Liverpool City Council v Irwin: CA 1976

The court considered the nature and extent of the obligations of landlords of a building in multiple occupation to repair essential means of access.
Held: Lord Denning MR (dissenting) suggested that the court had power to imply a term if it was reasonable so to do, and held that the landlords were under an implied obligation to repair accordingly. Roskill and Ormrod LJJ held to the contrary. Roskill LJ said: ‘But I am afraid, with profound respect, I cannot agree with his view that it is open to us in this court at the present day to imply a term because subjectively or objectively we as individual judges think it will be reasonable so to do. It must be necessary, in order to make the contract work as well as reasonable so to do, before the court can write into a contract, as a matter of implication, some term which the parties have themselves, assumedly deliberately, omitted to do.’

Judges:

Lord Denning MR, Roskill and Ormrod LJJ

Citations:

[1976] QB 319

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

At CALiverpool City Council v Irwin HL 31-Mar-1976
The House found it to be an implied term of a tenancy agreement that the lessor was to be responsible for repairing and lighting the common parts of the building of which the premises formed part. In analysing the different types of contract case in . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Landlord and Tenant, Contract

Updated: 14 May 2022; Ref: scu.259562

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

Foundling Hospital Governors v Crane: 1911

Farwell LJ approved the description of the operation of the doctrine of escrow as follows: ‘The rules respecting escrows are, 1st, The writing will not operate as a deed till the second delivery. 2ndly, The party deputed to make the second delivery, cannot give effect to the writing by delivering the same before the conditions are performed. 3rdly, On the second delivery of the writing, it will have relation, for the purposes of title, and not for the purpose of giving a right to the immediate rent, etc from the delivery. 4thly, So as the conditions be performed, and the deed delivered a second time, the deed will be good, not withstanding the death of either or both of the parties before the second delivery.’

Judges:

Farwell LJ

Citations:

[1911] 2 KB 367

Cited by:

CitedAlan Estates Ltd v WG Stores Ltd and Another CA 1-Jul-1981
The proposed tenant wanted to get into possession, and was given a key and paid a quarter’s rent to the lessor’s solicitors to be held as stakeholders, before the lease had been formally granted. An undated lease and counterpart were executed and . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 14 May 2022; Ref: scu.252351

Dawsons Ltd v Bonnin: HL 1922

The House considered whether a provision was a warranty rather than a representation, allowing the contract to be avoided for its breach. It was an inadvertently inaccurate statement by the insured in the proposal form which was expressly incorporated in the policy, as was a clause which expressly rendered the policy void for material misstatement.
Held: The inaccuracy was found to be immaterial but a majority of the House decided that there could be no claim under the insurance.
Lord Haldane said: ‘It is clear that the answer was textually inaccurate. I think that the words employed in the body of the policy can only be properly construed as having made its accuracy a condition. The result may be technical and harsh, but if the parties have so stipulated, we have no alternative, sitting as a Court of justice, but to give effect to the words agreed on. Hard cases must not be allowed to make bad law . . It was a specific insurance, based on a statement which is made of foundational if the parties have chosen, however carelessly, to stipulate that it should be so. Both on principle and in the light of authorities such as those I have already cited, it appears to me that when the answers, including that in question, are declared to be the basis of the contract this can only mean that their truth is made a condition exact fulfilment of which is rendered by stipulation foundational to its enforceability.’
Lord Cave said: ‘But it is contended . . that the ‘basis’ clause is limited or qualified by the fourth condition on the back of the policy [relating to material misstatement’].
And it is argued that, having regard to this condition, a misstatement in the proposal does not avoid the policy unless it is a material misstatement. I do not take that view. The ‘basis’ clause and the fourth condition do not cover the same ground. The former includes promissory statements which are apparently not within the condition; and the condition covers misstatements and concealments outside the proposal with which the ‘basis’ clause is not concerned. I think the two clauses are independent and cumulative provisions, each of which must take effect’
Lord Dunedin said: ‘I think that ‘basis’ cannot be taken as merely pleonastic and exegitical of the following words, ‘and incorporated therewith’. It must mean that the parties held that these statements are fundamental – ie go to the root of the contract – and that consequently if the statements are untrue the contract is not binding’

Judges:

Lord Haldane, Lord Cave, Lord Dunedin

Citations:

[1922] SC (HL) 156, [1922] 2 AC 413

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedF L Schuler AG v Wickman Machine Tools Sales Limited HL 4-Apr-1973
The parties entered an agreement to distribute and sell goods in the UK. They disagreed as to the meaning of a term governing the termination of the distributorship.
Held: The court can not take into account the post-contractual conduct or . .
CitedGenesis Housing Association Ltd v Liberty Syndicate Management Ltd CA 4-Oct-2013
The housing association was to develop an estate of social housing, supported by an insurance guarantee. The insurance proposal contained a clause stating that the information in the proposal was to form the basis of the policy, and that the policy . .
CitedGenesis Housing Association Ltd v Liberty Syndicate Management Ltd TCC 8-Nov-2012
Insurers had rejected a claim under the policy, saying that the proposal form had included a basis of insurance declaration warranted by the proposer, and that since it had named a main contractor different to the one named, there was no liability . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract, Insurance, Scotland

Updated: 14 May 2022; Ref: scu.251141

Marc Rich v SOCAP: 1992

The court equated best endeavours with due diligence.

Judges:

Savill J

Citations:

Unreported 1992

Cited by:

CitedRhodia International Holdings Ltd. Rhodia UK Ltd v Huntsman International Llc ComC 21-Feb-2007
The parties contracted for the sale of a chemical surfactants business.The claimant had contracted to use reasonable endeavours to obtain the consent of a third party for the assignment a a contract to supply energy to the business. The defendant . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 14 May 2022; Ref: scu.251419

David v New England College of Arundel: 1977

Citations:

[1977] 1 ICR 6

Cited by:

CitedMassey v Crown Life Insurance Company CA 4-Nov-1977
Massey worked as Crown Life’s manager under 2 contracts, one a contract of employment, the other a contract of general agency. Tax and other contributions were deducted from wages paid under the former, while commission was paid under the agency . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Employment, Contract

Updated: 14 May 2022; Ref: scu.250996

Glaholm v Hays: 1874

A term in a charterparty provided that the vessel was to sail from England on or before the 4th of February. The question which arose was whether that term was a condition precedent upon the non-compliance wherewith the freighters were at liberty to throw up the charter.
Held: In giving judgment, Tindal CJ said: ‘Whether a particular clause in a charter-party shall be held to be a condition, upon the non-performance of which by the one party, the other is at liberty to abandon the contract and consider it at an end; or whether it amounts to an agreement only, the breach whereof is to be recompensed by an action for damages, must depend upon the intention of the parties to be collected, in each particular case, from the terms of the agreement itself, and from the subject matter to which it relates’. ‘ It cannot depend,’ as Lord Ellenborough observes, ‘ on ‘any formal arrangement of the words, but (must depend) on the reason’ and sense of the thing as it is to be collected from the whole contract.’

Judges:

Tindal CJ

Citations:

[1874] 2 Man and G 257

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedF L Schuler AG v Wickman Machine Tools Sales Limited HL 4-Apr-1973
The parties entered an agreement to distribute and sell goods in the UK. They disagreed as to the meaning of a term governing the termination of the distributorship.
Held: The court can not take into account the post-contractual conduct or . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 14 May 2022; Ref: scu.251068

London Guarantie Company v Fearnley: HL 1880

Lord Blackburn said: ‘My Lords, it has long been the practice of companies insuring against fire, for the purpose of their own security, to incorporate in their policies, by reference to their proposals, various stipulations for matters to be done by the assured making a claim before the company is to pay them, and (as the remedy by action for not complying with these stipulations would not afford them any protection) to make the fulfillment of those conditions a condition precedent to their obligation to pay. There was much controversy on the subject about a century ago; but since the case of Worsley v Wood (1) it has been settled law that this mode of protecting themselves is effectual.’ and ‘It seems to me, therefore, that the whole question is reduced to that of the construction of an ill-penned instrument: a matter on which opinions always may differ, and in this case have differed. I do not think that the rules which are laid down as to the construction of agreements in which there are cross contracts, in order to see whether those cross contracts are dependent or independent, are of much assistance, where, as here, the question is, whether a matter is expressly made a condition precedent, nor that much good can be done by arguing on the words used, or citing cases: it would be merely repeating what has been said below. All agree that the question is, what is the intention to be collected from the words. I agree that the intention is obscurely expressed; and that the obscurity is the fault of the language used by the company, which can be amended in future by so framing the policy as to leave no doubt as to its meaning; and this is, I think, the strongest argument against putting on the instrument the construction which I do. But, after making all due allowance for this, I am obliged to come to the conclusion that the intention must have been what I have last stated, and that it is sufficiently expressed to have the effect of making this a condition precedent.’

Judges:

Lord Blackburn

Citations:

(1880) 5 App Cas 911

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedF L Schuler AG v Wickman Machine Tools Sales Limited HL 4-Apr-1973
The parties entered an agreement to distribute and sell goods in the UK. They disagreed as to the meaning of a term governing the termination of the distributorship.
Held: The court can not take into account the post-contractual conduct or . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract, Insurance

Updated: 14 May 2022; Ref: scu.251067

Overseas 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 EIC did ‘all that could reasonably be expected of them’, rather than finding whether EIC used their ‘best endeavours’ to obtain permission to export, which is the test laid down by the decided cases. I can frankly see no substance at all in this argument. Perhaps the words ‘best endeavours’ in a statute or contract mean something different from doing all that can reasonably be expected-although I cannot think what the difference might be. The unreported decision of the Court of Appeal in IBM v Rockware Glass upon which the buyers relied, does not suggest that such a difference exists.’

Judges:

Mustill J

Citations:

[1980] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 608

Citing:

CitedIBM v Rockware Glass Ltd CA 1980
The court considered the meaning on a promise by one party to use its best endeavours to obtain a relevant planning permission.
Held: The obligation included an obligation to appeal from an initial refusal of permission so long as the . .
CitedTsakiroglou and Co Ltd v Noblee Thorl GmbH HL 1961
The appellants had agreed to sell to the respondents 300 tonnes of groundnuts. However due to the blockade of the Suez canal from November 2 1956 until April 1957, the appellants failed to deliver these goods and the respondents sued for breach of . .

Cited by:

CitedRhodia International Holdings Ltd. Rhodia UK Ltd v Huntsman International Llc ComC 21-Feb-2007
The parties contracted for the sale of a chemical surfactants business.The claimant had contracted to use reasonable endeavours to obtain the consent of a third party for the assignment a a contract to supply energy to the business. The defendant . .
CitedVitol 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 . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 14 May 2022; Ref: scu.251418

Brinkibon Ltd v Stahag Stahl und Stahlwarenhandelsgesellschaft mbH: HL 1982

Brinkibon, based in London wanted to buy steel from the defendants who were in Austria. They accepted Stahag’s offer by Telex to Vienna. Brinkibon wanted to sue Stahag and in order to have leave to serve out of the jurisdiction, had to establish that the contract had been formed in England.
Held: The contract had been formed in Austria. In the case of instantaneous communication, which included telex, the contract is normally formed in the jurisdiction where the acceptance is received.
Lord Wilberforce said: ‘Since 1955 the use of Telex communication has been greatly expanded, and there are many variants on it. The senders and recipients may not be the principals to the contemplated contract. They may be servants or agents with limited authority. The message may not reach, or be intended to reach, the designated recipient immediately: messages may be sent out of office hours, or at night, with the intention, or on the assumption that they will be read at a later time. There may be some error or default at the recipient’s end which prevents receipt at the time contemplated and believed in by the sender. The message may have been sent and/or received through machines operated by third persons. And many other variants may occur. No universal rule can cover all such cases; they must be resolved by reference to the intentions of the parties, by sound business practice and in some cases by a judgement where the risks should lie.’

Judges:

Lord Wilberforce

Citations:

[1983] 2 AC 34

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedChartbrook Ltd v Persimmon Homes Ltd and Another ChD 2-Mar-2007
The claimants had entered into an agreement with the defendant house-builder for the development of a site which the claimants had recently acquired. The structure of the agreement was that the developer would obtain planning permission and, under . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract, Jurisdiction

Updated: 14 May 2022; Ref: scu.251172

William Morton and Co v Muir Brothers and Co: 1907

Lord McLaren said: ‘The conception of an implied condition is one with which we are familiar in relation to contracts of every description, and if we seek to trace any such implied conditions to their source, it will be found that in almost every instance they are founded either on universal custom or in the nature of the contract itself. If the condition is such that every reasonable man on the one part would desire for his own protection to stipulate for the condition, and that no reasonable man on the other part would refuse to accede to it, then it is not unnatural that the condition should be taken for granted in all contracts of the class without the necessity of giving it formal expression.’

Judges:

Lord McLaren

Citations:

1907 SC 1211

Cited by:

CitedJ and H Ritchie Ltd v Lloyd Ltd HL 7-Mar-2007
The appellants had bought a seed drill from the respondents. It had been repossessed but sold as near new. A fault was noticed after two days use, and it was returned. The defendants repaired it without agreeing this with the appellant, and then . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Scotland, Contract

Updated: 14 May 2022; Ref: scu.249910

Smith Hogg Co v Louis Bamberger and Sons: 1929

Where it has been demonstrated by satisfactory evidence that an expression is understood to have a special meaning by virtue of a ‘custom of the trade’, then effect will be given to the custom of the trade, unless it is inconsistent with the express terms of the contract.

Citations:

[1929] 1 KB 150

Cited by:

CitedRoche Products Ltd and Another v Kent Pharmaceuticals Ltd CA 20-Dec-2006
The defendant appealed summary judgment in a trade mark infringement case based on parallel imports of ACCU-CHEK blood testing strips for diabetics. The defendant said that the products were ‘CE’ marked and therefore intended for sale within the EU. . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 14 May 2022; Ref: scu.247523

Chapman v Aberdeen Construction Group: 1991

It having been conceded that contracts of service fell within section 15 of the 1977 Act, the court found that the question whether the contract was a consumer contract depended on the circumstances. Though the employee pursuer was to be regarded as a consumer in relation to his contract of employment with the defenders, the term consumer may not sit comfortably on an employee in relation to his work.

Judges:

Lord Caplan

Citations:

[1991] IRLR 505

Statutes:

Unfair Contract terms Act 1977 15

Cited by:

CitedBrigden v American Express Bank Ltd 2000
A clause providing that the employer could dismiss an employee in the first two years of employment without implementing the disciplinary procedure was not void under the 1977 Act. Section 3 extended to contracts of employment and although the . .
CitedCommerzbank Ag v Keen CA 17-Nov-2006
The bank had sought summary dismissal of a claim for non-payment of bonuses to the claimant a former employee, and now appealed refusal of its request for summary dismissal, saying that the claim had no prospect of success. The claimant said that . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract, Employment, Scotland

Updated: 14 May 2022; Ref: scu.246222

Thackwell v Barclays Bank plc: 1986

The plaintiff was party to a fraudulent scheme under which a cheque had been made payable to him. The plaintiff’s signature endorsing the cheque to a third party was forged and in reliance on the forgery the bank credited the third party. The plaintiff sued the bank for conversion. In defence the bank relied on the maxim ex turpi causa non oritur actio.
Held: Hutchison J said that the maxim: ‘involved the court looking at the quality of the illegality relied on by the defendant and all the surrounding circumstances, without fine distinctions, and seeking to answer two questions: first, whether there had been illegality of which the court should take notice and, second, whether in all the circumstances it would be an affront to the public conscience if by affording him the relief sought the court was seen to be indirectly assisting or encouraging the plaintiff in his criminal act’.

Judges:

Hutchison J

Citations:

[1986] 1 All ER 676

Cited by:

CitedVellino v Chief Constable of Greater Manchester Police CA 31-Jul-2001
The police were not under any duty to protect someone who had been arrested from injuring himself in an attempt to escape. The claimant had a history of seeking to avoid capture by jumping from his flat window. On this occasion he injured himself in . .
CitedMoore Stephens (A Firm) v Stone Rolls Ltd (in liquidation) HL 30-Jul-2009
The appellants had audited the books of the respondent company, but had failed to identify substantial frauds by an employee of the respondent. The auditors appealed a finding of professional negligence, relying on the maxim ex turpi causa non . .
CitedMerseyside Police v Owens Admn 31-May-2012
The police had refused to returns items seized from Mr Owens on the basis that to do so would indirectly encourage and assist him in suspected criminal activity. CCTV footage had been removed from him to attempt identify an arsonist of a house.The . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 14 May 2022; Ref: scu.248026

The Black Falcon: 1991

The ship under charter was returned late. The arbitrators had awarded the market rate of hire from the date when the vessel would have been delivered if she had not undertaken her last (illegitimate) voyage rather than from the last date when she could have been delivered without a breach of charterparty.
Held: The courtoverturned the award: ‘In my judgement the arbitrators’ approach conflicts with the principle governing the calculation of damages which was enunciated in The Dione . . A study of the judgments of the majority reveals that this case is authority for the proposition that in circumstances where the owners undertook the illegitimate last voyage without waiving their rights to claim damages, the charterers’ obligation is to pay the charter rate until the last permissible date for redelivery, and thereafter pay the market rate until the actual redelivery . . I am of course bound by this decision. But . . I would have come to the same conclusion in the absence of authority.’

Judges:

Steyn J

Citations:

[1991] I LLR 77

Cited by:

CitedTransfield Shipping Inc of Panama v Mercator Shipping Inc of Monrovia ComC 1-Dec-2006
The owners made substantial losses after the charterers breached the contract by failing to redliver the ship on time as agreed.
Held: On the facts found the Owners’ primary claim is not too remote. To the knowledge of the Charterers, it was . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract, Transport

Updated: 14 May 2022; Ref: scu.246799

British Motor Trade Association v Salvadori: 1949

The plaintiff was a trade association whose policy was to enforce the fixing of prices of motor cars, at a time when the demand for cars greatly exceeded the supply, so that there were large profits to be made by anyone who could acquire a new car free of any obligation to resell it at the manufacturer’s price. The plaintiff established that the defendants had sought to attack the plaintiff’s policy by conspiracy to breach the contracts entered into by purchasers of new cars, prohibiting resale within twelve months.
Held: Time spent in detecting and countering a conspiracy can be included in a claim for damages if there is also other pecuniary loss.
Roxborough J said: ‘But Lord Macnaghten preferred the word ‘interference’ for his statement of the doctrine, and this seems to me to predicate active association of some kind with the breach. But, in my judgment, any active step taken by a defendant having knowledge of the covenant is enough. If this be so, a defendant by agreeing to buy, paying for and taking delivery of a motor-car known by him to be on offer in breach of covenant, takes active steps by which he facilitates a breach of covenant.’
As to the plaintiff’s request for an inquiry as to damages, Roxborough J said: ‘To resist such a counter-attack (i.e., by the defendants against the plaintiffs’ pricing policy) and also counter-attacks from various other directions, the plaintiffs maintain, and must maintain, a large investigation department, and the money actually expended in unravelling and detecting the unlawful machinations of the defendants which have been proved in this case before any proceedings could be taken must have been considerable. I can see no reason for not treating the expenses so incurred which could not be recovered as part of the costs of the action as directly attributable to their tort or torts. That these expenses cannot be precisely quantified is true, but it is also immaterial. Accordingly, the plaintiffs have proved the damage which is essential to the tort of conspiracy, and they are entitled to an inquiry accordingly.’

Judges:

Roxborough J

Citations:

[1949] Ch 556

Cited by:

CitedAdmiral Management Services Ltd v Para-Protect Europe Ltd and Others ChD 4-Mar-2002
The claimants suspected the defendants of wrongfully using their confidential information. Their staff made an initial investigation. They obtained a search and seizure order; and the material seized was examined by the staff. A Tomlin Order was . .
CitedPhonographic Performance Ltd v Reader ChD 22-Mar-2005
The claimant had in the past obtained an injunction to prevent the defendant broadcasting without their licence musical works belonging to their members at his nightclub. The defendant had obtained a licence, but had not renewed it. The claimants in . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract, Damages

Updated: 14 May 2022; Ref: scu.246217

Aggeliki Charis Compania Maritima SA v Pagnan SpA The Angelic Grace: QBD 1994

The court considered whether a claim for a collision between two ships was governed by an arbitration clause which read ‘all disputes from time to time arising out of this contract shall . . be referred to the arbitrament of two arbitrators carrying on business in London.’
Held: The proceedings in a foreign jurisdiction were to be restrained by reason of agreement to submit to arbitration in England.
Rix J said: ‘collision claims I n the present case raised disputes which are within the arbitration clause. To some extent the claims in contract and in tort are true alternatives (for example the charterers’ counterclaim). To some extent they may not be true alternatives, but they clearly overlap (as in the owners’ claims for breach of the warranty of safety and for fault in collision) In any event all claims and cross-claims arise out of the same incident, the identical set of facts which have to be investigated by the arbitrators . . The parties clearly contemplated that a collision or other accident of navigation could give rise to a charterparty dispute.’

Judges:

Rix J

Citations:

[1994] 1 Lloyds Rep 168

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

FollowedEmpresa Exportadora de Azucar v Industria Azucarera Nacional S.A, The Playa Larga CA 1983
There had been a theft by Cuban sellers of one cargo of sugar, property in which had already passed to the buyers, and non-delivery of a second combined with trickery whereby the intended buyers were nonetheless induced to pay its price. The first . .

Cited by:

CitedFiona Trust and Holding Corp and others v Privalov and others ComC 20-Oct-2006
The parties disputed whether their claim should be arbitrated.
Held: A claim as to whether the contract itself had been made was not one which could be arbitrated by provisions in that contract. It does not arise ‘under’ the contract. The . .
Appeal fromAggeliki Charis Compania Maritima SA v Pagnan SpA – The Angelic Grace CA 1995
On the charterers’ orders the Angelic Grace was required to tie up alongside another vessel which they owned. Whilst unloading the weather turned and the vessels collided. Each blamed the other and the owners claimed a salvage. The court considered . .
CitedFiona Trust and Holding Corp and others v Privalov and others ComC 20-Oct-2006
The parties disputed whether their claim should be arbitrated.
Held: A claim as to whether the contract itself had been made was not one which could be arbitrated by provisions in that contract. It does not arise ‘under’ the contract. The . .
CitedFiona Trust and Holding Corporation and others v Privalov and others CA 24-Jan-2007
The court was asked whether when contracts have been induced by bribery and have been rescinded on discovery of the bribery, that constitutes a dispute which can be determined by arbitration in the context of a common form of arbitration clause.
CitedWest Tankers Inc v Ras Riunione Adriatica Di Sicurta Spa and others (The Front Comor) HL 21-Feb-2007
A ship had foundered, and the owners disputed their insurance claim. The policy provided for arbitration in London, and one party sought an order to prevent the other commencing proceedings in another EU state in breach of the arbitration agreement. . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Transport, Contract, Arbitration

Updated: 14 May 2022; Ref: scu.245558

William Martin and Co v Mills Brothers and Co: 1907

Citations:

1907 SC 1211

Cited by:

CitedFraser v The Professional Golfers Association Ltd OHCS 25-Aug-2006
The pursuer a former competitive golfer who wished to become a trainer complained that the defendant which controlled a substantial portion of the professional golf world, had by its rules permanently debarred him from qualification after he three . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Scotland, Contract

Updated: 14 May 2022; Ref: scu.244741

Cory v Bretton: 1830

The provision in a letter that it was ‘not to be used in prejudice of my rights . . .’ was read as meaning that an apparent acknowledgement of indebtedness in the same letter was ‘clearly a conditional statement’.

Citations:

[1830] 172 ER 783, (1830) 4 Car and P 462

Cited by:

CitedBradford and Bingley Plc v Rashid HL 12-Jul-2006
Disapplication of Without Prejudice Rules
The House was asked whether a letter sent during without prejudice negotiations which acknowledged a debt was admissible to restart the limitation period. An advice centre, acting for the borrower had written, in answer to a claim by the lender for . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 14 May 2022; Ref: scu.243138

Surrendra Overseas Ltd v Government of Sri Lanka: 1977

A debtor can only be held to have acknowledged the claim if he has in effect admitted his legal liability to pay that which the plaintiff seeks to recover. An acknowledgement of part only of a debt cannot operate to acknowledge more.
Kerr J said: ‘What I draw from these authorities, and from the ordinary meaning of ‘acknowledges the claim,’ is that the debtor must acknowledge his indebtedness and legal liability to pay the claim in question. There is now no need to go further to seek for any implied promise to pay it. That artificiality has been swept away. But, taking the debtor’s statement as a whole, as it must be, he can only be held to have acknowledged the claim if he has in effect admitted his legal liability to pay that which the plaintiff seeks to recover. If he has denied liability, whether on the ground of what in pleader’s language is called ‘avoidance’, or on the ground of an alleged set off or cross-claim, then his statement does not amount to an acknowledgment of the creditor’s claim. Alternatively, if he contends that some existing set off or cross-claim reduces the creditor’s claim in part, then the statement, taken as a whole, can only amount to an acknowledgment of indebtedness for the balance. In effect, ‘acknowledges the claim’ means that the statement in question must be an admission of that indebtedness which the plaintiff seeks to recover notwithstanding the expiry of the period of limitation.’

Judges:

Kerr J

Citations:

[1977] 1 WLR 565

Cited by:

CitedBradford and Bingley Plc v Rashid HL 12-Jul-2006
Disapplication of Without Prejudice Rules
The House was asked whether a letter sent during without prejudice negotiations which acknowledged a debt was admissible to restart the limitation period. An advice centre, acting for the borrower had written, in answer to a claim by the lender for . .
CitedOfulue and Another v Bossert CA 29-Jan-2008
The claimants appealed an order finding that the defendant had acquired their land by adverse possession. They said that the defendant had asserted in defence to possession proceedings that they were tenants, and that this contradicted an intent to . .
AppliedNational Westminster Bank v Powney CA 1990
The limitation period has nothing to do with the procedural machinery of enforcing a judgment when one was obtained. . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Limitation, Contract

Updated: 14 May 2022; Ref: scu.243128

Phillips v Rogers: 1945

The creditor argued that the limitation period was extended anew when the debtor wrote: ‘Re your correspondence re Mr C H Phillips claim $1300 which he is prepared to settle November 1st for $700. Please thank Mr Phillips for the kind offer. I have no idea where I am going to get $700 and meet your demands by November 1st unless I rob a bank and I really don’t think a case of this kind warrants such drastic action on my part. If Mr Phillips or yourself have any ideas how I can get that amount of money, honestly I shall be pleased to consider them.’

Citations:

[1945] 2 WWR 53

Cited by:

CitedBradford and Bingley Plc v Rashid HL 12-Jul-2006
Disapplication of Without Prejudice Rules
The House was asked whether a letter sent during without prejudice negotiations which acknowledged a debt was admissible to restart the limitation period. An advice centre, acting for the borrower had written, in answer to a claim by the lender for . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Commonwealth, Limitation, Contract

Updated: 14 May 2022; Ref: scu.243122

Trollope and Colls Limited v North West Metropolitan Regional Hospital Board: HL 1973

The court was requested to imply a term into a building contract.
Held: The term could not be implied, since at least four alternatives might also be implied.
Lord Pearson said: ‘[T]he court does not make a contract for the parties. The court will not even improve the contract which the parties have made for themselves, however desirable the improvement might be. The court’s function is to interpret and apply the contract which the parties have made for themselves. If the express terms are perfectly clear and free from ambiguity, there is no choice to be made between different possible meanings: the clear terms must be applied even if the court thinks some other terms would have been more suitable. An unexpressed term can be implied if and only if the court finds that the parties must have intended that term to form part of their contract; it is not enough for the court to find that such a term would have been adopted by the parties as reasonable even if it had been suggested to them; it must have been a term that went without saying, a term necessary to give business efficacy to the contract, a term which, though tacit, formed part of the contract which the parties made for themselves.’
Lord Cross of Chelsea stated: ‘[W]hat the respondents are asking the court to do is, in effect, to rectify the clause by the addition of some words which will make it accord not indeed with the actual intention of the parties but with the intention which the respondents say must be imputed to them. In such a case, as I have always understood the law, it is not enough for the party seeking to have the words varied to say to the court, ‘We obviously did not mean what we have said, so please amend the clause so as to make it read in what you think is the most reasonable way.’ He must establish not only that the parties obviously did not mean what they said but also that if they had directed their minds to the question they would obviously have framed the clause in the way for which he contends.’

Judges:

Lord Pearson, Lord Guest, Lord Diplock

Citations:

[1973] 1 WLR 601, [1973] 2 All ER 260

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedDonington Park Leisure Ltd v Wheatcroft and Son Ltd ChD 7-Apr-2006
Leave to apply was pursued under the provisions of a Tomlin order. The parties had disputed the extent to which parts of the order should be exhibited to the court.
Held: The Tomlin order should be amended to add terms necessary to give effect . .
CitedAttorney General of Belize and others v Belize Telecom Ltd and Another PC 18-Mar-2009
(Belize) A company had been formed to manage telecommunications in Belize. The parties disputed the interpretation of its articles. Shares had been sold, but the company was structured so as to leave a degree of control with the government. It was . .
CitedMediterranean Salvage and Towage Ltd v Seamar Trading and Commerce Inc (‘The Reborn’) CA 10-Jun-2009
The court confirmed that the necessity to give business efficacy to a contract was still required for the implication of a term into a contract. . .
CitedPaymaster (Jamaica) Ltd and Another v Grace Kennedy Remittance Services Ltd PC 11-Dec-2017
(Court of Appeal of Jamaica) The parties disputed the ownership of copyight in certain computer software, and also an allegation of the misuse of confidential information. . .
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: 14 May 2022; Ref: scu.241559

JH Rayner (Mincing Lane) Ltd v Department of Trade and Industry: 1989

Citations:

[1989] Ch 72

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

Appeal fromJH Rayner (Mincing Lane) Ltd v Department of Trade and Industry HL 1989
An undisclosed principal will not be permitted to claim to be party to a contract if this is contrary to the terms of the contract itself. Thus the provision in the standard form B contract of the London Metal Exchange ‘this contract is made between . .
CitedRegina v Jones (Margaret), Regina v Milling and others HL 29-Mar-2006
Domestic Offence requires Domestic Defence
Each defendant sought to raise by way of defence of their otherwise criminal actions, the fact that they were attempting to prevent the commission by the government of the crime of waging an aggressive war in Iraq, and that their acts were . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

International, Contract

Updated: 14 May 2022; Ref: scu.239961

Redland Aggregates Limited v Shephard Hill Civil Engineering Limited: CA 11 Dec 1998

The opinion which the contract provided for the main contractor to hold under the 1984 edition of the FCEC form had to be bona fide, and perhaps also reasonable.

Judges:

Chadwick LJ

Citations:

Unreported, 11 December 1998

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedMcNicholas Plc v AEI Cables Limited TCC 25-May-1999
The claimant had subcontracted to supply cabling on the defendant’s project. The contract provided both for the exclusive jurisdiction of the English courts but also for arbitration. The defendant applied for the action to be stayed and referred to . .
See AlsoRedland Aggregates Limited v Shephard Hill Civil Engineering Limited CA 29-Jul-1999
The defendant building contractor sought a stay of collection of the sub-contractor’s bill of costs pending the determination of the House of Lords. . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 14 May 2022; Ref: scu.238328

Penfold and Penfold v Cooke: 1978

(New Zealand) There can be no boundary agreement unless it constitutes a genuine attempt to resolve a disputed boundary line. A boundary agreement gave one party as much as three quarters of an acre of land. The court thought that the judge was not justified in drawing an inference that the parties had agreed that the position where a fence was placed was the boundary between them.

Citations:

(1978) 128 NLJ 736

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

DistinguishedFlack v Lanzante CA 28-Aug-2002
Renewed application for leave to appeal. Boundary dispute. Boundary agreement shown – leave refused. . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land, Contract

Updated: 14 May 2022; Ref: scu.237692

Wehner v Dene Steam Shipping Co: 1905

Channell LJ said: ‘Now, although the owner has the right to demand the bill of lading freight from the holder of the bill of lading because the contract is the owner’s contract, yet the owner has also, of course contracted by the charterparty that for the use of his ship he will be satisfied with a different sum, which will also in the great majority of cases be less than the total amount of the bills of lading freights; and, therefore, if the owner were himself to demand and receive the bills of lading freight as he might do if he chose, he would still have to account to the charterer or the sub-charterer, as the case may be, for the surplus remaining in his hands after deducting the amount due for hire of the ship under the charterparty. Of course, in practice an agent is usually appointed to receive the bill of lading freight, though not necessarily, because the captain may receive it himself; and under this charterparty the captain has to appoint as agent any person whom the charterers may select, which is a very reasonable arrangement, because if the business goes smoothly and the charterparty hire is duly paid, the charterers are the persons really interested in receiving the bill of lading freight. But, if I am right as to the bill of lading contract being with the owner, then it seems to me to follow that the agent appointed to receive the bill of lading freight becomes by the very act of appointment the agent of the shipowner to receive the freight for him, and the agent’s receipt binds the shipowner.’

Judges:

Channell LJ

Citations:

[1905] 2 KB 92

Contract, Transport

Updated: 14 May 2022; Ref: scu.237421

Litchfield v Dreyfus: 1906

The plaintiff carried on business as an antique dealer, giving credit to customers and took bills from them in payment of amounts they owed for purchases, some of which he discounted and renewed from time to time. When he ceased business he sold his stock and took bills for the greater part of the purchase money which he also discounted and renewed from time to time. After he ceased business he became a consultant and assisted two dealers by discounting their customers’ bills. He also assisted some old friends in the trade and a few people with whom he had been connected in business with loans and by discounting bills for them, but he did not advertise as a moneylender and did not discount bills for people outside his own circle. He sought payment on bills given to an old customer. The defendant pleaded that he was an unregistered moneylender and could not recover.
Held: The defence failed. Credit given to customers and to those who purchased stock at the plaintiff’s closing down sale were loans incidental to the carrying on of his business as an antique dealer and so within proviso (d) to section 6. The later discounting of bills to assist a few old friends did not amount to carrying on the business of a moneylender, holding that whether a person carries on the business of a moneylender depends on the facts of the case.

Judges:

Farwell J

Citations:

[1906] 1 KB 584

Statutes:

Moneylenders Acts 1900 6

Cited by:

CitedGE Capital Bank Ltd v Rushton and Another CA 14-Dec-2005
The bank had entered into a master trading agreement with a trader under which the trader bought motor vehicles as agent for the bank for resale. The vehicles belonged to the bank. The defendant bought all the trader’s vehicles. The defendant now . .
CitedKenny v Conroy and Another CA 27-Jan-1999
A court need only first see whether at the time of the loan, the party’s business was that of moneylender. If not, the court then investigates if the person held themselves out as carrying on such a business. Kennedy L.J: ‘. . . a licensed . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 14 May 2022; Ref: scu.236661

United Dominions Corporation (Jamaica) Ltd v Shoucair: PC 1969

(Jamaica) A moneylending law required, for the enforceability of a loan bearing interest at more than ten per cent, a written memorandum containing all the terms of the loan with the borrower’s signature. A bank lent money at nine per cent secured by a mortgage which was enforceable. Later it sent a circular letter to borrowers raising the rate of interest to eleven per cent; the letter was unenforceable. The bank wanted to enforce the original mortgage at nine per cent.
Held: the question whether an unenforceable agreement avoided the original mortgage depended upon the intention of the parties and, as there was no intention to rescind the original mortgage, it remained in force unamended.
Lord Devlin said: ‘the difficulty about enforcing the original mortgage in this case is that, although itself untouched by the statute, it is no longer the real contract between the parties. In reality, although the statute prevents reality from being proved, there is no longer a mortgage at 9% but one at 11%. Since, however, the real contract is not evidenced in the way required by the moneylending law, it cannot be enforced. This is the approach made by Douglas J in the Supreme Court and by Lewis J, who gave the leading judgment for the majority in the Court of Appeal.
Another way of arriving at the same result is to treat a variation of contract as something that necessarily requires the rescission of the old contract and the substitution of a new one. On this view the old contract cannot be enforced because it has been rescinded and the new contract cannot be enforced because it is not properly evidenced. This was the conclusion reached by the Divisional Court in Williams v Moss’ Empires [1915] 3 KB 242 and adopted by the Court of Appeal in Morris v Baron [1918] AC 1. As Sankey J put it in the former case: ‘The result of varying the terms of an existing contract is to produce, not the original contract with a variation, but a new and different contract.’ The disadvantage of this view is that a minor variation may destroy the effect of the whole of the transaction between the parties. The alternative view, adopted by the House of Lords in Morris v Baron and again in British and Benningtons Limited v NW Cachar Tea Company Limited [1923] AC 48 (where Lord Sumner referred to the former view as possibly correct ‘as a matter of formal logic’), is based on the intention of the parties. They cannot have that which presumably they wanted, that is, the old agreement as amended; so the court has to make up its mind which comes nearer to their intention – to leave them with an unamended agreement or without any agreement at all. The House answered this question by rejecting the strict view propounded by Sankey J and distinguishing between rescission and variation. If the new agreement reveals an intention to rescind the old, the old goes; and if it does not, the old remains in force and unamended . . If the principle in Morris v Baron applies to this case, the mortgage of April 22 remains in force. The contrary has not been and could not be argued. It would be impossible to contend that a temporary variation in the rate of interest reveals any intention to extinguish the debt and the mortgage . . The choice before the board lies between solving the problem by means of what Lord Sumner called formal logic or solving it by giving effect as far as possible to the intention of the parties as was done in Morris v Baron.’

Judges:

Lord Devlin

Citations:

[1969] 1 AC 340

Citing:

CitedBritish and Beningtons Ltd v North Western Cachar Tea Co Ltd HL 1923
The House looked at the effect of rescission of a contract: ‘It was, however, argued before your Lordships that . . the old contracts were discharged because a varied contract is not the old contract, and as you cannot have a new and varied contract . .
CitedMorris v Baron and Co HL 1918
The House drew a distinction between a variation of a contract required to be evidenced in writing, and the rescission (or discharge) of such a contract. The former was itself required to be evidenced in writing; the latter was not.
Lord . .

Cited by:

CitedJagdeo Sookraj v Buddhu Samaroo PC 12-Oct-2004
PC (Trinidad and Tobago) Each party claimed to have entered into a contract to purchase the same land. It was contended that one contract had been rescinded and replaced by another. The issue was whether this . .
CitedButters and Others v BBC Worldwide Ltd and Others ChD 20-Aug-2009
In the insolvency of Woolworths plc, a subsidiary sought to have valued its shareholding in a company in which the defendants were co-shareholders. It was argued that an earlier agreement between them had not be fully superceded by a subsequent one. . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 14 May 2022; Ref: scu.237254

Newman v Oughton: 1911

The plaintiff sought to execute a judgment against goods in the possession of a judgment debtor. The goods were claimed by a firm of pawnbrokers who said that they were included in a bill of sale granted to them. At the trial of the resulting interpleader the bill of sale was said to have been given as security for an advance of andpound;50. The plaintiff argued that an advance on a bill of sale did not constitute business conducted in accordance with the provisions of the 1872 Act, that the claimant was an unregistered moneylender and that the transaction was therefore void.
Held: The claimant had not acted in breach of the Pawnbrokers Act and was therefore entitled to the protection of section 6(a) of the Moneylenders Act. Also, since there was evidence of only one loan it could not be said that the claimants had been proved to be persons whose business was that of moneylending within the meaning of the Act (Ridley J). Avory J agreed, holding that one isolated transaction was not enough to bring the claimants within the definition of a moneylender.

Judges:

Ridley J, Avory J

Citations:

[1911] 1 KB 792

Statutes:

Pawnbrokers Act 1872, Moneylenders Acts 1900 6

Cited by:

CitedKenny v Conroy and Another CA 27-Jan-1999
A court need only first see whether at the time of the loan, the party’s business was that of moneylender. If not, the court then investigates if the person held themselves out as carrying on such a business. Kennedy L.J: ‘. . . a licensed . .
CitedGE Capital Bank Ltd v Rushton and Another CA 14-Dec-2005
The bank had entered into a master trading agreement with a trader under which the trader bought motor vehicles as agent for the bank for resale. The vehicles belonged to the bank. The defendant bought all the trader’s vehicles. The defendant now . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 14 May 2022; Ref: scu.236662

Dendron GmbH v The Regents of the University of California: 2004

Pumfrey J said: ‘I would reject the suggestion that the right that is conferred by the grant of a licence is anything wider than a consent on behalf of the patentee to the doing of an act which absent that consent would be unlawful.’

Judges:

Pumfrey J

Citations:

[2004] FSR 43

Cited by:

CitedUltraframe (UK) Ltd v Fielding and others ChD 27-Jul-2005
The parties had engaged in a bitter 95 day trial in which allegations of forgery, theft, false accounting, blackmail and arson. A company owning patents and other rights had become insolvent, and the real concern was the destination and ownership of . .
See AlsoDendron Gmbh and others v Regents of University of California and Another PatC 23-Mar-2004
The claimants sought letters of request to obtain evidence to support applications they wished to make, including onme before the European Patents Office.
Held: The EPO when involved in opposition proceedings was not a domestic court, and . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract, Intellectual Property

Updated: 13 May 2022; Ref: scu.230285

Crittal Windows Ltd v Stormseal (UPVC) Window Systems Ltd: 1991

Judges:

Scott J

Citations:

[1991] RPC 265

Cited by:

CitedUltraframe (UK) Ltd v Fielding and others ChD 27-Jul-2005
The parties had engaged in a bitter 95 day trial in which allegations of forgery, theft, false accounting, blackmail and arson. A company owning patents and other rights had become insolvent, and the real concern was the destination and ownership of . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 13 May 2022; Ref: scu.230290

Timmins v Moreland Street Property Co Ltd: CA 1958

The Court considered the effect of a note or memorandum evidencing the sale of a property where it was described as ‘6,8 and 41, Boundary Street, Shoreditch (freehold).’ It was sought to connect the signature on a purchaser’s deposit cheque with an unsigned memorandum that stated the terms of the contract.
Held: Jenkins LJ said: ‘A description of this kind is to be taken as extending to the whole of the vendor’s interest in the property, so that the memorandum on the face of it records an agreement for the sale and purchase of the while of such interest. Moreover, unless the contrary appears, such interest is to be taken as comprising the fee simple in possession free from incumbrances, and the purchaser will be entitled to reject any less interest than that.’
When asked as to whether a cheque and a receipt could be read together he said: ‘it is still indispensably necessary, in order to justify the reading of documents together for this purpose, that there should be a document signed by the party to be charged, which, while not containing in itself all the necessary ingredients of the required memorandum, does contain some reference, express or implied, to some other document or transaction. Where any such reference can be spelt out of a document so signed, then parol evidence may be given to identify the other document referred to, or, as the case may be, to explain the other transaction, and to identify any document relating to it. If by this process a document is brought to light which contains in writing all the terms of the bargain so far as not contained in the document signed by the party to be charged, then the two documents can be read together so as to constitute a sufficient memorandum.’

Judges:

Jenkins LJ

Citations:

[1958] Ch 110, [1957] 3 All ER 265

Statutes:

Law of Property Act 1925 40

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedBarclays Bank Plc v Weeks Legg and Dean (a Firm); Barclays Bank Plc v Lougher and Others; Barclays Bank Plc v Hopkin John and Co CA 21-May-1998
The defendant solicitors had each acted for banks in completing charges over property. They had given the standard agreed form of undertaking to secure a good and marketable title, and the banks now alleged that they were in breach because . .
CitedOrton v Collins and others ChD 23-Apr-2007
The court considered how a Part 36 offer could be treated as accepted when it involved an agreement to transfer land, because the offer and its acceptance would not operate under the 1989 Act.
Held: The agreement was enforceable. The Civil . .
ApprovedElias v George Sahely and Co (Barbados) Ltd PC 1982
(Barbados) The parties entered into an oral agreement for the sale of land to the plaintiff. The plaintiff’s solicitor then wrote to the defendant’s solicitor confirming the oral agreement and setting out its terms. He enclosed a cheque for 10 . .
DistinguishedGolden 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 . .
CitedGolden Ocean Group Ltd v Salgaocar Mining Industries Pvt Ltd and Another CA 9-Mar-2012
The court was asked ‘whether a contract of guarantee is enforceable where contained not in a single document signed by the guarantor but in a series of documents duly authenticated by the signature of the guarantor. It is common in commercial . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land, Contract

Updated: 13 May 2022; Ref: scu.229216

The Nefeli: 1986

Citations:

[1986] 1 Lloyds Rep 339

Cited by:

ApprovedMelvin International SA v Poseidon Schiffahrt GmbH ComC 18-Jun-1999
ComC Guarantee – guarantor not exempted from liability ‘…by any variation in the terms of the …2 underlying charterparty – whether addenda to charterparty a ‘variation’ – the relevant legal principles – the . .
CitedTriodos Bank Nv v Dobbs (No 2) CA 24-May-2005
The bank sought payment under a guarantee given by the appellant. The appellant said that the original loan agreement had been varied so as to release him. The loan had been taken out to support a business venture. After the guarantee was signed a . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Banking, Contract

Updated: 13 May 2022; Ref: scu.225452

Berkely v Poulett: CA 1977

The court discussed the duties of a vendor to the property between exchange and completion: ‘These duties and rights [of a purchaser] arise from the contract of sale and it is because of their existence that the vendor is said to be a constructive trustee, or a trustee sub modo, of the estate for the purchaser from the time when the contract is constituted. But to say that it is the duty of the vendor as trustee for the purchaser to care for the property is to put the cart before the horse and may lead you into error. He is said to be a trustee because of the duties which he has, and the duties do not arise because he is a trustee but because he has agreed to sell the land to the purchaser and the purchaser on tendering the price is entitled to have the contract specifically performed according to its terms. Nor does the relationship in the meantime have all the incidents of the relationship of trustee and cestui que trust. That this is so is sufficiently illustrated by the fact that prima facie the vendor is until the date fixed for the completion entitled to receive and retain the rents and profits and that as from that date the purchaser is bound to pay interest. And you may search the Trustee Act 1925 without obtaining much that is relevant to the relationship of vendor and purchaser. Thus, although the vendor because of his duties to the purchaser is called a trustee, it is wrong to argue that because he is so called he has all the duties of or holds the land on a trust which has all the incidents associated with the relationship of a trustee and his cestui que trust.’
Scarman LJ discussed what were the two tests for whether an item became affixed to the land: ‘(1) the method and degree of annexation; and (2) the object and purpose of the annexation. ‘ and ‘In other words, a degree of annexation which in earlier time the law would have treated as conclusive may now prove nothing. If the purpose of the annexation be for the better enjoyment of the object itself, it may remain a chattel, not withstanding a high degree of physical annexation. Clearly, however, it remains significant to discover the extent of physical disturbance of the building or the land involved in the removal of the object. If an object cannot be removed without serious damage to, or destruction of, some part of the realty, the case for its having become a fixture is a strong one. The relationship of the two tests to each other requires consideration. If there is no physical annexation there is no fixture. Quicquid plantatur solo solo cedit. Nevertheless, an object, resting on the ground by its own weight alone, can be a fixture, if it is so heavy that there is no need to tie it into a foundation, and if it were put in place to improve the realty. Prima Facie, however, an object resting on the ground by its own weight alone is not a fixture: see Megarry and Wade , p 716. Conversely, an object affixed to realty but capable of being removed without much difficulty may yet be a fixture, if, for example, the purpose of its affixing be that ‘of creating a beautiful room as a whole’ (Neville J in In Re Whaley [1908] 1 Ch 615 at p 619. An in the famous instance of Lord Chesterfield’s Settled Estates [1911] 1 Ch 237 Grinling Gibbons carvings, which had been affixed to a suit of rooms 200 years earlier, were held to be fixtures. Today so great are the technical skills of affixing and removing objects to land or buildings that the second test is more likely than the first to be decisive. Perhaps the enduring significance of the first test is a reminder that there must be some degree of physical annexation before a chattel can be treated as part of the realty.’
. . . and the tests, in the case of an item which has been attached to the building in some way other than simply by its own weight, seem to be the purpose of the item and the purpose of the link between the item and the building. If the item viewed objectively, is, intended to be permanent and to afford a lasting improvement to the building, the thing will have become a fixture. If the attachment is temporary and is no more than is necessary for the item to be used and enjoyed, then it will remain a chattel. Some indicators can be identified. For example, if the item is ornamental and the attachment is simply to enable the item to be displayed and enjoyed as an adornment that will often indicate that this item is a chattel. Obvious examples are pictures. But this will not be the result in every case; for example ornamental tiles on the walls of kitchens and bathrooms. The ability to remove an item or its attachment from the building without damaging the fabric of the building is another indicator. The same item may in some areas be a chattel and in others a fixture. For example a cooker will, if free standing and connected to the building only by an electric flex, be a chattel But it may be otherwise if the cooker is a split level cooker with the hob set into a work surface and the oven forming part of one of the cabinets in the kitchen. It must be remembered that in many cases the item being considered may be one that has been bought by the mortgagor on hire purchase, where the ownership of the item remains in the supplier until the instalments have been paid. Holding such items to be fixtures simply because they are housed in a fitted cupboard and linked to the building by an electric cable, and, in cases of washing machines by the necessary plumbing would cause difficulties and such findings should only be made where the intent to effect a permanent improvement in the building is incontrovertible. The type of person who instals or attaches the item to the land can be a further indicator. Thus items installed by a builder, eg the wall tiles will probably be fixtures, whereas items installed by eg a carpet contractor or curtain supplier or by the occupier of the building himself or herself may well not be.
The judge’s directions to himself on the law were these: that the primary test whether an item is or is not a fixture is the degree of annexation of the item to the building. He cited Megarry and Wade on Real Property at page 732:
‘An article is prima facie a fixture if it has some substantial connection with the land or a building on it’ and ‘A chattel attached to the land or a building on it, in some substantial manner, eg by nails or screws, were prima facie a fixture even if it would not be difficult to remove it. Examples in this category are a fireplace, panelling, wainscot and a conservatory on a brick foundation.’

Judges:

Stamp LJ, Scarman LJ

Citations:

[1977] 261 EG 911, [1977] 1 EGLR 86

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedEnglewood Properties Limited v Patel and Another ChD 16-Feb-2005
The claimant was a property developer, which sought to sell a row of shops at auction. One lot was a Woolworths store, where the company owned both freehold and leasehold interests, with Woolworths occupying an underlease, which the claimant had . .
CitedBotham and others v TSB Bank Plc CA 30-Jul-1996
A flat had been repossessed by the bank. The parties disputed whether items were fixtures and charged with the land or not.
Held: The judge had correctly analysed and applied the law of fixtures and fittings. The appeal failed save to a . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land, Contract

Updated: 13 May 2022; Ref: scu.223740

Golden Bread Co. v Hemmings: 1922

Where there was a contract for the sale of premises together with the goodwill of the business carried on from the premises, there was a duty on the vendor not to let the business lapse, and to inform the purchaser with reasonable promptitude of what he was doing.

Citations:

[1922] 1 Ch 162

Cited by:

CitedEnglewood Properties Limited v Patel and Another ChD 16-Feb-2005
The claimant was a property developer, which sought to sell a row of shops at auction. One lot was a Woolworths store, where the company owned both freehold and leasehold interests, with Woolworths occupying an underlease, which the claimant had . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land, Contract

Updated: 13 May 2022; Ref: scu.223746

In Re Hamilton-Snowball’s Conveyance: 1958

The vendor had received, between contract and completion, compensation for the requisition of the premises.
Held: The vendor under a contract for sale is only a qualified trustee for the purchaser of the premises with vacant possession, together with any physical accretions thereto, and not of any right to compensation moneys payable to him under an Act of Parliament which did not, in the absence of express provision in the contract, form part of the subject matter of the sale.

Judges:

Upjohn J

Citations:

[1958] Ch 308

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedEnglewood Properties Limited v Patel and Another ChD 16-Feb-2005
The claimant was a property developer, which sought to sell a row of shops at auction. One lot was a Woolworths store, where the company owned both freehold and leasehold interests, with Woolworths occupying an underlease, which the claimant had . .
CitedEnglewood Properties Limited v Patel and Another ChD 16-Feb-2005
The claimant was a property developer, which sought to sell a row of shops at auction. One lot was a Woolworths store, where the company owned both freehold and leasehold interests, with Woolworths occupying an underlease, which the claimant had . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land, Contract

Updated: 13 May 2022; Ref: scu.223736

Den Danske Bank A/S and Others v The Skipton Building Society and Others: ComC 19 Dec 1997

ComC Insurance – Mortgage guarantee insurance – condition as to compliance with lending criteria – consequences of failure to comply. Master Mortgage guarantee insurance policy – whether term warranty descriptive of the risk or condition precedent or other term. Recovery of claims paid – mistake.
Obligation to sue negligent professionals Contract – Penalty clause Contributory negligence- applicability of Law Reform Act 1945 to claim for breach of contractual duty of care. Negligence – Securitisation – title of banks buying bonus to sue agent who effected the loans for transfer.

Judges:

Thomas J

Citations:

[1998] 1 EGLR 140

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Insurance, Contract

Updated: 13 May 2022; Ref: scu.220833

F C Shepherd and Co Ltd v Jerrom: 1986

A party alleging frustration should not be allowed to rely upon the frustrating event if that event was caused by that party.

Citations:

[1986] ICR 802

Cited by:

CitedJames v The Greytree Trust EAT 17-Jan-1996
The tribunal was asked whether, due to incapacity, an employee has been dismissed, or his contract of employment frustrated. . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 13 May 2022; Ref: scu.221582

Energoproject Holding Company and Others v Lloyds Bank Plc and Others: ComC 1 Sep 1997

ComC Termination; Estoppel/Manner, Validity of Notice of Termination. The contract under which Plaintiffs’ promissory notes had been held by a bank and been validly terminated. The Plaintiffs were not estopped from relying on breach in order to terminate.

Judges:

Tuckey J

Citations:

Unreported, 1 September 1997

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Contract

Updated: 13 May 2022; Ref: scu.220792

Navigas Ltd of Gibraltar v Enron Liquid Fuels Inc: ComC 11 Aug 1997

Standard terms of third party supplies incorporated by general reference; whether term for inspection for quality and quantity at the loading port incorporated, whether time bar incorporated, whether term in respect of procedure for making claims incorporated. Whether inspection term was a conclusive evidence clause 1.

Judges:

Colman J

Citations:

[1997] 2 Lloyd’s Rep. 759

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Contract

Updated: 13 May 2022; Ref: scu.220791

‘Red Sea Tankers’: ComC 30 Apr 1997

Shipping – acquisition of ship – recommendation – duty in contract – negligent recommendation – duty of care – tort – duty in contract – duty in tort – contributory negligence – – obiter

Judges:

Mance J

Citations:

[1997] 2 Lloyd’s Rep. 547

Statutes:

Civil Liability (Contribution) Act 1978

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Contract

Updated: 13 May 2022; Ref: scu.220774

Lee-Parker v Izzett (2): 1972

A contract was exchanged subject to ‘the purchaser obtaining a satisfactory mortgage’.
Held: A contract which is said to be conditional, but where the condition is not expressed clearly or is too imprecise as in this case, may be void for uncertainty. The term ‘subject to the purchaser obtaining a satisfactory mortgage’ was void for uncertainty because ‘the concept of a satisfactory mortgage is too indefinite for the court to give it a practical meaning. Everything is at large, not only matters like rate of interest and ancillary obligations on which evidence might establish what would be usual or reasonable, but also those two most essential points – the amount of the loan and the terms of repayment’.

Judges:

Goulding J

Citations:

[1972] 1 WLR 775

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

See AlsoLee-Parker v Izzett (1) ChD 1971
Money expended by a tenant on discharging his landlord’s covenants will in appropriate circumstances operate as a partial or a complete discharge so as to furnish a defence of set-off at law to a claim for unpaid rent. Justice Goff discussed the . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land, Contract

Updated: 13 May 2022; Ref: scu.219181

Brownlie v Campbell; Brownlie v Miller: HL 1880

Silence where there is a duty to speak, may amount to a misrepresentation. Lord Blackburn said: ‘where there is a duty or an obligation to speak, and a man in breach of that duty or obligation holds his tongue and does not speak, and does not say the thing he was bound to say, if that was done with the intention of inducing the other party to act upon the belief that the reason why he did not speak was because he had nothing to say, I should be inclined myself to hold that that was fraud also.’
Lord Blackburn said: ‘I further agree in this; that when a statement or representation has been made in the bona fide belief that it is true, and the party who has made it afterwards comes to find out it is untrue, and discovers what he should have said, he can no longer honestly keep up that silence on the subject after that has come to his knowledge, thereby allowing the other party to go on, and still more, inducing him to go on, upon a statement that was honestly made at the time when it was made, but which he has not now retracted when he has become aware that it can be no longer honestly persevered in. That would be fraud too, I should say, that at present advised. And I go on further still to say, what is perhaps not quite so clear, but certainly it is my opinion, where there is a duty or obligation to speak, and a man in breach of that duty or obligation will hold his tongue and will not speak, and does not say the thing he was bound to say, if that was done with the intention of inducing the other party to act upon the belief that the reason why he did not speak was that he had nothing to say, I should be inclined myself to hold that that was fraud also.’

Judges:

Lord Blackburn

Citations:

(1880) 5 AC 925, (1880) 7 R (HL) 66

Jurisdiction:

Scotland

Cited by:

CitedHIH Casualty and General Insurance Limited and others v Chase Manhattan Bank and others HL 20-Feb-2003
The insurance company had paid claims on policies used to underwrite the production of TV films. The re-insurers resisted the claims against them by the insurers on the grounds of non-disclosure by the insured, or in the alternative damages for . .
CitedAdvanced Industrial Technology Corporation Ltd v Bond Street Jewellers Ltd CA 4-Jul-2006
The claimant left a valuable necklace with the defendant jewellers for sale. The jewellers fell into financial difficulties, and the director gave the necklace as security for a loan to the company. The jeweller failed to maintain payments on the . .
CitedHeilbut Symons and Co v Buckleton HL 11-Nov-1912
In an action of damages for fraudulent misrepresentation and breach of warranty, the plaintiff founded on a conversation between himself and the defendants’ representative. In this conversation the plaintiff said-‘I understand that you are bringing . .
ApprovedWith v O’Flanagan CA 1936
When negotiating to enter into a contract, a person may have a duty to disclose material facts which come to his notice before the conclusion of a contract if they falsify a representation previously made by him. A representation as to the profits . .
CitedWickens v Cheval Property Developments Ltd ChD 8-Sep-2010
The buyer of land sought a reduction in the purchase price complaining of the removal of several items (worth possibly andpound;300,000) by intruders after exchange. The seller said that the fixtures had been excluded under the contract.
Held: . .
CitedCramaso Llp v Ogilvie-Grant, Earl of Seafield and Others SC 12-Feb-2014
The defenders owned a substantial grouse moor in Scotland. There had been difficulties with grouse stocks, and steps taken over years to allow stocks to recover. They had responded to enquiries from one Mr Erskine with misleading figures. Mr Erskine . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract, Torts – Other

Updated: 13 May 2022; Ref: scu.219299

Chandris v Isbrandtsen-Moller Co Inc: CA 1950

Although section 3(1) of the 1934 Act expressly empowered only courts of record to include interest in sums for which judgment was given for damages or debt, arbitrators were nevertheless empowered by the agreement of reference to apply English law, including so much of that law as is to be found in the section. The Hague Rules were designed to achieve a part harmonisation of the diverse laws of trading nations. It achieved this by regulating freedom to contract on certain topics only.
Devlin J said: ‘A rule of construction cannot be more than a guide to enable the court to arrive at the true meaning of the parties.’

Judges:

Devlin J

Citations:

[1951] 1 KB 240, (1950) 2 All ER 618, (1950) 84 Lloyds Rep 347

Statutes:

Hague-Visby Rules, Law Reform (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1934 3(1)

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedJindal Iron and Steel Co Ltd and others v Islamic Solidarity Shipping Company Jordan Inc (‘The Jordan II’) HL 25-Nov-2004
Cargo was damaged by rough handling during loading and/or discharging, and/or inadequate stowage due to failure to provide dunnage, failure to secure the coils and/or stacking them so that the bottom layers were excessively compressed. The House was . .
CitedJindal Iron and Steel Co Ltd and others v Islamic Solidarity Shipping Company Jordan Inc (‘The Jordan II’) HL 25-Nov-2004
Cargo was damaged by rough handling during loading and/or discharging, and/or inadequate stowage due to failure to provide dunnage, failure to secure the coils and/or stacking them so that the bottom layers were excessively compressed. The House was . .
CitedCosco Bulk Carrier Co Ltd and Another v M/V ‘Saldanha’ C/P Dated 25/06/08 ComC 11-Jun-2010
The court considered the effect of a ship being taken by pirates at sea on the obligations in the charterparty contract. The insurers said that a claim for ‘average accident’ must include an element of physical damage – absent in this case.
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Transport, Contract

Updated: 13 May 2022; Ref: scu.219886

In Re Macartney: 1921

The principle that an English court will not enforce a contract against the public policy of this country wherever it was made, applied as ‘directly to the enforceability of foreign judgments founded on contracts contrary to public policy or rights of that character.’

Judges:

Astbury J

Citations:

[1921] 1 Ch 522

Cited by:

CitedWestacre Investments Inc v Jugoimport-SDPR Holding Co Ltd ComC 19-Dec-1997
There was a consultancy agreement, under which it was said to be contemplated or intended (or both) that the plaintiffs would bribe Kuwaiti officials in order to obtain contracts for the purchase of military equipment. The contract was governed by . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 13 May 2022; Ref: scu.219309

W F Harrison and Co v Burke: 1956

If a notice of assignment of a debt describes the assignment by reference to a wrong date, the notice is invalid because it has described a non-existent document.

Citations:

[1956] 1 WLR 419

Statutes:

Law of Property Act 1925 139

Cited by:

CitedVan Lynn Developments Ltd v Pelvis Construction Co Ltd 1969
A notice of an assignment of a debt need not state the date of the assignment. . .
CitedFirstdale Ltd v Quinton ComC 5-Aug-2004
In the course of a long dispute, the defendant’s solicitors had indicated that they would accept service of proceedings. Just before the limitation period expired, the papers were served directly in the client. The defendants solicitors said that . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 13 May 2022; Ref: scu.219112

British Steel Corporation v Cleveland Bridge and Engineering Co Ltd: 1983

An ‘if contract’ is where one party makes an offer capable of acceptance on the basis that ‘if you do this for us, we will do that for you’. Often used in the construction industry.
Goff J said: ‘the question whether . . any contract has come into existence must depend on a true construction of the relevant communications which have passed between the parties and the effect (if any) of their actions pursuant to those communications. There can be no hard and fast answer to the question whether a letter of intent will give rise to a binding agreement; everything must depend on the circumstances of the particular case. In most cases where work is done pursuant to a request contained in a letter of intent, it will not matter whether a contract did or did not come into existence; because if the party who has acted on the request is simply claiming payment, his claim will usually be based upon a quantum meruit, and it will make no difference whether that claim is contractual or quasi-contractual. Of course, a quantum meruit claim (like the old actions for money had and received and for money paid) straddles the boundaries of what we now call contract and restitution; so the mere framing of a claim as a quantum meruit claim, or a claim for a reasonable sum, does not assist in classifying the claim as contractual or quasi-contractual. . . As a matter of analysis the contract (if any) which may come into existence following a letter of intent may take one of two forms: either there may be an ordinary executory contract, under which each party assumes reciprocal obligations to the other; or there may be what is sometimes called an ‘if’ contract, ie a contract under which A requests B to carry out a certain performance and promises B that, if he does so, he will receive a certain performance in return, usual remuneration for his performance. The latter transaction is really no more than a standing offer which, if acted upon before it lapses or is lawfully withdrawn, will result in a binding contract. The former type of contract was held to exist by Judge Fay QC in Turriff Construction Ltd. v. Regalia Knitting Mills Ltd (1971) 9 BLR 20; and it is the type of contract for which [Counsel for CBE] contended in the present case. Of course, as I have already said, everything must depend on the facts of the particular case; but certainly, on the facts of the present case – and, as I imagine, on the facts of most cases – this must be a very difficult submission to maintain.’
If there is no contract there can be no question of a party to a transaction being in breach of an obligation of the type which can only arise under a contract. ‘In my judgment, the true analysis of the situation is this. Both parties confidently expected a formal contract to eventuate. In these circumstances, to expedite performance under that anticipated contract, one requested the other to commence the contract work, and the other complied with that request. If thereafter – as anticipated – a contract was entered into, the work done as requested will be treated as having been performed under that contract; if, contrary to their expectation, no contract was entered into, then the performance of the work is not referable to any contract of which the terms can be ascertained, and the law simply imposes an obligation on the party who made the request to pay a reasonable sum for such work as has been done pursuant to that request, such an obligation sounding in quasi-contract or, as we now say, in restitution.’

Judges:

Robert Goff J

Citations:

[1984] 1 All ER 504, (1983) BLR 94, [1984] 1 WLR 504

Cited by:

CitedMowlem Plc (T/A Mowlem Marine) v Stena Line Ports Ltd TCC 6-Oct-2004
Construction of ‘if contract’ for work at Holyhead ferry terminal. . .
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 . .
CitedYeoman’s Row Management Ltd and Another v Cobbe HL 30-Jul-2008
The parties agreed in principle for the sale of land with potential development value. Considerable sums were spent, and permission achieved, but the owner then sought to renegotiate the deal.
Held: The appeal succeeded in part. The finding . .
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 . .
CitedRTS Flexible Systems Ltd v Molkerei Alois Muller Gmbh and Company Kg (UK Production) SC 10-Mar-2010
The parties had reached agreement in outline and sought to have the contract formalised, but went ahead anyway. They now disputed whether an agreement had been created and as to its terms if so.
Held: It was unrealistic to suggest that no . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Construction, Contract

Updated: 13 May 2022; Ref: scu.216348

Treacy v Corcoran: 1874

(Irish Court of Common Pleas) The holder of a public office as Clerk of the Crown was entitled to be paid half yearly. During the course of a half year the plaintiff, Treacy, had resigned from that office. At the end of the half year the salary for the whole half year was paid to his successor, Corcoran. Treacy brought an action against Corcoran (not against the Treasurer of the County as payer).
Held: Corcoran must pay to Treacy his apportioned share. Section 110 of the Grand Jury Act applied under which a salary was payable to the Clerk of the Crown. The 1870 Act applied: ‘That being so, it is clear that the salary of the Clerk of the Crown became due to Mr Treacy from day to day up to the 13th of April 1782, being the period during which he filled that office, and became recoverable by him on or after the 24th of July 1872, the proper time for payment having then arrived.’

Judges:

Monahan C J

Citations:

(1874) IR Vol VIII 40

Statutes:

Apportionment Act 1870

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedFassihim, Liddiardrams, International Ltd, Isograph Ltd v Item Software (UK) Ltd CA 30-Sep-2004
The first defendant (F) had been employed by a company involved in a distribution agreement. He had sought to set up a competing arrangement whilst a director of the claimant, and diverted a contract to his new company.
Held: A company . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 13 May 2022; Ref: scu.215874

Campbell 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 payment could be, and in fact was, a penalty. Lord Morton said that had it been triggered by the exercise of an option then: ‘In that event the present appellant would have been bound to pay the stipulated sum of andpound;206 3s.4d., not by way of penalty or liquidated damages but simply because payment of that sum was one of the terms upon which the option could be exercised.’
The question of penalty or not is determined as a matter of substance not form. The House discussed the meaning of the words ‘in terrorem’ in the context of penalty clauses in contracts: ‘I do not find that that description adds anything to the idea conveyed by the word ‘penalty’ itself, and it obscures the fact that penalties may quite easily be undertaken by parties who are not in the least terrorised by the prospect of having to pay them.’
The rule against penalty clauses is not a rule as to the illegality of a clause, but rather one of refusing to sanction legal proceedings for recovery of a penalty sum, as a matter of public policy.

Judges:

Radcliffe, Morton, Devlin, Denning LL

Citations:

[1962] 2 WLR 439, [1962] 1 All ER 385, [1962] AC 600

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

Approved (Obiter)Associated Distributors Ltd v Hall CA 1938
The common law doctrine of penalty is inapplicable where the triggering event is not a breach of contract. . .
Appeal fromCampbell Discount Company Ltd v Bridge CA 1961
Agreed compensation is not a penalty
A hirer under a hire purchase agreement could terminate the hiring during the course of the term whereupon the hirer was required to pay a sum by way of agreed compensation.
Held: A sum of money payable under a contract on the occurrence of an . .
ApprovedCooden 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 . .

Cited by:

CitedOresundsvarvet AB v Marcos Diamantis Lemos (The ‘Angelic Star’) CA 1988
As part of a contract for ship-building, a delivery credit was made available to the purchaser as an ‘option’, in default of exercise of which the full price was payable in cash. The option was taken. The loan was to be repaid by bills of exchange . .
CitedSwan Hill Developments Limited, Lloyd-Thomas etc v British Waterways Board CA 25-Feb-1997
The issue was whether the rights given under the section could only be exercised by owners of land on either side of the canal.
Held: The Act took rights over land and was to be construed in the case of any ambiguity against its proposers. . .
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 . .
AppliedRe a Debtor; ex parte Berkshire Finance Co Ltd QBD 2-Jan-1962
The court was asked to consider whether a judgment debt in respect of sums due under a hire-purchase agreement was a good petitioning creditor’s debt. The judgment sum included the balance of all the remaining hire charges which became payable on . .
MentionedMcGuinness v Norwich and Peterborough Building Society CA 9-Nov-2011
The appellant had guaranteed his brother’s loan from the respondent, and the guarantee having been called in and unpaid, he had been made bankrupt. He now appealed saying that the guarantee debt, even though of a fixed amount could not form the . .
CitedLombard North Central v Butterworth CA 31-Jul-1986
The defendant entered into a hire-purchase contract for a computer, time being stipulated to be ‘of the essence’ in relation to the payment obligations. He defendant defaulted, and the plaintiff took possession of the goods, and and sought payment . .
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, . .
MentionedWright 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

Updated: 13 May 2022; Ref: scu.200653

Steggall v Lymburner: 1912

The defendant deducted from the wages of an employee, either at his request or by his consent, the amount of a debt due by the employee to the plaintiffs, and promised the plaintiffs to pay the amount to them.
Held: ‘The contention on the part of the defendant before the magistrate was that his promise to pay was a promise to pay a debt of another person and, therefore, was not actionable, as there was no evidence in writing. In answer to that it is said that the Statute of Frauds has nothing to do with the case, and that the promise of the defendant is not to discharge the debt of another person, but a promise to pay his own debt. In Leake on Contracts, 5th edition, p.839, it is stated ‘the contract or promise of the debtor to pay according to the order or assignment of his creditor is a promise to pay his own debt, although it operates in discharge of the debt of his creditor. It is, therefore, not a promise to pay the debt of another within the Statute of Frauds, and does not require written evidence.” Burnside J agreed, describing it as ‘a very simple case’.

Judges:

McMillan J

Citations:

(1912) 14 WALR 201

Employment, Contract

Updated: 13 May 2022; Ref: scu.199772

Libertas-Kommerz Gmb H re Johnson: 1997

Intimation of the assignation to the debtor can be made either by the assignor or the assignee.

Citations:

1997 SC 191

Jurisdiction:

Scotland

Cited by:

CitedSafdar v Shahid SCS 30-Apr-2004
The pursuer claimed repayments of loans made for the purchase of company shares. The defender denied any loan had been made, and claimed that any loans would require evidence in writing under the Act.
Held: The arguments should be allowed to . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 13 May 2022; Ref: scu.196585

E E Caledonia Ltd v Orbit Valve Plc: QBD 1994

A clause which gave an indemnity against any claim arising from the manner of performance of the contract by one party was not to be construed to exempt negligence: ‘The principle is that in the absence of clear words the parties to a contract are not to be taken to have intended that an exemption or indemnity clause should apply to the consequences of a party’s negligence.’

Judges:

Buckley J

Citations:

[1994] 1 WLR 221

Citing:

Appealed toE E Caledonia Ltd v Orbit Valve Plc CA 30-May-1994
A clause providing for an indemnity against any claim arising from the manner of performance was not to be construed to cover negligence. ‘The printed conditions in the agreement in this case were plainly drafted by a lawyer. Why was an express . .

Cited by:

Appeal fromE E Caledonia Ltd v Orbit Valve Plc CA 30-May-1994
A clause providing for an indemnity against any claim arising from the manner of performance was not to be construed to cover negligence. ‘The printed conditions in the agreement in this case were plainly drafted by a lawyer. Why was an express . .
CitedStent Foundations Ltd v M J Gleeson Group Plc TCC 9-Aug-2000
The defendant company sought to rely upon an exemption clause.
Held: Applying standard rules for contract interpretation, the exemption clause was to be construed against the one proposing it. At best the clause was ambiguous, and the . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 13 May 2022; Ref: scu.195680

Industrie Chimiche v Nea Ninemia Shipping: 1983

Construction of exemption clause in time charterparty: ‘Since it is inherently improbable that one party to a contract should intend to absolve the other party from the consequences of the latter’s own negligence, the court will presume a clause not to have that effect unless the contrary is plainly shown by clear words or by implication.’ and ‘In carrying out that task of construction, the court should not treat commercial parties as if they were law students.’

Judges:

Bingham J

Citations:

[1983] 1 All ER 686

Citing:

CitedLamport and Holt Lines v Coubro, The Raphael CA 1982
The court considered how it should treat the construction of a contractual clause claiming that one party should be exempt from liability for its own negligence: ‘Thus, if an exemption clause of the kind we are considering excludes liability for . .

Cited by:

CitedStent Foundations Ltd v M J Gleeson Group Plc TCC 9-Aug-2000
The defendant company sought to rely upon an exemption clause.
Held: Applying standard rules for contract interpretation, the exemption clause was to be construed against the one proposing it. At best the clause was ambiguous, and the . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract, Transport

Updated: 13 May 2022; Ref: scu.195681

Hyslop v Shirlaw: 1905

Judges:

Lord Kyllachy

Citations:

(1905) 7 F 875

Jurisdiction:

Scotland

Cited by:

CitedStewart v Perth and Kinross Council HL 1-Apr-2004
The claimant challenged refusal of a licence to sell second hand cars, saying that the licensing requirements imposed were outwith the Act under which they had been made. The licensing scheme imposed additional requirements.
Held: Though a . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 13 May 2022; Ref: scu.195475

Joyce v Barker Bros (Builders) Ltd: 1980

The rule that where in a deed there are two contradictory provisions, the earlier provision prevails over the later is ‘an absolutely last resort in construction’.

Judges:

Vinelott J

Citations:

Times 26-Feb-1980, (1980) 40 P and CR 512

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedInglorest Investments Ltd v Robert Campbell and Another CA 2-Apr-2004
The appellants appealed an order that property be part of the estate of the deceased. There had been an agreement to assign the reversion of the lease to the claimant. That was not completed, but he later acquired the freehold reversion. No written . .
CitedSlater v Simm ChD 27-Apr-2007
The deceased and her partner did not marry but owned three properties together. They could not agree on the interpretation of the documents setting out their interests, and whether they had been varied.
Held: The court set out the various . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 12 May 2022; Ref: scu.189983

Coral Leisure Group Ltd v Barnett: EAT 1981

The court was asked whether any taint of illegality affecting part of a contract necessarily rendered the whole contract unenforceable by a party who knew of the illegality. In the case of a contract not for an illegal purpose or prohibited by statute.
Held: It did not. The fact that the employee in the course of his employment committed an unlawful act did not prevent him from asserting thereafter his contract of employment against his employer. ‘The fact that a party has in the course of performing a contract committed an unlawful or immoral act will not by itself prevent him from further enforcing that contract unless the contract as entered into with the purpose of doing that unlawful or immoral act or the contract itself (as opposed to the mode of his performance) is prohibited by law.’

Judges:

Browne-Wilkinson J

Citations:

[1981] ICR 503

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedHall v Woolston Hall Leisure Limited CA 23-May-2000
The fact that an employment contract was tainted with illegality of which the employee was aware, did not deprive the employee of the possibility of claiming rights which were due to her under a statute which created rights associated with but not . .
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 . .
CitedAXA General Insurance Limited v Gottlieb CA 11-Feb-2005
The defendant made a claim under an insurance policy. The insurer made an interim payment, but then asserted that the claim was fraudulent, and sought recovery of the interim payment.
Held: At common law, fraud in an insurance claim, once . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract, Employment

Updated: 12 May 2022; Ref: scu.189940

B and B Viennese Fashions v Losane: CA 1952

Judges:

Jenkins LJ

Citations:

[1952] 1 All E R 909

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedAshmore, Benson, Pease and Co v A V Dawson Ltd CA 1973
By acquiescing in the unlawful overloading of the hauliers’ lorries, the consignors’ assistant transport manager and his assistant made the haulage contract unenforceable at the instance of the consignors, who were unable to recover when a lorry . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 12 May 2022; Ref: scu.189942

Wetherell v Jones: 1832

The plaintiff sold spirits, misstating the strength to reduce the tax.
Held: A failure only to comply with regulations, which would result in a penalty, did not render void a sale of goods, and the plaintiff was entitled to recover the contract price.

Citations:

(1832) 3BandAD 221, (1832) 1 LJ KB 139

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 . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 12 May 2022; Ref: scu.189944

Newland v Simons and Willer (Hairdressers) Ltd: 1981

The court was asked whether an employee could complain of unfair dismissal where the tribunal had held that the employee knew or ought to have known that her employer had failed to pay tax and national insurance contributions in respect of her wages. The majority of the Employment Appeal Tribunal had been of the view that, where both employer and employee knowingly commit an illegality by way of a fraud on the revenue in the payment and receipt of the employee’s remuneration under a contract of employment, the contract was turned into one prohibited by statute or common law and the employee was precluded from enforcing any employment rights which she might otherwise have against the employer. The majority thought the essential question to be: ‘Has the employee knowingly been a party to a deception on the revenue?’
Held: May J said: ‘We have no doubt that Parliament never intended to give the statutory rights provided for by the relevant employment legislation to those who were knowingly breaking the law by committing or participating in a fraud on the revenue.’

Judges:

May J

Citations:

[1981] IRLR 359, [1981] ICR 521

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedHall v Woolston Hall Leisure Limited CA 23-May-2000
The fact that an employment contract was tainted with illegality of which the employee was aware, did not deprive the employee of the possibility of claiming rights which were due to her under a statute which created rights associated with but not . .
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 . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract, Employment

Updated: 12 May 2022; Ref: scu.189941

Hardman v Booth: CEC 1863

Gandell carried on business in two capacities: as clerk to Gandell and Co, of which his father was sole proprietor. He had no authority to contract. He was in partnership with Todd, as Gandell and Todd. He purported to conclude a contract to purchase cloth from the plaintiffs, holding himself out as a member of Gandell and Co. The first instalment of the cloth was delivered to the premises of Gandell and Co and the second instalment was collected in a cart owned by Gandell and Co. Edward Gandell took the cloth to the defendant and purported to pledge it to secure a loan to Gandell and Todd. The issue was whether in these circumstances any contract was concluded between the plaintiffs and Gandell and Todd, under which the property in the cloth passed to them. He became bankrupt. The court held that no contract had been concluded.
Pollock CB said: ‘ in this case I think it clear that there was no contract. Mr Hawkins contended that there was a contract personally with Edward Gandell, the individual with whom the conversations took place. It is true that the words were uttered by and to him, but the plaintiffs supposed that they were dealing with Gandell and Co., the packers, to whom they sent the goods; the fact being that Edward Gandell was not a member of that firm and had no authority to act as their agent. Therefore at no period of time were there two consenting minds to the same agreement.’

Judges:

Pollock CB

Citations:

(1863) 1 H and C 803

Cited by:

FollowedCundy v Lindsay HL 1878
Cundy was asked to pay the linen manufacturers Lindsay and Co for 250 dozen cambric handkerchiefs which he had acquired from a crook who had acquired them from Lindsay by pretending to be the respectable business firm of Blenkiron.
Held: A . .
CitedShogun Finance Limited v Hudson HL 19-Nov-2003
Thief acquired no title and could not sell
A purchaser used a stolen driving licence to obtain credit for and purchase a car. He then purported to sell it to the respondent, and then disappeared. The finance company sought return of the car.
Held: (Lords Nicholls and Millett . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 12 May 2022; Ref: scu.188454

Fawcett v Star Car Sales Limited: 1960

(New Zealand) ‘a void contract is a paradox; in truth there is no contract at all.’ and ‘the difficulty in deciding whether a mistake of identity prevents the formation of a concluded contract is a proper assessment of the facts rather than the ascertainment of the law’.

Judges:

Gresson P

Citations:

[1960] NZLR 406

Cited by:

CitedNorman Hudson v Shogun Finance Ltd CA 28-Jun-2001
A rogue had purchased a car, using a false name to obtain finance. He had then sold it to the defendant. The finance company claimed the car back.
Held: The dealer had not taken all the steps he might have done to check the identity of the . .
CitedShogun Finance Limited v Hudson HL 19-Nov-2003
Thief acquired no title and could not sell
A purchaser used a stolen driving licence to obtain credit for and purchase a car. He then purported to sell it to the respondent, and then disappeared. The finance company sought return of the car.
Held: (Lords Nicholls and Millett . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract, Commonwealth

Updated: 12 May 2022; Ref: scu.188423

Hartog v Colin and Shields: 1939

The defendants had contracted to sell to the plaintiff 30,000 Argentine hairskins but by an alleged mistake the defendants offered the goods at a price per pound weight instead of a price per piece. The value of a piece was approximately one third that of the value at pound weight. Previous discussions had been on the usual trade practice of a price per piece.
Held: The plaintiff could not reasonably have supposed that the offer expressed the real intention of the persons making it and must have known that it would have been made by mistake and that the plaintiff did not by his acceptance of the offer make a binding contract with the defendants. If one party to a proposed contract knows or really ought to have known that the offeror does not intend the terms of the offer to be those that the natural meaning of the words would suggest, and that the terms offered were a mistake, he cannot, by purporting to accept the offer, bind the offeror to a contract.

Citations:

[1939] 3 All ER 566

Cited by:

CitedShogun Finance Limited v Hudson HL 19-Nov-2003
Thief acquired no title and could not sell
A purchaser used a stolen driving licence to obtain credit for and purchase a car. He then purported to sell it to the respondent, and then disappeared. The finance company sought return of the car.
Held: (Lords Nicholls and Millett . .
CitedDresdner Kleinwort Ltd and Another v Attrill and Others CA 26-Apr-2013
The bank appealed against judgment against it on claims by former senior employees for contractual discretionary bonuses.
Held: The appeal failed. The bank’s unilateral promise made within the context of an existing employment relationship to . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 12 May 2022; Ref: scu.188456

Phillips v Brooks Ltd: 1919

A jeweller had a ring for sale. The buyer pretended to be somebody else: ‘I am Sir George Bullough of 11 St. James’s Square.’ The jeweller had heard of Sir George Bullough and checked he lived at the address given. He released the jewellry against his cheque. The cheque was dishonoured, but the jewelry had been sold on. The jeweller sought its return.
Held: The jeweller failed in his action, and title had passed. Horridge adapted the the judgment of Morton CJ in the Massachusetts case of Edmunds v Merchants’ Despatch Transportation Co 135 Mass 283: ‘The fact that the seller was induced to sell by fraud of the buyer made the sale voidable, not void. He could not have supposed that he was selling to any other person; his intention was to sell to the person present, and identified by sight and hearing; it does not defeat the sale because the buyer assumed a false name, or practised any other deceit to induce the vendor to sell.’

Judges:

Horridge J

Citations:

[1919] 2 KB 243

Cited by:

DistinguishedIngram v Little 27-Jul-1960
Two ladies had a car for sale. A buyer came along. He fooled them into believing him to be someone else, and they sold him the car, after checking the name in the telephone directory. Before the cheque bounced, the rogue sold the car to the . .
CitedLewis v Averay CA 22-Jul-1971
A private seller had parted with his car in return for a worthless cheque to a rogue who persuaded him that he was the well-known actor who played Robin Hood on television, and who sold it on to the defendant.
Held: ‘When two parties have come . .
CitedShogun Finance Limited v Hudson HL 19-Nov-2003
Thief acquired no title and could not sell
A purchaser used a stolen driving licence to obtain credit for and purchase a car. He then purported to sell it to the respondent, and then disappeared. The finance company sought return of the car.
Held: (Lords Nicholls and Millett . .
CitedDirector of Public Prosecutions v Gomez HL 3-Dec-1992
The defendant worked as a shop assistant. He had persuaded the manager to accept in payment for goods, two cheques which he knew to be stolen. The CA had decided that since the ownership of the goods was transferred on the sale, no appropriation of . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 12 May 2022; Ref: scu.188417

Said v Butt: 1920

The plaintiff wanted to go to a play’s first night. He had fallen out with the management of the theatre, and knew that he would not get a ticket in his own name. He got a friend to go to the theatre and buy a ticket for him without disclosing the fact. When he turned up for the performance he was refused admission. He brought a claim against Sir Alfred Butt the managing director of the theatre.
Held: His claim was dismissed. Said had not established that a contract existed between himself and the company, and that he had consequently failed to prove that Sir Alfred had caused any breach of the alleged contract in refusing Mr Said admission to the theatre.
A first night is a special event with characteristics of its own, and tickets are only given or sold to persons whom the management selects and wishes to favour. The purchaser’s identity was a material element in the formation of the contract and that the failure to disclose the fact that the ticket was bought on his behalf prevented the plaintiff from asserting that he was the undisclosed principal.
Where a company breaches a contract the company employee whose conduct within the scope of employment is ascribed to the company is not usually personally liable for inducing breach of that contract.
McCardie J said: ‘But the servant who causes a breach of his master’s contract with a third person seems to stand in a wholly different position. He is not a stranger. He is the alter ego of his employer. In such a case it is the master himself, by his agent, breaking the contract he has made, and in my view an action against the agent under the Lumley v Gye principle must therefore fail, just as it would fail if brought against the master himself for wrongly procuring a breach of his own contract.

Judges:

McCardie J

Citations:

[1920] 3 KB 497, [1920] All ER 232, 11 BRC 317

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedShogun Finance Limited v Hudson HL 19-Nov-2003
Thief acquired no title and could not sell
A purchaser used a stolen driving licence to obtain credit for and purchase a car. He then purported to sell it to the respondent, and then disappeared. The finance company sought return of the car.
Held: (Lords Nicholls and Millett . .
CitedJohn Louis Carter Fourie v Allan Le Roux and others CA 7-Mar-2005
The defendant’s company in South Africa had become insolvent and the claimant had recovered judgment for arrears of rent. They obtained a freezing order against the defendant. The defendant appealed saying the court did not have jurisdiction, and . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract, Agency

Updated: 12 May 2022; Ref: scu.188452

Basma v Weekes: PC 1950

The appellant requested specific performance of an agreement by which the first three respondents had agreed to sell to him two houses, of which they were tenants in common. The respondents pleaded, inter alia, that the agreement alleged was not a sufficient memorandum to comply with the requirements of the Statute of Frauds in that the purchaser named therein was acting, to the knowledge of the respondents, as agent for the appellant who was the principal and that the agreement did not identify the appellant as purchaser.
Held: An agent who contracted in his own name did not cease to be contractually bound because it was proved that the other party knew when the contract was made that he was acting as agent. Also the agreement which was made in his name did not cease in that event to contain the names of the contracting parties, and therefore did not cease to satisfy the Statute of Frauds; and, accordingly that, as the agent could have sued on the contract, so could his principal, the appellant.
In a contract subject to the Statute of Frauds the required memorandum in writing must identify the parties and a person could not intervene to claim that he was the true party to the contract when this was not consistent with the terms of the memorandum. A party is nonetheless entitled to enforce the contract to the extent he can perform it.

Judges:

Lord Reid

Citations:

[1950] AC 441, [1950] 2 All ER 146

Jurisdiction:

Commonwealth

Citing:

ApprovedCalder v Dobell 1871
‘an agent who contracts in his own name does not cease to be contractually bound because it is proved that the other party knew when the contract was made that he was acting as agent.’ . .

Cited by:

CitedShogun Finance Limited v Hudson HL 19-Nov-2003
Thief acquired no title and could not sell
A purchaser used a stolen driving licence to obtain credit for and purchase a car. He then purported to sell it to the respondent, and then disappeared. The finance company sought return of the car.
Held: (Lords Nicholls and Millett . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract, Agency

Updated: 12 May 2022; Ref: scu.188462

Edwin Shirley Productions Ltd v Workspace Management Ltd: 2001

So familiar is the use of the phrase ‘subject to contract’ in the conveyancing context that its effect is, without proof, to be taken to be known to the parties.

Citations:

[2001] 2 EGLR 16

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedGonthier and Another v Orange Contract Scaffolding Ltd CA 25-Jun-2003
The question of a proprietary estoppel as between landlord and tenant arose. An agreement had been reached subject to contract for the grant of a lease, with an option to purchase. The tenant was allowed into possession before the documentation was . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract, Land

Updated: 12 May 2022; Ref: scu.188285

Island Holdings Ltd v Birchington Engineering Co Ltd: 7 Jul 1981

Two prospectively separate purchasers in a later ‘subject to contract’ arrangement between them had replaced their earlier concluded agreement as to how a property, if acquired, would be dealt with.
Held: Effect was to be given to the agreement by way of constructive trust, not to the ‘subject to contract’ arrangement but simply to the notion that the two parties should be obliged to share.

Judges:

Goulding J

Citations:

Unreported, 7 July 1981

Cited by:

CitedBanner Homes Group Plc v Luff Developments and Another CA 10-Feb-2000
Competing building companies agreed not to bid against each other for the purchase of land. One proceeded and the other asserted that the land was then held on trust for the two parties as a joint venture.
Held: Although there was no formal . .
CitedGonthier and Another v Orange Contract Scaffolding Ltd CA 25-Jun-2003
The question of a proprietary estoppel as between landlord and tenant arose. An agreement had been reached subject to contract for the grant of a lease, with an option to purchase. The tenant was allowed into possession before the documentation was . .
CitedThames Cruises Limited v George Wheeler Launches Limited, Kingwood Launches Limited ChD 16-Dec-2003
The parties had previously worked to gether to provide ferry services on the Thames. A new tender to operate the services was not submitted. It was alleged that the Defendants had inequitably seized for themselves a business opportunity which the . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land, Contract, Trusts

Updated: 12 May 2022; Ref: scu.188287

Derby and Co Ltd v ITC Pension Trust Ltd: 1977

The court considered a party resisting a claim to an estoppel: ‘where parties negotiate on a basis ‘subject to contract’ everybody knows there is a risk that, at the end of the day, either side may back out of negotiations, up to the point where leases are exchanged.’

Judges:

Oliver J

Citations:

[1977] 2 All ER 890

Cited by:

CitedGonthier and Another v Orange Contract Scaffolding Ltd CA 25-Jun-2003
The question of a proprietary estoppel as between landlord and tenant arose. An agreement had been reached subject to contract for the grant of a lease, with an option to purchase. The tenant was allowed into possession before the documentation was . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract, Land

Updated: 12 May 2022; Ref: scu.188286

T W Thomas and Co Ltd v Portsea Steamship Co Ltd: PC 1912

The board discussed the approach to the incorporation of arbitration clauses and jurisdiction clauses from one contract into another such as a bill of lading.

Citations:

[1912] AC 1

Cited by:

CitedNisshin Shipping Co Ltd v Cleaves and Company Ltd and others ComC 7-Nov-2003
One party sought a declaration that arbitrators should have no jurisdiction to determine claims for commission said to be due to the Respondent chartering brokers.
Held: Because he has in effect become a statutory assignee of the promisee’s . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract, Arbitration

Updated: 12 May 2022; Ref: scu.187714

Graham v Belfast and Northern Counties Railway Co: 1901

The court had to construe the phrase ‘wilful misconduct’.
Held: ‘Wilful misconduct in such a special condition means misconduct to which the will is party as contradistinguished from accident, and is far beyond any negligence, even gross or culpable negligence, and involves that a person wilfully misconducts himself who knows and appreciates that it is wrong conduct on his part in the existing circumstances to do, or to fail or omit to do (as the case may be), a particular thing and yet intentionally does or fails or omits to do it, or persists in the act, failure or omission regardless of the consequences.’

Judges:

Johnson J

Citations:

[1901] 2 IR 13

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

AdoptedForder v Great Western Railway Company 1905
The court construed the phrase ‘wilful misconduct’.
Held: The court adopted the definition given in Graham, Lord Alverstone CJ adding: ‘The addition which I would suggest is, ‘or acts with reckless carelessness, not caring what the results of . .
CitedLaceys Footwear (Wholesale) Ltd v Bowler International Freight Ltd and Another CA 18-Apr-1997
The defendant’s driver had taken a consignment of shoes to Spain, where they were stolen. The plaintiff alleged his gross negligence amounted to ‘wilful misconduct’ so as to disapply an exemption clause.
Held: Whether a bailee’s acts . .
CitedTNT Global Spa and Another v Denfleet International Ltd and Another CA 2-May-2007
The driver of a lorry carrying the claimant’s goods was said to have fallen asleep at the wheel, and the cargo damaged in the accident. The carrier appealed a finding of liability for wilful misconduct.
Held: ‘I am unable to accept that mere . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 12 May 2022; Ref: scu.187674

Forder v Great Western Railway Company: 1905

The court construed the phrase ‘wilful misconduct’.
Held: The court adopted the definition given in Graham, Lord Alverstone CJ adding: ‘The addition which I would suggest is, ‘or acts with reckless carelessness, not caring what the results of his carelessness may be.’

Judges:

Lord Alverstone CJ

Citations:

[1905] 2 KB 532

Citing:

AdoptedGraham v Belfast and Northern Counties Railway Co 1901
The court had to construe the phrase ‘wilful misconduct’.
Held: ‘Wilful misconduct in such a special condition means misconduct to which the will is party as contradistinguished from accident, and is far beyond any negligence, even gross or . .

Cited by:

CitedLaceys Footwear (Wholesale) Ltd v Bowler International Freight Ltd and Another CA 18-Apr-1997
The defendant’s driver had taken a consignment of shoes to Spain, where they were stolen. The plaintiff alleged his gross negligence amounted to ‘wilful misconduct’ so as to disapply an exemption clause.
Held: Whether a bailee’s acts . .
CitedTNT Global Spa and Another v Denfleet International Ltd and Another CA 2-May-2007
The driver of a lorry carrying the claimant’s goods was said to have fallen asleep at the wheel, and the cargo damaged in the accident. The carrier appealed a finding of liability for wilful misconduct.
Held: ‘I am unable to accept that mere . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 12 May 2022; Ref: scu.187675

Sonicare International Limited v East Anglia Freight Terminal Limited: 1997

When looking at the reasonableness of a clause limiting rather than excluding of liability, the size of the limit compared with other limits in widely used standard terms may be relevant.

Judges:

Judge Hallgarten QC

Citations:

[1997] 2 Lloyds Rep 48

Statutes:

Unfair Contract Terms Act 1977

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedOverseas Medical Supplies Limited v Orient Transport Services Limited CA 20-May-1999
The appellant challenged a finding that it was responsible for the loss of medical equipment being transported from Tehran to the UK, and of failing to insure it as required, the contractual term exempting it from responsibility being an . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract, Consumer

Updated: 12 May 2022; Ref: scu.187459

Boustany v Piggott: PC 1995

In discussing what was said to be unconscionable contract, the Board accepted that ‘It is not sufficient to attract the jurisdiction of equity to prove that a bargain is hard, unreasonable or foolish; it must be proved to be unconscionable, in the sense that ‘one of the parties to it has imposed the objectionable terms in a morally reprehensible manner, that is to say in a way which affects his conscience’

Judges:

Lord Templeman

Citations:

[1995] 69 PandCR 298

Citing:

CitedAlec Lobb (Garages) Ltd v Total Oil Ltd QBD 1983
To establish that a contract was unconscionable, a party had to have made an unconscientious use of its superior position or superior bargaining power to the detriment of someone suffering from some special disability or disadvantage. This weakness . .
CitedAlec Lobb (Garages) Ltd v Total Oil Ltd CA 1985
The court was asked whether the terms of a lease and lease back amounted to an unconscionable bargain and was unenforceable.
Held: The court affirmed the decision at first instance, but emphasised the need for unconscientious behaviour rather . .

Cited by:

CitedChagos Islanders v The Attorney General, Her Majesty’s British Indian Ocean Territory Commissioner QBD 9-Oct-2003
The Chagos Islands had been a British dependent territory since 1814. The British government repatriated the islanders in the 1960s, and the Ilois now sought damages for their wrongful displacement, misfeasance, deceit, negligence and to establish a . .
CitedPortman Building Society v Dusangh and Others CA 19-Apr-2000
The defendant sought to set aside an order for possession under a mortgage.
Held: Where a case was strong enough on its face in terms of conduct and terms, unconscionable conduct could be inferred if there was no explanation offered to . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract, Equity

Updated: 12 May 2022; Ref: scu.186677

Edinburgh University v Eagle Star Insurance Company Ltd: OHCS 4 Jun 2003

The insurance policy excluded claims for ‘damage caused by or consisting of or consequential losses arising directly from theft or attempted theft no involving breaking into or out of the buildings of the premises by forcible and violent means’. The thief did not use violence to enter the premises but did break down an internal door.
Held: The insurance company could not rely upon the exclusion clause. The clause made no direct reference to external limits, and the context did not suggest that the insurance company’s interpretation was commercially intended. It was intended to avoid liability for thefts by those with a right to enter the building.

Judges:

Lord Drummond Young

Citations:

Times 06-Oct-2003

Insurance, Contract

Updated: 12 May 2022; Ref: scu.186975

Resolute Maritime Inc v Nippon Kaiji Kyokai: 1983

On its proper construction the section is concerned only with the liability of that other party to the contract and not with the liability of an agent.

Citations:

[1983] 1 WLR 857

Statutes:

Misrepresentation Act 1967 2(1)

Cited by:

CitedMCI Worldcom International Inc v Primus Telecommunications Inc ComC 25-Sep-2003
The claimant sought judgment, and the defendant leave to amend its defence. The question was whether the proposed defence had any reasonable prospect of success.
Held: The misrepresentation alleged was made by the claimant’s in-house . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract, Agency, Torts – Other

Updated: 12 May 2022; Ref: scu.186447

Waunton v Coppard: 1899

A statement was made by the vendor’s agent as to the effect of a restrictive covenant to a lay person who, as a prospective purchaser, did not (to the knowledge of the vendor’s agent) have a copy of the covenant.
Held: Running a boys’ school was capable of amounting to nuisance. A statement as to the meaning or effect of a document can amount to an actionable misrepresentation

Judges:

Romer J

Citations:

[1899] 1 Ch 92

Cited by:

CitedMCI Worldcom International Inc v Primus Telecommunications Inc ComC 25-Sep-2003
The claimant sought judgment, and the defendant leave to amend its defence. The question was whether the proposed defence had any reasonable prospect of success.
Held: The misrepresentation alleged was made by the claimant’s in-house . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract, Torts – Other

Updated: 12 May 2022; Ref: scu.186444

Edler v Auerbach: 1950

Devlin J said: ‘It is the business of the tenant, if he does not protect himself by an express warranty, to satisfy himself that the premises are fit for the purpose for which he wants to use them, whether that fitness depends upon the state of their structure, the state of the law, or any other relevant circumstances.’
Where an allegation of illegality emerges only at the time of the trial, the court should take particular care to ensure that the party taken by surprise has opportunity adduce additional evidence for the purpose of rebutting an inference of illegality which the court might be entitled to draw. The court should not act on unpleaded facts ‘unless it is satisfied that the whole of the relevant circumstances are before it’.

Judges:

Devlin J

Citations:

[1950] 1 KB 359

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedSouthwark London Borough Council v Mills/Tanner; Baxter v Camden London Borough Council HL 21-Oct-1999
Tenants of council flats with ineffective sound insulation argued that the landlord council was in breach of the covenant for quiet enjoyment in their tenancy agreements.
Held: A landlord’s duty to allow quiet enjoyment does not extend to a . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Landlord and Tenant, Contract

Updated: 12 May 2022; Ref: scu.186075

Jackson v Union Marine Insurance Co Ltd: CCP 1874

The plaintiff ship owner, contracted under a charterparty to proceed with all possible dispatch to Newport. He insured the cargo. The ship ran aground before the cargo could be collected, and was delayed. The charterers threw up the charterparty and contracted elsewhere for the delivery of the goods. The plaintiff claimed under his insurance.
Held: The delay had been so long as to put an end to the contractual obligations. The charterers were therefore not obliged to load the cargo, and the loss constituted a loss of the chartered freight by perils of the sea. It was the happening of the event and not the fact that the event was the result of a breach by one party of his contractual obligations that relieved the other party from further performance of his obligations: ‘There are the cases which hold that, where the shipowner has not merely broken his contract, but has so broken it that the condition precedent is not performed, the charterer is discharged. Why? Not merely because the contract is broken. If it is not a condition precedent, what matters it whether it is unperformed with or without excuse? Not arriving with due diligence or at a day named is the subject of a cross-action only. But not arriving in time for the voyage contemplated, but at such a time that it is frustrated is not only a breach of contract, but discharges the charterer. And so it should though he has such an excuse that no action lies’.

Judges:

Baron Bramwell

Citations:

[1874] LR 10 CP 125, [1874-80] All ER REP 317, 44 LJCP 27, [1874] 31 LT 789, [1874] 23 WR 169, [1874] 2 Asp MLC 435

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedWilliam Sindall Plc v Cambridgeshire County Council CA 21-May-1993
Land was bought for development, but the purchaser later discovered a sewage pipe which very substantially limited its development potential. The existence of the pipe had not been disclosed on the sale, being unknown to the seller.
Held: . .
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 . .
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, Insurance

Updated: 12 May 2022; Ref: scu.185676

National Mercantile Bank v Rymill: 1881

The plaintiff owned horses subject to a bill of sale. The grantor of the bill sold the horses privately in the defendant’s auction yard and following the sale, on the grantor’s instructions, the auctioneer delivered the horses to the buyer.
Held: There had been no conversion. Bramwell LJ: [the auctioneer:] ‘has not claimed to transfer the title and he has not purported to sell; all the dominion he exercised over the chattels was to redeliver them to the person to whom the man from whom he had received them had told him to redeliver them.’ Brett and Cotton LJJ agreed that on the evidence there had been no sale by the auctioneer. This case has been criticised, mainly for the conclusion that there had been no sale by the auctioneer.

Judges:

Bramwell LJ, Brett and Cotton LJJ

Citations:

(1881) 44 LTNS 767

Cited by:

CitedMarcq v Christe Manson and Woods (t/a Christies) QBD 29-Oct-2002
The claimant sought damages for conversion from the respondent auctioneers as bailees. The painting had been registered as stolen. It failed to achieve its reserve and had been returned.
Held: It was for a bailee to prove that he had acted in . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract, Agency

Updated: 12 May 2022; Ref: scu.183501

Re Daniel, Daniel v Vassall: 1917

The vendor of land who, whether through innocent or wiful default, or with or without bad faith, fails to do everything possible to make good title, makes himself liable in damages for the general losses of the purchaser, including any loss of bargain.

Citations:

[1917] 2 Ch 405, 87 LJ Ch 69, 117 LT 472, 33 TLR 503, 61 Sol Jo 646

Citing:

CitedEngell v Fitch ChD 1869
The lease of land was sold at auction. The conditions of sale provided for possessionto be given on completion. The vendors, mortgagees with the right of sale, were unwilling to incur the expense of recovering possession.
Held: The vendor was . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land, Contract

Updated: 12 May 2022; Ref: scu.183265

Johnston v Boyes: 1899

There is no custom that a purchaser at an auction can expect to have his personal cheque for a ten per cent deposit accepted. This applies even to those with a good credit standing as much as (here) for an apparent pauper.
Cozens Hardy J said (obiter): ‘A vendor who offers property for sale by auction on the terms of printed conditions can be made liable to a member of the public who accepts the offer if those conditions be violated: see Warlow v. Harrison 1 Ellis and Ellis,295, and the recent case of Carlill v. Carbolic Smoke Ball Co. (1893) 1 Queen’s Bench, 256. Nor do I think that the Statute of Frauds would afford any defence to such an action. The plaintiff is not suing on a contract to purchase land: she is suing simply because her agent, in breach of the first and second conditions of sale, was not allowed to sign a contract which would have resulted in her becoming the purchaser of the land. I think this conclusion results from the decision of the Exchequer Chamber in Warlow v. Harrison’.

Judges:

Cozens Hardy J

Citations:

[1899] 2 Ch 73, [1899] 68 LJ Ch 425, [1989] 80 LT 488, [1899] 47 WR 517, [1899] 43 Sol Jo 457

Citing:

CitedCarlill v Carbolic Smoke Ball Co CA 7-Dec-1892
Unilateral Contract Liability
The defendants advertised ‘The Carbolic Smoke Ball,’ in the Pall Mall Gazette, saying ‘pounds 100 reward will be paid by the Carbolic Smoke Ball Company to any person who contracts the increasing epidemic influenza, colds, or any disease caused by . .
CitedWarlow v Harrison CExC 26-Nov-1859
Unless public notice of this was given, a bid from the seller himself was fraudulent. He appealed against rejection of his claim against the auctioneer.
Held: The appeal failed on the existing pleadings, but said that the plaintiff might . .

Cited by:

CitedDahlia Ltd v Four Millbank Nominees Ltd and Another CA 24-Nov-1977
Appeal against strike out of statement of claim. The plaintiffs had negotiated with the defendants for the purchase of several properties. Though formal contracts were never exchanged, the plaintiffs said that they had the benefit of a unilateral . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 12 May 2022; Ref: scu.183112

British Airports Authority v Customs and Excise Commissioners: 1977

The court adopted the test when interpreting the contract at issue of whether the substance and reality of the agreement was the grant of a license to occupy land.

Judges:

Scarman LJ

Citations:

[1977] STC 36

Cited by:

CitedCommissioners of Customs and Excise v Sinclair Collis Limited HL 7-Jun-2001
The appellants operated a system of placing their vending machines in clubs for the sale of cigarettes. They took as consideration a share of the profits of the cigarettes sold, and, in return, maintained the machines. They claimed that the machines . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Taxes – Other, Contract

Updated: 12 May 2022; Ref: scu.182963

Kennedy v Thomassen: 1929

No binding contract comes into existence where the acceptance was never communicated or was communicated only to the acceptor’s own agent.

Citations:

[1929] 1 Ch 426

Citing:

CitedCarlill v Carbolic Smoke Ball Co CA 7-Dec-1892
Unilateral Contract Liability
The defendants advertised ‘The Carbolic Smoke Ball,’ in the Pall Mall Gazette, saying ‘pounds 100 reward will be paid by the Carbolic Smoke Ball Company to any person who contracts the increasing epidemic influenza, colds, or any disease caused by . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 12 May 2022; Ref: scu.183115

Stolley v Maskelyne: 1898

Citations:

[1898] 15 TLR 79

Citing:

CitedCarlill v Carbolic Smoke Ball Co CA 7-Dec-1892
Unilateral Contract Liability
The defendants advertised ‘The Carbolic Smoke Ball,’ in the Pall Mall Gazette, saying ‘pounds 100 reward will be paid by the Carbolic Smoke Ball Company to any person who contracts the increasing epidemic influenza, colds, or any disease caused by . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 12 May 2022; Ref: scu.183111

Reynolds v Atherton: 1921

Citations:

(1921) 125 LT 690

Citing:

CitedCarlill v Carbolic Smoke Ball Co CA 7-Dec-1892
Unilateral Contract Liability
The defendants advertised ‘The Carbolic Smoke Ball,’ in the Pall Mall Gazette, saying ‘pounds 100 reward will be paid by the Carbolic Smoke Ball Company to any person who contracts the increasing epidemic influenza, colds, or any disease caused by . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 12 May 2022; Ref: scu.183114

Ferguson v Littlewoods Pools Ltd: 1997

The court reviewed a decision on the enforceability of gaming contracts.
Held: Different considerations played a part in the development of the rules with different emphases in different cases. In some cases the ground of decision is that the parties cannot have intended that the transactions should have legal consequences. In others it was beneath the dignity of the court to enter into the question who won or lost a particular wager, and in others stress is put on the fact that such transactions do not have commercial significance, and it may be that, in some of those cases, a general disapproval of gaming or wagering can be detected.

Judges:

Lord Coulsfield

Citations:

1997 SLT 309

Jurisdiction:

Scotland

Citing:

CitedHope v Tweedie 1776
The court refused to find an enforceable contract where from the circumstances it was found that the parties cannot have intended that the transactions should have any legal consequences. . .

Cited by:

CitedRobertson v Anderson IHCS 5-Dec-2002
The parties had agreed to share any winnings from their Bingo activities. One sought to reject the contract as an unenforceable gaming contract.
Held: The contention was rejected. It had been suggested that there had been no intention to . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 12 May 2022; Ref: scu.181875

Graham v Pollock: IHCS 1848

There was no dispute that a dog race had been won by a dog named Violet, and that Violet had been entered in the race by one of the parties. The issue was whether that party had entered Violet for his own benefit, having borrowed Violet for the purpose, and was therefore entitled to the prize; or whether he had entered Violet as the agent of Violet’s owner, who was therefore the person truly entitled to the prize.
Held: No question of sponsio ludicra. The issue as to which party was entitled to the prize depended on the nature of the contract between them, whether loan or agency, and since that was a question which was separate from the race itself, no question of sponsio ludicra was involved. It was a question not of racing or hunting, but of contract of mandate or loan. The whole sporting question is settled – the prize is awarded to Violet – and the question is, what individual has an interest by law and contract in what Violet has won?

Judges:

Lord Mackenzie, Lord Fullerton, Lord Jeffrey

Citations:

(1848) 10 D 646

Jurisdiction:

Scotland

Cited by:

CitedRobertson v Anderson IHCS 5-Dec-2002
The parties had agreed to share any winnings from their Bingo activities. One sought to reject the contract as an unenforceable gaming contract.
Held: The contention was rejected. It had been suggested that there had been no intention to . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Scotland, Contract

Updated: 12 May 2022; Ref: scu.181866

The Ship “Marlborough Hill” v Alex Cowan and Sons Limited: PC 1921

The question was whether a document, describing itself as a bill of lading but written in the form of a receipt of goods for (rather than of) shipment, was a bill of lading for the purposes of the Act, which set out the jurisdiction of the admiralty court for an action in rem. The claim had been brought by consignees which provided for delivery to the shipper’s order.
Held: It was a bill of lading within the Act. The court noted that it purported to be negotiable. If this document is a bill of lading, it is a negotiable instrument. Other incidents of the document were standard for a bill of lading, such as detailed terms and conditions in familiar form; the fact that the document was called a bill of lading many times in the course of such provisions and that it was made subject to the US Charter Act; the fact that it provides that ‘If required by the shipowner, one signed bill of lading, duly endorsed, must be surrendered on delivery of the goods’; and that it ‘ends in the time honoured form’, viz ‘In witness whereof the master or agent of said vessel has signed three bills of lading, all of this tenor and date, of which if one is accomplished, the others shall be void’ The court emphasised that the document would work as merchants would expect a bill of lading to work. It accorded wit hstandard commercial practiceand the parties agreed to call it a bill of lading, and entered into obligations and acquired rights proper to a bill of lading. All the other incidents in its very detailed language are such as are proper to such a document.

Judges:

Lord Phillimore

Citations:

[1921] AC 444

Statutes:

Admiralty Court Act 1861

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 . .
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, Commercial

Updated: 12 May 2022; Ref: scu.181886

Humphries v Humphries: CA 1910

The plaintiff began an action against the defendant for arrears of rent, and succeeded. Arrears developed again, and the plaintiff began this second action. The defendant now pleaded that the action was barred as having no sufficient memorandum to satisfy the Statute of Frauds.
Held: The plea was one which could have been raised in the first action, and judgment having been given, the defendant was estopped from raising that issue now.

Citations:

[1910] 2 KB 531, [1908-10] All ER rep 733, [1910] 79 LJKB 919, [1910] 103 LT 14

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedBank of Scotland v Wright ChD 1991
A director of two companies (one a subsidiary of the other) had given the bank a written guarantee of the liability of the holding company (only); but under an ‘interavailable’ facility backed by cross-guarantees (by the companies) the holding . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract, Estoppel

Updated: 12 May 2022; Ref: scu.180647

Reid-Newfoundland Co v Anglo-American Telegraph Co Ltd: PC 1912

A railway company agreed not to transmit any commercial messages over a particular telegraph wire except for the benefit and account of the telegraph company.
Held: The railway company was liable to account as a trustee for the profits it wrongfully made from its use of the wire for commercial purposes.

Citations:

[1912] AC 555

Jurisdiction:

Canada

Cited by:

CitedHM Attorney General v Blake (Jonathan Cape Ltd third Party intervening) HL 3-Aug-2000
Restitutionary Claim against Pofits from Breach
The author had written his book in breach of his duty of confidence. Having signed the Official Secrets Act, he accepted a contractual private law duty. After conviction as a spy, the publication of the book was in breach of the undertaking by not . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract, Damages

Updated: 12 May 2022; Ref: scu.180894

Christopher Hill Ltd v Ashington Piggeries Ltd: HL 1972

Mink farmers had asked a compounder of animal foods to make up mink food to a supplied formula.
Held: There was reliance as to the suitability of the ingredients only.
Lord Diplock said: ‘Unless the Sale of Goods Act 1893 is to be allowed to fossilise the law and to restrict the freedom of choice of parties to contracts for the sale of goods to make agreements which take account of advances in technology and changes in the way in which business is carried on today, the provisions set out in the various sections and subsections of the code ought not to be construed so narrowly as to force upon parties to contracts for the sale of goods promises and consequences different from what they must reasonably have intended. They should be treated rather as illustrations of the application to simple types of contract of general principles for ascertaining the common intention of the parties as to their mutual promises and their consequences, which ought to be applied by analogy in cases arising out of contracts which do not appear to have been within the immediate contemplation of the draftsman of the Act in 1893.’ and
‘Because of the source of the rules stated in the Sale of Goods Act 1893 the classification adopted is by reference to the promises made in relatively simple types of contracts for the sale of goods which were commonly made in the 19th century and had been the subject of judicial decision before 1893.’
Viscount Dilhorne said: ‘I regard it as almost unarguable that a person who goes into a shop and asks for a food for feeding to animals has not made known the particular purpose for which he is requiring the food and that he has only made known the particular purpose if he specifies the variety or varieties of animals he wants to feed.’
Lord Guest distinguished between a dealer in the way of business as opposed to when a seller sold goods in a private capacity.
Lord Wilberforce said: ‘But, moreover, consideration with the preceding common law shows that what the Act had in mind was something quite simple and rational: to limit the implied conditions of fitness or quality to persons in the way of business, as distinct from private persons.’ and ‘I would have no difficulty in holding that a seller deals in goods ‘of that description’ if he accepts orders to supply them in the way of business and this whether or not he has previously accepted orders for goods of that description.’
and ‘Equally I think it is clear (as both courts have found) that there was reliance on the respondents’ skill and judgment. Although the Act [ie section 14(1) of the Sale of Goods Act 1893] makes no reference to partial reliance, it was settled, well before the Cammell Laird case [1934] AC 402 was decided in this House, that there may be cases where the buyer relies on his own skill or judgment for some purposes and on that of the seller for others. This House gave that principle emphatic endorsement.’

Judges:

Lord Diplock, Lord Wilberforce, Viscount Dilhorne, Lord Guest

Citations:

[1972] AC 441

Statutes:

Sale of Goods Act 1893 14(1)

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

Appeal fromChristopher Hill Ltd v Ashington Piggeries Ltd CA 1969
The buyer suppied a food formula to a food mixer and claimed damages when the food mix injured his mink. The defendant argued that the level of damages sought exceeded that expectations of the parties when the contract was entered into.
Held: . .

Cited by:

CitedHamilton v Papakura District Council and Watercare Services Ltd PC 28-Feb-2002
(New Zealand) The claimants sought damages. The water authority had put in the water supply herbicides which damaged the crops they sought to grow, and which were watered from the supply. The plants were particularly sensitive to such chemicals.
CitedRegina v Secretary of State for Health ex parte Quintavalle (on behalf of Pro-Life Alliance) HL 13-Mar-2003
Court to seek and Apply Parliamentary Intention
The appellant challenged the practice of permitting cell nuclear replacement (CNR), saying it was either outside the scope of the Act, or was for a purpose which could not be licensed under the Act.
Held: The challenge failed. The court was to . .
CitedStevenson and Another v Rogers CA 8-Dec-1998
The defendant, who carried on the business of a fisherman, sold his vessel Jelle to the plaintiff with a view to having a new boat built to his requirements. In the event he bought a replacement vessel which he continued to use for his business. The . .
CitedJewson Limited v Boyhan as Personal Representative of the Estate of Thomas Michael Kelly CA 28-Jul-2003
The company appealed a finding that it was in breach of the 1979 Act. The deceased had bought boilers from the appellant. They were said not to be satisfactory, in that they were not as energy efficient as they had been described to be.
Held: . .
CitedTransfield Shipping Inc of Panama v Mercator Shipping Inc of Monrovia ComC 1-Dec-2006
The owners made substantial losses after the charterers breached the contract by failing to redliver the ship on time as agreed.
Held: On the facts found the Owners’ primary claim is not too remote. To the knowledge of the Charterers, it was . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract, Damages

Updated: 12 May 2022; Ref: scu.180097

Definitely Maybe (Touring) Ltd v Marek Lieberberg Konzertagentur GmbH: ComC 2001

The claimant supplied the services of the pop group Oasis to the defendant concert organisers for a concert in Germany. They sued for payment here, but the respondent said that proceedings should have been commenced in Germany.
Held: The contract was made in Germany for services to be provided in Germany. The proper forum to hear the case was Germany.

Judges:

Morison J

Citations:

[2001] All ER 283, [2001] 1 WLR 1745

Statutes:

Rome Convention on the law applicable to contractual obligations 1980 4(5)

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedCaledonia Subsea Limited v Micoperi SRL SCS 9-Mar-2001
The parties disputed which court should have jurisdiction to hear their contract dispute.
Held: There has been an ongoing difference in the interpretation of the Rome Convention as to the relative weight to be given to the place of business of . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Jurisdiction, Contract

Updated: 12 May 2022; Ref: scu.179883

Coleman v Mundell: QBD 30 Oct 2020

Request for specific performance of oral contract for transfer of shares in company. The parties disputed the nature of the contract

Judges:

Mr David Lock, sitting as a Deputy Judge of the High Court

Citations:

[2020] EWHC 2852 (QB)

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Contract

Updated: 12 May 2022; Ref: scu.655915

Gesner Investments Ltd v Bombardier Inc: CA 11 Oct 2011

‘This appeal concerns a short but knotty point of construction concerning the termination provisions of a contract for the construction and purchase of an aircraft. The issue is whether, after 90 days of non-excusable delay in tendering the aircraft for inspection and delivery, the buyer was entitled to terminate the contract forthwith, under clause 8.4, or could only do so by first serving a written notice under clause 9.2 specifying the default or breach and granting the seller the opportunity to remedy it.’

Judges:

Lord Justice Rix

Citations:

[2011] EWCA Civ 1118

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Contract

Updated: 12 May 2022; Ref: scu.445283

Zoan v Rouamba: CA 7 Mar 2000

A document could not be construed other than in its clear words even though one party had clearly intended the result sought. A hire agreement would be unenforceable under the Act, depending upon whether payments were made within a year of the agreement. A payment on the day after could not be included, the agreement was not exempt, and being wrongly executed, was unenforceable, and its cost was not recoverable from another party after an accident.

Citations:

Times 07-Mar-2000, [2000] 1 WLR 1500

Statutes:

Consumer Credit Act 1974

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedThew v Cole; King v Daltray CA 16-Dec-2003
Issues arose as to whether car hire agreements were exempt from regulation under the Act. They provided that payment was to be made in 12 months ‘from the start of the agreement’.
Held: The first question was whether the time by which the . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Consumer, Contract

Updated: 11 May 2022; Ref: scu.90690

Society of Lloyd’s v Twinn and another: CA 4 Apr 2000

An acceptance of an offer could be complete even if accompanied by a request for an indulgence. The request for such an indulgence delivered with an unequivocal acceptance of the offer made was not sufficient to make the acceptance conditional. If the request for an indulgence fell short of the addition of a new term then it did not reduce the effect of the acceptance.
Sir Richard Scott VC said: ‘In considering whether a provision is a penalty, the law will look at the substance not to the form. The substance of the Settlement Agreement is that the Name is offered a benefit, namely, the settlement credits, as an offset against his underwriting liabilities, provided he pays the balance by a specified date. If he does so, he discharges his liability. If he does not, his original liability revives. This is the reverse of a penalty. It is a conditional benefit. If, of course, the sum specified in the finality statement as the amount of the Name’s underwriting liabilities were an arbitrary sum, the conclusion might be otherwise. It is clear, however, and the contrary has not been suggested, that the underwriting liabilities sum specified in the finality statement was a bona fide calculation of the amount of the Name’s underwriting liabilities to Lloyd’s. Whether or not the sum was agreed by the Name as being correct, it was the result of a genuine attempt by Lloyd’s to quantify the Name’s current liabilities. The question of a penalty simply does not arise’.

Judges:

Sir Richard Scott VC

Citations:

Times 04-Apr-2000, Gazette 14-Apr-2000

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Contract

Updated: 11 May 2022; Ref: scu.89380