedIn Re Spenborough Urban District Council’s agreement; Spenborough Corporation v Cooke Sons and Company Ltd ChD 1968
A contract regulating the flow of industrial effluents into a public sewer contained no power of termination notwithstanding that the agreement it replaced did.
Held: There is no presumption in law that a joint venture is not terminable.
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.450970

Tolhurst v Associated Portland Cement Manufacturers Ltd: 1902

Citations:

[1902] 2 KB 660

Cited by:

CitedSimpson v Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital NHS Trust CA 12-Oct-2011
The court was asked whether it was possible to assign as a chose in action a cause of action in tort for damages for personal injury, and if so under what circumstances it was possible.
Held: The appeal was dismissed. The claimant did not have . .
Appeal fromTolhurst v Associated Portland Cement Manufacturers (1900) Ltd HL 1903
Tolhurst had contracted to sell a quantity of chalk from his quarries to the Imperial Company for fifty years. The Imperial Company afterwards assigned the Contract and sold its land, works and business to the Associated Company, and went into . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.445433

Obestain Inc v National Mineral Development Corporation (‘The Sanix Ace’): 1987

Hobhouse J affirmed an owner’s right to recover damages (in full) in respect of loss or damage to goods, subject to the one qualification that ‘his claim may be defeated if his right is a bare proprietary one and did not include any right to possession of the goods’

Judges:

Hobhouse J

Citations:

[1987] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 465

Cited by:

CitedP and O Nedlloyd B v Dampskibsselskabet Af, 1912, Aktieselskab, Aktieselskabet Dampskibsselskabet Svendborg v Utaniko Limited, East West Corporation CA 12-Feb-2003
The claimants shipped goods to Chile through the defendant shipping line. The goods were lost. The shippers rights of suit under the contract of carriage had been transferred to a third party.
Held: The shippers as the bank’s principals . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.442085

Carreras Rothmans Ltd v Freeman Mathews Treasure Ltd: 1985

Peter Gibson J said: ‘where the effect of a contract is that an asset which is actually owned by a company at the commencement of its liquidation would be dealt with in a way other than in accordance with [the statutory pari passu rule] . . then to that extent the contract as a matter of public policy is avoided.’

Judges:

Peter Gibson J

Citations:

[1985] Ch 207, [1985] 1 All ER 155, [1984] 3 WLR 1016

Cited by:

CitedBelmont Park Investments Pty Ltd v BNY Corporate Trustee Services Ltd and Another SC 27-Jul-2011
Complex financial instruments insured the indebtedness of Lehman Brothers. On that company’s insolvency a claim was made. It was said that provisions in the documents offended the rule against the anti-deprivation rule. The courts below had upheld . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Insolvency, Contract

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.442609

Goff v Gauthier: 1991

Citations:

[1991] 62 PandCR 388

Cited by:

CitedCleaver and Others v Schyde Investments Ltd CA 29-Jul-2011
The parties had contracted for the sale of land. The purchaser secured the rescinding of the contract for innocent misrepresentation. A notice of a relevant planning application had not been passed on by the seller’s solicitors. The seller appealed . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land, Contract

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.443308

Four Point Garage v Carter: 1985

A simple retention of title clause was argued to have the effect of preserving title, despite the sale to an ultimate customer. The plaintiff had sold a car to a garage who in turn, it thought was leasing it to the defendant. The defendant was in fact purchasing it. The plaintiff delivered it direct to the defendant. On the failure of the garage to pay, it sought recovery of the car from the defendant.
Held: The claim failed. Where goods were delivered directly by the seller to the sub-purchaser, the purchaser was deemed to take constructive delivery of goods and the seller was deemed to act as the buyer’s agent when making delivery to the sub-purchaser.

Judges:

Simon Brown J

Citations:

[1985] 3 All ER 12

Cited by:

CitedSandhu (T/A Isher Fashions UK) v Jet Star Retail Ltd and Others CA 19-Apr-2011
The claimant had supplied clothing to the defendant under a contract containing a retention of title clause. The defendant fell into financial difficulties and administration. The claimant now sought damages for conversion of its goods by the . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.434836

John Griffiths Cycle Corporation, Limited v Humber and Co, Limited: 1899

Smith v Webster was not to be taken as meaning that the agent must have had authority to sign the document as a record of the contract. All that Smith v Webster decided was that, in order to satisfy the Statute, it must be shown that the agent signing was an agent ‘thereunto lawfully authorised’ ie that he was authorised to sign the document which referred to and recognised an agreement in the terms relied on. A signature to a document containing the terms of a contract could satisfy the Statute, although put alio intuitu and not in order to attest or verify the contract.

Citations:

[1899] 2 QB 414

Statutes:

Statute of Frauds 1677 4

Citing:

LimitedSmith v Webster CA 1876
P verbally agreed to buy an inn from D. On the next day D told his solicitors that he had entered into a verbal arrangement for the sale and instructed them to prepare an agreement. On the same day they forwarded a draft formal contract to P’s . .

Cited by:

CitedGolden Ocean Group Ltd v Salgaocar Mining Industries Pvt Ltd and Another ComC 21-Jan-2011
The defendants sought to set aside orders allowing the claimants to serve proceedings alleging repudiation of a charterparty in turn allowing a claim against the defendants under a guarantee. The defendant said the guarantee was unenforceable under . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.430067

Lynn v Bamber: 1930

A cause of action in contract arises when the contract is breached. Talbot J said: ‘There is no question that the three learned judges who decided that case stated in emphatic and unambiguous language that contributory negligence is a good defence to an action of this class; but it is said that the expression of opinion can be disregarded in this court because it is not necessary for the purpose of deciding that case that that opinion should be expressed. I do not agree, any more than the other members of this court, that that expression of opinion was in fact unnecessary, and it appears to me that it is not legitimate to say that it should be disregarded . . If a judge thinks it desirable to give his opinion on some point which is not necessary for the decision of the case, that of course has not the binding weight of the decision of the case and the reasons for decision. It seems to me, however, to be an abuse of language to describe as obiter dicta the deliberate pronouncements in Dew’s Case, which were all made expressly as reasons for the decision to which the court there came, and even if I did not assent to them, I should certainly regard these pronouncements as authoritative.’

Judges:

Talbot J

Citations:

[1930] 2 KB 72

Citing:

CitedDew v United British Steamship Co CA 1928
. .

Cited by:

CitedSecretary of State for Communities and Local Government and Another v Welwyn Hatfield Borough Council SC 6-Apr-2011
The land-owner had planning permission to erect a barn, conditional on its use for agricultural purposes. He built inside it a house and lived there from 2002. In 2006. He then applied for a certificate of lawful use. The inspector allowed it, and . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Torts – Other, Contract

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.431889

Tonnelier and Bolckow, Vaughan and Co v Smith and Weatherill and Co: CA 1897

The charterparty required the charterers to pay hire monthly in advance at the rate of andpound;709 per calendar month and at the same rate for any part of a month until her redelivery.
Held: The charterers were liable to pay a full month’s hire at the beginning of each month, even if it was clear that the ship would be re-delivered to the owners before the month had expired.
Rigby LJ said: ‘Even when it appears probable that only a few days’ freight will be earned, some circumstances – as, for instance, a strike – may intervene to delay the date of discharge and delivery up, and in the result a whole month’s freight may, after all, be earned. The greater or less degree of probability of the happening of the events which will determine how much freight is to be earned is nowhere referred to in the contract and can scarcely afford a rule for construing it . . No doubt it would have been a reasonable contract that an estimated payment on account should be sufficient if the parties had thought fit to make such an agreement, but nothing about an estimated amount is said in the charterparty. On the other hand, the charterer, if he had to pay a whole month’s freight instead of a third, would only have paid more than actually turned out to be earned – a state of things contemplated by the contract, and provided for by giving him a lien on the ship for over-payment. On the construction acted upon by the learned Judge the parties would be uncertain, until the discharge of the cargo was completed and delivery of the ship made, when the actual payment was to be, and the owners might be driven to an action – a necessity against which the charterparty plainly intended to protect them.’

Judges:

Rigby LJ and Lord Esher MR

Citations:

(1897) 2 Com Cas 2

Cited by:

ApprovedFrench Marine v Compagnie Napolitaine d’Eclairage et de Chauffage par le Gaz HL 1921
A ship had been requisitioned after an instalment of advance hire had become due, leading to the frustration of the charterparty. The parties disputed whether the charterers were still liable to pay the hire in full.
Held: They were. The . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.410699

Raiffeisen Zentralbank Osterreich A G v Crossseas Shipping Ltd and Others: CA 2000

The claimant creditor bank made changes to the guarantee executed by the guarantee without its approval and after it had been signed and duly executed, by inserting the details of a service agent.
Held: The insertion did not work to alter the guarantor’s liability, and had not been prejudicial to its legal rights and obligations and accordingly was not material. The guarantee remained enforceable. An alteration to the contract after signature did not invalidate it unless it was material in the sense of being ‘potentially prejudicial to the legal rights or obligations of the affected party’.

Citations:

[2000] 1 WLR 1135

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

Appeal FromRaiffeisen Zentralbank Osterreich A G v Crossseas Shipping Ltd and Others ComC 19-Mar-1999
ComC The rule in Pigot’s case. Whether alteration to a guarantee by the insertion of the name and address of a service agent was material so as to render the guarantee unenforceable. . .
CitedPigot’s Case 1614
A written contact may be avoided if somebody makes a material alteration to it after it has been signed and without his consent. . .

Cited by:

CitedMercury Tax Group Ltd and Another, Regina (On the Application of) v HM Revenue and Customs and Others Admn 13-Nov-2008
The claimant sought judicial review of the lawfulness of search warrants given to the Commissioners and executed at their various offices. The Revenue had suspect the dishonest implementation of a tax avoidance scheme. The claimants said that there . .
CitedPickenham Romford Ltd v Deville ChD 31-Jul-2013
The claimant company’s administrators sought an order to have vacated unilateral notices entered against land titles registered to the claimant. The court now gave its reasons for making the order as requested by way of summary relief. The notices . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Agency, Contract

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.415070

French Marine v Compagnie Napolitaine d’Eclairage et de Chauffage par le Gaz: HL 1921

A ship had been requisitioned after an instalment of advance hire had become due, leading to the frustration of the charterparty. The parties disputed whether the charterers were still liable to pay the hire in full.
Held: They were. The Tonnelier case had been so long acted upon in the time-chartering business and had been followed in such a multitude of settlements of ships’ accounts, that, unless it was manifestly wrong, it ought not to be overruled.
Lord Dunedin described the principle ‘frustra petis quod mox es restiturus’ as a ‘brocard’ of the civil law and held that judgment for the full charter hire should not be given where, although the hire had been due, it could be shown that it would be repayable in part, because, as Lord Dunedin put it, ‘it would be useless to give judgment for the respondents’ for more than the sum which was not repayable. Lord Dunedin said: ‘The question must therefore, in my opinion, be thus approached: On August 10 the respondents were bound to pay a month’s hire, on August 16 the further performance of the contract became impossible. Was there or was there not an accrued right on the appellants’ part to get repayment of such portion of the hire paid on August 10 as did not, as we conveniently term it in Scotland by a word which is wanting in English, ‘effeir’ to the period from August 10 to 16. The sheet anchor of the appellants’ argument is the expression used by Rigby L.J. and the Master of the Rolls in Tonnelier’s Case , that the payment in advance is ‘provisional’; coupled with the admission which had to be given by the respondents’ counsel that had there been a delivery at a coal port in the United Kingdom in the ordinary course on the 16th that sum would have been recoverable. I confess I was much moved by that argument, but on further consideration it appeared to me that the word ‘provisional’ might be too hard pressed. I do not think that by terming the payment ‘provisional’ the learned judges meant to say that the payment in advance was not really a payment, but only a deposit, leaving the question of payment over. The payment in advance is truly payment, but it can only be a payment of what the contract says is earned.’

Judges:

Lord Dunedin, Lord Sumner

Citations:

[1921] 2 AC 494

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

ApprovedTonnelier and Bolckow, Vaughan and Co v Smith and Weatherill and Co CA 1897
The charterparty required the charterers to pay hire monthly in advance at the rate of andpound;709 per calendar month and at the same rate for any part of a month until her redelivery.
Held: The charterers were liable to pay a full month’s . .

Cited by:

CitedFarstad Supply As v Enviroco Ltd SC 5-May-2010
The defendants (E) were liable to F after a serious offshore accident, but sought a contribution from a third party (A), the main charterers, seeking to rely on section 3(2) o the 1940 Act saying that ‘if sued they might have been liable’. The court . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract, Damages

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.410698

Attica Sea Carriers Corporation v Ferrostaal Poseidon Bulk Reederei GmbH, The Puerto Buitrago: CA 1976

The parties entered into a charterparty by demise of a bulk carrier. It was in a state of disrepair. The owners required the charterers to repair it before redelivery, and claimed hire losses until it was returned repaired. The extensive repairs required would have cost far more than the repaired value of the vessel. Mocatta J had accepted this proposition.
Held: The appeal succeeded. If the vessel was out of repair when redelivered, the charterers were liable in damages, but the redelivery without first repairing the vessel was nevertheless valid.
Lord Denning MR considered whether, if the redelivery had been a repudiation of the contract, the owners would have been entitled to refuse to accept it and sue for hire thereafter. The decision in White and Carter had no application ‘in a case in which the plaintiff ought, in all reason, to accept the repudiation and sue for damages, provided that damages would provide an adequate remedy for any loss suffered by him’.
Orr LJ discussed the White and Carter point, saying that in this case, first, the owners could not perform the contract without the co-operation of the charterers and, secondly, the charterers had set out to prove that the owners had no legitimate interest in claiming the hire rather than damages.
Browne LJ agreed with Lord Denning on the principal point and with Orr LJ on the White and Carter point.

Judges:

Lord Denning MR, Orr LJ

Citations:

[1976] 1 Lloyds Reports 250

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedReichman and Another v Beveridge CA 13-Dec-2006
The defendants were tenants of the claimant. They vacated the premises and stopped paying the rent. The claimant sought payment of the arrears of rent. The defendants said that the claimants should have taken steps to reduce their damages by seeking . .
CitedClea Shipping Corp v Bulk Oil International, The Alaskan Trader (No 2) 1984
The 24 month charterparty vessel suffered a major engine breakdown after nearly a year. The repairs would take several months. The charterers said they had no further use for the vessel but the owner did the repairs and sought to hold the charterers . .
DistinguishedSalaried Staff London Loan Company Ltd v Swears and Wells Ltd SCS 15-Feb-1985
. .
CitedMSC Mediterranean Shipping Co Sa v Polish Ocean Lines (The Tychy) CA 31-Mar-1999
A slot charterer had a right in a ship, even if only of a part of the ship, and so a claim under the agreement to arrest a sister ship of the chartering company could be heard within the Admiralty Court’s jurisdiction. . .
CitedOcean Marine Navigation Ltd v Koch Carbon Inc (‘The Dynamic’) ComC 31-Jul-2003
The arbitrator had held in favour of the charterers that the owners were limited to damages and could not claim hire. The owners appealed.
Held: The arbitrator had not applied the law correctly in rejecting the owners’ claim to hire, and he . .
CitedIsabella Shipowner Sa v Shagang Shipping Co Ltd ComC 26-Apr-2012
The claimant ship owners challenged an award on two grounds. First, with permission, the owners appealed under section 69 of the Arbitration Act 1996 on the following question of law: ‘Whether, as a matter of law, owners were entitled to refuse . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract, Transport

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.396612

The Magnavox Electronics Company Limited v Hall (HM Inspector of Taxes): 1986

Citations:

(1986) 59 TC 610

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedIn Re Selectmove Ltd CA 21-Dec-1993
Promisse to Pay Tax due is not Consideration
The company appealed against an order for its winding up, saying that the debt was disputed, an accomodation having been reached with the Revenue.
Held: The court declined to regard a promise to the Revenue by a company to pay its existing . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.396767

Burchell v Thompson: CA 1920

A printed form of bill of sale set out that in consideration of andpound;250 being ‘now paid by the grantees to’ and then identifying a third person ‘at the request of the grantor’ chattels were assigned by way of security for the repayment of the loan with interest at andpound;55 per cent per annum. The printed form originally stated the interest to be at ‘one shilling in the pound per month’ with the printed words being struck out. The words ‘per annum’ were omitted in what was said to be a true copy of a the bill when lodged in relation to the rate of interest, and no receipt was given within the bill.
Held: The omission of the words ‘per annum’ did prevent the filed version being a true copy.
However, not all omissions would prevent the copy being a true copy. The expression ‘true copy’ in the bills of sale legislation indicates that the copy need not be an exact one and immaterial differences between the original and the copy which do not mislead the reader as to the contents can be ignored: ‘mere mis-spellings, mere failures to fill up blanks which can be filled up from other parts of the deed – matters which do not in any way affect the purpose for which the true copy is required – will not prevent the document registered from being a ‘true copy’ within the meaning of the Act.’
The former notion that a receipt contained in a deed gave rise to an estoppel whereas one not in a deed did not had long been discarded. It derived from times when a greater distinction was made between practice in courts of equity and of common law. The fact of a receipt being in a deed had not since days prior to the 1873 Act, given rise to no greater presumption. A party to a deed was not estopped from setting up the truth.

Judges:

Scrutton LJ, Lush J

Citations:

[1920] 2 KB 80, (1920) LJKB 533, (1920) 122 LT 758, (1920) 38 TLR 257, (1920) 64 Sol Jo 68, [1920] BandCR 7

Statutes:

Supreme Court of Judicature Act 1873

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedCarey v HSBC Bank plc, Yunis v Barclays Bank plc and similar QBD 23-Dec-2009
(Manchester Mercantile Court) The court considered the effects in detail where a bank was unable to comply with a request under section 78 of the 1974 Act to provide a copy of the agreement signed by the client.
Held: The court set out to give . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract, Equity

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.384473

More Og Romsdal Fylkesbatar AS v The Demise Charterers of the Ship JUTUNHEIM: ComC 2004

Relief against forfeiture under a lease agreement is available, ‘provided that the object of the transaction and of the insertion of the right to forfeit for non-payment of money is essentially to secure the payment of that money or is security for the attainment of a specific result which can be achieved through the courts.’

Citations:

[2004] EWHC 671 (Comm)

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedCelestial Aviation Trading 71 Ltd v Paramount Airways Private Ltd ComC 4-Dec-2009
The claimant sought summary judgment for recovery of three aircraft (valued at US$36m each) leased to the defendant after non-payment of instalments. The defendant said that the default was based on a demand for supplementary rents which had not . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.381839

Great Northern Railways v Avon Insurance: 2001

A court may rely on post-contract correspondence when it has to determine what the terms of a contract are (rather than what those terms mean).

Citations:

[2001] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 649 (?)

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedTekdata Interconnections Ltd v Amphenol Ltd CA 19-Nov-2009
The court considered which of two sets of contractual terms applied. The parties had dealt with each other over a long period. Under standard offer and acceptance the seller’s terms would apply. The buyer appealed, saying the court should look to . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.380337

Eastern Distributors Limited v Goldring (Murphy, Third Party): CA 1957

The court considered the meaning of the phrase: ‘shall not be entitled to enforce’ in the section.
Held: ‘How is the present case affected by the fact that the hire-purchase agreement is unenforceable? If the Act said that it was void, then of course the character of Murphy’s possession could not be altered by it. But the Act says merely that it is to be unenforceable. This must mean that it is effective to alter the rights of the parties but that the altered rights cannot be enforced.’

Citations:

[1957] 2 QB 600

Statutes:

Hire-Purchase Act 1938 2(2)

Cited by:

CitedMcGuffick v The Royal Bank of Scotland Plc ComC 6-Oct-2009
Requirements for Enforcing Consumer Loan Agreement
The claimant challenged the validity of a loan agreement with his bank as a regulated consumer credit agreement. After default, the lender failed to satisfy a request for a copy of the agreement under section 77. The bank said that though it could . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract, Consumer

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.375745

Hurst v Picture Theatres Ltd: CA 1915

The plaintiff had paid to enter the cinema, but was asked to leave by the manager who said he had not paid. He was forcibly removed. The jury found as a fact that he had paid the entrance fee. The defendant argued that the plaintiff had only a revocable licence to enter the premises, and had no interest which would entitle him to stay after revocation of the licence.
Held: The Court of Appeal rejected this argument holding that in the circumstances the contract provided him with a licence plus a grant of an interest which was enforceable in equity and which after the judicature Acts clearly provided not withstanding the absence of a legal interest (created by deed).
Buckley LJ said: ‘We have listened in this case to a very ingenious and interesting argument from Mr. Mackinnon, but, if I may borrow the words of Lord Esher in Butler v. Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway (1888) 21 Q.B.D. 207, 211, it may have been quite right for the appellants’ counsel to suggest the point, but when considered it is contrary to good sense. I may add that I think it is not only contrary to good sense, but contrary also to good law as administered since the Judicature Act in this Court. The proposition Mr. McKinnon sets out to affirm is that if a man has paid for his seat at the opera, or the theatre, and has entered and taken his seat, and is behaving himself quite properly, it is competent to the proprietors of the theatre, merely because they choose so to do, to call him to withdraw before he has seen the performance for the enjoyment of which he has paid; that what he has obtained for his money is a mere revocable licence to come upon the land of the proprietor of the theatre, and that the proprietor may, simply because he chooses, say ‘I revoke your licence; go.’ If that proposition be true, it involves startling results.
Kennedy LJ has suggested one. Suppose that there be sitting in the stalls a man who is a constant patron of the opera or the thentre, to whom the management pay great deference, whether from his rank or his habit of attendance: he goes to the management and says, ‘I do not like the person sitting in front of me or next to me; ask him to go.’ It would be competent to the management to go to that person and say: ‘Please go; you cannot have your money back, go.’ Further, if the proposition is right, it follows that, having let the seat to A., the management may come to A. at the end of the first act or before and say, ‘I revoke your licence, go,’ and he has to go. The management may let the seat to B. for the rest of the performance, and at the end of the second act or sooner they may come to B. and say, ‘I revoke your licence, go.’ He will have to go, and they may let the seat a third time to C. Those consequences ensue from this proposition if it be well founded.
It was for that reason I said at the outset of my remarks that it seems to me, when the point comes to be considered, it is contrary to good sense. Next it is to my mind contrary also to good law. The proposition is based upon the well-known decision in Wood v. Leadbitter 13 M. and W. 838.
Let me at the outset say what Wood v. Leadbitter seems to me to have decided. It affirmed that a mere licence, whether or not it be under seal, by which I mean a, licence not coupled with an interest or a gra.nt whether it be under seal or not, is revocable. It affirmed also that if there be a licence coupled with an interest or coupled with a grant, it is not, or at any rate in general it is not, revocable. For those two propositions I read these two sentences from the case of Wood v. Leadbitter at p. 844: ‘A mere licence is revocable; but that which is called a licence is often something more than a licence; it often comprises or is connected with a grant, and then the party who has given it cannot in general revoke it, so as to defeat his grant, to which it was incident. It may further be observed, that a licence under seal (provided it be a mere licence) is as revocable as a licence by parol; and, on the other hand, a licence by parol, coupled with a grant, is as irrevocable as a licence by deed, provided only that the grant is of a nature capable of being made by parol.’
Those are propositions with which, as it seems to me, no one quarrels or can quarrel. Wood v. Leadbitter rested, I think, upon one of two grounds-I will indicate them both-but I think it was the second of those which I am going to mention. The first ground is that the man who bought his ticket for the race meeting not obtained any grant of the right to come during the currency of the meeting to see any particular spectacle from its commencement to its termination. If that were the ground, it would, I think, be erroneous. I conceive he had the right to see what was to be seen during the days covered by his ticket. But I do not think that was the ground on which the Court decided it. They decided it upon the ground, which will be found at p. 842 and onwards, that no incorporeal inheritance affecting land can be created or transferred otherwise than by deed, a proposition which was discussed with some elaboration in the course of the judgment.
What Alderson B. was saying there was: this man has got no deed; he has got nothing under seal; he has therefore not got a grant; he cannot in this Court be heard to say he is a grantee, and because he is not a grantee he is a mere licensee, and being a mere licensee (whether it is under seal or not under seal does not make any difference) the licence is revocable.
Let me for a moment discuss this present case upon the footing that Wood v Leadbitter stands as good law at this date. I am going to say presently that to my mind it does not, but suppose it does, stand as good law at this date. What is the grant in this case? The plaintiff in the present action paid his money to enjoy the sight of a particular spectacle. He was anxious to go into a picture theatre to see a series of views or pictures during I suppose, an hour or a couple of hours. That which was granted to him was the right to enjoy looking at a spectacle, to attend a performance from its beginning to its end. That which was called the licence, the right to go upon the premises, was only something granted to him for the purpose of enabling him to has e that which had been granted him, namely the right to see, he could not see the performance unless he went into the building His right to go into the building was something given to him in order to enable him to have the benefit of that which had been granted to him, namely, the right to hear the opera, or see the theatrical performance, or see the moving pictures as was the case here. So that here there was a licence coupled with a grant. If so, Wood v. Leadbitter does not stand in the way at all. A licence coupled with a grant is not revocable; Wood v. Leadbitter affirmed as much.
So far I have been treating it as if Wood v Leadbitter were law as now administered in every Court. Let us see how that matter stands. Wood v Leadbitter was a case decided in a Court of law before the Judicature Act; it was a case to be decided, therefore, simply upon the principles which are applicable in a Court of law as distinguished from a Court of Equity. What was the principle which would have been administered in a Court of Equity in the year 1845, the date of Wood v. Leadbitter, or subsequently. For that I look at the decision of Wood V.C. in Frogley v. Earl of Lovelace (1859) John. 333. Other cases have been cited to us; I select this one because it seems to me to be the most pertinent, and to state the proposition in the most plate manner. The facts in Frogley v. Earl of Lovelace were these: the defendant was lessor to the plaintiff of certain lands for twenty-one years; he had executed a lease to him, but preciously to the execution of the lease this was [the lessee] but was not under seal: ‘It is hereby agreed that [the lessee] shall have the exclusive right of sporting over, and killing the game upon, the lands included in the withinwritten lease, and also upon the lands adjacent thereto belonging to the said Earl’ (describing such adjacent lands) ‘during the continuance of the said term, if the said Ralph Frogley shall so long live; he undertaking to keep and leave a fair stock of game thereupon, and not to keep such an excessive quantity of hares and rabbits as to do damage to the said Earl or his under-tenants in the neighbourhood.’ On February 9, 1859, the lessor served the lessee with a notice that after that date he revoked, rescinded, and put an end to that agreement. The question was whether he could do so or not. The suit was brought in a Court of Equity for specific performance for the execution of a proper instrument under seal giving effect to the document which was not under seal. The plaintiff moved for an injunction as prayed by his bill, namely, an injunction to give effect to his rights until that deed had been executed, and that was the matter which came before the Vice Chancellor. At p. 339 the Vice-Chancellor says this: ‘ The memorandum is a mere writing not under seal and the case of Wood v. Leadbitter has decided that, in order to acquire a right such as that which is here claimed by the plaintiff an instrument under seal is necessary; and that, at law, an instrument purporting to grant such a right, though given for a valuable consideration, is revocable at all:- time, and without paying back the money. At law, therefore, the plaintiff has no remedy until the defendant shall have executed a deed containing a proper and legal grant of the exclusive right of sporting in accordance with the terms of the agreement.’ Finding, therefore, that the plaintiff’s interest was incapable of being supported at law upon the footing of Wood v. Leadbitter, he gave him relief in equity, and in so doing so, he says: ‘It appears to me that the plaintiff is clearly- entitled to an injunction in the interval until the defendant shall has-e executed proper legal grant of the right claimed bethe plaintiff.’ What could be plainer ? According to Wood v. Leadbitter the plaintiff would have been dismissed from a Court of Law; he would have had no case. He comes into a Court of Equity and he obtains relief in equity because he would have no remedy at law, and his remedy is given until he has been clothed with such rights under a proper instrument as that he has a remedy at law, and then he is left to his legal rights. I will read a few words from the judgment of Kay J. in McManus v Cooke 35 Ch. D. 681, Kays J. says: ‘Hewlins v Shippam 5 B. and C. 221, Wood v Leadbitter 13 M. and W. 838, and other authorities at common law were cited, and it was argued that the right claimed could only be granted by deed, and that therefore the licence was revocable; but this common law doctrine was not allowed to prevail in equity.” As I have shown in Frogley v. Earl of Lovelace John. p.333 it was not allowed to prevail in equity.
The position of matters now is that the Court is bound under the Judicature Act to give effect to equitable doctrines. The question we have to consider is having regard to equitable considerations, Wood v Leadbitter is now law, meaning that Wood v Leadbitter is a decision which can be applied in its integrity in a Court which is bound to give effect to equitable considerations. In my opinion, it is not. Cozens Hardy J, as he then was, the present Master of the Rolls, in the case of Lowe v Adams [1901] 2 Ch 598, at p. 600, said this: ‘Whether Wood v. Leadbitter is still good Iaw having regard to Walsh v. Lonsdale’ 21 Ch. D. 9 -which is a decision of the Court of Appeal-‘is very doubtful.’ The present Lord Parker, then Parker J., in the case of Jones v. Earl of Tankerville [1909] 2 Ch 440, at p. 443 says this: ‘An injunction restraining the revocation of the licence, when it is revocable at law, may in a sense be called relief by way of specific performance, but it is not specific performance in the sense of compelling the vendor to do anything. It merely prevents him from breaking his contract, and protects a right in equity which but for the absence of a seal would be a right at law, and since the Judicature Act it may well be doubted whether the absence of a seal in such a case can be relied on in any Court.’ What was relied on in Wood v. Leadbitter, and rightly relied on at that date, was that there was not an instrument under seal, and therefore there was not a grant, and therefore the licensee could not say that he was not a mere licensee, but a licensee with a grant. That is now swept away. It cannot be said as against the plaintiff that he is a licensee with no grant merely because there is not an instrument under seal which gives him a right at law.
There is another way in which the matter may be put. If there be a licence with an agreement not to revoke the licence, that, if given for value, is an enforceable right. If the facts here are, as I think they are, that the licence was a licence to enter the building and see the spectacle from its commencement until its termination, then there was included in that contract a contract not to revoke the licence until the play had run to its termination. It was then a breach of contract to revoke the obligation not to revoke the licence, and for that the decision in Kerrison v. Smith [1897] 2 QB 445 is an authority. So far I have dealt with the law.
‘I will say a few words as to what were the facts in this case. The plaintiff entered this picture theatre and paid 6d. for his admission. The defendants denied that he had paid, and that was the question for the jury in the case. The jury have given the plaintiff a verdict; they have found that he did pay his 6d., and that fact is not now in contest before us. Alleging that the plaintiff had not paid, the attendant at the theatre, and then the manager, called upon him to go out of the theatre, treating him as a fraudulent person, a person who had come in without payment. There was some conversation with, I think, one attendant and a second attendant, and then the manager came, and the manager called upon him to go out. A police constable was then called in, and in the presence of the audience the man was again called upon to come out. The police constable was asked to take him out, but declined and said the doorkeeper could take him out if he were so minded. Thereupon the doorkeeper laid hands upon him to remove him by force, and the plaintiff, as a reasonable man, yielded at once to the man and went out. There was in law an assault, and an assault of a grievous kind. He was exposed to indignity, and it is for that indignity, I suppose, that the jury have given him a verdict for 150l.’
‘The defendants had for value contracted that the plaintiff should see a certain spectacle from its commencement to its termination. They broke that contract and it was a tort on their part to remove him. They committed an assault upon him in law. It was not of a violent kind, because, like a wise man, the plaintiff gave way to superior force and left the theatre. They sought to justify the assault- by saying, that they were entitled to remove him because he had not paid. He had paid, the jury have so found. Failing on that question of fact, they say: that they were entitled to remove him because his licence was revocable. In my opinion it was not. There was, I think, no justification for the assault here committed. Under the circumstances it was for the jury to give him such a sum as was right for the assault which was committed upon him, and for the serious indignity to a gentleman of being seized and treated in this way in a place of public resort. The jury have found that he was originally in the theatre as a spectator, that the assault was committed upon him, and that it was a wrongful act.
I think that the appeal which has been brought before us, and which is founded simply upon the question of law which I have discussed at the beginning of this judgment, fails and must be dismissed with costs.’
Kennedy LJ said: ‘I am of the same opinion. The facts as well as the law have been very fully dealt with, and I do not propose to add much. We have heard a very careful and interesting argument chiefly affecting the character of Wood v. Leadbitter. Personally, I am indifferent as to whether that case has or has not been subjected to some slight imputations upon its character. It was decision of a great Court, and I desire to treat it myself with the utmost respect, but I do not think it governs this case. The plaintiff was in this picture theatre and was assaulted and subjected to indignities which were entirely unjustifiable by those who handled him and compelled him to go out. What is his position? He says ‘I was there by right; I was occupying a sent for which I had paid in a place of public entertainment,’ he says that if you pay a certain price you must be entitled to the possession of the seat. The seat, I understand, is one which he may choose; it is not a reserve seat, but a seat which he entered. He did enter that seat, and they took him out again practically, in the eyes of the law, by force. Now the defendants have to justify that, and they justify it by saying that there is a point of law apart from the defence in fact which failed, namely that he was not there by right because he had not fulfilled the condition of payment. The defendants say through their counsel, ‘In point of law, even if you did pay, we had a right to turn you out, although you were behaving in the way in which those who go into places of public entertainment are bound (by implied contract at any rate) to behave.’ They say, ‘In law we are justified because all that you had was a revocable licence. When we use the words ‘revocable licence,’ ‘ say the defendants, ‘we mean that we can at will require you to leave this building, and you are bound to obey. Therefore, as we can legally require you to do so, you must go quietly, and if you do not go quietly we are right, using no more force than is necessary, in putting you out.’ For the reasons I ventured to refer to in the course of the argument by way of illustration (which have been still better illustrated by Buckley L.J. in his judgment) such an astounding conclusion is one which one would require as a matter of law, I think, and as a matter of common sense, to be strictly justified. The justification is hung entirely on the peg of the doctrine which is said to be the doctrine established by the considered decision of the Court of Exchequer in the year 1845. With regard to that decision, I am not going myself to say, and I should feel I was presumptuous in saying, that it was not at the time a perfectly good decision. It has been quoted frequently with respect, and I am not going to say a word in dimiution of that respect. But what was the decision ? It is stated, and I think with perfect correctness, at the bottom of p. 838: ‘A right to come and remain for acertain time on the land of another can be granted only by- deed; and a parole licence to do so, though money be paid for it is revocable at any time, and without paying back the money.’
‘Now I hold that this case, as Buckley LJ has intimated, the contract would not be correctly expressed by saying that it was a right to come and remain for a certain time on the land of another. In this case I think there was, if you were to put the contract into terms, a contract that there should be an irrevocable right to remain until the conclusion of the performance. I do not lay stress upon that point, and for this reason, that in the case of Wood v. Leadbitter, the plaintiff, who ho was in a particular part of the racecourse, might have said that he had the same sort of contract, but he did not say it, and therefore I will leave the matter alone. What was decided by the case was that the grant, to be effectual and irrevocable, must be a grant valid in law, and such a grant could only he made by deed. Passages have already been quoted from that judgment, and I am not going to take up time by quoting them again, but I think that it is important to remember that at the very commencement of the judgment of Alderson B. he points out that the question arose upon the plea and its replication, and the replication, he points out, is that: ‘At the time of such removal, the plaintiff was in the said close by the leave and licence of Lord Eglintoun.’ It was not there suggested by the plaintiff, ‘My right to remain is not merely by leave and licence of Lord Eglintoun; I have an implied contract that I should be there and that contract is not subject to revocation.’ Therefore, as I say, one must deal with that case upon the pleading, and upon that pleading the judgment of the Court cannot be put more specifically or more correctly than in the passage I have quoted from the headnote. There must be a grant by deed; if you show only a parol licence, you have no case. There are several passages which show that. When the learned Alderson B. is commenting on the case, from the decision in which the Court differed, of Talyer v. Waters (1817) 7 Taunt. 374, he says at p. 854: ‘It was taken for granted that, if the statute of Frauds did not apply, a parol licence was sufficient, and the necessity of an instrument under seal, by reason of the interest in question being a right in nature of an easement, was by some inadvertence kept entirely out of sight.’ There is language used in the passage on p. 845 which has been already cited by Buckley L.J. to the same effect, and which states this in one sentence: ‘But where there is a licence by parol, coupled with a parol grant, or pretended grant, of something which is incapable of being granted otherwise than by deed, there the licence is a mere licence; it is not an incident to a valid grant, and it is therefore revocable.’ Does that apply now? Since the Judicature Act there is no doubt we have to apply the principles of equity, and according to those principles there was in this case that which was not granted by a deed, and which need not be granted by deed, and therefore there was that which is valid now in equity as a good title upon which this gentleman, the plaintiff, being in possession of a seat, had a right to stay and say ‘It is no use your saying to me I am obliged to go because I have not got in the language of Wood v. Leadbitter (l) a grant by deed; this is an interest which, whether you call it an easement or not, is an interest which I can now acquire in equity by parol, and I have that interest.’
‘The passage which has been quoted from Parker J.’s judgment in Jones v. Earl of Tankerville states that which I believe to be right, namely, that an injunction restraining the revocation of the licence, when it is revocable at law, may in a sense be called relief by way of specific performance, but it is not specific performance in the sense of compelling the Vendor to do anything. It merely prevents him from breaking his contract, and protects a right in equity which, but for the absence of a seal, would be a right at law. There is also the judgment of Kay .J. in McManus v. Cooke 35 Ch. at p. 697. The learned judge sets out number of propositions established by the authorities in regard to these questions, and amongst other things he says that the equity applies ‘wherever the defendant has obtained and is in possession of some substantial advantage under a parol agreement which, if in writing, should be such as the Court would direct to be specifically performed. The doctrine applies to a parol agreement for an easement, though no interest in land is intended to be acquired.’
‘I have come to the conclusion, therefore, putting,’ aside altogether the question what the contract was in this case, that in fact to treat it upon the basis of Wood v. Leadbitter, being good law is wrong because of more modern legislation. It is no longer good law to do such act as the defendants have done here.
I think I ought to add that that which we are now asserting in this Court has been recognised in the passage to which I referred in the course of the argument from Sir Frederick Pollock’s work upon Torts. He points out carefully at p. 390, referring to Wood v. Leadbitter and Tayler v Waters, which was there overruled, that even in such a case, where there had been part performance, specific performance is sometimes decreed, and equitable rights are now enforced by all the Courts. (See also Roscoe’s Nisi Prius, vol. ii., p. 930.) It seems to me that there was here a good equitable right which rendered the act of the defendants in the present case bad in law.’

Judges:

Buckley LJ, Kennedy LJ, Phillimore LJ

Citations:

[1915] 1 KB 1

Citing:

CitedWood v Leadbitter ExcC 22-Feb-1845
The plaintiff complained of being assaulted. He had been on Doncaster Race Course with a ticket. The owner’s servant requested him to leave, and when he refused gently laid his hands on the plaintiff to remove him. The plaintiff said that his . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract, Equity, Land

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.377908

Forslind v Bechely-Crundall: HL 1922

A ‘shilly-shallying attitude in regard to the contract’ (Lord Dunedin) may discharge a party to a contract otherwise in breach. Procrastination may be so gross and protracted as to amount to repudiation.
Lord Shaw of Dunfermline said: ‘If, in short, A, a party to a contract, acts in such a fashion of ignoring or not complying with his obligations under it, B, the other party, is entitled to say: ‘My rights under this contract are being completely ignored and my interests may suffer by non-performance by A of his obligations, and that to such a fundamental and essential extent that I declare he is treating me as if no contract existed which bound him.’ . . In business over and over again it occurs – as, in my opinion, it occurred in the present case – that procrastination is so persistently practised as to make a most serious inroad into the rights of the other party to a contract. There must be a stage when the person suffering from that is entitled to say: ‘This must be brought to an end. My efforts have been unavailing, and I declare that you have broken your contract relations with me.”
‘the question whether the stage has been reached when procrastination or non-performance’ constitutes repudiation is essentially one of fact.
Viscount Finlay (dissenting on the facts) said: ‘If one of the parties to a contract, either in express terms or by conduct, leads the other party to the reasonable conclusion that he does not mean to carry out the contract, this amounts to a repudiation which will justify the other in treating the contract as at an end.’

Judges:

Lord Shaw of Dunfermline, Lord Dunedin, Viscount Finlay

Citations:

1922 SC (HL) 173

Jurisdiction:

Scotland

Cited by:

CitedSK Shipping (S) Pte Ltd v Petroexport Ltd ComC 24-Nov-2009
The parties disputed the termination of a charterparty for anticipatory repudiatory breach.
Held: To the extent that the dispute relied on disputes of fact, the court preferred the evidence of the claimant. The defendant had displayed an . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.381487

Jones v Randall: HL 23 Apr 1774

Gaming – Declaration that there was a promissory note on a wager given to the piaintiff by defendant in case of a decree in the Court of Chancery should be reversed in the House of Lords, to which decree the person who had laid upon the reversal was party, and had set off his loss by the reversal, upon which the decision would be against him by his gain upon the wager if it should be reversed. They gave in evidence a copy of a minute-book of the House of Lords. Verdict for the plaintiff – upon which motion for a new trial, because evidence insufficient. Lord Mansfield being against them upon that point, there was another that the contract was illegal : so that the points in this case were two.
1. That the evidence was insufficient, which went to the new trial.
2. That the contract was illegal which went to the motion in arrest of judgment.

Citations:

[1774] EngR 57, (1774) Lofft 383, (1774) 98 ER 706

Links:

Commonlii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

See AlsoJones v Randall 7-Feb-1774
In an action upon a wager, whether a decree of the Court of Chancery would be reversed on appeal to the House of Lords, proof of the decree arid reversal is sufficient without shewing the previous proceedings below. – A copy of the judgment of . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.373913

Jones v Randall and Another: 25 Apr 1774

Action lies to recover money won upon a wager, ‘whether a decree of the Court of Chancery would be reversed or not on appeal to the House of Lords ;’ unless the motive be fraud or other turpis causa. Contracts not prohibited by positive law, nor adjudged illegal by precedent, may nevertheless be void as against principles.

Judges:

Mansfield L

Citations:

[1774] EngR 59, (1774) 1 Cowp 37, (1774) 98 ER 954 (B)

Links:

Commonlii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Contract

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.373915

Handel v The City of London Brewery: 1901

Citations:

[1901] Ch D 496

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedAttorney General’s Reference No 3 of 1999: Application By the British Broadcasting Corporation To Set Aside or Vary a Reporting Restriction Order HL 17-Jun-2009
An application was made to discharge an anonymity order made in previous criminal proceedings before the House. The defendant was to be retried for rape under the 2003 Act, after an earlier acquittal. The applicant questioned whether such a order . .
CitedWoodchester Lease Management Services Ltd v Swayne and Co (A Firm) CA 26-Aug-1998
The parties entered into a regulated copier finance agreement. The defendant defaulted. The plaintiffs served a notice to determine the agreement, but providing what sum was to be paid to continue. The defendant said that the notice specified the . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract, Landlord and Tenant

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.349084

Petrie And Another, Executors of Page Keeble, v Hannay, Baronet: 13 Nov 1789

If two persons jointly engage in a stock-jobbing transaction, and incur losses, and employ a broker to pay the differences, and one of them repay the broker with the privity atid consent of the other the whole sum, he may recover a moiety from that other in an action for money paid to his use; notwithstanding the 7 Qeo. 2, e. 8.

Citations:

[1789] EngR 2589, (1789) 3 TR 418, (1789) 100 ER 652

Links:

Commonlii

Contract

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.368220

Chandler v Parker and Danks: 1800

Where the plaintiff declares on a joint contract, and one defendant pleads infancy, the plaintiff cannot enter a noli prosequi and proceed against the other defendant in that action, but should commence a new action against the adult defendant only.

Citations:

[1800] EngR 3, (1800) 3 Esp 76, (1800) 170 ER 544 (A)

Links:

Commonlii

Contract, Children

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.345779

Bunn, Executor of Bunn v Guy: 7 Nov 1803

A contract entered into by a practising attorney to relinquish his business and recommend his clients t0 two other attornies for a valuable consideration, and that he would not himself practise in such business within certain limits, and would permit them to make use of his name in their firm for a certain time, but without his interference, andc was holden to be valid in law.

Citations:

[1803] EngR 697, (1803) 4 East 190, (1803) 102 ER 803

Links:

Commonlii

Legal Professions, Contract

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.344738

Chase And Others, Assignees of William And Thomas Hurst (Bankrupts), v James And David Westmore: 21 May 1816

A workman having bestowed his labour upon a chattel in consideration of a price fixed in amount by his agreement with the owner, may detain the chattel until the price be paid; and this, though the chattel be delivered to the workman in different parcels, and at different times, if the work to be done under the agreement be entire. Semble, that where the parties contract for a particular time or mode of payment, the workman has not a right to set up a claim to the possession inconsistent with the terms of the contract.

Citations:

[1816] EngR 501, (1816) 5 M and S 180, (1816) 105 ER 1016

Links:

Commonlii

Cited by:

CitedYour Response Ltd v Datateam Business Media Ltd CA 14-Mar-2014
The claimant employed the defendant to manage subscription lists for the claimant’s magazines. The claimant came to seek damages, and the defendant for non-payment of its invoices. The court was now asked whether it was possible to assert a common . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.334194

Slack v Tolson: 4 Aug 1826

A, having previously borrowed andpound;1000 of B, executes to him a bond for that sum, and B, two days afterwards, executes a deed, whereby he covenants that the bond shall not be enforced: some years afterwards, B having become bankrupt, his assignees bring an action on the bond, and file a bill to have the deed of covenant declared fraudulent. Held, that the Court will not interfere against the legal operation of the deed; there being nothing to shew that B was insolvent when he executed it; and there being evidence, that A. had also at that time pecuniary claims on E, and that the execution of the bond was accompanied by an agreement, that payment of it should not be enforced.

Citations:

[1826] EngR 1119, (1826) 1 Russ 553, (1826) 38 ER 213

Links:

Commonlii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Contract, Insolvency

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.325883

Ranger v The Earl of Chesterfield: 1 May 1816

If a bond and warrant of attorney and indenture be made to secure an annuity, the memorial of the bond and warrant of attorney, need not express for whose life the annuity is granted, if it be expressed in the memorial of the indenture, which recites the said bond and warrant of attorney, for whose life the said annuity is granted.

Citations:

[1816] EngR 439, (1816) 5 M and S 2, (1816) 105 ER 952 (B)

Links:

Commonlii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Contract

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.334132

Judson v Etheridge: 1833

A contract for the feeding and stabling of a horse does not allow a lien for unpaid fees because it does not improve the horse.

Citations:

[1833] EngR 144, (1833) 1 Cr and M 743, (1833) 149 ER 598

Links:

Commonlii

Cited by:

CitedYour Response Ltd v Datateam Business Media Ltd CA 14-Mar-2014
The claimant employed the defendant to manage subscription lists for the claimant’s magazines. The claimant came to seek damages, and the defendant for non-payment of its invoices. The court was now asked whether it was possible to assert a common . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.318138

Scarfe v Morgan: 1838

A keeper of livery stables does not have a right to exercise a lien for his charges because he is obliged to give possession of the horse to the bailor whenever requested.
Parke B. expressed the view that particular liens ‘being consistent with the principles of natural equity, are favoured by the law, which is construed liberally in such cases.’

Judges:

Parke B

Citations:

[1838] EngR 253, (1838) 4 M and W 270, (1838) 150 ER 1430

Links:

Commonlii

Cited by:

CitedYour Response Ltd v Datateam Business Media Ltd CA 14-Mar-2014
The claimant employed the defendant to manage subscription lists for the claimant’s magazines. The claimant came to seek damages, and the defendant for non-payment of its invoices. The court was now asked whether it was possible to assert a common . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.312259

Brown v Boorman, Boorman, and Wild: HL 3 Jun 1844

The declaration alleged that A employed B as a broker, to sell and deliver oil, on the terms contained in such contracts of sale as should be made with perisons who should become purchasers thereof, for reasonable commission to B: That B accepted the employment, and sold oil to C on the terms of payment on delivery: That it thereupon became the duty of B not to deliver the oil without payment: That B delivered the oil to C, but did not obtain payment, whereby the plaintiff was damnified. Held that this declaration set forth a good cause of action: that the duty of B arose out of the contract: and that, after verdict, judgment could not be arrested.
Wherever there is a contract, and something is to be done in the course of the emiployment which is the subject of that contract, if there is a breach of duty in the course of that employment, the party injured may recover either in tort or in contract.

Citations:

[1844] EngR 65, (1844) 11 Cl and Fin 1, (1844) 8 ER 1003

Links:

Commonlii, Uniset

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Contract

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.304657

Tolhurst v Notley: 18 Jan 1848

In assumpsit on a promissory note, by indorsee against maker, defendant pleaded that the payee, before, at and ever since the time of indorsement, was indebted to him in a sum equalling the money due on the note, and damages ; and, while so indebted, and after maturity in order to deprive defendant of his set-off, in fraud of defendant and in collusion with plaintiff, indorsed to plaintiff without consideration, in
order to enable him to sue for the use and benefit of the payee : and that plaintiff
commenced and maintains the action as agent for the payee, for his use and benefit, according to the fraud and collusion. And defendant offered to set off, to the payee and plaintiff, the damages sustained by the nonpayment of the note, against the payee’s debt to defendant. Replication : de injuria. Special demurrer to the replication held frivolous, inasmuch as fraud was averred in the plea; and it was immaterial to the goodliness of the replication whether, without such averment, the plea disclosed a defence.

Citations:

[1848] EngR 139, (1848) 11 QB 406, (1848) 116 ER 529

Links:

Commonlii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Contract

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.299689

Forth v Simpson: 23 May 1849

A racehorse trainer cannot exercise a lien over a racehorse for his fees if the contract reserves to the owner (expressly or by implication) the right to decide the places at which and the jockeys by whom it is to be raced.

Citations:

[1849] EngR 641, (1849) 13 QB 680, (1849) 116 ER 1423

Links:

Commonlii

Cited by:

CitedYour Response Ltd v Datateam Business Media Ltd CA 14-Mar-2014
The claimant employed the defendant to manage subscription lists for the claimant’s magazines. The claimant came to seek damages, and the defendant for non-payment of its invoices. The court was now asked whether it was possible to assert a common . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.298946

Henry Stephenson Johnson And Isabella, His Wife v Samuel Lucas: 1853

A declaration by husband and wife on an account stated rnust shew that the accounting was concerning matters in which the wife had an lnterest. So held, on demurrer to a declaration posterior to the coming into effect of stat. 15 and
16 Vict, c. 76.

Citations:

[1853] EngR 12, (1853) 1 El and Bl 659, (1853) 118 ER 584

Links:

Commonlii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Contract

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.293998

Holliday v Morgan: 2 Nov 1858

A warranty of soundness, oil the sale of a horse, is broken by a malformation, existing from the birth of the horse, which, at the time of the sale, renders the horse less fit for reasonable use. – As an extraordinary convexity of the cornea of the eye, producing shortsightedness, in consequence of which the horse is liable to shy. – Such a defect in the eye is not so patent a defect that a purchaser with express warranty is bound to notice it.

Citations:

[1858] EngR 1066, (1858) 1 El and El 1, (1858) 120 ER 808

Links:

Commonlii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Contract, Animals

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.289537

William Pain Beecham and Richard Smith v Henry Tilden Smith: 28 May 1858

Action by A. and B., payees of a joint and several promissory note, against C., one of the makers. Plea, that the said note was made (setting it out) by B., out of the plaintiffs, the defendant, and another : and that the defendant, in case the plaintiffa were to recover from him in that action the amount of the said note, would be entitled to call on B. for contribution. On demurrer, held a bad plea, as being no answer to the action upon the several contract by C. – Semble, per Lord Campbetl C.J., that, even if the plea had beeri good, a replication, averring that the plaintiffs made the said note only as sureties for third parties, would have been a good answer.

Citations:

[1858] EngR 742, (1858) El Bl and El 442, (1858) 120 ER 574

Links:

Commonlii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Contract

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.289213

Thompson v Hudson: 3 Nov 1864

A judgment creditor, whose debt had been satisfied but who had not entered satisfaction on the rolls, was made a Defendant to a foreclosure suit. He disclaimed. Held, that he was not entitled to his costs, in consequence of his negligence in not entering up satisfaction of his judgment,

Judges:

Sir John Romilly MR

Citations:

[1864] EngR 699 (A), (1864) 34 Beav 107

Links:

Commonlii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Contract, Costs

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.282413

Elsey v J G Collins Insurance Agencies Limited: 1978

(Supreme Court of Canada) The court considered the power to strike down a clause as a penalty: ‘It is now evident that the power to strike down a penalty clause is a blatant interference with the freedom of contract and is designed for the sole purpose of providing relief against oppression for the party having to pay the stipulated sum. It has no place where there is no such oppression.’

Judges:

Dickson J

Citations:

[1978] 83 DLR 15

Jurisdiction:

Canada

Cited by:

CitedTullett Prebon Group Ltd v El-Hajjali QBD 31-Jul-2008
The defendant signed an employment contract to join the claimants as a senior broker. He changed his mind and decided to stay in his existing job. The new employers sued for breach of contract. The defendant said that the claimants had refused to . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.282597

Lockland Builders v Rickwood: 1995

A contract for the construction of a house gave the building owner the right to determine the contract if the rate of progress, materials or workmanship proved unsatisfactory as certified by an independent third party and the building contractor failed to rectify them within a specified period. The building owner was dissatisfied with the work, but did not seek to invoke clause 2, but wrote to the contractor purporting to treat the contract as discharged and sought to recover damages.
Held: The clause was designed to deal with shortcomings of the very kind alleged and the common law right to treat the contract as discharged by reason of repudiation could arise only in a case where the breach was of a fundamental nature. The breaches alleged were not of that kind and so the building owner’s only right to terminate arose under clause 2, which he had not invoked. The court placed some emphasis on the fact that the clause was not expressed to be without prejudice to the building owner’s rights under the general law.

Citations:

[1995] 77 BLR 42

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedStocznia Gdynia Sa v Gearbulk Holdings Ltd CA 13-Feb-2009
Orders were placed for the construction of ships. They were not delivered. The buyer, the defendant, cancelled the orders. The defendants sought the loss of profit. The claimants said they were entitled only to the repayment of instalments. The . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.282633

Jenning and Chapman Ltd v Woodman Matthews and Co: 1952

Citations:

[1952] 2 TLR 406

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedCountrywide Communications Limited v ICL Pathway Ltd 1996
The court considered the authorities bearing on the question of whether or not a claim under a quantum meruit can successfully be made for work done in anticipation of a contract which does not materialise. Strauss J concluded: ‘I have found it . .
MentionedMSM Consulting Ltd v United Republic of Tanzania QBD 30-Jan-2009
The claimants sought commission or a quantum meruit for the part they had taken in finding a suitable site for the defendant’s High Commission in London.
Held: The works undertaken were consistent with the claimant seeking work from the . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.280270

Re Scott and Alvarez’s Contract No 2: CA 1895

Lindley LJ discussed the circumstances under which a deposit paid under a contract for the sale of land could be returned. Even where specific performance was refused to the vendor because the title was wholly defective, the purchaser might be left unable to rescind by the terms of the contract, and therefore unable in law to claim return of the deposit: ‘There is no question of discretion in such a case as that . . The legal answer is this: ‘There is no breach of contract at all; you have taken your chance with respect to your deposit; and unless you shew a breach by the vendor of his bargain, you are not entitled to have that deposit back.”

Judges:

Lindley LJ

Citations:

[1895] 2 Ch 603

Cited by:

CitedMIDILL (97Pl) Ltd v Park Lane Estates Ltd and Another CA 11-Nov-2008
Refusal to return Land Contract Deposit
The court was asked as to whether a seller could retain a deposit paid by the claimant on a sale where contracts had been exchanged but the buyer had proved unable to go ahead.
Held: The appeal against refusal of return of the deposit failed. . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land, Contract

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.279042

Smith v Wallace: 1895

Romer J said that a vendor of land wanting to exercise the right of rescission given him by the relevant contract term must do so ‘fairly, and to determine promptly whether he [will] exercise the power or not. He [is] not entitled to take advantage of his position, and to leave the purchaser in ignorance whether the contract [is] to be treated as rescinded or not.’

Judges:

Romer J

Citations:

[1895] 1 Ch 385

Cited by:

CitedAlchemy Estates Ltd v Astor and Another ChD 5-Nov-2008
The parties disputed the effect of a contract between them for the sale of a leasehold property. After exchange the solicitors failed to obtain the landlord’s consent to the proposed assignment as required by the lease. In the meantime the proposed . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land, Contract

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.277561

Rossiter v Miller: 1873

There is no significance in the fact that a formal written agreement, whether executed or not, is in different terms to the oral discussions leading up to it, subject of course to the appropriate authority of those who have executed it.
Lord Blackburn said: ‘So long as they are only in negotiation either party may retract; and though the parties may have agreed on all the cardinal points of the intended contract, yet, if some particulars essential to the agreement still remain to be settled afterwards, there is no contract. The parties, in such a case, are still only in negotiation. But the mere fact that the parties have expressly stipulated that there shall afterwards be a formal agreement prepared, embodying the terms, which shall be signed by the parties does not, by itself, shew that they continue merely in negotiation. It is a matter to be taken into account in construing the evidence and determining whether the parties have really come to a final agreement or not. But as soon as the fact is established of the final mutual assent of the parties so that those who draw up the formal agreement have not the power to vary the terms already settled, I think the contract is completed.’

Judges:

Lord Blackburn

Citations:

[1873] 3 APP Cas 1124

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedLondon and Regional Investments Ltd v TBI Plc and Another ChD 1-Mar-2001
. .
CitedHutchison and others v B and DF Ltd ChD 3-Oct-2008
The claimants sought an order declaring that the defendant had a tenancy and requiring it to execute an appropriate lease. The landlords said that the tenant had a continuation lease under the 1954 renewal procedure, and the tenants said they had . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.276690

London and Regional Investments Ltd v TBI Plc and Another: ChD 1 Mar 2001

Judges:

Peter Smith J

Citations:

Unreported March 2001

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedRossiter v Miller 1873
There is no significance in the fact that a formal written agreement, whether executed or not, is in different terms to the oral discussions leading up to it, subject of course to the appropriate authority of those who have executed it.
Lord . .

Cited by:

CitedHutchison and others v B and DF Ltd ChD 3-Oct-2008
The claimants sought an order declaring that the defendant had a tenancy and requiring it to execute an appropriate lease. The landlords said that the tenant had a continuation lease under the 1954 renewal procedure, and the tenants said they had . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.276692

Cooden Engineering Co Ltd v Stanford: CA 1953

A payment to be made on a wrongful termination of a lease by a tenant, will attract consideration of the law of penalties, for notwithstanding the requirement for acceptance of it, the amount to be paid is, ‘plainly a sum to be paid in consequence of the breach’.

Judges:

Jenkins LJ, Somervell LJ

Citations:

[1953] 1 QB 86, [1952] 2 All ER 915

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedOffice of Fair Trading v Abbey National Plc and others ComC 8-Oct-2008
The director sought a further judgment as to whether charges imposed by banks on a customer taking an unauthorised overdraft, and otherwise were unlawful penalties. . .
CitedCavendish Square Holding Bv v Talal El Makdessi; ParkingEye Ltd v Beavis SC 4-Nov-2015
The court reconsidered the law relating to penalty clauses in contracts. The first appeal, Cavendish Square Holding BV v Talal El Makdessi, raised the issue in relation to two clauses in a substantial commercial contract. The second appeal, . .
ApprovedCampbell Discount Company Ltd v Bridge HL 1962
The parties disputed the validity of a clause in a car hire contract relating to the consequences of a breach.
Held: (Majority) The agreement had been terminated by breach rather than by the exercise of an option, so that the stipulated . .
CitedWright and Another (Liquidators of SHB Realisations Ltd) v The Prudential Assurance Company Ltd ChD 6-Mar-2018
IVA is a special form of contract
Liquidators asked the court whether sums sought by the insolvent company’s landlords were payable and or provable. Under an IVA, the copany had been paying reduced rents, but the arrangement document provided that the full rents would be restored on . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract, Landlord and Tenant

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.277065

Von Hatzfeldt-Wildenburg v Alexander: 1912

Parker J said: ‘It appears to be well settled by the authorities that if the documents or letters relied on as constituting a contract contemplate the execution of a further contract between the parties, it is a question of construction whether the execution of the further contract is a condition or term of the bargain or whether it is a mere expression of the desire of the parties as to the manner in which the transaction already agreed to will in fact go through. In the former case there is no enforceable contract either because the condition is unfulfilled or because the law does not recognize a contract to enter into a contract. In the latter case there is a binding contract and the reference to the more formal contract can be ignored.’

Judges:

Parker J

Citations:

[1912] 1 Ch 284

Contract

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.276691

Humble v Hunter: 1848

Citations:

(1848) 12 QB 310

Cited by:

CitedDunlop Pneumatic Tyre Co Ltd v Selfridge and Co Ltd HL 26-Apr-1915
One company had acquired tyres from the appellant at a discount, but subject to conditions as to their resale. The respondents contracted for their repurchase, making similar promises, but it sold them below the minimum price agreed. The appellant . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.276434

New Zealand Shipping Co Ltd v Societe des Ateliers et Chantiers de France: 1919

Citations:

[1919] AC 718

Cited by:

CitedTorquay Hotel v Cousins CA 17-Dec-1968
The plaintiff contracted to buy oil for his hotel from Esso. Members of the defendant trades union blocked the deliveries of oil by Esso to the Hotel because of a trade dispute they had with the management of the hotel. The hotel sued for an . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.272907

Badische Anilin und Soda Fabrik v Hickson: HL 1906

A British patent was not infringed by a sale of goods where the property in the goods had already passed before they arrived in this country. Lord Loreburn LC said: ‘A contract to sell unascertained goods is not a complete sale, but a promise to sell. There must be added to it some act which completes the sale, such as delivery or the appropriation of specific goods to the contract by the assent, express or implied, of both buyer and seller.’
Lord Atkinson where he has stated : ‘And it is, moreover, quite obvious that a contract entered into in England for the sale of a specific ascertained chattel situated abroad, of a kind and nature protected here by patent but never imported into this country, can no more deprive the patentee of his profits’ . . raise the price of the article at home, hurt trade here, or cause general inconvenience . . ‘to the community in these kingdoms – the very evils struck at by the Statute of Monopolies – than would the same contract if entered into abroad. The two transactions are indeed equally outside the purview of this statute.’

Judges:

Lord Loreburn LC, Lord Atkinson

Citations:

[1906] AC 419

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedOxonica Energy Ltd v Neuftec Ltd PatC 5-Sep-2008
The parties disputed the meaning of an patent and know how licence. The parties disputed whether the agreement referred to IP rights before formal patents had been granted despite the terms of the agreement.
Held: ‘The secret of drafting legal . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract, Intellectual Property

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.273184

Keir v Leeman: 1846

Tyndal CJ said: ‘Indeed it is very remarkable what very little authority there is to be found . . for the principle that any compromise of a misdemeanour or indeed of any public offence can be otherwise than illegal and any promise founded on such a consideration otherwise than void. If the matter were res integra we should have no doubt on this point. We have no doubt that in all offences which involve damages to an injured party for which he may maintain an action it is competent for him, notwithstanding they are also of a public nature, to compromise or settle his private damage in any way he may think fit.’

Judges:

Tyndal CJ

Citations:

[1846] 9 QB 371

Cited by:

CitedAustralia and New Zealand Banking Group Ltd v Compagnie Noga D’Importation Et D’Exportation Sa and Another ComC 21-Feb-2007
Non-payment of bills of exchange – construction of settlement agreement. It was said that the compromise agreement ws unenforceable as being against public policy in restraining one party.
Held: The restraint ‘does not affect the course of . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.270282

Rawlings v General Trading Co: CA 1921

Prospective bidders at an auction of military surplus stores agreed that only one should bid. Thus the defendant was to bid on their joint account, and the goods purchased were to be shared equally, each paying half the purchase price. The goods were duly knocked down to the defendant, but he reneged on the agreement, which the plaintiff then sued to enforce. The contract was held to be contrary to public policy.
Held: The judge’s decision was against authority. Atkin LJ said that the agreement was one the parties were free, in the absence of express or implied misrepresentations intended to deceive, to make and enforce the agreement was one the parties were free, in the absence of express or implied misrepresentations intended to deceive, to make and enforce, and there was nothing in this agreement which was ex facie illegal. Bankes LJ concurred.
Scrutton LJ dissenting said it was clear that the agreement was neither criminal nor actionable at the suit of the vendors, but he considered that the restrictions accepted in the agreement, although reasonable in the plaintiff’s interest, were contrary to the interest of the public and thus an unjustified and unenforceable restraint of trade.

Judges:

Scrutton LJ, Atkin LJ, Bankes LJ

Citations:

[1921] 1 KB 635

Citing:

Appeal fromRawlings v General Trading Co 1920
Prospective bidders at an auction of military surplus stores had agreed that one should bid for their joint account, and the goods purchased were to be shared equally, each paying half the purchase price. The goods were knocked down to the . .

Cited by:

CitedNorris v United States of America and others HL 12-Mar-2008
The detainee appealed an order for extradition to the USA, saying that the offence (price-fixing) was not one known to English common law. The USA sought his extradition under the provisions of the Sherman Act.
Held: It was not, and it would . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.270736

Lowenstein and Co Limited v Durable Wharfage Co Limited: 1973

Citations:

[1973] 1 Lloyds Rep 221

Cited by:

CitedKamidian v Holt (on Behalf of Certain Underwriters at Lloyd’s) and others ComC 27-Jun-2008
The claimant claimed to have bought what he believed to be a genuine Faberge Egg Clock, but which his insurers said was a copy. It was loaned to an exhibition, and insured, and damaged twice. The parties disagreed as to the disappreciation value, . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract, Agency

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.270465

Howard v Odhams Press: CA 1935

The plaintiff claimed damages arising out of disclosure to his union of fraudulent activities in the defendant’s competition department of which he had been a member, such disclosure being contrary to an agreement between the claimant and his employers. Held; The contract sued upon was invalid as being against public policy since as it purported to prevent the defendants from giving information to third parties which might assist them to secure the conviction of persons who had defrauded them in the past or to prevent commission of frauds against them in the future.
Slesser LJ said: ‘It may be said that the particular facts on which this agreement is said to be illegal are not those precisely of stifling a prosecution or compounding a crime; but the agreement would in my opinion have the necessary effect of restricting the opportunity which the defendants and others might otherwise possess to assist the authorities in the investigation of, and, if necessary, in the prosecution of the alleged crimes.’ He approved Lound and added ‘and a fortiori if they are criminal’.

Judges:

Slesser LJ

Citations:

[1935] 1 KB 1

Citing:

CitedLound v Grimwade ChD 1886
The plaintiff tried to set aside a bond, saying that he had executed it under duress in the form of the threat of criminal proceedings.
Held: The bond had not been executed under pressure at law. However the consideration for it included a . .

Cited by:

CitedAustralia and New Zealand Banking Group Ltd v Compagnie Noga D’Importation Et D’Exportation Sa and Another ComC 21-Feb-2007
Non-payment of bills of exchange – construction of settlement agreement. It was said that the compromise agreement ws unenforceable as being against public policy in restraining one party.
Held: The restraint ‘does not affect the course of . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.270281

Vitol Sa v Norelf Ltd: HL 10 Jul 1996

(The Santa Clara) The seller was to deliver propane by a ship set to leave on a certain date. The market was falling. The buyer, when it was clear that the ship would be unable to leave on the day fixed, sent a telex to say that the contract was repudiated. The seller did nothing, but later sued for the loss on a later sale. The buyer said that the seller’s mere failure to carry out his side of the contract was sufficient to be an acceptance of the repudiation, thus excusing the buyer from the purchase.
Held: The seller’s appeal succeeded. A party suffering a repudiation of a contract can notify his election to accept or affirm the contract in any way: ‘a failure to perform may sometimes signify to a repudiating party an election by the aggrieved party to treat the contract as at an end.’ Silence can be held to be an acceptance of a contract, and it can exceptionally, and as a question of fact, also amount to an acceptance of a repudiation. All that is required for acceptance of a repudiation at common law is for the injured party to communicate clearly and unequivocally his intention to treat the contract as discharged
Lord Steyn said: ‘The primary purpose of the Act of 1979 was to reduce the extent of the court’s supervisory jurisdiction over arbitration awards. It did so by substituting for the special case procedure a limited system of filtered appeals on questions of law.’ and ‘It is now possible to turn directly to the first issue posed, namely whether non-performance of an obligation is ever as a matter of law capable of constituting an act of acceptance. On this aspect I found the judgment of Phillips J. entirely convincing. One cannot generalise on the point. It all depends on the particular contractual relationship and the particular circumstances of the case. But, like Phillips J., I am satisfied that a failure to perform may sometimes signify to a repudiating party an election by the aggrieved party to treat the contract as at an end. Postulate the case where an employer at the end of a day tells a contractor that he, the employer, is repudiating the contract and that the contractor need not return the next day. The contractor does not return the next day or at all. It seems to me that the contractor’s failure to return may, in the absence of any other explanation, convey a decision to treat the contract as at an end. Another example may be an overseas sale providing for shipment on a named ship in a given month. The seller is obliged to obtain an export licence. The buyer repudiates the contract before loading starts. To the knowledge of the buyer the seller does not apply for an export licence with the result that the transaction cannot proceed. In such circumstances it may well be that an ordinary businessman, circumstanced as the parties were, would conclude that the seller was treating the contract as at an end. Taking the present case as illustrative, it is important to bear in mind that the tender of a bill of lading is the pre-condition to payment of the price. Why should an arbitrator not be able to infer that when, in the days and weeks following loading and the sailing of the vessel, the seller failed to tender a bill of lading to the buyer he clearly conveyed to a trader that he was treating the contract as at an end?’

Judges:

Steyn, Mackay, Griffiths, Nolan, Hoffmann LL

Citations:

Gazette 10-Jul-1996, Times 01-Jul-1996, [1996] AC 800, [1996] 2 Lloyds Rep 225

Statutes:

Arbitration Act 1979

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

At first instanceVitol Sa v Norelf Ltd (the ‘Santa Clara’) QBD 30-Apr-1993
The parties chartered for delivery of molasses. The ship was not going to be ready for the intended start date and the charterer repudiated the contract in a telex alleging breach of condition. The market was falling rapidly. The sellers did . .
Appeal fromVitol Sa v Norelf Ltd (‘the Santa Cara’) CA 26-May-1995
The parties agreed to buy and sell molasses to be delivered on the Santa Clara which was set to leave on a certain date. The market was falling, and when the buyer saw that the ship would not be ready in time, it sent a telex saying that this was a . .
CitedOverseas Buyers v Granadex 1980
The court considered the meaning of a promise by one party to use its best endeavours.
Held: Mustill J said: ‘it was argued that the arbitrators can be seen to have misdirected themselves as to the law to be applied, for they have found that . .
CitedFercometal v Mediterranean Shipping Co SA, The Simona HL 1988
The House considered the options available to a party faced with an anticipatory repudiation of a contract.
Held: Affirmation or election requires an unequivocal choice between two inconsistent causes of action.
Lord Ackner said: ‘When A . .
Went too farState Trading Corporation of India Ltd v M Golodetz Ltd CA 1989
Kerr LJ said: ‘What is commonly referred to as an acceptance of a repudiation must be communicated to the party in breach or at least overtly evinced. . An unequivocal act which is inconsistent with the subsistence of the contract may be sufficient, . .
CitedRust v Abbey Life Assurance Co ltd CA 1979
Delay in objection indicated assent to contract
The court was asked whether a binding contract had been concluded between an applicant for an investment in property bonds and the insurance company offering such bonds when, in response to an application form submitted by the applicant, accompanied . .

Cited by:

CitedForce India Formula One Team Ltd v Etihad Airways PJSC and Another QBD 4-Nov-2009
The parties had entered into a sponsorship agreement, with the claimants undertaking to display the name of the defendants on their car. After the agreement, the claimant company had been taken over by parties with interests competing with those of . .
CitedPhones 4U Ltd v EE Ltd ComC 16-Jan-2018
The parties contracted for the marketing of contracts for the marketing of the defendant’s mobile phone contracts. On the claimant entering administration, the defendant exercised a clause in their contract to terminate the contract. The claimant . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract, Arbitration

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.90181

Society of Lloyds v Clementson, Same v Mason: ComC 11 Jan 1994

An undertaking given on joining Lloyds is a sufficiently binding contract.

Citations:

Times 11-Jan-1994, [1995] CLC 117

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

Appealed toSociety of Lloyd’s v Clementson and Another CA 11-Nov-1994
It was arguable that a central insolvency fund created to manage the Lloyd’s liabilities distorted competition, and was therefore unenforceable. The court refused to make a preliminary ruling on the applicability of article 85 of the EC Treaty. . .

Cited by:

AppliedEurophone International Ltd v Frontel Communications Ltd ChD 25-Jul-2001
Although the VAT regime required all commercial enterprises to issue VAT invoices in a timely way, that is not sufficient, of itself, to create an implied term into contracts between businesses, that invoices should be issued in a way which would . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Insurance, Contract

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.89375

Trafalgar House Construction (Regions) Ltd v General Surety and Guarantee Co Ltd: HL 4 Jul 1995

The main contractors for the construction of a new leisure complex for a borough council entered into a subcontract for the groundworks. The subcontractor and the appellants provided a Bond for 10 percent of the value of the subcontract on condition that ‘if the subcontractors shall duly perform and observe’ all the terms of the contract or ‘if on default by the subcontractor the surety shall satisfy and discharge the damages sustained by the main contractor thereby’ up to the amount of the Bond then the obligation would be null and void but otherwise remain in full force.
Held: The appeal succeeded. The subcontractor was entitled to a set off against a claim on the bond given to the head contractor. A sub-contractor’s bond was a guarantee and he was entitled to the rights of a guarantor. The House viewed with scepticism a submission that it was an implied term of a bond that any overpayment would be repaid.
Bonds in similar form had always been treated as guarantee; the bond referred to the appellants as ‘the surety’; the contract appeared in substance to be one to answer for the default of another; and it contained express provisions negating release of the surety upon a variation of the contract or forbearance as to time.
Lord Jauncey of Tullichettle said: ‘There is no doubt that in a contract of guarantee parties may, if so minded, exclude any one or more of the normal incidents of suretyship. However, if they choose to do so clear and unambiguous language must be used to displace the normal legal consequences of the contract . .’

Judges:

Lord Jauncey of Tullichettle

Citations:

Gazette 19-Jul-1995, Times 04-Jul-1995, [1995] 3 All ER 737, [1996] 1 AC 199

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

Appeal fromTrafalgar House Construction (Regions) Ltd v General Surety and Guarantee Co Ltd CA 1994
Beldam LJ said: ‘It seems to me implicit that the demand made by the sub-contractor should state the amount of the damages sustained by the default. But it does not follow that, because the main contractor must state the amount of the damages, the . .

Cited by:

CitedGold Coast Ltd v Caja De Ahorros Del Mediterraneo and others CA 6-Dec-2001
The banks appealed findings as to their liability to pay out under on-demand guarantees they had given in respect of stage payments for the construction of a ship. It was claimed that the delivery times had not been met, and the builder was in . .
CitedVan Der Merwe and Another v IIG Capital Llc ChD 13-Nov-2007
The parties had entered into a debt factoring agreement, under which repayment was sought of some $30m, and the claimants were said to have guaranteed the loan by the factor to their company. The court was asked whether the guarantors had the same . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract, Construction

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.89972

Skilton v Sullivan: CA 18 Mar 1994

The seller of a quantity of Koi carp sent the buyer an invoice for trout. The supply of Koi carp is chargeable to VAT but the supply of trout is not. When the seller sued for the price, he was met with a plea that the contract was illegal as being a fraud on the Revenue.
Held: At the time the contract was entered into there was no intention to defraud the Revenue and although the subsequent sending of the invoice for trout was an unlawful act, the seller was not relying on that act to recover the price. An intention not to account for VAT did not vitiate it.
Beldam LJ said: ‘In a case in which one party to a contract seeks performance of an obligation under the contract by the other party, it is now well established that the contract entered into with the object of committing an illegal act is unenforceable. If both parties enter that contract with that objective, neither can enforce it. If one of the parties does so and the other is unaware of the illegal purpose the party whose object is illegal cannot enforce the obligation of the other. ‘

Judges:

Beldam LJ

Citations:

Gazette 01-Jun-1994, Ind Summary 16-May-1994, Times 25-Mar-1994

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedNapier v National Business Agency Ltd CA 1951
The plaintiff sought to sue for wrongful dismissal on a contract of employment under which he was paid andpound;13 salary per week and andpound;6 ‘expenses’, when his expenses could never exceed andpound;1 per week.
Held: The parties had made . .
CitedSt John Shipping Corporation v Joseph Rank Limited 1956
The defendants held a bill of lading for part of the cargo carried on the plaintiffs’ vessel from Mobile, Alabama, to Birkenhead. The vessel was over laden and the plaintiffs were guilty of an offence under the 1932 Act. The defendants relied on the . .

Cited by:

Cited21st Century Logistic Solutions Limited (In Liquidation) v Madysen Limited QBD 17-Feb-2004
The vendor sold computers to the defendant, intending not to account to the commissioners for the VAT. The seller went into liquidation, and the liquidator sought payment. The purchaser had been unaware of the intended fraud and resisted payment. . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.89296

Little v Courage Ltd: ChD 19 Jan 1994

The pub tenant had an option to renew his lease, subject to agreeing with the brewer a business plan and agreement. He notified the landlord that he wished to renew but the landlord did not himself present any plan and agreement, or obtain one, but instead declined to grant a new lease on the grounds that no new plan or agreement had been entered into.
Held: A condition precedent for a plan which was unfulfilled defeated a right to a new lease.

Citations:

Times 19-Jan-1994

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

Appeal fromLittle v Courage Ltd CA 6-Jan-1995
The tenancy contained an option for the tenant to renew, subject to agreement being reached with the brewer on a business plan. The tenant said he wished to renew, but the brewer did not present a business plan or agreement, and then the landlord . .
CitedTaylor v Rive Droite Music Ltd ChD 6-Jul-2004
The claimant music producer and songwriter had entered into a publishers agreement with the defendant, agreeing to work for it. He now sought to be free to work for another company. The factual background was unclear, and the contract documentation . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Landlord and Tenant, Contract

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.83094

Close Asset Finance Ltd v Care Graphics Machinery Ltd: QBD 21 Mar 2000

A hire agreement provided that after the payment of substantial sums over the period of hire, the hirers could exercise an option to purchase the equipment for fifty pounds. They purported to sell the equipment before the end of the lease, but the question arose of whether they could give good title.
Held: However likely it was that the option would be exercised, there was no obligation on the hirer to exercise it, and there was therefore no binding agreement to buy, and he could not give good title, despite having possession of the equipment.

Citations:

Times 21-Mar-2000, Gazette 23-Mar-2000

Statutes:

Sale of Goods Act 1979 25(1)

Consumer, Contract, Commercial

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.79231

Chiemgauer Membran Und Zeltbau Gmbh v New Millenium Experience Company Ltd: ChD 16 Jan 2001

Where one party terminated a contract without cause, damages were to be assessed on the basis of the contract provision allowing that. Certain aspects of causation should be side stepped, as with the law of repudiation. It was not open to the terminating party to seek to reduce the damages it should pay, by arguing that the claimant company, which had fallen into insolvency after the contract was terminated, would have gone into liquidation in any event. Damages were to be assessed on the basis that the contract would have been performed.

Citations:

Times 16-Jan-2001, Gazette 01-Feb-2001

Damages, Contract

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.79057

Bovis Construction (Scotland) Ltd v Whatlings Construction Ltd: HL 19 Oct 1995

The managing contractors sought damages from a sub-contractor. The contract was on a printed form and in letters. A letter limited time related damages to pounds 100,000. The main contractors sought a much larger sum.
Held: A clause seeking to limit liability must be clear in what it restricts, and is to be read strictly. The sub-contractors had wholly failed to show that the clause could cover their repudiatory breach leading to a termination of the contract. Time was not relevant for this clause after the breach. Appeal dismissed.

Citations:

Gazette 24-Jan-1996, Times 19-Oct-1995, [1995] CLY 5569, 1995 SLT 1339

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

AppliedAilsa Craig Fishing Co Ltd v Malvern Fishing Co Ltd HL 26-Nov-1981
Even though a shipowner who had carried cargo on deck was not entitled to rely on the exceptions to liability in his contract, a limitation clause was different and should not be construed by reference to the specially exacting standards applicable . .
Appeal fromBovis Construction (Scotland) Ltd v Whatlings Construction Ltd OHCS 1994
Correspondence preceding a contract could be looked at to determine the circumstances in which a provision in the contract was intended to apply.
Lord President Hope said: ‘In my opinion the issue which has arisen between the parties in this . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract, Construction, Scotland

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.78513

Re Anziani: 1930

Maugham J considered what law applied when a transfer of the title to goods was asserted: ‘I do not think that anyone can doubt that, with regard to the transfer of goods, the law applicable must be the lex situs. Business could not be carried on if that were not so’

Judges:

Maugham J

Citations:

[1930] 1 Ch 407

Cited by:

CitedT Comedy (Uk) Ltd v Easy Managed Transport Ltd ComC 28-Mar-2007
The hauliers had exercised a lien over the goods it was carrying, releasing them only when provsion was made for payment. The claimants now sought damages for the exercise of the lien which it said was unlawful. The claimant issued a contract, but . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.268789

The Kapetan Markos N.L. (No 2): CA 1987

A party seeking to establish the existence of a contract must at least able to answer the question ‘What was the mechanism for offer and acceptance?’

Judges:

Mustill LJ

Citations:

[1987] 2 LI 321

Cited by:

CitedBlackpool and Fylde Aero Club Ltd v Blackpool Borough Council CA 25-May-1990
The club had enjoyed a concession from the council to operate pleasure flights from the airport operated by the council. They were invited to bid for a new concession subject to strict tender rules. They submitted the highest bid on time, but the . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.267745

Shamsher Jute Mills Ltd v Sethia (London) Ltd: 1987

The plaintiff sold goods to the defendant under the protection of a letter of credit. The plaintiff did not himself provide approriate documentation to claim under the letter of credit, and the banker did not pay.
Held: The plaintiffs were the cause of their own misfortune, and could not visit it on the defendant. The court considered the connection between between the doctrine of waiver and the alteration of the terms of a contact.

Judges:

Bingham J

Citations:

[1987] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 388

Cited by:

CitedOffice of Fair Trading v Abbey National Plc and seven Others ComC 24-Apr-2008
The Office sought a declaration that the respondent and other banks were subject to the provisions of the Regulations in their imposition of bank charges to customer accounts, and in particular as to the imposition of penalties or charges for the . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.267120

Bradford Old Bank Ltd v Sutcliffe: CA 1918

A demand for payment is not necessary in order to make a present debt immediately payable, even if it is expressed to be payable on demand, unless it is a collateral debt.

Citations:

[1918] 2 KB 833

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedTS and S Global Ltd v Fithian-Franks and others ChD 18-Jun-2007
Appeal against setting aside of statutory demand disputed as to amount of liability under contract.
Held: The guarantors’ liability under the guarantee was immediately payable by them, without the need for a demand, before service of the . .
CitedMS Fashions Ltd v Bank of Credit and Commerce International SA CA 1993
BCCI contracted with three companies and their directors or others as sureties. Money was deposited with BCCI as security from the companies. Some agreements described the sureties as ‘principal debtor’ or contained personal covenants by them as . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.267645

Hirji Mulji v Cheong Yue Steamship Co: PC 1926

Lord Sumner described the doctrine of frustration as ‘a device by which the rule as to absolute contracts are reconciled with a special exception which justice demands.’

Judges:

Lord Sumner

Citations:

[1926J AC 497

Cited by:

CitedMaritime National Fish Ltd v Ocean Trawlers Ltd PC 12-Apr-1935
(Nova Scotia En Banco) The parties contracted for a charter of a fishing ship. It then became unlawful for a ship to use otter trawl, the only equipment available to the ship, without a licence, but the number of licences was restricted and did not . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.267345

Cornelius v Phillips: HL 1918

A transaction which had been entered into in contravention of statutory restrictions was unlawful, and any contract which formed part of it conferred no rights on the moneylender.

Citations:

[1918] AC 199

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedHughes v Asset Managers Plc CA 13-May-1994
The appellants had entered into discretionary investment management agreements wth the respondent. The investments made a substantial losss which the appellants sought to recover, saying that the agreements were void under the 1958 Act.
Held: . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Banking, Contract

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.267377

Cunard Steamship Co v Buerger: HL 1927

Eight cases of textile goods belonging to the respondents had been lost in the course of a voyage aboard the S.S. Verentia, owned by the appellant company, under circumstances which were found to constitute deviation from the provisions of the Bill of Lading. That contract contained a clause under which the appellants became not accountable for any goods of whatever description above the value of 20 pounds per package unless the value was set out in the Bill of Lading and extra freight agreed on and paid.
Held: The clause was insufficient to protect the steamship company from the effects of its acts of deviation. A bailee may be exempted from liability by an exemption clause, but any such must be expressed in clear and unambiguous terms.

Judges:

Viscount Dilhorne

Citations:

[1927] AC 1, 42 TLR 653

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedGeorge Mitchell (Chesterhall) Ltd v Finney Lock Seeds Ltd CA 29-Sep-1982
The buyer bought 30lbs of cabbage seed, but the seed was not correct, and the crop was worthless. The seed cost pounds 192, but the farmer lost pounds 61,000. The seed supplier appealed the award of the larger amount and interest, saying that their . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.266865

Stanton v Richardson: 1874

The shipowner contracted to carry wet sugar but the ship was not fit to carry it. The jury found also that it could not be made fit in time to avoid frustrating the purpose of the voyage. The molasses had drained from the wet sugar into the hold in large quantities and the ship’s pumps were unable to deal with it. The cargo was unloaded.
Held: The charterers were entitled to refuse to reload it or to provide any other cargo. If the defect had been or could have been remedied within a reasonable time so as not to frustrate the adventure the charterer’s right would not have been to terminate the charter-party but to have claimed damages for any loss occasioned by the delay.

Citations:

[1874] 9 Common Pleas 390

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedHong Kong Fir Shipping Co v Kawasaki Kisen Kaisha Ltd CA 20-Dec-1961
The plaintiffs had recently acquired the ship the ‘Hong Kong Fir’ and contracted to charter it to the defendants, but being late in delivering it, the defendants cancelled the charterparty contract. The plaintiffs said the repudiation was wrongful, . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract, Transport

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.266193

Thompson v LMS: 1930

The defendant train company claimed exemption from liability for damages under a clause printed not on the ticket, but in small print on the rear of the timetable.
Held: The clause was successfully incorporated in the contract and exempted the company from liability.

Citations:

(1930) 1 KB 41

Contract

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.266863

Freeman v Taylor: 1846

The charterer claimed a deviation by the owner. The jury found the deviation of such a nature and description as to deprive the freighter of the benefit of the contract.
Held: The verdict was upheld.

Judges:

Tindal CJ

Citations:

[1846] 8 Bingham 124

Cited by:

CitedHong Kong Fir Shipping Co v Kawasaki Kisen Kaisha Ltd CA 20-Dec-1961
The plaintiffs had recently acquired the ship the ‘Hong Kong Fir’ and contracted to charter it to the defendants, but being late in delivering it, the defendants cancelled the charterparty contract. The plaintiffs said the repudiation was wrongful, . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract, Transport

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.266197

Bowker v Burdekin: 1843

Parke B considered how a court identified whether a document had been delivered in escrow: ‘you are to look at all the facts attending the execution, to all that took place at the time, and to the result of the transaction; and therefore, though it is in form an absolute delivery, if it can reasonably be inferred that it was delivered not to take effect as a deed till a certain condition was performed, it will nevertheless operate as an escrow.’

Judges:

Parke B

Citations:

(1843) 11 MandW 128

Cited by:

CitedThompson v McCullough CA 1947
Thompson had agreed to buy a tenanted property, had paid part of the purchase price, and had received a conveyance in escrow pending payment of the balance. He at that point gave McCullough notice to quit. Two months later Thompson paid the balance . .
CitedBank of Scotland Plc v King and others ChD 23-Nov-2007
The parties contracted to buy and sell a property. The lending bank sought possession, saying that it had advanced the money which had been spent acquirng the property. The defendant purchasers said that completion had not taken place, the full . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land, Contract

Updated: 14 May 2022; Ref: scu.261511

Ball v Mallin: HL 1829

A person must have the necessary mental capacity if he is to execute a voluntary deed. The House upheld a direction to the jury that what was required was that a person ‘should be capable of understanding what he did by executing the deed in question when its general import was fully explained to him.’

Citations:

(1829) 3 Bligh NS 1

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedMasterman-Lister v Brutton and Co, Jewell and Home Counties Dairies (No 1) CA 19-Dec-2002
Capacity for Litigation
The claimant appealed against dismissal of his claims. He had earlier settled a claim for damages, but now sought to re-open it, and to claim in negligence against his former solicitors, saying that he had not had sufficient mental capacity at the . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract, Health

Updated: 14 May 2022; Ref: scu.259609

McEllistrim v Ballymacelligott Co-operative Society: HL 1919

The Co-operative had changed its rules to prevent any member from selling (except under heavy penalty) any milk produced by him in a large area of County Kerry to anyone except the Society, and a member could not terminate his membership without the Society’s permission. The plaintiff, who was a member, sought a declaration that the new rules were in unreasonable restraint of trade.
Held: There comes a point at which such a contract can come within the doctrine of restraint of trade. Lord Birkenhead LC found them unreasonable and void as being in restraint of trade.
Lord Finlay referred to Morris -v- Saxelby and said: ‘The present case is really governed by the principle there enunciated that ‘ public policy requires that every man shall be at liberty to work for himself and shall not be at liberty to deprive himself or the State of his labour, skill or talent, by any contract that he enters’ into’. This is equally applicable to the right to sell his goods.’

Judges:

Lord Birkenhead LC, Lord Atkinson, Lord Shaw, Lord Finlay

Citations:

[1919] AC 548

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedHerbert Morris Ltd v Saxelby HL 1916
For a covenant in restraint of trade to be treated as reasonable in the interests of the parties ‘it must afford no more than adequate protection to the benefit of the party in whose favour it is imposed.’ There is a need for the court to consider . .

Cited by:

CitedEsso Petroleum Co Ltd v Harper’s Garage (Stourport) Ltd HL 1968
Agreement in Restraint of Trade Unenforceable
The defendant ran two garages under solus agreements with the plaintiffs who complained when the defendants began to purchase petrol from cheaper alternative sources. The House was asked whether the solus agreements were be regarded in law as an . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 14 May 2022; Ref: scu.259687

Denny, Mott and Dickson Ltd v James B Fraser and Co Ltd: 1944

Judges:

Lord Wright

Citations:

[1944] AC 265

Cited by:

CitedNational Carriers Ltd v Panalpina (Northern) Ltd HL 11-Dec-1980
No Frustration of Lease through loss of access
The tenant’s access to the premises was closed by the local authority because it passed by a derelict and dangerous building. The tenant argued that its tenancy was frustrated.
Held: The lease was not frustrated. The lease had a term of ten . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 14 May 2022; Ref: scu.259069

Hirji Mulji v Cheong Yue Steamship Co Ltd: 1926

Lord Sumner considered the doctrine of frustration, formulating it as a ‘device by which the rules as to absolute contracts are reconciled with a special exception which justice demands.’

Judges:

Lord Sumner

Citations:

[1926] AC 497

Cited by:

CitedNational Carriers Ltd v Panalpina (Northern) Ltd HL 11-Dec-1980
No Frustration of Lease through loss of access
The tenant’s access to the premises was closed by the local authority because it passed by a derelict and dangerous building. The tenant argued that its tenancy was frustrated.
Held: The lease was not frustrated. The lease had a term of ten . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 14 May 2022; Ref: scu.259068

Shoolbred v Roberts: 1899

A bankrupt won andpound;100 in a billiards game. The stake was given to stakeholders.
Held: The bankrupt’s trustee could recover the bankrupt’s own stake from the stakeholder but not the stake of the loser. Phillimore J said that: ‘I am bound now to hold . . that where people embark in a perfectly lawful game and contest of skill, not trusting to fortune but to skill, to ascertain the comparative eminence of the two persons, the sums which they deposit to make a joint award are to be considered by the law as sums deposited by way of wagering, the contract is null and void, and the winner cannot recover the fund.’ The andpound;100 staked by the bankrupt was his money and was part of his property which his trustee in bankruptcy had a right to recover from the stakeholder. If the bankrupt at any time received from the stakeholder the stake of andpound;100 which had been deposited by the loser, that receipt ‘must be in the eye of the law a voluntary gift by the stakeholders’ or by the loser or possibly by both to the bankrupt; and if the loser should receive it of the bounty of the winner or of the bounty of the stakeholders or at the bounty of both, so far it would not go to the trustee in bankruptcy.

Judges:

Phillimore J

Citations:

[1899] 2 QB 560

Cited by:

CitedLipkin Gorman (a Firm) v Karpnale Ltd HL 6-Jun-1991
The plaintiff firm of solicitors sought to recover money which had been stolen from them by a partner, and then gambled away with the defendant. He had purchased their gaming chips, and the plaintiff argued that these, being gambling debts, were . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 14 May 2022; Ref: scu.259418

Brown v Davis and Galbraith: 1972

The garage, had negotiated with the insurers and entered into a written agreement with them on their printed forms to repair cars of the insured clients. When the insurer failed, they sought to recover payment from the car owners.
Held: The owner of the car as only liable in respect of the excess and other charges referable to him as opposed to the main cost of repairs which was payable by insurers. Sachs LJ said: ‘I only pause to add that there was no suggestion at the time or later that for any reason the insurers might repudiate liability to the insured, in which case a quite different position would result.’

Judges:

Sachs LJ

Citations:

[1972] 2 Lloyds Reports 1, [1972] 3 All ER 31

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedBee v Jenson CA 13-Sep-2007
The claimant hired a car whilst his own, damaged by the defendant, was being repaired. His insurer sought to recover the cost from the other driver. The insurer had first arranged te hire with one company, but then another provided a finacial reward . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Insurance, Contract

Updated: 14 May 2022; Ref: scu.259335