Hamilton v Mendes: 8 Jun 1761

The ‘SELBY’ was captured by a French privateer in the Atlantic during the Seven Years War, and then recaptured from her French prize crew a few weeks later by a British man-of-war. News of the capture and recapture reached the assured simultaneously. He purported to give notice of abandonment.
Held: The ship was never a constructive total loss, because it was never sufficiently clear that the loss arising from the original capture would be permanent. But on the footing that it was a constructive total loss, he held that the assured could recover only for a partial loss, arising from the prize due to the recaptors.
The daily negotiations and property of merchants ought not to depend upon subtleties and niceties; but upon rules, easily learned and easily retained, because they are the dictates of common sense, drawn from the truth of the case.
‘The plaintiff’s demand is for an indemnity. His action, then, must be founded upon the nature of his damnification, as it really is at the time the action is brought. It is repugnant, upon a contract of indemnity, to recover as for a total loss, when the final event has decided that the damnification, in truth, is an average, or perhaps no loss at all. Whatever undoes the damnification, in whole or in part, must operate upon the indemnity in the same degree. It is a contradiction in terms, to bring an action for indemnity, when, upon the whole event, no damage has been sustained.’

Judges:

Lord Mansfield

Citations:

97 ER 787, (1761) 2 Burr 1198, [1761] EngR 56, (1761) 2 Burr 1198, (1761) 97 ER 787

Links:

Commonlii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedHomburg Houtimport BV v Agrosin Private Ltd (the ‘Starsin’) HL 13-Mar-2003
Cargo owners sought damages for their cargo which had been damaged aboard the ship. The contract had been endorsed with additional terms. That variation may have changed the contract from a charterer’s to a shipowner’s bill.
Held: The specific . .
CitedSveriges Angfartygs Assurans Forening (The Swedish Club) and Others v Connect Shipping Inc and Another SC 12-Jun-2019
The Court was asked as to the construction of the phrase ‘constructive total loss’, and in particular the calculation the expenditure to be taken into account in computing the cost of recovery and or repair, where notice of loss had been served . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract, Transport

Updated: 04 April 2022; Ref: scu.180645

Story v McLoughlin: QBD 21 Dec 2017

The court was asked whether the claimant has a real prospect of establishing that he is entitled to declaratory relief as a result of a breach of contract by the Conservative and Unionist Party (the Party) when it decided not to certify that he may be returned as an MEP for the Yorkshire and the Humber Region after a vacancy occurred in October 2016.

Judges:

Edis J

Citations:

[2017] EWHC 3350 (QB)

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Contract

Updated: 03 April 2022; Ref: scu.602678

Cavendish 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, ParkingEye Ltd v Beavis, raised the issue at a consumer level, with a separate issue under the Unfair Terms in Consumer Contracts Regulations 1999.
Held: The appeal of Cavendish was granted, but that in ParkingEye rejected. The law relating to penalties was long establishe and must be maintained. It should not however be extended, having already become an ‘ancient, haphazardly constructed edifice which has not weathered well’ The rule as to penalties regulated only the remedy available under the contract for a breach of a primary contractual obligations. It does not control the fairness of primary obligations under the contract.
A contractual term can be unenforceable as a penalty if it operates on a breach of contract and satisfies the relevant test, which was explained as follows:
‘The true test is whether the impugned provision is a secondary obligation which imposes a detriment on the contract-breaker out of all proportion to any legitimate interest of the innocent party in the enforcement of the primary obligation’ (per Lord Neuberger of Abbotsbury PSC and Lord Sumption JSC, with whom Lord Carnwath JSC and Lord Clarke of Story- cum-Ebony JSC agreed) and
‘What is necessary in each case is to consider, first, whether any (and, if so, what) legitimate business interest is served and protected by the clause, and, second, whether, assuming such an interest to exist, the provision made for the interest is nevertheless in the circumstances extravagant, exorbitant or unconscionable’ (per Lord Mance JSC, with whom Lord Clarke and Lord Toulson JSC agreed) and
‘ . . the correct test for a penalty is whether the sum or remedy stipulated as a consequence of a breach of contract is exorbitant or unconscionable when regard is had to the innocent party’s interest in the performance of the contract’ (per Lord Hodge JSC, with whom Lord Clarke and Lord Toulson agreed).

Judges:

Lord Neuberger, President, Lord Mance, Lord Clarke, Lord Sumption, Lord Carnwath, Lord Toulson, Lord Hodge

Citations:

[2015] UKSC 67, 162 Con LR 1, [2015] 3 WLR 1373, [2016] RTR 8, [2016] AC 1172, [2016] BLR 1, [2016] CILL 3769, [2015] WLR(D) 439, [2016] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 55, UKSC 2013/0280

Links:

Bailii, Bailii Summary, SC, SC Summary, SC Video Summary, WLRD

Statutes:

Unfair Terms in Consumer Contracts Regulations 1999, Unfair Contract Terms Act 1977

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedAstley v Frances Weldon CCP 27-Jan-1801
Clause was a Penalty – Not Estimate of Loss
By articles of agreement between the Plaintiff arid Defendant it was agreed on the part of the former that he should pay the latter so much per week to perform at his theatres, with her travelling expences of removing from one theatre to another . .
See AlsoCavendish Square Holdings Bv and Another v El Makdessi ComC 14-Dec-2012
The parties disputed whether clauses in a share sale agreement between them amounted to a penalty and as such were rendered unenforeable.
Held: Burton J felt able to escape those constraints, and concluded that the two provisions were valid . .
CitedWallis v Smith CA 1882
Jessel MR said: ‘You may depart from the literal meaning of words, if reading the words literally leads to an absurdity.’ and ‘It has always appeared to me that the doctrine of the English law as to non-payment of money – the general rule being that . .
CitedSir Harry Peachy v Duke of Somerset 1720
Lord Macclesfield said: ‘The true ground of relief against penalties is from the original intent of the case, where the penalty is designed only to secure money, and the court gives him all that he expected or desired: but it is quite otherwise in . .
CitedSloman v Walter 14-Nov-1783
Common law enforced the bonds according to their letter. But equity regarded the real intention of the parties as being that the bond should stand as security only, and restrained its enforcement at common law on terms that the debtor paid damages, . .
CitedRoles v Rosewell 12-Feb-1794
The stat, 8 and 9 W. 3, e. 11, s. 8, which enacts ‘That in actions on any penal sum for non-performance of covenants, and co. the plaintiff may assign as many breaches, and co. and if judgment shall be given for the plaintiff on nihil dicit the . .
CitedProtector Endowment Loan and Annuity Company v Grice 1880
Baggallay LJ considered the equitable doctrine of relief: ‘where the intent is not simply to secure a sum of money, or the enjoyment of a collateral object, equity does not relieve’. . .
Appeal fromEl Makdessi v Cavendish Square Holdings Bv and Another CA 26-Nov-2013
The appellants had agreed for the sale of his company by way of a share sale agreement. The price to be paid was to vary accoriding to the operating profits. A large part of the price reflected goodwill. The agreement contained a clause providing . .
Appeal fromParkingeye Ltd v Beavis CA 23-Apr-2015
The appellant had overstayed the permitted period of free parking in a retail park by nearly an hour. The parking was managed by the respondent who had imposed a charge of 85.00 pounds. The judge had found that the appellant was in breach of a . .
CitedHardy v Bern 1794
This case, which is brought by writ of error from the Court of Exchequer, is an action of debt upon articles of agreement containing divers stipulations of things to be done by the defendant; and there is a penal clause, whereby the parties became . .
CitedBetts v Burch 11-May-1859
Martin B regretted that he was ‘bound by the cases’ and prevented from holding that ‘parties are at liberty to enter into any bargain they please’ so that ‘if they have made an improvident bargain they must take the consequences’. Bramwell B did not . .
CitedCommissioner of Public Works v Hills PC 24-May-1906
(Cape of Good Hope) A railway construction contract provided that in the event of a breach by the contractor he should forfeit ‘as and for liquidated damages’ certain percentages retained by the Government of the Cape of Good Hope of money payable . .
CitedDunlop Pneumatic Tyre Company Ltd v New Garage and Motor Company Ltd HL 1-Jul-1914
The appellants contracted through an agent to supply tyres. The respondents contracted not to do certain things, and in case of breach concluded: ‘We agree to pay to the Dunlop Pneumatic Tyre Company, Ltd. the sum of 5 l. for each and every tyre, . .
CitedRobophone Facilities Ltd v Bank CA 1966
Parties to a contract should be free to stipulate not only primary obligations and rights but also the secondary rights and obligations, ie those which arise upon non-performance of any primary obligation by one of the parties to the contract, but . .
CitedClydebank Engineering Co v Castaneda HL 19-Nov-1904
The House considered a contract for the construction by a Scottish shipbuilder of four torpedo boats for the Spanish government. The contract provided that: ‘The penalty for late delivery shall be at the rate of andpound;500 per week for each . .
CitedCooden 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 . .
CitedModern Engineering (Bristol) Ltd v Gilbert Ash (Northern) Ltd HL 1974
The court considered how to construe a clause in a contract which excluded a remedy provided by law. Lord Diplock said: ‘It is, of course, open to parties to a contract . . to exclude by express agreement a remedy for its breach which would . .
CitedScandinavian Trading Tanker Co AB v Flota Petrolera Ecuatoriana (The Scaptrade) HL 1983
The House considered giving relief from forfeiture where an owner had justifiably withdrawn his vessel in accordance with the terms of the charter.
Held: A withdrawal clause under a time charter, exercised on the ground of the charterer’s . .
CitedAMEV-UDC Finance Ltd v Austin 1986
High Court of Australia – Contract – Damages – Penalty – Agreement for hire of chattel – Failure to pay instalments of hire – Termination by owner pursuant to contractual power – Damages – Instalments due but unpaid – Damages for loss of . .
CitedElse (1982) Ltd v Parkland Holdings Ltd CA 1994
Hoffmann LJ spoke of the giving of relief in the context of a penalty: ‘mechanical in effect and involves no exercise of discretion at all.’ . .
CitedMoss Empires Ltd v Olympia (Liverpool) Ltd 1939
Lord Atkin said: ‘if it does not apply in its ordinary and natural construction, I do not understand how there can be said to exist any principle of law which would avoid an agreement not in terms avoided by the statute sought to be applied.’ . .
CitedCampbell 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 . .
CitedShiloh Spinners Ltd v Harding HL 13-Dec-1972
A right of re-entry had been reserved in the lease on the assignment (and not on the initial grant) of a term of years in order to reinforce covenants (to support, fence and repair) which were taken for the benefit of other retained land of the . .
CitedExport Credits Guarantee Department v Universal Oil Products HL 1983
A contract provided for the payment of a stated sum by one party to the contract (A) to the other party (B) in the event of the non-performance by A of one of more contractual obligations owed by A not to B himself but to C, who was not a party to . .
CitedOfficial Custodian for Charities v Parway Estates Developments (In Liquidation) CA 1985
The consideration for the grant of a lease was not a capital sum, but substantial building works. Application was made for its forfeiture.
Held: Dillon LJ assumed that the words ‘if the tenant shall enter into liquidation whether compulsorily . .
CitedStreet v Mountford HL 6-Mar-1985
When a licence is really a tenancy
The document signed by the occupier stated that she understood that she had been given a licence, and that she understood that she had not been granted a tenancy protected under the Rent Acts. Exclusive occupation was in fact granted.
Held: . .
CitedAssociated British Ports v CH Bailey plc 1990
. .
CitedCukurova Finance International Ltd and Others v Alfa Telecom Turkey Ltd PC 23-May-2012
(British Virgin Islands) Interlocutory issue as to who should manage the affairs of the Turkcell mobile telephone business pending the Board’s final adjudication (after a hearing which should take place this autumn) on the rights and wrongs of what . .
CitedDomina Holles v Wyse 9-May-1693
Interest reserved at 5 pounds per cent. but if not duly paid, then to answer interest at 6 pounds per ann. Great arrear of interest. Mortgagor decreed to pay but 5 pounds per cent., the reservation at 6 per cent. being only as a Nomine Poenae -But . .
CitedStrode v Parker 27-Apr-1694
. .
CitedWallingford v Mutual Society HL 1880
Lord Hatherley said: ‘Now I take it to be as settled as anything well can be by repeated decisions, that the mere averment of fraud, in general terms, is not sufficient for any practical purpose in [a pleading]. Fraud may be alleged in the largest . .
CitedGeneral Trading Company (Holdings) Ltd v Richmond Corporation Ltd ComC 3-Jul-2008
. .
CitedWhite and Carter (Councils) Ltd v McGregor HL 6-Dec-1961
Contractor not bound to accept Renunciation
Mr McGregor contracted with the appellants for them to display advertisements for three years on litter bins. The contract was made on his behalf by an employee, without specific authority. On the day it was made, he sought to cancel the contract. . .
CitedBICC plc v Burndy Corp CA 1985
. .
CitedLordsvale Finance Plc v Bank of Zambia QBD 20-Mar-1996
The court looked at a facility agreement opened by a bank in favour of the defendant which provided that in the event of default the defendant should pay interest during the period of default at an aggregate rate equal to the cost to the bank of . .
CitedCo-Operative Insurance Society Ltd v Argyll Stores HL 21-May-1997
The tenants of a unit on a large shopping centre found the business losing money, and closed it in contravention of a ‘keep open’ clause in the lease. They now appealed from a mandatory injunction requiring them to keep the store open.
Held: . .
CitedCine Bes Filmcilik Ve Yapimcilik and Another v United International Pictures and Others CA 21-Nov-2003
The parties entered into agreements licensing the exclusive distribution of encrypted television channels within Turkey. A clause provided a calculation of damages for a breach amounting to the balance of licence fees due, and other penalties, . .
CitedMurray v Leisureplay Plc CA 28-Jul-2005
The court considered the extent to which the content of negotiations leading up to the signing of a contract were admissible. Arden LJ said: ‘Lord Dunedin in the Dunlop case makes the point that, although the issue is one of construction, the court . .
CitedImperial Tobacco Company (of Great Britain) and Ireland v Parslay CA 1936
Lord Wright MR said: ‘A millionaire may enter into a contract in which he is to pay liquidated damages, or a poor man may enter into a similar contract with a millionaire, but in each case the question is exactly the same, namely, whether the sum . .
CitedLegione v Hateley 1982
(High Court of Australia) Purchasers of land were put on notice that unless they paid the price by 10th August the contract of sale would be rescinded. On 9th August the purchasers’ solicitor telephoned the vendor’s solicitors and spoke to the . .
CitedPhilips (Hong Kong) Ltd v The Attorney General of Hong Kong PC 9-Feb-1993
After referring to two Australian cases on penalty clauses in contracts: ‘These statements assist by making it clear that the court should not adopt an approach to provisions as to liquidated damages which could, as indicated earlier, defeat their . .
CitedEuro London Appointments Ltd v Claessens International Ltd CA 6-Apr-2006
The court considered whether a clause in an employment agency’s terms and conditions amounted to a penalty and was unenforceable. The contract provided that if the offer was withdrawn by the eventual employer after acceptance but before the . .
CitedIAC (Leasing) Ltd v Humphrey 7-Jan-1972
High Court of Australia – Contract – Penalty – Hire of chattels for term – Liability of lessee on repossession and on return Before or at the end of term – Payment of deficiency where equipment sold or valued at amount less than appraisal value . .
CitedAndrews v Australia and New Zealand Banking Group Ltd 6-Sep-2012
Austlii High Court of Australia – Banker and customer – Penalty doctrine – Consumer and commercial credit card accounts – Honour fee – Dishonour fee – Late payment fee – Non-payment fee – Over limit fee – Whether . .
CitedOffice of Fair Trading (OFT) v Abbey National Plc and Others SC 25-Nov-2009
The banks appealed against a ruling that the OFT could investigate the fairness or otherwise of their systems for charging bank customers for non-agreed items as excessive relative to the services supplied. The banks said that regulation 6(2) could . .
CitedChartbrook Ltd v Persimmon Homes Ltd and Others HL 1-Jul-2009
Mutual Knowledge admissible to construe contract
The parties had entered into a development contract in respect of a site in Wandsworth, under which balancing compensation was to be paid. They disagreed as to its calculation. Persimmon sought rectification to reflect the negotiations.
Held: . .
CitedIn re Dagenham (Thames) Dock Co; Ex parte Hulse CA 1873
The Court of Appeal in chancery heard an appeal from the Master of the Rolls from his refusal of the Master of the Rolls to make a declaration in the winding up of the purchaser company. The purchaser had sought a direction that if the balance of . .
CitedKilmer v The British Columbia Orchard Lands Limited PC 26-Feb-1913
British Columbia . .
CitedRingrow Pty Ltd v BP Australia Pty Ltd 17-Nov-2005
High Court of Australia – Contract – Penalty – Agreement to purchase service station from distributor of fuel – Collateral agreement requiring fuel to be purchased exclusively from distributor – Breach of collateral agreement – Termination of . .
CitedOffice of Fair Trading v Abbey National Plc and seven Others ComC 24-Apr-2008
The Office sought a declaration that the respondent and other banks were subject to the provisions of the Regulations in their imposition of bank charges to customer accounts, and in particular as to the imposition of penalties or charges for the . .
CitedO’Dea v Allstates Leasing System (WA) Pty Ltd 17-Feb-1983
High Court of Australia – Contract – Breach – Penalty – Hire of vehicle for term – Liability of lessee on repossession before end of term – Provision that entire rent for term due at commencement of term – Entire rent not payable if instalments duly . .

Cited by:

CitedWright and Another (Liquidators of SHB Realisations Ltd) v The Prudential Assurance Company Ltd ChD 6-Mar-2018
IVA is a special form of contract
Liquidators asked the court whether sums sought by the insolvent company’s landlords were payable and or provable. Under an IVA, the copany had been paying reduced rents, but the arrangement document provided that the full rents would be restored on . .
CitedSoleymani v Nifty Gateway Llc ComC 24-Mar-2022
Arbitration jurisdiction applications stayed
The claimant sought declaratory relief as to the basis of a purchase after he placed a bid for a blockchain-based non-fungible token (also known as an NFT) associated with an artwork by the artist known as Beeple titled ‘Abundance’. The court was . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract, Consumer

Updated: 03 April 2022; Ref: scu.554250

Dynniq UK Ltd v Lancashire County Council: TCC 7 Dec 2017

The claimant sought various declarations as to the proper meaning of two particular parts of the service contract between the parties for the maintenance of traffic signal installations and associated equipment, and the construction of new or replacement traffic signal installations and equipment, in Lancashire.

Judges:

Coulson J

Citations:

[2017] EWHC 3173 (TCC)

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Contract

Updated: 02 April 2022; Ref: scu.601878

Adam Architecture Ltd v Halsbury Homes Ltd: CA 2 Nov 2017

Appeal by a firm of architects in litigation concerning its entitlement to recover fees following termination of its engagement. The principal issue in this appeal is whether Section 111 of the 1996 Act applies only to interim payments or whether it also applies to payments due following completion of the works or termination of the contract.

Judges:

Jackson, Lindblom, Thirlwall LJJ

Citations:

[2017] EWCA Civ 1735

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Housing Grants, Construction and Regeneration Act 1996 111

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Construction, Contract

Updated: 01 April 2022; Ref: scu.598471

Scomadi Ltd and Another v RA Engineering Co Ltd and Others (Judgment): IPEC 27 Oct 2017

Claims and counterclaims covering breach of contract, trade mark infringement, passing off, Registered Community Design (‘RCD’) infringement, UK unregistered design right infringement, negligent misrepresentation, negligent misstatement, infringement of copyright, and rescission .

Citations:

[2017] EWHC 2658 (IPEC)

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

Main JudgmentScomadi Ltd and Another v RA Engineering Co Ltd and Others (Orders) IPEC 27-Oct-2017
. .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Intellectual Property, Contract, Torts – Other

Updated: 31 March 2022; Ref: scu.598318

Koninklijke Philips Nv v Asustek Computer Incorporation and Others: CA 11 Oct 2017

Appeal from decision regarding alleged infringement of a patent cross-licensing agreement containing a covenant not to assert patents against third parties.

Judges:

Arden DBE, Kitchin, Floyd LJJ

Citations:

[2017] EWCA Civ 1526

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Intellectual Property, Contract

Updated: 30 March 2022; Ref: scu.596089

MM Packaging (UK) Ltd v Philip Potter and Others: CA 31 Jul 2017

Interpretation of a formal settlement agreement made between the appellant company, which had closed a factory operated by it in Bootle, and the former employees and their trade union.

Judges:

Underhill, Lindblom, Thirlwall LJJ

Citations:

[2017] EWCA Civ 1471

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Contract, Employment

Updated: 30 March 2022; Ref: scu.595812

Greenock Harbour Trustees v Glasgow and South-Western Railway Co: HL 28 Jun 1909

In 1881 Harbour Trustees made an agreement with a railway company whereby each was to convey to the other for their respective undertakings certain lands which were to be acquired or had already been acquired. The agreement provided the mode in which, calculated according to the cost of acquisition of the lands to be acquired, the price chargeable to the parties for the lands to be conveyed to them respectively was to be fixed. By 1885 the parties were in possession of the respective lands, but owing to disagreement arising out of the terms of the agreement and from the fact that difficulties unforeseen at its date had had to be surmounted, no conveyanoes had been executed and no adjustment of accounts had been made. In 1906 the Harbour Trustees brought an action to have the agreement finally implemented and to recover a sum alleged to be due to them on a balancing of accounts. They claimed interest.
Held (dub. the Lord Chancellor and Lord James) that the circumstances of the case disclosed no specialties sufficient to take it out of the established rule that where a purchaser of heritage entered into possession before the purchase price was paid, interest on the price from the date at which he had obtained full possession ran in favour of the vendor, and that the rate of interest to be charged in the particular case should be 31/2 per centum.

Judges:

Lord Chancellor (Loreburn), Lord Ashbourne, Lord James of Hereford, Lord Gorell, and Lord Shaw of Dunfermline

Citations:

[1909] UKHL 1014, 46 SLR 1014

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Land, Contract

Updated: 30 March 2022; Ref: scu.620581

The Royal Devon and Exeter NHS Foundation Trust v Atos IT Services UK Ltd: TCC 31 Aug 2017

The Trust bought software from the defendant. After attempts at remedy, the Trust terminated the contract and now sued for damages in expenditure wasted in attempting the remedies. The defendant argued that such damages were limited by the contract.

Judges:

O’Farrell DBE J

Citations:

[2017] EWHC 2197 (TCC)

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Contract

Updated: 29 March 2022; Ref: scu.593132

Amtrust Europe Ltd v Trust Risk Group Spa: ComC 10 Dec 2014

The parties disputed sums said to be due under arrangements selling medical malpractice insurance in Italy.
Held: ATEL had a ‘good arguable case’ that the ToBA continued as an agreement and was not superseded by the ‘Framework Agreement’, and that the courts of England and Wales have jurisdiction in relation to disputes arising out of that agreement.

Judges:

Blair J

Citations:

[2014] EWHC 4169 (Comm)

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

Appeal fromTrust Risk Group Spa v AmTrust Europe Ltd CA 30-Apr-2015
The appeal was as to a jurisdiction dispute arising from the breakdown of a business relationship about the placement of medical malpractice insurance in the Italian market. The underlying question was whether the contractual arrangements between . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract, Jurisdiction, Insurance

Updated: 29 March 2022; Ref: scu.539959

Houldsworth v Gordon Cumming: HL 21 Jul 1910

All that passed, either oral or in writing, in the negotiations leading up to a completed contract of sale of heritable property is admissible in evidence to prove what was the subject of the sale, not to alter the contract, but to identify the subject.
>
Per Lord Kinnear-‘The meaning of a descriptive name in a particular contract cannot be determined by a fixed rule of law without regard to the facts of the case. . . I agree that a contract to sell the lands contained in a certain title is perfectly possible, and would give the purchaser right to everything which the seller and his predecessors had in fact possessed under that title. I would be disposed to concede further that if an estate is sold under a general name, without reservation or restriction expressed in the contract, or capable of being proved by competent evidence, the reasonable inference is that what is intended is the estate so named which the seller holds under a valid title. And if it be assumed that the contract covers the whole estate, the buyer would be entitled to a disposition according to the description contained in the existing titles, because ex hypothesi the intention of the contract is to transfer to the disponee everything to which the disponer had right. But if there be any question whether the subject sold is less or more than the whole estate possessed, that cannot be solved by the title unless the contract has been made with express reference to the title. The mere coincidence of names proves nothing, because names are not used in the ordinary transactions of business with exact reference to title-deeds, and the local use of estate names may vary indefinitely as boundaries may shift from time to time.’

Judges:

Lord Chancellor (Loreburn), Earl of Halsbury, Lord Kinnear, and Lord Shaw

Citations:

[1910] UKHL 761, 47 SLR 761

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

Scotland

Contract

Updated: 28 March 2022; Ref: scu.619797

Green v Rangers International Football Club Plc: SCS 22 Jun 2017

(Outer House) The pursuer seeks declarator that the defender is contractually bound to pay any reasonable professional costs and expenses incurred by the pursuer in respect of his defence to criminal proceedings commenced against him on

Citations:

[2017] ScotCS CSOH – 90

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

Scotland

Cited by:

See AlsoGreen v Rangers International Football Club Plc – CA196/15 SCS 22-Jun-2017
. .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract

Updated: 28 March 2022; Ref: scu.591986

Rooney and Another v CSE Bournemouth Ltd: CA 9 Jun 2010

This appeal raises a short point as to whether the words ‘terms and conditions available upon request’ at the foot of a form of work order were reasonably capable of being understood as intended to incorporate the contractor’s standard conditions of trading.

Judges:

Arden, Toulson LJJ,Hedley J

Citations:

[2010] EWCA Civ 1364

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Contract

Updated: 28 March 2022; Ref: scu.591666

National Private Air Transport Company and Another v Sheikh Abedlelah M Kaki: ComC 22 Jun 2017

Application by the Defendant for summary judgment and/or an order that the claim, insofar as not admitted, should be struck out. The Claimant alleged breach of an agreement for the purchase of airplanes.

Judges:

Christopher Butcher QC

Citations:

[2017] EWHC 1496 (Comm)

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Contract, Transport

Updated: 28 March 2022; Ref: scu.588925

African Export-Import Bank and Others v Shebah Exploration and Production Company Ltd and Others: CA 28 Jun 2017

The court was asked as to the interpretation of the phrase ‘deals . . On the other’s written standard terms of business’.

Judges:

Longmore, Henderson LJJ

Citations:

[2017] EWCA Civ 845

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Unfair Contract Terms Act 1977 3

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Contract, Consumer

Updated: 27 March 2022; Ref: scu.588315

Lexlaw Ltd v Zuberi: ChD 9 Jun 2017

The claimant firm of solicitors sought payment of its charges. The defendant former client now challenged the enforceability of a Damages Based Agreement with them.
Held: The application should be allowed to proceed as a preliminary point.

Judges:

Clark M

Citations:

[2017] EWHC 1350 (Ch)

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Courts and Legal Services Act 1990 58AA(2) 58AA(4)

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Legal Professions, Contract

Updated: 27 March 2022; Ref: scu.588213

Persimmon Homes Ltd v Ove Arup and Partners Ltd and Another: CA 25 May 2017

Appeal by developers against a decision that their engineers have no liability for unexpected quantities of asbestos found on site. The issue in this appeal is whether the following clause, when read in context, exempts the engineers from liability for any asbestos which they may negligently have failed to identify: ‘Liability for any claim in relation to asbestos is excluded.’

Judges:

Jackson, Beatson, Moylan LJJ

Citations:

[2017] EWCA Civ 373

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Contract

Updated: 26 March 2022; Ref: scu.584530

Ndole Assets Ltd v Designer M and E Services Uk Ltd: TCC 18 May 2017

The defendant sought a declaration that the Claim Form and the Particulars of Claim were not properly served, alternatively that the claim should be struck out because of invalid or ineffectual service. Further, Designer sought summary judgment against the claimant because the claim was brought by Ndole as assignees, and it was said that the circumstances of the assignments meant that the claim should be dismissed on grounds of maintenance/champerty.

Judges:

Coulson J

Citations:

[2017] EWHC 1148 (TCC)

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Litigation Practice, Contract, Torts – Other

Updated: 26 March 2022; Ref: scu.583983

St Albans City and District Council v International Computers Ltd: QBD 11 Nov 1994

A liability limitation in a computer contract was an unfair contract term since it was a standard term, and it restricted liability when there had been no attempt to justify the amount chosen for the limit by reference, for example, to a consideration of the cost of insurance.

Citations:

Times 11-Nov-1994, (1995) 21 FSR 686

Statutes:

Unfair Contract Terms Act 1977

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

Appeal fromSt Albans City and District Council v International Computers Ltd CA 14-Aug-1996
The council purchased software from the defendants to calculate council taxes. Mistakes in the software undercalculated the amounts required to be recovered causing the council substantial losses. The company sought to rely upon a clause in the . .
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

Updated: 26 March 2022; Ref: scu.89465