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View translated passages only
Oxford Law Citator
Contents
Expand All
Collapse All
Preliminary Material
Dedication
Foreword
Preface
Table of Contents
Table of Cases
United Kingdom
Australia
Canada
Hong kong
New Zealand
Scotland
Singapore
United States
Table of Legislation
Table of Statutes
Table of Statutory Instruments
Other Legislation
New Zealand
International Instruments
Table of Main Abbreviations
Main Text
Part I Fundamentals
Preliminary Material
1 Sources and General Features
Sources and Categories of Contract Law
Dominance of Case Law.
1.01
1.02
1.03
Contexts Where Statute Predominates.
1.04
Contexts Where Statute and Common Law are Intertwined.
1.05
Transnational Soft Law.
1.06
1.07
Transnational Conventions.
1.08
Transnational Standard Form Contracts.
1.09
Lex Mercatoria.
1.10
European Union Law.
1.11
Contract and Tort Law.
1.12
1.13
1.14
Contract and Unjust Enrichment.
1.15
1.16
1.17
1.18
1.19
‘The General Part’ of Contract Law
1.20
Employment Law.
1.21
Sale of Goods.
1.22
Leases.
1.23
Statute.
1.24
1.25
Contextual Exceptions to General Rule.
1.26
1.27
1.28
Specific Contracts.
1.29
‘Equity’: The Distinction between Common Law and Equity
Jurisdictional History.
1.30
Equitable Doctrines and Remedies.
1.31
Common Law Remedies.
1.32
Equity’s Modern Decline within Contract Law.
1.33
1.34
1.35
1.36
1.37
1.38
Rescission for Non-fraudulent Misrepresentation.
1.39
Rescission Generally.
1.40
Equity’s Resilience.
1.41
The Nature of Consensus or Agreement
General Analysis.
1.42
1.43
1.44
1.45
Conduct.
1.46
Implied Contracts.
1.47
Implied Mutual Choice.
1.48
Implied Terms.
1.49
1.50
1.51
Rectification.
1.52
Modern Developments in English Contract Law
Introduction.
1.53
1.54
1.55
Statutory Control of Exclusion Clauses and Unfair Consumer Terms.
1.56
1.57
1.58
1.59
Third Party Rights of Action.
1.60
1.61
1.62
Interpretation of Contracts.
1.63
1.64
1.65
Breach of Contract and Classification of Terms.
1.66
1.67
1.68
1.69
1.70
Variation Agreements and the Doctrine of Consideration.
1.71
1.72
1.73
Economic Duress.
1.74
Other Changes.
1.75
False Starts and Partial Successes.
1.76
1.77
1.78
1.79
1.80
1.81
Doctrinal Controversies: Evaluation
1.82
2 Principles
Freedom of Contract
Six Main Principles.
2.01
Freedom of Contract.
2.02
2.03
2.04
Judicial Affirmations of the Principle.
2.05
2.06
‘No Oral Modification’ Clauses and Freedom of Contract.
2.07
2.08
Judicial Fidelity to the Parties’ Agreement.
2.09
2.10
2.11
2.12
Freedom of Contract: Qualifications.
2.13
Restraint of Trade Doctrine.
2.14
Contractual Estoppel.
2.15
Standard Clauses.
2.16
2.17
Objectivity
Nature.
2.18
2.19
2.20
2.21
Pervasive Application.
2.22
2.23
2.24
2.25
Rationale for Objective Principle.
2.26
2.27
Test One: ‘Fly-on-the-Wall’: Neutral Objectivity.
2.28
Test Two: Objectivity from the Representee’s Perspective.
2.29
2.30
2.31
2.32
True State of Affairs Perceived by Party: Objective Appearance Not Determinative.
2.33
2.34
2.35
2.36
Objective Principle Qualified: Bad Faith Failure to Point Out Special Types of Mistake (‘Snapping Up’).
2.37
Undisclosed Principal.
2.38
Proof of an Oral Contract: Objectivity Supplemented by Subjective Evidence.
2.39
The Contractual Bond Principle
Nature.
2.40
The First Limb: No General Power to Relieve Against Bad, Harsh, or Imprudent Bargain.
2.41
2.42
2.43
Force Majeure Clauses.
2.44
The Second Limb: No Unilateral Retreat, Termination, or Alteration.
2.45
2.46
Deeds and Guarantees.
2.47
Clauses Permitting Unilateral Alteration.
2.48
2.49
Agreed Variations.
2.50
Estoppel
Nature.
2.51
Estoppel Not a Cause of Action, Unless Proprietary Estoppel is Made Out.
2.52
2.53
2.54
Types of Estoppel.
2.55
(1) Estoppel by Representation.
2.56
(2) Promissory Estoppel.
2.57
(3) Estoppel by Convention.
2.58
Effects of Estoppel by Convention.
2.59
2.60
Statute.
2.61
Estoppel by Convention and Entire Agreement Clauses.
2.62
(4) Contractual Estoppel.
2.63
(5) Proprietary Estoppel.
2.64
(6) Estoppel by Silence or Acquiescence.
2.65
Evaluation of Estoppel by Silence.
2.66
(7) Res Judicata.
2.67
(8) Apparent Authority.
2.68
Good Faith and Fair Dealing
The Two Meanings.
2.69
2.70
Doctrines Exemplifying Sensitivity to Good Faith.
2.71
2.72
The Compensation Principle
Nature of the Compensation Principle.
2.73
2.74
2.75
Compensation for Substantial Loss.
2.76
Measures of Compensation.
2.77
Limits to the Compensatory Principle.
2.78
Legal Usage.
2.79
Compensation Is Not the Only Game in Town.
2.80
Part II Formation
Preliminary Material
3 Agreement
Formation of Contracts: Outline
3.01
Objectivity.
3.02
Offer and Acceptance.
3.03
Offers and Invitations to Treat.
3.04
Advertisements, etc.
3.05
Offerees.
3.06
Offer Mistakenly Made.
3.07
Party Aware of Other Party’s Mistake as to Terms.
3.08
Party’s Error as to Subject-matter Induced by Other Party.
3.09
Counter-offers.
3.10
Offer Revoked by Offeror.
3.11
Offer Rejected by Offeree.
3.12
Offer Lapsing.
3.13
Need for Acceptance to be Communicated.
3.14
Silence.
3.15
Conduct.
3.16
Timing of Acceptance.
3.17
Acceptance by Post.
3.18
The Battle of the Forms.
3.19
Unilateral Contracts.
3.20
Consumers: Cooling-Off Periods.
3.21
Unjust Enrichment: Restitutionary Awards for Goods or Services: No Contract Found
Unjust Enrichment in General.
3.22
3.23
3.24
3.25
Payment for Goods Supplied Without a Contract.
3.26
Valuation of Services in Absence of a Contract.
3.27
Quantum Meruit Below the Market Value?
3.28
Abortive Contract.
3.29
Contract on Foot.
3.30
3.31
3.32
3.33
Work After Termination of Contract.
3.34
Total Failure of Consideration: Recovery of Money Paid: No Contract Found
Nature.
3.35
The Fibrosa Case.
3.36
3.37
3.38
3.39
3.40
3.41
Absence of Consideration: Void Contract.
3.42
‘Subject to Contract’
Proposition.
3.43
3.44
3.45
Exception: Implied Contract: Joint Waiver Evidenced by Conduct.
3.46
3.47
3.48
3.49
3.50
Estoppel.
3.51
Express Special Arrangements.
3.52
Competitive Bidding: Tenders, Auctions, and Sealed Bids
Competitive Bidding: the Three Main Contexts.
3.53
Tenders.
3.54
3.55
3.56
3.57
3.58
Auctioneer’s Liability.
3.59
Sealed Bids.
3.60
3.61
Invitations to Treat
Nature.
3.62
Background Considerations.
3.63
Goods on Display.
3.64
3.65
3.66
3.67
On-line Purchasing.
3.68
Advertising.
3.69
3.70
3.71
3.72
Advertisements and Unilateral Contracts.
3.73
3.74
Advertising and Consumer Protection.
3.75
3.76
Advertising: the Legal Position in the United States.
3.77
Offer and Acceptance
Offer and Acceptance Analysis.
3.78
3.79
3.80
Offer and Acceptance Requiring Scrutiny of a Long Train of Communication.
3.81
3.82
3.83
Formation Without Explicit Offer and Acceptance.
3.84
Formation and Multipartite Contracts
Participation in a Yachting Regatta.
3.85
Later Cases.
3.86
Other Situations.
3.87
Receipt and Offeree’s Awareness of Offer
Has the (Alleged) Offeree Received an Offer?
3.88
3.89
3.90
3.91
3.92
3.93
3.94
3.95
3.96
3.97
Is the Offeree Aware of the Offer?
3.98
3.99
3.100
3.101
Offer Revoked: Direct and Indirect Revocation
Nature.
3.102
Binding Option.
3.103
Direct and Indirect Revocation: the Leading Case.
3.104
3.105
3.106
3.107
3.108
Evaluation: the Scope of Indirect Revocation.
3.109
3.110
Offer Lapsing or Rejected
3.111
Offer Overridden by a Counter-offer.
3.112
3.113
3.114
‘Mere Inquiry’ by Offeree as Distinct from a Counter-offer.
3.115
3.116
3.117
3.118
Reiteration of Original Offer.
3.119
General Need for Acceptance to be Communicated
General Rule.
3.120
3.121
3.122
E-mailed Acceptance.
3.123
Offeree Aware of Failed Communication.
3.124
Prescribed Method of Acceptance
General Rule.
3.125
Signature Not a Condition Precedent: A Three-Party Contract Became Operative Even Though One Signature Box Remained Empty.
3.126
Signature Required.
3.127
Written Agreement Required.
3.128
Acceptance by E-mail etc (Not by Ordinary Post)
Need for Communication of Acceptance.
3.129
3.130
3.131
E-mail Available to be Read Test in Ordinary Working Hours.
3.132
3.133
Acceptance Received at Offeror’s Business Premises During Ordinary Working Hours (Other than by Royal Mail).
3.134
3.135
3.136
3.137
Converse Situation: Acceptance Received Outside Offeror’s Ordinary Working Hours (Other than by Royal Mail).
3.138
3.139
3.140
3.141
3.142
Evaluation: E-mailed Acceptance: ‘24/7’ Unlimited Accessibility?
3.143
3.144
3.145
3.146
Service in General.
3.147
‘Postal Rule’: Acceptance by Royal Mail
Rule.
3.148
Necessary Conditions.
3.149
Leading Case: Acceptance Never Arrived: Good Contract.
3.150
3.151
Offeror Expressly Disapplying Rule.
3.152
Implicit Disapplication of Rule?
3.153
3.154
Evaluation: Retraction of Posted Acceptance.
3.155
3.156
Unilateral Contracts
Nature.
3.157
‘Smoke Ball’ Reward Case.
3.158
3.159
3.160
3.161
3.162
3.163
Consideration Found.
3.164
3.165
Offeror Unable to Revoke: At What Point?
3.166
3.167
Estate Agency Contracts.
3.168
3.169
3.170
3.171
Offeree’s Commencement of Performance.
3.172
3.173
Evaluation: ‘Acceptance’ within Unilateral Contracts.
3.174
3.175
Acceptance by Conduct
Nature.
3.176
Other Cases.
3.177
3.178
3.179
Acceptance by Silence: In General Not Possible
General Proposition.
3.180
3.181
3.182
Rationale.
3.183
Qualifications.
3.184
3.185
3.186
Offeree Aware of Price Error: ‘Snapping Up’
Proposition: ‘Snapping Up’.
3.187
3.188
3.189
3.190
3.191
3.192
3.193
3.194
Error as to Quality: Caveat Emptor.
3.195
3.196
3.197
3.198
Mistaken Acceptance Induced by Offeror’s Confusing Arrangements
Confusing Pre-Sale Arrangements.
3.199
3.200
Battle of the Forms
Last-Shot Analysis: Offer and Acceptance.
3.201
Leading Case.
3.202
3.203
3.204
3.205
A Loose-end: Course of Dealing.
3.206
3.207
Soft-law Analysis.
3.208
Evaluation: the Battle of the Forms.
3.209
3.210
3.211
4 Certainty
Commercial Arrangements and Certainty
Agreement on Essentials is Enough.
4.01
4.02
Leading Case: Obscure Second Year Option: Sufficient Certainty.
4.03
4.04
4.05
4.06
4.07
Eight Instances of Sufficient Certainty
(1) Negotiation Exclusivity for Fixed Duration.
4.08
(2) Airport Franchise: Airline Bound.
4.09
(3) Another Airport Franchise: Airport’s Responsibility.
4.10
(4) Bonus Pay Offer.
4.11
(5) Hire Charge Subject to Variation.
4.12
4.13
(6) Publisher’s Telephone Assurance to Author.
4.14
(7) Settlement Agreement with Minor Loose-Ends.
4.15
(8) ‘Find Me a Purchaser’: Estate Agency Contract Sufficiently Clear.
4.16
4.17
4.18
Five Instances of Transactions Void for Uncertainty
4.19
4.20
4.21
4.22
4.23
4.24
Duties to Try to Obtain Planning Permission, etc
Binding Commitments.
4.25
4.26
Graduated Obligations.
4.27
4.28
4.29
4.30
Negotiation or Mediation Agreements
Pre-Formation Negotiation Obligations.
4.31
4.32
4.33
4.34
Evaluation: Pre-formation Negotiation Agreements: Walford v Miles.
4.35
4.36
4.37
4.38
Settlement Valid Despite Offeror’s Manifest Blind Spot.
4.39
Negotiation Agreements and Dispute-Resolution Clauses.
4.40
4.41
Evaluation: Negotiation Agreements and Dispute-Resolution Clauses.
4.42
4.43
4.44
Post-Formation Negotiation Obligations.
4.45
4.46
4.47
4.48
4.49
4.50
4.51
4.52
4.53
4.54
Mediation Agreements.
4.55
Third Party Valuation
Is Third Party’s Intervention Make-or-Break? Generally: No.
4.56
4.57
4.58
4.59
4.60
4.61
Exceptional Situation: Third Party Valuation Involving Non-objective Criteria.
4.62
4.63
4.64
4.65
Sale of Goods: Agreement to Agree Price
Executory Context: No Goods Yet Delivered.
4.66
4.67
4.68
4.69
4.70
4.71
4.72
4.73
4.74
4.75
4.76
Non-Executory Context: Goods Already Supplied: the Foley Case.
4.77
4.78
4.79
4.80
5 Formality
Outline
Most Contracts Valid Without Writing.
5.01
Evidence.
5.02
Signature Not a Condition Precedent: A Three Party Contract Became Operative Even Though One Signature Box Remained Empty.
5.03
Main Exceptions Where Writing Required.
5.04
(1) Certain Land Transactions.
5.05
5.06
5.07
5.08
(2) Guarantees of Debts.
5.09
5.10
5.11
‘Letters of Comfort’.
5.12
5.13
Deed or Covenant
Main Elements.
5.14
5.15
5.16
No Specific Performance.
5.17
Solicitors’ Undertakings.
5.18
Unilateral Alteration of Deeds.
5.19
Analogy with Guarantee Alteration Rule.
5.20
Non-Statutory Formality Requirements
5.21
5.22
Formality Imposed by Professional or Regulatory Body.
5.23
‘No Oral Modification’ (‘NOM’) Clauses Given Effect.
5.24
5.25
5.26
Estoppel Qualification.
5.27
Later Case.
5.28
Evaluation: the Rock Decision and ‘No Oral Modification’ Clauses.
5.29
5.30
5.31
6 Consideration
Consideration Doctrine: Formation
Introduction.
6.01
6.02
6.03
6.04
6.05
Main Elements of the Consideration Doctrine.
6.06
(1) Requested Detriment Incurred or Benefit Conferred.
6.07
(2) No Testing of the Adequacy of Consideration: Nominal Consideration.
6.08
(3) Further Requirement of an Intent to Create Legal Relations.
6.09
(4) Formation and Variation and Consensual Discharge.
6.10
(5) Past Consideration.
6.11
(6) Pre-existing Duty.
6.12
(7) Pre-existing Commitment to Third Party.
6.13
(8) Variation (1): ‘Increasing (or Ameliorative) Pact’.
6.14
(9) Variation (2): ‘Decreasing (or Forbearance) Pact’.
6.15
Consideration’s Branches Lopped but Trunk Intact.
6.16
Detriment or Benefit as Elements of Consideration: Two Illustrations.
6.17
6.18
6.19
No Testing of the Adequacy of Consideration.
6.20
6.21
6.22
6.23
6.24
6.25
Evaluation: Consideration as a Test for Formation of Contract.
6.26
6.27
6.28
6.29
6.30
6.31
6.32
Past Consideration Rule.
6.33
6.34
6.35
Requested Performance and Binding Subsequent Promise.
6.36
6.37
6.38
6.39
Evaluation: the Past Consideration Rule.
6.40
6.41
Pre-Existing Statutory or Public Duty.
6.42
6.43
6.44
6.45
6.46
6.47
Consideration and Variation (1): Promises to Pay More
‘Practical Benefit’ Analysis.
6.48
6.49
6.50
6.51
6.52
6.53
6.54
Possible Coercion.
6.55
6.56
6.57
6.58
Evaluation: Increasing or Ameliorative Pacts: Goodbye to Consideration?
6.59
6.60
No Consideration to Support Post-Formation Restrictive Covenants and Confidentiality Clauses Imposed by Employer.
6.61
6.62
Consideration and Variation (2): Promises to Reduce Debts or Give More Time
The Rule in Pinnel’s Case.
6.63
Affirmations of Rule.
6.64
Leading 1884 Decision.
6.65
6.66
Cheque Payment Not Fresh Consideration.
6.67
Genuinely Dispute Claim.
6.68
Promise to Give Debtor More Time: Creditor’s Commercial Advantages.
6.69
6.70
6.71
6.72
6.73
Promissory Estoppel and Creditors’ Rights.
6.74
6.75
6.76
6.77
6.78
6.79
6.80
6.81
Evaluation of the Rule in Pinnel’s Case: Decreasing or Forbearance Pacts.
6.82
Third Party Payment to Creditor.
6.83
6.84
6.85
6.86
7 Intent to Create Legal Relations
Outline
Proposition.
7.01
7.02
7.03
7.04
7.05
Evaluation
7.06
View (i): ‘Intent’ doctrine should be subsumed by ‘offer and acceptance’.
7.07
View (ii): ‘Intent’ destined to oust consideration?
7.08
View (iii): Intent to create legal relations is an independent doctrine supplementing consideration.
7.09
7.10
Presumed Unenforceability: Family Relations
Spouses: Marriage Still Intact.
7.11
7.12
7.13
7.14
Ante-Nuptial and Post-Nuptial Special Arrangements.
7.15
Other Family Relations.
7.16
7.17
7.18
7.19
Commercial Deals: Presumption of Legal Enforceability
Presumption of Legal Enforceability.
7.20
7.21
Other Cases.
7.22
7.23
7.24
7.25
7.26
7.27
Intent to Create Legal Relations and the Objective Principle.
7.28
Barrister’s Fees.
7.29
Surrogacy Arrangements.
7.30
Enforceability: Bankers’ Bonus Promises.
7.31
Matter of Honour: ‘Gentlemen’s Agreements’.
7.32
7.33
7.34
7.35
‘Letter of Intent’: Need to Construe.
7.36
‘Letter of Comfort’.
7.37
7.38
7.39
The Semantic Niceties of Contractual Commitment.
7.40
Absence of Any Promise or Contractual Commitment.
7.41
7.42
7.43
Absence of an ‘Apparent Promise’: No Long-Term Supply Agreement: Series of Separate Transactions.
7.44
7.45
Borderline Unenforceability (1): Royalties: Members of a Band.
7.46
7.47
Borderline Unenforceability (2): Tycoon’s Drinking ‘Banter’.
7.48
7.49
7.50
Borderline Unenforceability (3): Methodist Ministry.
7.51
Borderline Unenforceability (4): Golfing Prize.
7.52
Borderline Enforceability (1): Property in Return for Care Services.
7.53
Borderline Enforceability (2): Petrol-Sharing: Reimbursement Duty.
7.54
Borderline Enforceability (3): Sharing the Winnings of a Competition or Lottery Entry.
7.55
Borderline Enforceability (4): Elite Athlete and the Organizing Committee.
7.56
7.57
Borderline Enforceability (5): Loss of Chance Damages: Football Transfer Negotiations.
7.58
Part III Capacity and Parties
Preliminary Material
8 Capacity
Capacity: Minors, Mental Disability, etc
8.01
Minors.
8.02
Mental Incapacity.
8.03
8.04
8.05
Sovereign Person.
8.06
Companies and other Legal Entities.
8.07
8.08
9 Third Parties and Co-Parties
Damages Normally Confined to Promisee’s Personal Loss
General Position: the Rule in Woodar v Wimpey.
9.01
9.02
9.03
Judicial Regret.
9.04
Evaluation: Promisee Prima Facie Unable to Sue for Third Party’s Loss.
9.05
Building Contract Exception to ‘Promisee Loss Only’ Compensation Rule
Scope of the Building Contract Exception.
9.06
9.07
Extension of Dunlop v Lambert (1839).
9.08
‘The Albazero’ Qualification.
9.09
9.10
9.11
9.12
9.13
9.14
Panatown Case (2001) and ‘The Albazero’ Qualification.
9.15
9.16
Nature of Promisee’s Cost of Cure Damages.
9.17
9.18
9.19
9.20
Evaluation: In Support of the Narrow View (Damages Sought on Behalf of a Third Party).
9.21
Promisee Obtaining Specific Performance to Compel Payments to the Third Party
Common Law Remedies Inadequate.
9.22
9.23
Third Party Statutory Route.
9.24
Promisee’s Position Unaltered by Statute.
9.25
9.26
Third Party Rights and Claims: Outline and Evaluation
Outline.
9.27
9.28
9.29
Evaluation: Reflections on the Regime Governing Third Party Rights.
9.30
9.31
9.32
9.33
9.34
The Common Law Privity Doctrine
9.35
Third Party Not Privy to Provision of Consideration.
9.36
Promisee Exclusivity: Entrenchment of the Privity Doctrine.
9.37
Equitable Protection of Third Parties: Trusts of Promises
Nature.
9.38
9.39
9.40
Need for Express Creation.
9.41
9.42
Relics.
9.43
9.44
Effects of Trusts of Promises.
9.45
The Contracts (Rights of Third Parties) Act 1999: Positive Rights of Action
Summary.
9.46
Identification of the Third Party under the Contracts (Rights of Third Parties) Act 1999.
9.47
9.48
9.49
Implied Right of Action under the Contracts (Rights of Third Parties) Act 1999.
9.50
9.51
Two-Step Test under ‘limb two’ of the Contracts (Rights of Third Parties) Act 1999.
9.52
9.53
9.54
9.55
9.56
9.57
Two Examples of No Implied Direct Right of Action Arising.
9.58
9.59
Nature of a ‘Benefit’ under ‘limb two’ of the Contracts (Rights of Third Parties) Act 1999.
9.60
9.61
9.62
9.63
Arbitration Clauses and Third Party Claims under the Contracts (Rights of Third Parties) Act 1999.
9.64
9.65
9.66
9.67
9.68
9.69
Variation or Rescission of the Contract under the Contracts (Rights of Third Parties) Act 1999.
9.70
9.71
9.72
9.73
Common Law Rights of Promisee Preserved under the Contracts (Rights of Third Parties) Act 1999.
9.74
Right of Defence or Set-off Based on Relations between A and T.
9.75
9.76
Right of Defence or Set-off Based on Relations between A and B.
9.77
9.78
Rule Excluding ‘Double Compensation’ under the Contracts (Rights of Third Parties) Act 1999.
9.79
Parties Agreeing to Exclude the Contracts (Rights of Third Parties) Act 1999.
9.80
9.81
Third Parties Gaining Protection from Exclusion Clauses
Scruttons v Midland Silicones (1962): the Privity Problem.
9.82
9.83
9.84
9.85
9.86
‘Himalaya Clause’ Creating Privity of Contract Between Owner of Goods and Stevedores.
9.87
9.88
9.89
‘The Starsin’ Exception.
9.90
9.91
Exclusive Jurisdiction Exception.
9.92
9.93
9.94
The Contracts (Rights of Third Parties) Act 1999 and the Benefit of Exclusion Clauses.
9.95
9.96
9.97
Privity of Contract and ‘Burdens’
General Principle.
9.98
Procurement of a Breach of Contract and Unlawful Interference with Another’s Contract.
9.99
9.100
9.101
Restrictive Covenants Affecting Land.
9.102
Injunction to Prevent Knowing Interference with Contractual Rights in Other Types of Property, especially Goods.
9.103
Bailment of Goods ‘on Terms’.
9.104
Nature of Bailment.
9.105
9.106
9.107
9.108
Joint Obligations
9.109
Co-promisors (also referred to as ‘co-obligors’).
9.110
9.111
9.112
Contribution.
9.113
Private International Law.
9.114
Evaluation: Contribution Proceedings and Foreign Law.
9.115
Co-promisees.
9.116
9.117
9.118
9.119
10 Assignment and Agency
Assignment: Outline
Nature.
10.01
10.02
Effects.
10.03
No Assignment of Duties.
10.04
Vicarious Performance Contrasted.
10.05
10.06
Modes of Assignment
Statutory Assignment.
10.07
Equitable Assignment.
10.08
10.09
10.10
Specific Statutory Contexts.
10.11
Extent of the Assigned Right
‘Subject to Equities’.
10.12
Adjustment Provision Between A and B Prevails.
10.13
Assignee’s Damages Calculated to Reflect Assignor’s Position before Assignment.
10.14
10.15
10.16
10.17
Non-Assignable Rights
10.18
10.19
Assignment Distinguished from Other Doctrines
10.20
(1) Novation.
10.21
10.22
(2) Third Party Beneficiary Rights.
10.23
(3) Negotiable Instruments.
10.24
(4) Acknowledgement.
10.25
(5) Revocable Mandate.
10.26
Agency: Outline
10.27
10.28
10.29
Actual Authority
10.30
Apparent or Ostensible Authority
10.31
10.32
10.33
Ratification
10.34
10.35
10.36
Anomalous Category of ‘Usual Authority’: Watteau v Fenwick (1893)
10.37
Evaluation: Watteau v Fenwick (1893): Anomalous Liability of Principal in Absence of Apparent Authority, Actual Authority, or Ratification.
10.38
Undisclosed Principal
10.39
10.40
10.41
10.42
10.43
10.44
10.45
Implied Warranty of Authority
10.46
10.47
Further Aspects of Consensual Agency
Agent and Principal Co-Promisees.
10.48
Revocation.
10.49
Disclosure of Third Party Commission Payments.
10.50
Commercial Agents.
10.51
Termination of Agency Following Breach.
10.52
Rival Agents and Tortious Interference.
10.53
Agency of Necessity
Legal Consequences of Agency of Necessity.
10.54
Part IV Vitiation
Preliminary Material
11 Misrepresentation
Outline
11.01
11.02
11.03
11.04
11.05
11.06
11.07
11.08
The Range of Remedies Applicable to Misrepresentation: a Summary.
11.09
11.10
11.11
11.12
11.13
11.14
11.15
11.16
11.17
11.18
11.19
11.20
11.21
Overlap Between ‘Misrepresentation’ Law and Contractual Assurances or Warranties.
11.22
11.23
11.24
11.25
11.26
11.27
Fundamental Elements of a Misrepresentation
Definition.
11.28
11.29
Pre-Formation False Statement or Representation by Conduct: Element (1) of a Misrepresentation.
11.30
Inaccuracy.
11.31
11.32
11.33
11.34
11.35
11.36
Misrepresentation can be Verbal or by Conduct.
11.37
Conduct: Nods, Winks, etc.
11.38
11.39
11.40
Representation Endures Until Formation.
11.41
11.42
Supervening Falsification Known to the Representor.
11.43
11.44
11.45
Evaluation: Supervening Falsification.
11.46
Apt to Mislead: Element (2) of a Misrepresentation.
11.47
11.48
11.49
11.50
11.51
11.52
11.53
‘Mere Puffs’: Incredible Statements: ‘It Will Never Rain’; ‘Prices Will Never Fall’.
11.54
The Representee Receives the Inaccurate Information: Element (3) of a Misrepresentation.
11.55
Reliance on the Misrepresentation; Element (4) of a Misrepresentation.
11.56
11.57
11.58
Matters of Opinion
Reliance on the Misrepresentation; Element (4) of a Misrepresentation.
11.59
11.60
Mere Opinion: Representor Lacking Experience.
11.61
11.62
11.63
11.64
11.65
Informal Oral Comment of No Consequence: ‘The Devil in the Detail’.
11.66
11.67
11.68
11.69
Routes to Rescission
Modes of Rescission.
11.70
Fraudulent Representor Disappears Without Trace.
11.71
Evaluation: Rescission and the Non-Fraudulent Representor.
11.72
11.73
Bars to Rescission for Misrepresentation
11.74
(1) Affirmation by the Representee.
11.75
11.76
(2) Acquiescence, Laches, and Prejudicial Lapse of Time.
11.77
11.78
(3) Inability to Restore the Parties to the Original Position.
11.79
(4) Intervening Third Party Rights: Notably, Purchase of the Subject-matter by a Bona Fide Purchaser for Value without Notice.
11.80
Non-fraudulent Misrepresentation: Statutory Discretionary Bar under Section 2(2) of the 1967 Act.
11.81
11.82
11.83
11.84
Monetary Adjustment During Rescission
Indemnity in Favour of the Representee.
11.85
11.86
11.87
11.88
Flexible Adjustment.
11.89
Rescission and Allowance for Representor’s Skill.
11.90
Tort Damages for Loss of Income
Compensation for Lost Revenue from Investment or Business Venture.
11.91
11.92
11.93
Tort Damages to Compensate for Less Profitable Contractual Terms.
11.94
Tort Damages for Having Failed to Acquire a Better Alternative Business and Investment.
11.95
Damages for the Full Extent of Investment Losses.
11.96
Tort Damages: Inevitable Loss? Burden of Proof.
11.97
Damages under Section 2(1) of the Misrepresentation Act 1967
Nature.
11.98
11.99
11.100
11.101
11.102
Section 2(1) of the Misrepresentation Act 1967 (1): Claimant’s First Advantage: The Burden of Proof.
11.103
11.104
11.105
‘Reasonable Ground’: an Objective Inquiry.
11.106
Section 2(1) of the Misrepresentation Act 1967 (2): Claimant’s Second Advantage: The Fiction of Fraud.
11.107
11.108
11.109
11.110
11.111
11.112
Evaluation: ‘Fiction of Fraud’ and the 1967 Act.
11.113
11.114
11.115
11.116
11.117
11.118
11.119
11.120
11.121
Section 2(1) Damages Claims and the Defence of Contributory Negligence.
11.122
Other Points Concerning Contributory Negligence and the Misrepresentation Act 1967.
11.123
11.124
The Torts of Deceit and Negligent Misstatement
The Need for Dishonesty.
11.125
11.126
11.127
11.128
11.129
11.130
11.131
Reliance in the Context of Deceit.
11.132
11.133
11.134
11.135
11.136
Evaluation: the Zurich Case, Bogus Claims, and the Categories of Vitiation.
11.137
Obtaining Damages for Deceit.
11.138
The Path to Rescission of the Settlement.
11.139
11.140
11.141
11.142
Common Law Rule Barring Exclusion of Liability for Fraud.
11.143
11.144
11.145
11.146
11.147
The Hedley Byrne Principle: the Tort of Negligent Misstatement.
11.148
Misrepresentation and Exclusion Clauses
Common Law Rule Barring Exclusion of Liability for Fraud.
11.149
Contractual Estoppel: Inability to Override Historic Misrepresentation.
11.150
11.151
11.152
11.153
Misrepresentation and the Statutory Reasonableness Test: Three Types of Clause Covered by Section 3(1) of the Misrepresentation Act 1967.
11.154
11.155
11.156
‘No Representation Made’ Clause.
11.157
‘Mere Opinion’ Clause or Made ‘Without Responsibility’.
11.158
‘Non-reliance’ Clause.
11.159
11.160
Entire Agreement Clauses are Prima Facie Not Subject to Statutory Reasonableness Test.
11.161
11.162
11.163
11.164
11.165
11.166
11.167
Scope of Agency Clause Not Subject to the Statutory Reasonableness Test.
11.168
Non-contractual Relationship.
11.169
Misrepresentation: Statutory Reasonableness Test Determinations. Exclusion of Liability for Oral Representations in Conveyancing Context: Exclusion Not Unreasonable.
11.170
Exclusion of Rescission for Non-fraudulent Misrepresentation in Conveyancing Context: Exclusion Unreasonable.
11.171
11.172
Misrepresentation and Exclusion Clauses in Consumer Contracts.
11.173
Exceptional Duties to Disclose
No General Duty.
11.174
11.175
11.176
11.177
Exceptional Duties to Disclose.
11.178
(1) Half-truth.
11.179
11.180
(2) Misleading Conduct.
11.181
(3) Falsification Known to Representor before Contract’s Formation.
11.182
(4) Mistake as to Terms of Proposed Deal: Other Party Taking Advantage.
11.183
(5) Insurance.
11.184
Commercial Insurance: Insurer: No Disclosure Duty.
11.185
Commercial or Consumer Insured: Disclosure Duty.
11.186
(6) Rectification.
11.187
(7) Estoppel by Silence.
11.188
(8) Creditor and Guarantees: Creditor’s Non-disclosure of Unusual Features Relevant to Risk of Principal’s Possible Default.
11.189
(9) Relationships of ‘Trust and Confidence’ under the rubric of Undue Influence.
11.190
(10) Fiduciaries.
11.191
11.192
12 Mistake
Outline
12.01
Unilateral Mistake: Generally Inoperative.
12.02
Common Mistake.
12.03
Non Est Factum: Common Law Doctrine.
12.04
Mistaken Identity.
12.05
Shared Mistake at Common Law
Leading Case.
12.06
12.07
12.08
12.09
12.10
Impossibility Criterion.
12.11
12.12
Survival of ‘Essential Difference’ Test.
12.13
12.14
12.15
12.16
Implied Term Theory of Mistake: Requiescat in Pace?
12.17
12.18
12.19
Case Law Examples of Shared Mistake
12.20
12.21
No Parallel Equitable Doctrine of Shared Mistake.
12.22
Responses to the Solle v Butcher Issue in Other Jurisdictions.
12.23
12.24
12.25
12.26
Equitable Doctrine of Mistake concerning Voluntary Instruments.
12.27
12.28
12.29
12.30
‘Non Est Factum’: Documents Signed Under Complete Misapprehension
Proposition.
12.31
12.32
Leading Case.
12.33
12.34
12.35
12.36
12.37
Doctrine Successfully Invoked.
12.38
12.39
Other Cases.
12.40
Mistake as to Identity
Nature.
12.41
Two Contexts.
12.42
Mistake as to Identity: Distance Dealings: Contract Void.
12.43
12.44
12.45
12.46
12.47
12.48
12.49
12.50
Cundy v Lindsay (1878) Followed.
12.51
12.52
12.53
Supposed Party Must In Fact Exist.
12.54
Mistake as to Identity: Face-to-Face Dealings.
12.55
12.56
12.57
12.58
Aberrant Case Now Discarded.
12.59
Evaluation: Mistake as to Identity (1): Distance Dealings.
12.60
Evaluation: Mistake as to Identity (2): Face-to-Face Dealings: Lewis v Averay.
12.61
13 Duress
General Features
Nature.
13.01
Four Elements of Duress.
13.02
13.03
13.04
13.05
13.06
13.07
Categories of Unlawfulness.
13.08
13.09
Insufficient Pressure?
13.10
13.11
13.12
13.13
13.14
13.15
13.16
Damages in the Tort of Intimidation.
13.17
13.18
Anomalous Features of Duress as to Person
The Two Anomalies.
13.19
13.20
Anomaly One: Sufficient that Coerced Party was Mentally Disturbed by the Threat.
13.21
13.22
13.23
13.24
13.25
Anomaly Two: Void? Rather than Voidable.
13.26
Evaluation: Duress as to Person: the Two Anomalies.
13.27
13.28
13.29
13.30
13.31
13.32
Lawful Act Threatened: When is this Illegitimate?
Nature.
13.33
Bad Faith Threat Test.
13.34
13.35
13.36
13.37
Evaluation: Illegitimate (But Not Unlawful) Pressure.
13.38
13.39
Four Cases Where Threat Not Found to be Illegitimate.
13.40
13.41
13.42
13.43
13.44
Case Where Threat Found to be Illegitimate
13.45
13.46
Illegitimacy in Transactions Between Sovereign States.
13.47
14 Undue Influence
Main Elements
Summary.
14.01
Nature of Undue Influence.
14.02
14.03
14.04
14.05
No Categorical Definition.
14.06
14.07
14.08
Impropriety, including Failure to Require Independent Advice.
14.09
14.10
14.11
14.12
Relationships of Trust and Confidence.
14.13
14.14
‘Calls for Explanation’.
14.15
Free and Informed Consent.
14.16
14.17
Relevance of Independent Legal Advice.
14.18
14.19
14.20
The Spectrum of Undue Influence: Illustrative Cases
Spiritual Tyranny and the Convent.
14.21
14.22
14.23
Lender’s Breach of Fiduciary Duty.
14.24
14.25
No Undue Influence: Confidentiality and ‘the SAS’.
14.26
Trust and Dependence Relationship Proved on Facts: Employer and Employee.
14.27
Trust and Dependence Relationship Proved on Facts: Spouses.
14.28
14.29
Octogenarian Eccentric Landowner and Trusted Local Ally and Friend.
14.30
14.31
Vulnerable Parents.
14.32
14.33
14.34
Opportunity for Undue Influence Arising as Relationship has Developed During Protracted Dealings.
14.35
Retrospectively Visible Pattern of Undue Influence.
14.36
Surety Agreements and Constructive Notice of Misrepresentation, etc
Recognition of the Lender’s Constructive Notice of Impropriety.
14.37
Seminal Modern Cases.
14.38
Misrepresentation by Borrower.
14.39
Borrower’s Non-disclosure.
14.40
14.41
Borrower’s Undue Influence.
14.42
Joint Loan.
14.43
Constructive Notice Analysis: Surety Receives Legal Advice.
14.44
14.45
Quality of Legal Advice.
14.46
14.47
Doctrinal Neighbours: the Relationship between Unconscionability and Undue Influence.
14.48
15 Unconscionability
Unconscionability in Equity
Nature.
15.01
15.02
Earlier Law.
15.03
Modern Judicial Summaries.
15.04
Vulnerability.
15.05
15.06
Exploitation.
15.07
Date of Formation.
15.08
Modern Applications.
15.09
Restraint of Trade Doctrine: Overlap.
15.10
Doctrinal Neighbours: the Relationship between Unconscionability and Undue Influence
Doctrinal Relationship.
15.11
Evaluation: Undue Influence: the Birks/Chin Analysis.
15.12
15.13
15.14
15.15
Inequality of Bargaining Power: Lord Denning’s Infertile Suggestion
A Bold Synthesis.
15.16
15.17
15.18
Evaluation: Inequality of Bargaining Power Doctrine.
15.19
Bargaining Power Forming Part of a Wider Evaluation.
15.20
15.21
15.22
15.23
15.24
15.25
15.26
15.27
Absence of Equal Bargaining Power Insufficient Basis for Challenging Contracts.
15.28
15.29
15.30
15.31
15.32
15.33
15.34
15.35
Part V Illegality and Public Policy
Preliminary Material
16 Illegality
Outline of Illegality and Public Policy
Main Propositions.
16.01
16.02
16.03
16.04
16.05
16.06
16.07
Main Heads of Illegality or Public Policy.
16.08
(1) Gross Immorality.
16.09
(2) Procuring Marriage.
16.10
(3) Preventing Marriage.
16.11
(4) Surrogacy Agreements Within the United Kingdom.
16.12
16.13
(5) Economic and Personal Enslavement.
16.14
16.15
(6) Unreasonable Restraint of Trade, etc.
16.16
(7) Trading with the Enemy.
16.17
(8) Bribery and Corruption and Cheating of Public Authorities.
16.18
(9) Suborning of Adjudicators or Witnesses, etc.
16.19
(10) Maintenance and Champerty.
16.20
(11) Ousting the Courts’ Jurisdiction.
16.21
Lawful Transaction.
16.22
16.23
Agreements Contrary to Statute
Legal Effect.
16.24
Leading Case.
16.25
16.26
Other Cases.
16.27
16.28
16.29
Judicial Reluctance to Infer Statutory Prohibition of Contract.
16.30
16.31
Valid Collateral Contract Alongside Main Illegal Contract
16.32
16.33
16.34
16.35
Innocent Party Can Sue Despite Defendant’s Unilateral Decision to Perform Illegally
Position of Innocent Party.
16.36
16.37
16.38
Other Party Aware and Participates.
16.39
16.40
Minor Act of Illegality Not Entitling Other Party to End the Contract
16.41
16.42
16.43
16.44
Arrangements Designed to Cheat the Revenue
16.45
16.46
16.47
16.48
16.49
16.50
16.51
16.52
16.53
16.54
16.55
Financial Interest in Outcome of Litigation: Champerty and Maintenance
Doctrine.
16.56
Statutory Exceptions.
16.57
No Expansion of Doctrine at Common Law.
16.58
16.59
Restraint of Trade
Nature.
16.60
16.61
Sale of Business.
16.62
16.63
Employment Contracts.
16.64
16.65
16.66
16.67
16.68
Restraining Competition Between Law Firms.
16.69
Restraint of Trade: Constraining Creative Talent.
16.70
16.71
Filling Station ‘Solus Agreements’: Esso Petroleum Co Ltd v Harper’s Garage (Stourport) Ltd (1968).
16.72
16.73
Severance and Post-Employment Restrictive Covenants.
16.74
16.75
16.76
Evaluation: Wrongfully Dismissed Employee Released from Restrictive Covenants.
16.77
16.78
16.79
16.80
16.81
16.82
16.83
Prostitution (‘Sex Working’)
Equipment Supplied.
16.84
Whole Contract Not Tainted.
16.85
Early Twentieth-Century Public Morality.
16.86
Restitution or Unjust Enrichment and Illegal Contracts: Patel v Mirza
Restitution Prima Facie Available.
16.87
Disarray before Patel v Mirza.
16.88
The Old Law: Situations Where Payor Could Recover in Restitution before Patel v Mirza.
16.89
Patel v Mirza in Greater Detail.
16.90
16.91
Majority Analysis in Patel v Mirza.
16.92
16.93
16.94
16.95
16.96
The Range of Factors or Multi-factorial Approach in Patel v Mirza.
16.97
Are There any Types of Illegal Transaction Where Restitution is Inappropriate?
16.98
16.99
Minority Analysis in Patel v Mirza.
16.100
16.101
Case Law Reception of Patel v Mirza.
16.102
16.103
16.104
16.105
16.106
16.107
Singaporean Criticism.
16.108
Part VI Terms and Interpretation
Preliminary Material
17 Express Terms
Classification of Express Terms
Taxonomy.
17.01
17.02
17.03
17.04
17.05
17.06
Strict Liability.
17.07
17.08
17.09
17.10
17.11
Duties of Care, or other Non-strict Contractual Obligations.
17.12
17.13
17.14
17.15
17.16
17.17
17.18
Overlapping Contractual and Tortious Duties of Care.
17.19
Written Contracts: the Parol Evidence Rule
Scope of the Rule.
17.20
17.21
17.22
17.23
The Parol Evidence Rule’s Exceptions or Qualifications.
17.24
17.25
17.26
Evaluation: the Parol Evidence Rule.
17.27
17.28
17.29
17.30
Contractual Assurances and Collateral Warranties
Outline.
17.31
17.32
17.33
Determining Whether a Statement Has Become a Term of the Main Contract.
17.34
Judicial Caution towards Collateral Warranties.
17.35
17.36
Criteria for Identifying a Collateral Warranty.
17.37
17.38
17.39
17.40
Collateral Warranty Not Found During ‘Subject to Contract’ Negotiations.
17.41
17.42
17.43
17.44
Collateral Warranty that Reasonable Care has been Taken when Providing a Business Estimate.
17.45
17.46
Identification of Terms: Inconsistency Between Standard and ‘Bespoke’ Terms
Bespoke Terms Prevailing Over Standard Terms.
17.47
17.48
17.49
17.50
Other Cases.
17.51
Incorporation of Written Terms, Including Exclusion Clauses
Outline: the Five Modes of Incorporation.
17.52
17.53
Mode (2): Direct Notice.
17.54
Contractual Document.
17.55
17.56
17.57
Failure to Read.
17.58
Timing: Post-formation Notification is Ineffective.
17.59
17.60
Reasonable Steps Taken to Notify Party.
17.61
17.62
17.63
17.64
17.65
17.66
17.67
17.68
17.69
17.70
An Exclusion Clause Is Not Necessarily Onerous.
17.71
17.72
17.73
17.74
17.75
Mode (3): Signature.
17.76
17.77
Leading Case in Detail.
17.78
17.79
Common Law Exceptions to the Signature Rule.
17.80
17.81
Statutory Control of Exclusion Clauses affecting Purchasers of Goods.
17.82
Signature Incorporating a CFA ‘Death Clause’: Payment for Legal Work Wasted if Client Dies before Conclusion of Claim Funded by a Conditional Fee Agreement.
17.83
Rejection of Power to Override the Signature Rule in Absence of Misrepresentation, Duress, or Non Est Factum.
17.84
Are There Indications of a Different Approach?
17.85
Evaluation: Signature Rule’s Only Exceptions Are Duress, Misrepresentation, or Non Est Factum.
17.86
Proferens Seeking to Rely on an Exclusion Clause was Aware of the Other Party’s Failure to Read: Canadian Discussion.
17.87
18 Implied Terms
Summary
18.01
Implied Terms of Law
Statutory.
18.02
Judicially Recognized.
18.03
18.04
Policy Factors.
18.05
18.06
Leading Case.
18.07
18.08
18.09
18.10
Implied Term of Trust and Confidence in Employment Contracts.
18.11
18.12
18.13
18.14
18.15
18.16
18.17
Confidentiality and Arbitration.
18.18
No Cheating in Gambling Contracts.
18.19
18.20
Cheating: Analogies.
18.21
Implied Term to Avoid Arbitrary Exercise of Contractual Discretion
The Paragon Case: Seminal Decision (1).
18.22
The Socimer Case: Seminal Decision (2).
18.23
The Braganza Case: Seminal Decision (3).
18.24
18.25
Review of Braganza Case Law.
18.26
18.27
Connection with Express Term.
18.28
Other Cases.
18.29
18.30
18.31
18.32
18.33
Implied Terms in Fact: General Points
Nature.
18.34
Judicial Definitions.
18.35
18.36
18.37
18.38
Strict Approach.
18.39
18.40
18.41
18.42
18.43
Implied Terms and Objectivity.
18.44
18.45
18.46
Implied Terms and Bar on Negotiation Evidence.
18.47
18.48
18.49
Evaluation: Implied Terms and Material Deleted During Negotiations.
18.50
18.51
18.52
Necessity and Obviousness: (1) Business Efficacy and (2) Officious Bystander Tests
‘Business Efficacy’: Commercial Necessity: Nature.
18.53
18.54
18.55
18.56
18.57
18.58
18.59
18.60
18.61
Business Efficacy: New Phraseology.
18.62
18.63
18.64
18.65
18.66
18.67
Obviousness: Officious Bystander Test.
18.68
Leading Case.
18.69
18.70
18.71
18.72
18.73
18.74
18.75
Evaluation: the Two Tests for Terms Implied in Fact.
18.76
18.77
18.78
18.79
18.80
18.81
18.82
18.83
18.84
18.85
18.86
Implied Terms in Fact and Written Contracts
Implication and Construction are Different Exercises.
18.87
Facts and Significance of the Marks and Spencer Case.
18.88
18.89
18.90
18.91
18.92
18.93
18.94
Implied Terms and ‘Corrective Construction’.
18.95
No Conflict with Written Terms.
18.96
18.97
Implied Term Not to be Inserted to Upset Careful Allocation of Commercial Risks.
18.98
18.99
18.100
18.101
18.102
18.103
18.104
18.105
18.106
18.107
18.108
18.109
Hardly Ever, Not Never.
18.110
Written Agreements Lacking Specificity.
18.111
Nine Cases Where a Term Implied in Fact Was Found
18.112
18.113
18.114
18.115
18.116
18.117
18.118
18.119
18.120
Ten Cases Where a Term Implied in Fact Was Not Found
18.121
18.122
18.123
18.124
18.125
18.126
18.127
18.128
18.129
Implied Terms and Entire Agreement Clauses
Nature of Entire Agreement Clauses.
18.130
Terms Implied in Fact: Argument Based on Overriding Need to Ensure ‘Business Efficacy’.
18.131
18.132
Argument Based on Intrinsic Quality of Implied Term.
18.133
Statutory Implied Terms.
18.134
Implication Founded on Custom: Position Uncertain.
18.135
Implied Term Based on Custom
Nature.
18.136
18.137
Statute.
18.138
19 Good Faith
19.01
Express Duty to Perform in Good Faith
Leading Case.
19.02
19.03
Other Cases.
19.04
19.05
19.06
Implied Term of Good Faith in ‘Relational Contracts’
Leading Discussion.
19.07
19.08
19.09
19.10
19.11
19.12
19.13
19.14
19.15
19.16
19.17
Relational Contracts: Court of Appeal Support in Principle.
19.18
Traditional Scepticism.
19.19
19.20
Good Faith: the Position in Canada.
19.21
19.22
19.23
19.24
19.25
19.26
Evaluation: Good Faith
The Ambiguity of ‘Good Faith’.
19.27
Good Faith as a Source of a General Implied Obligation to Perform: Traditional Absence of a General Obligation to Perform in Good Faith.
19.28
19.29
19.30
19.31
Good Faith as a Doctrinal Common Thread: Latent Principle of Good Faith as an Overarching Feature, Characteristic, or Criterion.
19.32
19.33
19.34
Are We Speaking of ‘Good Faith’ as the Source of an Implied Obligation or as a Doctrinal Common Thread?
19.35
19.36
19.37
19.38
20 Interpretation of Written Contracts
Preliminary Material
Summary
Modern Influences.
20.01
Eleven Fundamental Propositions.
20.02
20.03
20.04
20.05
20.06
20.07
20.08
20.09
20.10
20.11
20.12
20.13
Interpretation: Judicial Encapsulation.
20.14
20.15
20.16
20.17
20.18
20.19
Whole Contract to be Considered
Established Feature of Construction.
20.20
Case Law Examples.
20.21
20.22
20.23
‘Precedence Clauses’.
20.24
Bar on Evidence of (1) Subjective Intent, or (2) Negotiations, or (3) Subsequent Conduct
20.25
The First Bar: Bar on Evidence of Subjective Intent.
20.26
The Second Bar: Bar on Evidence of Negotiations.
20.27
20.28
20.29
Negotiation Evidence Bar and Implied Terms of Fact.
20.30
Contexts Where Negotiation Evidence Bar Does Not Apply.
20.31
Negotiations Relevant to a Different Contract.
20.32
No Bar to Considering Previous Contracts.
20.33
Arguments Supporting the Bar on Negotiation Evidence.
20.34
(1) Certainty and Economy.
20.35
(2) Fluctuations of Negotiation.
20.36
(3) Subjective Material.
20.37
(4) Third Parties.
20.38
(5) Manufactured Material.
20.39
(6) Party Agreement to Exclude.
20.40
20.41
Deleted Words.
20.42
20.43
Rectification.
20.44
The Third Bar: Bar on Evidence of Post-formation Conduct.
20.45
20.46
20.47
Factual Matrix Evidence (Background to the Transaction Other than Negotiations)
Lord Wilberforce’s Seminal Discussion.
20.48
20.49
20.50
20.51
Prenn v Simonds (1971): in Detail.
20.52
20.53
20.54
Reardon Smith Line Ltd v Hansen-Tangen (‘The Diana Prosperity’) (1976).
20.55
Transparency of the Background.
20.56
Objective Facts and Not Subjective Material or Evidence of Various Negotiation Phases.
20.57
20.58
Commercial Common Sense
Leading Case.
20.59
20.60
20.61
20.62
20.63
Other Cases.
20.64
20.65
20.66
No Escape from A Bad Bargain: Arnold v Britton (2015)
Leading Modern Decision.
20.67
20.68
20.69
20.70
20.71
20.72
20.73
Wording Probably the Result of Tough Bargaining: Wood v Capita (2017)
20.74
20.75
20.76
20.77
20.78
20.79
20.80
20.81
20.82
‘Corrective Construction’
Nature and Criteria.
20.83
20.84
20.85
20.86
20.87
20.88
20.89
Examples of ‘Corrective Construction’: Example 1. Investors Compensation Scheme Ltd v West Bromwich Building Society (No 1) (1998).
20.90
20.91
20.92
Example 2. Chartbrook Ltd v Persimmon Homes Ltd (2009).
20.93
20.94
20.95
20.96
20.97
Example 3.
20.98
Example 4.
20.99
Example 5.
20.100
Example 6.
20.101
Example 7.
20.102
Example 8.
20.103
Example 9.
20.104
Example 10.
20.105
Example 11.
20.106
Examples 12 to 15.
20.107
Contexts Where ‘Corrective Construction’ is Unavailable.
20.108
(1) ‘Bespoke’ and Complicated Document: Not Clear that Text is Defective.
20.109
(2) Obvious Error but No Obvious Solution Shown.
20.110
(3) Suggested Obvious Solution is Contentious: It Exceeds what is Necessary to give Adequate Expression to the Contract.
20.111
(4) A Bad Bargain Has Arisen for One Party.
20.112
(5) Contract is Beyond Verbal Redemption.
20.113
(6) Public Registers.
20.114
Radically Different and Unimaginable Change of Events
20.115
20.116
20.117
20.118
20.119
20.120
20.121
20.122
20.123
21 Rectification
Outline
Nature.
21.01
Five Propositions.
21.02
(1) Common Mistake Rectification.
21.03
(2) Unilateral Mistake Rectification.
21.04
(3) Negotiation Evidence.
21.05
(4) Third Party Rights.
21.06
(5) Rectification Operates Retrospectively.
21.07
21.08
Rectification and Access to Evidence
Negotiation Evidence Admissible.
21.09
Entire Agreement Clauses Do Not Bar Such Evidence.
21.10
Common Mistake Rectification
Nature.
21.11
21.12
21.13
Four Bars to Rectification
21.14
Fourth Bar: Third Party Rights.
21.15
21.16
No Rectification Where Negotiation Formula Matches the Final Agreement.
21.17
21.18
21.19
21.20
21.21
21.22
21.23
Common Mistake Rectification: No Need for a Prior Enforceable Agreement.
21.24
21.25
21.26
21.27
Common Mistake Rectification: Was There a Last-Minute Change of the Draft Agreement?
21.28
21.29
21.30
21.31
21.32
Evaluation: Objectivity and Common Mistake Rectification.
21.33
21.34
Unilateral Mistake Rectification
Nature.
21.35
21.36
21.37
21.38
Turning a Blind Eye.
21.39
Juristic Basis.
21.40
Leading Case.
21.41
21.42
21.43
21.44
21.45
21.46
Evaluation: Scope of Unilateral Mistake Rectification.
21.47
McLauchlan’s Theory.
21.48
Estoppel: Representation by Conduct.
21.49
22 Exclusion Clauses and Consumer Protection
Exclusion Clauses and the Common Law
Outline.
22.01
22.02
22.03
22.04
22.05
22.06
22.07
22.08
22.09
22.10
22.11
22.12
22.13
22.14
22.15
22.16
Common Law Doctrines Concerning Exclusion Clauses.
22.17
Exclusion Clauses: No Doctrine of Fundamental Breach.
22.18
22.19
22.20
22.21
22.22
22.23
22.24
22.25
‘Deviation’ in Maritime Carriage: A Special Rule.
22.26
Judicial Interpretation of Exclusion Clauses.
22.27
22.28
22.29
Modern Decisions Exemplifying the New Approach to Exclusion Clauses.
22.30
Canada Steamships: The Old Judicial Approach to Exclusion Clauses and Negligence.
22.31
22.32
Judicial Interpretation of Indemnities.
22.33
Exceptions Clauses in Commercial Insurance Contracts.
22.34
22.35
22.36
‘Direct Loss or Damage’ and ‘Indirect or Consequential Loss or Damage’.
22.37
Evaluation: Exclusion Clauses: ‘Direct’ and ‘Indirect or Consequential’ Loss.
22.38
Statute and Exclusion Clauses
Outline.
22.39
(1) Death or Personal Injury Arising from Negligence.
22.40
(2) Consumer Implied Terms.
22.41
(3) Consumer Unfair Terms.
22.42
(4) Non-consumer Loss; Business Liability for Other Harm or Loss (Other than Death or Personal Injury).
22.43
(5) Written Standard Terms of Business.
22.44
(6) Seller or Supplier to Have Good Title.
22.45
Structure of the Unfair Contract Terms Act 1977.
22.46
22.47
22.48
22.49
22.50
Standard Written Terms of Business (Section 3, UCTA).
22.51
22.52
22.53
22.54
22.55
Exclusion Clause Reasonable (1): Goodlife Case (2018).
22.56
22.57
Exclusion Clause Reasonable (2): Watford Electronics Case (2001).
22.58
22.59
Exclusion Clause Unreasonable (1): George Mitchell Case (1983).
22.60
Exclusion Clause Unreasonable (2): St Albans Case (1996).
22.61
22.62
Exclusion Clause Unreasonable (3): Ampleforth Abbey Case (2012).
22.63
Unfair Terms under the Consumer Contracts Legislation
‘Consumer’ and ‘Trader’ Defined.
22.64
22.65
Basic Test of Unfairness.
22.66
22.67
22.68
Core and Unreviewable Matters.
22.69
22.70
‘Price’ Beyond Statutory Challenge.
22.71
22.72
22.73
22.74
Cancellation Fee Part of the ‘Price’ for Consumer Services.
22.75
22.76
Parking Charges and the Unfair Terms in Consumer Contracts Regulations 1999 (now the Consumer Rights Act 2015, Part 2): Draconian Overstay Parking Charge Survives Scrutiny.
22.77
22.78
Renewal of a Tenancy: Restriction Preventing Sub-Letting: Not Unfair under the Consumer Protection Regime.
22.79
‘Death Clause’ Not Unfair.
22.80
Part VII Discharge and Breach
Preliminary Material
23 Termination by Notice or Consent
Termination by Reasonable Notice of Contracts of Indefinite Duration
Implied Term: Contracts of Indefinite Duration.
23.01
Fixed Duration: No Implied Term.
23.02
23.03
No Expansion of the ‘Trust and Confidence’ Implied Term.
23.04
‘Perpetual’ Does Not Normally Mean Forever.
23.05
23.06
Special Employment Context.
23.07
Implied Consensual Termination
Concept Recognized.
23.08
23.09
23.10
23.11
Evaluation: Termination by Implied Mutual Abandonment.
23.12
23.13
23.14
24 Breach
Outline
24.01
(A) The Nature of Breach.
24.02
(B) The Forms of Breach.
24.03
(C): Options Available to the Innocent Party.
24.04
(D): The Process of Termination or Discharge for Breach.
24.05
(E) Consequences of Termination or Discharge for Breach.
24.06
Renunciation
Outline.
24.07
24.08
24.09
Implicit Renunciation.
24.10
Renunciation by Communication to a Third Party.
24.11
Evaluation: Renunciation by Communication to a Third Party.
24.12
Renunciation: Seminal Case 1: Freeth v Burr (1874).
24.13
24.14
Renunciation: Seminal Case 2: Mersey Steel and Iron Co Ltd v Naylor, Benzon & Co (1884).
24.15
24.16
No Renunciation: Possibility that Contracting Party’s Superior Might Restrict Enjoyment of Contractual Subject-matter.
24.17
Repudiation
Nature.
24.18
Terminology.
24.19
Seven Tests.
24.20
24.21
24.22
24.23
24.24
24.25
24.26
24.27
24.28
24.29
24.30
Anticipatory Breach
The Two Species.
24.31
Anticipatory Breach by Advance Renunciation
24.32
24.33
24.34
Anticipatory Breach by Self-Induced Impossibility.
24.35
24.36
24.37
24.38
24.39
24.40
24.41
24.42
24.43
24.44
24.45
24.46
24.47
Good Faith Default is prima facie a Breach
General Rule: Default Constitutes Breach.
24.48
24.49
Leading Case.
24.50
24.51
24.52
24.53
Outline of Qualifications upon the General Rule that Breach Occurs Despite the Defaulter’s Good Faith.
24.54
Qualification (1): Obvious Unwitting Default Which Should be Pointed Out.
24.55
24.56
24.57
Qualification (2): Arguable Unwitting Default Which Should be Queried.
24.58
24.59
24.60
Qualification (3): Point Raised in Good Faith and Referred to Adjudicator.
24.61
24.62
24.63
24.64
24.65
24.66
24.67
24.68
24.69
24.70
24.71
Evaluation: Good Faith Breach: Neutral Evaluation of a Disputed Issue.
24.72
24.73
No Breach: Conduct Justified but Wrong Reason Given.
24.74
24.75
24.76
24.77
24.78
24.79
24.80
24.81
24.82
Innocent Party Justified in Terminating: But is Innocent Party Entitled to Claim Loss of Bargain Damages Based on the Other’s Serious Breach?
24.83
24.84
24.85
24.86
Promissory Conditions
Types of Promissory Term.
24.87
24.88
Cancellation Right as Distinct from a Promissory Condition.
24.89
24.90
Identifying a Promissory Condition.
24.91
24.92
‘Condition’ in a Contract Normally Denotes a Technical Condition, Unless the Whole Contract Dictates Otherwise.
24.93
24.94
24.95
24.96
24.97
24.98
‘Condition’ Upheld in its Technical Sense: Schuler Case (1974) Distinguished.
24.99
Commercial Sale: Condition: Trivial Breach: Statutory Relief of Vendor so that Buyer Unable to Terminate.
24.100
24.101
24.102
24.103
24.104
24.105
24.106
24.107
‘Time of Essence’: Condition.
24.108
24.109
24.110
24.111
24.112
24.113
24.114
Buyer of Land Late in Completing: Equitable Relief Unavailable.
24.115
24.116
24.117
24.118
Owner’s Statement Concerning Chartered Ship’s Location: Condition.
24.119
Owner’s Statement Concerning Availability of Chartered Ship: Condition.
24.120
24.121
24.122
24.123
Condition and Shipment Date: Buyer’s Duty to Give Specified Notice of Date of Shipment.
24.124
Termination for Breach Clauses.
24.125
24.126
24.127
24.128
Evaluation: Termination for Breach Clauses: the Rice Case and Freedom of Contract.
24.129
24.130
24.131
24.132
24.133
‘The Antaios’ (1985): Precursor to the Rice Case (2000).
24.134
24.135
24.136
24.137
Later Decisions.
24.138
Range of Default.
24.139
Clarity of Drafting: Condition Found in a Sophisticated Commercial Document.
24.140
24.141
24.142
24.143
24.144
Singaporean Case Not Following the Rice Case.
24.145
Throwing Away the Right to Sue for Loss of Bargain: Termination Clause: No Reliance on Breach.
24.146
24.147
Intermediate Terms
Outline.
24.148
24.149
24.150
24.151
24.152
Indications that Term is ‘Intermediate’.
24.153
24.154
24.155
24.156
24.157
24.158
24.159
Intermediate Term: Charterer’s Payment Date.
24.160
24.161
24.162
24.163
24.164
24.165
24.166
24.167
24.168
Intermediate Term: Express Term in Commercial Sales of Goods.
24.169
24.170
24.171
24.172
24.173
Seriousness of Breach Must be Assessed at Time of Termination.
24.174
24.175
24.176
24.177
24.178
Intermediate Term: Severity Test.
24.179
24.180
24.181
24.182
Intermediate Term: ‘Once Intermediate, Always Intermediate’.
24.183
24.184
24.185
24.186
24.187
24.188
24.189
Innocent Party’s Election whether to Terminate or Affirm the Contract
Proposition.
24.190
‘Discharge’ or ‘Termination’: Terminology.
24.191
Geys Case Confirming ‘Elective’ Analysis.
24.192
24.193
24.194
24.195
Exception to Election: Automatic Discharge if Breach Has Rendered Performance Pointless.
24.196
24.197
24.198
24.199
24.200
24.201
24.202
24.203
Innocent Party Entitled to a Brief Pause to Decide whether to Terminate.
24.204
24.205
Communication of Election
Election is Final Once Communicated.
24.206
24.207
24.208
Manner of Communication: (1) Expressly or (2) by Conduct, or (3) Inferred from Inaction.
24.209
24.210
Decision to Treat Contract as Discharged for Breach: ‘Acceptance’ of the Repudiation, etc.
24.211
24.212
24.213
24.214
24.215
Decision to Affirm the Contract.
24.216
24.217
Communication of Decision to Terminate for Breach Based Both on the Common Law and on an Express Termination Right.
24.218
Communication of Decision to Terminate But Based on an Erroneous Assumption that the Matter is Governed by an Express Termination Clause.
24.219
Situations Where Right to Terminate Survives
Failed Attempt to Induce Compliance: Termination Right Intact.
24.220
24.221
24.222
24.223
24.224
24.225
24.226
Specific Performance Not Achieved: Termination Right Intact.
24.227
24.228
24.229
24.230
24.231
24.232
24.233
24.234
24.235
24.236
No Right to Sue for the Debt until the Property is Transferred.
24.237
New Termination Right Arising from a Fresh Cause of Action.
24.238
Consequences of Election to Affirm
Contract Operates ‘Seamlessly’ and is thus Uninterrupted for Both Parties.
24.239
24.240
Leading Case in Detail.
24.241
24.242
24.243
24.244
24.245
24.246
Ready, Willing, and Able.
24.247
24.248
Estoppel Point.
24.249
Other Judicial Discussion of ‘The Simona’ Case.
24.250
Australian Authority.
24.251
24.252
Consequences of Termination or Discharge for Breach
24.253
24.254
24.255
Restrictive Covenants after Discharge of Employment Contracts.
24.256
Confidentiality Clauses after Discharge of Employment Contracts.
24.257
25 Incomplete Performance
Entire Obligation Rule
Outline.
25.01
No Duty to Pay: Builder Running Out of Funds and Not Finishing Construction Work.
25.02
25.03
25.04
25.05
No Duty to Pay: Work Done but Seriously Defective.
25.06
25.07
Duty to Pay, Subject to Abatement: Work Done but with Minor Defects.
25.08
25.09
25.10
25.11
No Opportunity for a ‘Rerun’: Burden of Proof.
25.12
Professional Services: Insufficient Qualifications.
25.13
Neutral Determination: Contract for a Positive Result.
25.14
25.15
Evaluation: the Entire Obligation Doctrine.
25.16
25.17
25.18
26 Force Majeure and Frustration
Force Majeure Clauses
Nature.
26.01
26.02
26.03
No Protection Where Party at Fault.
26.04
26.05
‘Beyond Reasonable Control’.
26.06
Short Supply: Supplier Exonerated.
26.07
Only One Party Covered in Relevant Event; Severe Financial Downturn Not Force Majeure.
26.08
26.09
26.10
Economic Interest of a Party Insufficient.
26.11
Reasonable Endeavours to Remedy Situation.
26.12
Force Majeure Clauses and Notification Requirements.
26.13
Force Majeure Clauses and Exceptions Clauses.
26.14
26.15
26.16
26.17
26.18
26.19
Force Majeure: Express Exception.
26.20
Frustration: General Features
Outline.
26.21
26.22
26.23
26.24
26.25
26.26
26.27
26.28
26.29
26.30
26.31
26.32
Frustration: Genesis.
26.33
26.34
26.35
26.36
26.37
26.38
26.39
26.40
26.41
26.42
26.43
The ‘Multifactorial’ Test.
26.44
26.45
26.46
26.47
26.48
26.49
26.50
26.51
26.52
26.53
26.54
26.55
Supervening Illegality
26.56
26.57
26.58
26.59
Supervening Personal or Physical Impossibility
Outline.
26.60
Death.
26.61
26.62
‘Death Clause’ Operating to Exclude Doctrine of Frustration.
26.63
Severe Illness.
26.64
Mental Incapacity.
26.65
Litigation Funding Arrangement Not Frustrated by Client’s Incapacity.
26.66
War-time Imprisonment by Enemy.
26.67
Peace-time Imprisonment.
26.68
26.69
Supervening Physical Impossibility: Vital Premises Destroyed.
26.70
Foreign Nation’s Social Breakdown Insufficient to Constitute Frustration of Music Tour.
26.71
Physical Impossibility Without Destruction.
26.72
26.73
Severe Delay
Test Encapsulated.
26.74
Case Law Examination.
26.75
Performance is Now Completely Pointless
Exceptional Basis of Frustration.
26.76
26.77
Room for View of Royal Procession: Frustration When Coronation Postponed.
26.78
26.79
Other Cases: No Frustration Found.
26.80
26.81
Commercial Hire Not Frustrated by King’s Absence at Review of the Fleet.
26.82
26.83
26.84
Overlapping Appellate Hearings.
26.85
Hypothetical Case (1).
26.86
Hypothetical Case (2).
26.87
Self-Induced Frustration: Breach or Choice Precludes Frustration
Two Segments of Self-inducement.
26.88
Self-inducement: Segment (1): Absence of Default.
26.89
26.90
26.91
26.92
Other Instances of Default Constituting Self-induced Frustration.
26.93
26.94
26.95
26.96
Self-inducement: Segment (2): Choice Precludes Frustration.
26.97
26.98
26.99
26.100
26.101
26.102
26.103
26.104
26.105
26.106
The Impact and Aftermath of Frustration
Frustration’s Impact on the Contract: the Position at Common Law.
26.107
26.108
26.109
26.110
Recovery or Cancellation of Payment (section 1(2)).
26.111
26.112
Operation of the Provision.
26.113
26.114
Solitary Reported Case.
26.115
26.116
26.117
26.118
No Fixed Rules: No Rules of Thumb.
26.119
Allowance for Goods or Services Supplied (section 1(3) of the 1943 Act).
26.120
26.121
Solitary Reported Case: ‘End Product’ Analysis.
26.122
26.123
26.124
26.125
26.126
26.127
26.128
End-Product Not Mentioned in Statute.
26.129
26.130
Part VIII Remedies For Default
Preliminary Material
27 Debt and Other Agreed Sums
Debt Claims
Outline.
27.01
27.02
27.03
A Fixed Sum or a Sum Calculable by Reference to a Formula or Agreed Machinery.
27.04
27.05
Has the Debt Accrued?
27.06
27.07
Exceptionally Debt Might Subsist as an Independent Obligation.
27.08
Has the Payment Obligation been Frustrated?
27.09
Is Satisfaction of the Debt Illegal under Foreign Law?
27.10
Debt Claims: Identifying Creditors.
27.11
27.12
27.13
27.14
27.15
27.16
Debt and the Doctrine of Merger.
27.17
Debt: Payment Obligation or Some Other Consideration?
27.18
Interest and Damages for Late Payment
Outline.
27.19
Simple Interest on Court Judgment.
27.20
Simple Interest: Payment Before Court Judgment.
27.21
Compound Interest for Equitable Wrongs or Fraud.
27.22
Common Law Damages for Late Payment.
27.23
27.24
27.25
Award of Compound Interest as Damages.
27.26
Arbitration Statute: Simple or Compound Interest.
27.27
Agreed Interest.
27.28
Construction Issues.
27.29
Agreed Interest Remaining Payable After Judgment.
27.30
Penalty Doctrine and Excessive Levels of Interest.
27.31
27.32
27.33
27.34
Commercial Debts Statute.
27.35
Debt Claim Where Other Party’s Cancellation Not Accepted
Cancellation Not Accepted: Debt Claim Validly Generated.
27.36
27.37
Leading Case in Detail.
27.38
27.39
27.40
27.41
Dissents.
27.42
‘Cooperation’ Qualification.
27.43
27.44
27.45
27.46
27.47
27.48
27.49
Innocent Party’s ‘Legitimate Interest’
Nature of the Restriction.
27.50
Later Judicial Encapsulations.
27.51
27.52
Summary of Subsequent Case Law.
27.53
Successful Debt Claims (`Legitimate Interest’).
27.54
27.55
27.56
27.57
27.58
27.59
27.60
27.61
Three Unsuccessful Debt Claims (No ‘Legitimate Interest’).
27.62
(1) Eight Month Inactivity Within a Twenty-Four-Month Time-Charterparty.
27.63
27.64
27.65
Evaluation: White & Carter and the ‘Legitimate Interest’ Doctrine.
27.66
27.67
27.68
Liquidated Damages and the Penalty Rule
Two Propositions.
27.69
27.70
Main Test.
27.71
27.72
27.73
27.74
27.75
27.76
27.77
27.78
English Penalty Doctrine is Breach-related Doctrine.
27.79
27.80
27.81
Range of the Penalty Doctrine.
27.82
Consequence of Finding a Penalty.
27.83
Cavendish Facts.
27.84
Clause 5.1: Price Reduction.
27.85
Clause 5.6: Transfer of Vendor’s Remaining Shares at a Low Value.
27.86
27.87
Post-Cavendish Case Law.
27.88
27.89
27.90
27.91
27.92
Further Aspects of Liquidated Damages Clauses
Valid Liquidated Damages Clause Acts as a Cap.
27.93
Invalid Liquidated Damages Clause Not a Cap.
27.94
27.95
27.96
27.97
Liquidated Damages and Failure of the Party in Default to Complete Performance.
27.98
27.99
27.100
27.101
27.102
27.103
27.104
Liquidated Damages and ‘Concurrent Delay’ in Building Contract.
27.105
27.106
27.107
Liquidated Damages Arising Under More Than One Head.
27.108
Deposits: Nature and Controls
Nature.
27.109
Penalty Doctrine Applicable.
27.110
Common Law Tariff of 10 Per Cent in Land Transactions.
27.111
27.112
27.113
Forfeiture upon Default.
27.114
27.115
27.116
Depositor’s Lawyer Not Liable.
27.117
Pre-payment or Deposit?
27.118
Additional Compensation.
27.119
27.120
Accrued Duty to Pay Deposit.
27.121
Repudiatory Failure to Pay Deposit.
27.122
Deposit in Anticipation of Transaction.
27.123
27.124
Statutory Relief Against Forfeiture.
27.125
Leading Case.
27.126
27.127
Exceptional Ground(s) for Relief.
27.128
28 Damages
General Features
Compensatory Damages: Outline.
28.01
28.02
28.03
28.04
(1) No Punitive Damages.
28.05
(2) Nominal Damages.
28.06
(3) Expectation Interest: Loss of Bargain.
28.07
(4) Reliance Loss.
28.08
(5) Four Restrictions.
28.09
(6) ‘Cost of Cure’ or ‘Reinstatement Damages’.
28.10
(7) Injured Feelings, Vexation, etc.
28.11
(8) ‘Negotiating Damages’.
28.12
(9) Loss of Chance.
28.13
(10) Causation.
28.14
(11) Remoteness and Scope of Duty (or ‘Assumption of Responsibility’) Analysis.
28.15
(12) Mitigation.
28.16
(13) Contributory Negligence.
28.17
(14) Post-breach Events.
28.18
(15) Party’s Least Onerous Mode of Performance.
28.19
(16) Discretionary Mode of Performance.
28.20
(17) One-off Award.
28.21
(18) Impecuniosity.
28.22
(19) Litigation Expenses.
28.23
(20) Liquidated Damages.
28.24
(21) Interest and Damages.
28.25
Has Substantial Loss Been Proved?
28.26
28.27
28.28
28.29
28.30
28.31
(1) Collateral Benefit Doctrine Inapplicable.
28.32
(2) Not an Act of Mitigation.
28.33
(3) Doctrine of Transferred Loss.
28.34
(4) Equitable Subrogation.
28.35
No Punitive Damages.
28.36
28.37
‘Expectation Interest’ or ‘Loss of Bargain’ Damages
Nature.
28.38
Seminal Case.
28.39
28.40
28.41
Share Purchase Warranty.
28.42
28.43
Warranty and Tort Measure Compared.
28.44
‘Reliance Loss’ Damages
Nature.
28.45
Leading Illustration.
28.46
Claimant is Shown to Have Entered into a Loss-Making Contract: Reliance Loss Unavailable if Alleged Loss is in fact Illusory.
28.47
Leading Case on the Loss-Making Exception.
28.48
28.49
28.50
Burden of Proof.
28.51
Evidential Complications when Applying the Loss-Making Exception.
28.52
28.53
28.54
28.55
28.56
28.57
28.58
28.59
28.60
No Claim Where Loss Successfully Mitigated.
28.61
Other Claims for Economic Loss, for example, Wasted Management Time.
28.62
‘Cost of Cure’ or ‘Reinstatement’ Damages
Nature.
28.63
28.64
28.65
28.66
28.67
28.68
No Cost of Cure Award if Excessive.
28.69
28.70
Successful Claims.
28.71
28.72
Cure Cheaper Form of Relief.
28.73
Work Already Done.
28.74
Will the Award Involve Over-Compensation?
28.75
28.76
28.77
28.78
Defective Surveying Cases: Cost of Cure Inappropriate.
28.79
Evaluation: ‘Cost of Cure’ or ‘Reinstatement’ Damages.
28.80
28.81
28.82
Compensation for Injured Feelings or Psychological Distress
Outline.
28.83
Addis v Gramophone Co: The General Bar.
28.84
Exceptions and Qualifications.
28.85
(1) A Main Purpose is Avoidance of Aggravation or Conferment of Pleasure.
28.86
28.87
28.88
Other Successful Claims.
28.89
28.90
(2) ‘Consumer Surplus’ Damages.
28.91
28.92
(3) Physical Discomfort.
28.93
(4) Psychiatric Illness.
28.94
(5) Employment Protection.
28.95
28.96
28.97
‘Loss of Chance’ Damages
Proposition.
28.98
Leading Case.
28.99
Loss of Chance Claim: Findings of Primary Fact at First Instance.
28.100
Other Cases.
28.101
28.102
Finite Stream of Future Business.
28.103
Valuation of Shares: Not a Loss of Chance Issue.
28.104
‘Negotiating Damages’
Nature.
28.105
28.106
Result in the Leading Case.
28.107
28.108
28.109
Judicial Discussion.
28.110
28.111
Lord Sumption’s Minority Analysis Was Criticized by Lord Carnwath.
28.112
28.113
Negotiating Damages Denied.
28.114
Evaluation: Scope of ‘Negotiating Damages’.
28.115
28.116
28.117
28.118
28.119
28.120
28.121
The Experience Hendrix Case: ‘Negotiating Damages’ for Breach of a Settlement Regarding Copyright.
28.122
28.123
28.124
Post-Breach Events
Proposition.
28.125
Leading Case.
28.126
28.127
28.128
28.129
28.130
28.131
Sale of Goods: Breach: Market Value Evaluation.
28.132
28.133
28.134
Majority in ‘The Golden Victory’ Affirmed.
28.135
28.136
28.137
28.138
Causation
Negligent Audit: Continuing Trading Losses: Insufficient Causal Connection.
28.139
28.140
28.141
28.142
Losses Consequent on Defective Sprinkler System: Sufficient Causal Connection.
28.143
28.144
28.145
28.146
28.147
28.148
Causation Satisfied: Case (1).
28.149
Causation Satisfied: Case (2).
28.150
Causation Absent.
28.151
Remoteness Outline
28.152
Hadley v Baxendale (1854): Genesis of the Remoteness Rule in Contract Law.
28.153
28.154
28.155
28.156
28.157
28.158
Serious Possibility Contemplated at Time of Formation
28.159
28.160
28.161
Transfield Case: Remoteness and Scope of Duty Reasoning
28.162
28.163
28.164
28.165
28.166
28.167
28.168
28.169
28.170
28.171
28.172
28.173
Commercial Soundness of the Result in the Transfield Case.
28.174
The Transfield Case: Scope of Duty (or ‘Assumption of Responsibility’) Analysis.
28.175
28.176
28.177
Evaluation: the Transfield Case and Scope of Duty Analysis.
28.178
28.179
28.180
28.181
28.182
28.183
28.184
28.185
28.186
Extent of Harm Need Not be Contemplated
Devastating Spread of Fatal Infection at the Pig Farm.
28.187
28.188
28.189
28.190
28.191
28.192
Huge Third Party Liability Losses Not Too Remote
Ultimate Risk-Holder’s Huge Losses from Over-exposure to Insurance Risks.
28.193
28.194
28.195
28.196
28.197
Special Rule for Exceptionally Lucrative Profits
Leading Case.
28.198
28.199
28.200
28.201
Judicial Approval of Exceptionally Lucrative Profit Restriction.
28.202
28.203
28.204
Professional Negligence: Contractual Remoteness Test Applicable
Central Proposition.
28.205
Leading Case in Detail.
28.206
28.207
28.208
28.209
28.210
28.211
28.212
Major Points.
28.213
(1) Economic Loss Claim Where Defendant Liable Both in Tort and Contract: Contractual Remoteness Test Applicable.
28.214
(2) Contractual Remoteness Test Satisfied.
28.215
(3) Loss of a Chance.
28.216
(4) Claim for Diversion of Management Time.
28.217
Scope of Duty Analysis of Professional Liability
Leading Case: Restricted Ambit of Lawyer’s Responsibility.
28.218
28.219
28.220
28.221
Judicial Summary of the Information or Advice Dichotomy.
28.222
28.223
28.224
Lawyer Not Responsible for Borrower’s Credit Risk.
28.225
Bank’s Failure to Act on Instruction to Ring-fence Investment Fund.
28.226
Evaluation: Unduly Restricting a Defendant’s Scope of Duty.
28.227
28.228
28.229
28.230
Mitigation of Loss
Mitigation: Three Strands
Three Propositions.
28.231
(1) Avoidability.
28.232
(2) Extra Expense Incurred Attempting to Mitigate.
28.233
(3) Loss Actually Avoided.
28.234
28.235
Evaluation: Mitigation: the Three Rules.
28.236
Damages not Debt.
28.237
Guilty Party Bears Burden of Proof.
28.238
Onus on Innocent Party to Try to Avoid or Eliminate Loss: ‘Rule One’
28.239
28.240
28.241
28.242
28.243
28.244
28.245
28.246
Mitigation Principle Over-extended?
28.247
Extra Expense Incurred by Innocent Party in Attempted Mitigation: ‘Rule Two’
Proposition.
28.248
Cases.
28.249
28.250
28.251
28.252
Loss Actually Avoided Has to be Brought into the Reckoning: ‘Rule Three’
Issue.
28.253
Was the Reduction or Elimination of Loss Attributable to the Innocent Party’s Personal Conduct?
28.254
Collateral Benefits Not Relevant.
28.255
Factors Relevant When Deciding Whether ‘Rule Three’ of the Mitigation Should Apply.
28.256
28.257
Leading Case.
28.258
28.259
28.260
28.261
Charterer’s Renunciation: Fit-out Costs Recouped.
28.262
Charterer’s Renunciation: Advantageous Sale of Vessel Not Taken into Account.
28.263
28.264
28.265
28.266
Cost of Cure Can Constitute Mitigation.
28.267
Contributory Negligence (Only on Special Occasions)
Proposition.
28.268
28.269
Leading Case.
28.270
28.271
Other Points.
28.272
Evaluation (1): Contributory Negligence: Concurrent Duties of Care in Contract and in Tort.
28.273
28.274
28.275
Evaluation (2): Duty of Care Arising Only under Contract.
28.276
Evaluation (3): Strict Contractual Obligation.
28.277
28.278
28.279
Four Further Restrictions Upon Damages Awards
(1) One-off Award.
28.280
(2) Impecuniosity.
28.281
(3) Litigation Expenses as Damages.
28.282
28.283
(4) Guilty Party’s Least Onerous Mode of Performance.
28.284
28.285
Fourfold Categorization.
28.286
28.287
29 Specific Performance and Other Equitable Remedies
Specific Performance: General Features
Nature.
29.01
The Promisee Has Supplied Consideration.
29.02
Common Law Remedies Inadequate.
29.03
Factors.
29.04
Specific Performance and Chattels.
29.05
29.06
29.07
29.08
29.09
29.10
29.11
Specific Performance: Expansion Resisted in the Co-operative Insurance Case (1998)
No Specific Performance to Run a Business.
29.12
29.13
29.14
29.15
29.16
29.17
29.18
29.19
29.20
29.21
29.22
Specific Performance is a Residual Remedy.
29.23
29.24
29.25
29.26
29.27
No Specific Performance to Compel Tenant to Run Hotel Business in Precise Compliance with Specified ‘Operating Standards: Adequacy of Damages, etc.
29.28
Specific Performance to Require Expensive Repair of Unsatisfactory Exterior of Skyscraper.
29.29
Injunctions: General Features
29.30
29.31
29.32
29.33
29.34
29.35
‘Undoing’ Injunction.
29.36
29.37
Relevance of Exclusion or Limitation or Liquidated Damages Clauses.
29.38
‘Quia Timet’ Injunction to Forestall Anticipated Breach of Contract.
29.39
Other Factors Relevant to the Discretion Whether to Grant an Injunction.
29.40
Injunctions: No Indirect Compulsion of Contracts Involving Personal Services or Trust and Confidence
Proposition.
29.41
Qualification: Defendant a Company.
29.42
Leading Case.
29.43
29.44
29.45
29.46
29.47
29.48
29.49
29.50
29.51
Judicial Survey of the Warren v Mendy Line of Cases.
29.52
29.53
Indirect Compulsion of Companies is Not Objectionable.
29.54
29.55
Contempt of Court Sanctions for Non-Compliance with Specific Performance or Injunctions
Governing Principles.
29.56
29.57
29.58
29.59
29.60
Contempt of Court: Procedural Aspects.
29.61
29.62
Sequestration.
29.63
29.64
Imprisonment or Fines.
29.65
29.66
Account of Profits Consequent on Breach of Contract
Proposition.
29.67
Unfruitful Reception.
29.68
29.69
Leading Case in Detail.
29.70
29.71
29.72
29.73
29.74
Declarations
29.75
29.76
29.77
29.78
29.79
29.80
29.81
29.82
‘Stays’ Upon Legal Proceedings
29.83
29.84
29.85
Further Material
Bibliography
Index
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Part VI Terms and Interpretation, 18 Implied Terms
From:
Contract Law in Practice
Neil Andrews
Content type:
Book content
Product:
International Commercial Law [ICML]
Published in print:
27 May 2021
ISBN:
9780192897947
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