ENGLISH CONTRACT LAW.
INTRODUCTION:
English contract law is a body of law regulating contracts in England and Wales. With its roots in the lex mercatoria and the activism of the judiciary during the industrial revolution, it shares a heritage with countries across the Commonwealth (such as Australia, Canada and India[1]), and the United States. It is also experiencing gradual change because of the UK's membership of the European Union and international organisations like Unidroit. Any agreement that is enforceable in court is a contract. Because a contract is a voluntary obligation, in contrast to paying compensation for a tort and restitution to reverse unjust enrichment,
English law places a high value on ensuring people have truly consented
to the deals that bind them in court. Generally a contract forms when
one person makes an offer, and another person accepts it by
communicating their assent or performing the offer's terms. If the terms
are certain, and the parties can be presumed from their behaviour to
have intended that the terms are binding, generally the agreement is
enforceable. Some contracts, particularly for large transactions such as
a sale of land, also require the formalities of signatures and
witnesses and English law goes further than other European countries by requiring all parties bring something of value, known as "consideration", to a bargain as a precondition to enforce it. Contracts can be made personally or through an agent
acting on behalf of a principal, if the agent acts within what a
reasonable person would think they have the authority to do. In
principle, English law grants people broad freedom to agree the content
of a deal. Terms in an agreement are incorporated through express
promises, by reference to other terms or potentially through a course of
dealing between two parties. Those terms are interpreted by the courts
to seek out the true intention of the parties, from the perspective of
an objective observer, in the context of their bargaining environment.
Where there is a gap, courts typically imply terms to fill the spaces,
but also through the 20th century both the judiciary and legislature
have intervened more and more to strike out surprising and unfair terms,
particularly in favour of consumers, employees or tenants with weaker bargaining power.Contract law works best when an agreement is performed, and recourse to the courts is never needed because each party knows her rights and duties. However, where an unforeseen event renders an agreement very hard, or even impossible to perform, the courts typically will construe the parties to want to have released themselves from their obligations. It may also be that one party simply breaches a contract's terms. If a contract is not substantially performed, then the innocent party is entitled to cease her own performance and sue for damages to put her in the position as if the contract were performed. She is under a duty to mitigate her losses and cannot claim for harm that was a remote consequence of the contractual breach, but remedies in English law are footed on the principle that full compensation for all losses, pecuniary or not, should be made good. In exceptional circumstances, the law goes further to require a wrongdoer to make restitution for their gains from breaching a contract, and may demand specific performance of the agreement rather than monetary compensation. It is also possible that a contract becomes voidable, because, depending on the specific type of contract, one party failed to make adequate disclosure or they made misrepresentations during negotiations. Unconscionable agreements can be escaped where a person was under duress or undue influence or their vulnerability was being exploited when they ostensibly agreed to a deal. Children, mentally incapacitated people and companies, whose representatives are acting wholly outside their authority, are protected against having agreements enforced against them where they lacked the real capacity to make a decision to enter an agreement. Some transactions are considered illegal, and are not enforced by courts because of a statute or on grounds of public policy. In theory, English law attempts to adhere to a principle that people should only be bound when they have given their informed and true consent to a contract.
Contents
History
Main articles: History of English contract law and History of contract law
The modern law of contract is primarily a creature of the industrial revolution
and the social legislation of the 20th century. However, the
foundations of all European contract law are traceable to obligations in
Ancient Athenian and Roman law,[2] while the formal development of English law began after the Norman Conquest of 1066. William the Conqueror created a common law across England, but throughout the middle ages
the court system was minimal. Access to the courts, in what are now
considered contractual disputes, was consciously restricted to a
privileged few through onerous requirements of pleading, formalities and court fees. In the local and manorial courts, according to English law's first treatise by Ranulf de Glanville in 1188, if people disputed the payment of a debt they, and witnesses, would attend court and swear oaths (called a wager of law).[3] They risked perjury
if they lost the case, and so this was strong encouragement to resolve
disputes elsewhere. The royal courts, fixed to meet in London by the Magna Carta 1215, accepted claims for "trespass on the case" (more like a tort
today) was alleged. A jury would be called, and no wager of law was
needed, but some breach of the King's peace had to be alleged.
Gradually, the courts allowed claims where there had been no real
trouble, no tort with "force of arms" (vi et armis), but it was still necessary to put this in the pleading. For instance, in 1317 one Simon de Rattlesdene alleged he was sold a tun of wine
that was contaminated with salt water and, quite fictitiously, this was
said to be done "with force and arms, namely with swords and bows and
arrows".[4] The Court of Chancery and the King's Bench
slowly started to allow claims without the fictitious allegation of
force and arms from around 1350. An action for simple breach of a covenant (a solemn promise) had required production of formal proof of the agreement with a seal. However, in The Humber Ferryman’s case
a claim was allowed, without any documentary evidence, against a
ferryman who dropped a horse overboard that he was contracted to carry
across the River Humber.[5]
Despite this liberalisation, in the 1200s a threshold of 40 shillings
for a dispute's value had been created. Though its importance tapered
away with inflation over the years, it foreclosed court access to most
people.[6] Moreover, freedom to contract was firmly suppressed among the peasantry. After the Black Death, the Statute of Labourers 1351 prevented any increase in workers' wages fuelling, among other things, the Peasants' Revolt of 1381.Increasingly, the English law on contractual bargains was affected by its trading relations with northern Europe, particularly since the Magna Carta 1215 had guaranteed merchants "safe and secure" exit and entry to England "for buying and selling by the ancient rights and customs, quit from all evil tolls".[7] In 1266 King Henry III had granted the Hanseatic League a charter to trade in England. The "Easterlings" who came by boats brought goods and money that the English called "Sterling",[8] and standard rules for commerce that formed a lex mercatoria, the laws of the merchants. Merchant custom was most influential in the coastal trading ports like London, Boston, Hull and King's Lynn. And with the courts' hostility to restraints on trade, a doctrine of consideration was forming, so that to enforce any obligation something of value needed to be conveyed.[9] Some courts remained sceptical that damages might be awarded purely for a broken agreement (that was not a sealed covenant).[10] Other disputes allowed a remedy. In Shepton v Dogge[11] a defendant had agreed in London, where the City courts' custom was to allow claims without covenants under seal, to sell 28 acres of land in Hoxton. Although the house itself was outside London at the time, in Middlesex, a remedy was awarded for deceit, but essentially based on a failure to convey the land. The resolution of these restrictions came shortly after 1585, when a new Court of Exchequer Chamber was established to hear common law appeals. In 1602, in Slade v Morley,[12] a grain merchant named Slade claimed that Morley had agreed to buy wheat and rye for £16, but then had backed out. Actions for debt were in the jurisdiction of the Court of Common Pleas, which had required both (1) proof of a debt, and (2) a subsequent promise to repay the debt, so that a finding of deceit (for non-payment) could be made against a defendant.[13] But if a claimant wanted to simply demand payment of the contractual debt (rather than a subsequent promise to pay) he could have to risk a wager of law. The judges of the Court of the King's Bench was prepared to allow "assumpsit" actions (for obligations being assumed) simply from proof of the original agreement.[14] With a majority in the Exchquer Chamber, after six years Lord Popham CJ held that "every contract importeth in itself an Assumpsit".[15] Around the same time the Common Pleas indicated a different limit for contract enforcement in Bret v JS,[16] that "natural affection of itself is not a sufficient consideration to ground an assumpsit" and there had to be some "express quid pro quo".[17] Now that wager of law, and sealed covenants were essentially unnecessary, the Statute of Frauds 1677 codified the contract types that were thought should still require some form. Over the late 17th and 18th centuries Sir John Holt,[18] and then Lord Mansfield actively incorporated the principles of international trade law and custom into English common law as they saw it: principles of commercial certainty, good faith,[19] fair dealing, and the enforceability of seriously intended promises.[20] As Lord Mansfield held, "Mercantile law is not the law of a particular country but the law of all nations",[21] and "the law of merchants and the law of the land is the same".[20]
‘governments do not limit their concern with contracts to a simple
enforcement. They take upon themselves to determine what contracts are
fit to be enforced.... once it is admitted that there are any
engagements which for reasons of expediency the law ought not to
enforce, the same question is necessarily opened with respect to all
engagements. Whether, for example, the law should enforce a contract to
labour, when the wages are too low or the hours of work too severe:
whether it should enforce a contract by which a person binds himself to
remain, for more than a very limited period, in the service of a given
individual.... Every question which can possibly arise as to the policy
of contracts, and of the relations which they establish among human
beings, is a question for the legislator; and one which he cannot escape
from considering, and in some way or other deciding.’
Over the 20th century, legislation and changes in court attitudes effected a wide-ranging reform of 19th century contract law.[32] First, specific types of non-commercial contract were given special protection where "freedom of contract" appeared far more on the side of large businesses.[33] Consumer contracts came to be regarded as "contracts of adhesion" where there was no real negotiation and most people were given "take it or leave it" terms.[34] The courts began by requiring entirely clear information before onerous clauses could be enforced,[35] the Misrepresentation Act 1967 switched the burden of proof onto business to show misleading statements were not negligent, and the Unfair Contract Terms Act 1977 created the jurisdiction to scrap contract terms that were "unreasonable", considering the bargaining power of the parties. Collective bargaining by trade unions and a growing number of employment rights carried the employment contract into an autonomous field of labour law where workers had rights, like a minimum wage,[36] fairness in dismissal,[37] the right to join a union and take collective action,[38] and these could not be given up in a contract with an employer. Private housing was subject to basic terms, such as the right to repairs, and restrictions on unfair rent increases, though many protections were abolished during the 1980s.[39] Nevertheless, the scope of the general law of contract had been reduced. It meant that most contracts made by people on an ordinary day were shielded from the power of corporations to impose whatever terms they chose in selling goods and services, at work, and in people's home. Nevertheless, classical contract law remained at the foundation of those specific contracts, unless particular rights were given by the courts or Parliament. Internationally, the UK had joined the European Union, which aimed to harmonise significant parts of consumer and employment law across member states. Moreover, with increasing openness of markets commercial contract law was receiving principles from abroad. Both the Principles of European Contract Law, the UNIDROIT Principles of International Commercial Contracts, and the practice of international commercial arbitration was reshaping thinking about English contract principles in an increasingly globalised economy.
Formation
In its essence a contract is an agreement which the law recognises as giving rise to enforceable obligations.[40] As opposed to tort and unjust enrichment, contract is typically viewed as the part of the law of obligations which deals with voluntary undertakings, and accordingly gives a high priority to ensuring that only bargains to which people have given their true consent will be enforced by the courts. While it is not always clear when people have truly agreed in a subjective sense, English law takes the view that when one person objectively manifests their consent to a bargain, they will be bound.[41] However, not all agreements, even if they are relatively certain in subject matter, are considered enforceable. There is a rebuttable presumption that people do not wish to later have legal enforcement of agreements made socially or domestically. The general rule is that contracts require no prescribed form, such as being in writing, except where statute requires it, usually for large deals like the sale of land.[42] In addition and in contrast to civil law systems, English common law carried a general requirement that all parties, in order to have standing to enforce an agreement, must have brought something of value, or "consideration" to the bargain. This old rule is full of exceptions, particularly where people wished to vary their agreements, through case law and the equitable doctrine of promissory estoppel. Moreover statutory reform in the Contracts (Rights of Third Parties) Act 1999 allows third parties to enforce the benefit of an agreement that they had not necessarily paid for so long as the original parties to a contract consented to them being able to do so.Agreement
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Main article: Agreement in English law
The formal approach of English courts is that agreement exists when an offer is mirrored by an unequivocal acceptance of the terms on offer. Whether an offer has been made, or it has been accepted, is an issue courts determine by asking what a reasonable person would have thought was intended. Offers are distinguished from "invitations to treat" (or an invitatio ad offerendum,
the invitation of an offer) which cannot be simply accepted by the
other party. Traditionally, English law has viewed the display of goods
in a shop, even with a price tag, as an invitation to treat,[43]
so that when a customer takes the product to the till it is she who is
making the offer, and the shopkeeper may refuse to sell. Similarly, and
as a very general rule, an advertisement,[44] the invitation to make a bid at an auction with a reserve price,[45]
or the invitation to submit a tender bid are not considered offers. On
the other hand, a person inviting tenders may fall under a duty to
consider the submissions if they arrive before the deadline, so the
bidder (even though there is no contract) could sue for damages if his
bid is never considered.[46] An auctioneer who publicises an auction as being without a reserve price falls under a duty to accept the highest bid.[47] An automated vending machine constitutes a standing offer,[48]
and a court may construe an advertisement, or something on display like
a deckchair, to be a serious offer if a customer would be led to
believe they were accepting its terms by performing an action.[49]
Statute imposes criminal penalties for businesses that engage in
misleading advertising, or not selling products at the prices they
display in store,[50] or unlawfully discriminating against customers on grounds of race, gender, sexuality, disability, belief or age.[51] In this respect the common law is out of line with modern practice, and also the practice in European Union states, where the Principles of European Contract Law article 2:201 suggests that most countries count a proposal to supply any good or service by a professional as an offer.Once an offer is made, the general rule is the offeree must communicate her acceptance in order to have a binding agreement.[52] Notification of acceptance must actually reach a point where the offeror could reasonably be expected to know, although if the recipient is at fault, for instance, by not putting enough ink in their fax machine for a message arriving in office hours to be printed, the recipient will still be bound.[53] This goes for all methods of communication, whether oral, by phone, through telex, fax or email,[54] except for the post. Acceptance by letter takes place when the letter is put in the postbox. The postal exception is a product of history,[55] and does not exist in most countries.[56] It only exists in English law so long as it is reasonable to use the post for a reply (e.g. not in response to an email), and its operation would not create manifest inconvenience and absurdity (e.g. the letter goes missing).[57] In all cases it is possible for the negotiating parties to stipulate a prescribed mode of acceptance.[58] It is not possible for an offeror to impose an obligation on the offeree to reject the offer without her consent.[59] However, it is clear that people can accept through silence, firstly, by demonstrating through their conduct that they accept. In Brogden v Metropolitan Railway Company,[60] although the Metropolitan Railway Company had never returned a letter from Mr Brogden formalising a long term supply arrangement for Mr Brogden's coal, they had conducted themselves for two years as if it were in effect, and Mr Brogden was bound. Secondly, the offeror may waive the need for communication of acceptance, either expressly, or implicitly, as in Carlill v Carbolic Smoke Ball Company.[61] Here a quack medicine company advertised its "smoke ball", stating that if a customer found it did not cure them of the flu after using it thrice daily for two weeks, they would get £100. After noting the advertisement was serious enough to be an offer, not mere puff or an invitation to treat, the Court of Appeal held the accepting party only needed to use the smokeball as prescribed to get the £100. Although the general rule was to require communication of acceptance, the advertisement had tacitly waived the need for Mrs Carlill, or anyone else, to report her acceptance first. In other cases, such as where a reward is advertised for information, the only requirement of the English courts appears to be knowledge of the offer.[62] Where someone makes such a unilateral offer, they fall under a duty to not revoke it once someone has begun to act on the offer.[63] Otherwise an offer may always be revoked before it is accepted. The general rule is that revocation must be communicated, even if by post,[64] although if the offerree hears about the withdrawal from a third party, this is as good as a withdrawal from the offeror himself.[65] Finally, an offer can be "killed off" if, rather than a mere inquiry for information,[66] someone makes a counter offer. So in Hyde v Wrench,[67] when Wrench offered to sell his farm for £1000, and Hyde replied that he would buy it for £950 and Wrench refused, Hyde could not then change his mind and accept the original £1000 offer.
While the model of an offer mirroring acceptance makes sense to analyse almost all agreements, it does not fit in some cases. In The Satanita[68] the rules of a yacht race stipulated that the yachtsmen would be liable, beyond limits set in statute, to pay for all damage to other boats. The Court of Appeal held that there was a contract to pay arising from the rules of the competition between The Satanita's owner and the owner of Valkyrie II, which he sank, even though there was no clear offer mirrored by a clear acceptance between the parties at any point. Along with a number of other critics,[69] in a series of cases Lord Denning MR proposed that English law ought to abandon its rigid attachment to offer and acceptance in favour of a broader rule, that the parties need to be in substantial agreement on the material points in the contract. In Butler Machine Tool Co Ltd v Ex-Cell-O Corp Ltd[70] this would have meant that during a "battle of forms" two parties were construed as having material agreement on the buyer's standard terms, and excluding a price variation clause, although the other court members reached the same view on ordinary analysis. In Gibson v Manchester CC[71] he would have come to a different result to the House of Lords, by allowing Mr Gibson to buy his house from the council, even though the council's letter stated it "should not be regarded as a firm offer". This approach would potentially give greater discretion to a court to do what appears appropriate at the time, without being tied to what the parties may have subjectively intended, particularly where those intentions obviously conflicted.
In a number of instances, the courts avoid enforcement of contracts where, although there is a formal offer and acceptance, little objective agreement exists otherwise. In Hartog v Colin & Shields,[72] where the seller of some Argentine hare skins quoted his prices far below what previous negotiations had suggested, the buyer could not enforce the agreement because any reasonable person would have known the offer was not serious, but a mistake.[73] Moreover, if two parties think they reach an agreement, but their offer and acceptance concerns two entirely different things, the court will not enforce a contract. In Raffles v Wichelhaus,[74] Raffles thought he was selling cotton aboard one ship called The Peerless, which would arrive from Bombay in Liverpool in December, but Wichelhaus thought he was buying cotton aboard another ship called The Peerless that would arrive in September. The court held there was never consensus ad idem or a meeting of minds on any one thing. Where agreements totally fail, but one party has performed work at another's request, relying on the idea that there will be a contract, that party may make a claim for the value of the work done, or quantum meruit.[75] Such a restitution claim allows recovery for the expense the claimant goes to, but will not cover her expectation of potential profits, because there is no agreement to be enforced.
Certainty and enforceability
Main articles: Certainty in English contract law, Creating legal relations in English law, and Formalities in English law
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While many agreements can be certain, it is by no means certain that in the case of social and domestic affairs people want their agreements to be legally binding. In Balfour v Balfour[82] Lord Atkin held that Mr Balfour's agreement to pay his wife £30 a month while he worked in Ceylon should be presumed unenforceable, because people do not generally intend such promises in the social sphere to create legal consequences. Similarly, an agreement between friends at a pub, or a daughter and her mother will fall into this sphere,[83] but not a couple who are on the verge of separation,[84] and not friends engaged in big transactions, particularly where one side relies heavily to their detriment on the assurances of the other.[85] This presumption of unenforceability can always be rebutted by express agreement otherwise, for instance by writing the deal down. By contrast, agreements made among businesses are almost conclusively presumed to be enforceable.[86] But again, express words, such as "This arrangement... shall not be subject to legal jurisdiction in the law courts" will be respected.[87] In one situation, statute presumes that collective agreements between a trade union and an employer are not intended to create legal relations, ostensibly to keep excessive litigation away from UK labour law.[88]
In a limited number of cases, an agreement will be unenforceable unless it meets a certain form prescribed by statute. While contracts can be generally made without formality, some transactions are thought to require form either because it makes a person think carefully before they bind themselves to an agreement, or merely that it serves as clear evidence.[89] This goes typically for large engagements, including the sale of land,[90] a lease of property over three years,[91] a consumer credit agreement,[92] and a bill of exchange.[93] A contract for guarantee must also, at some stage, be evidenced in writing.[94] Finally, English law takes the approach that a gratuitous promise, as a matter of contract law, is not legally binding. While a gift that is delivered will transfer property irrevocably, and while someone may always bind themselves to a promise without anything in return to deliver a thing in future if they sign a deed that is witnessed,[95] a simple promise to do something in future can be revoked. This result is reached, with some complexity, through a peculiarity of English law called the doctrine of consideration.
Consideration and estoppel
Main articles: Consideration in English law and Estoppel in English law
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When a contract is formed, good consideration is needed, and so a gratuitous promise is not binding. That said, while consideration must be of sufficient value in the law's eyes, it need not reflect an adequate price. Proverbially, one may sell a house for as little as a peppercorn, even if the seller "does not like pepper and will throw away the corn."[104] This means the courts do not generally enquire into the fairness of the exchange.[105] Another difficulty is that consideration for a deal was said not to exist if the thing given was an act done before the promise, such as promising to pay off a loan for money already used to educate a girl.[106] In this situation the courts have long shown themselves willing to hold that the thing done was implicitly relying on the expectation of a reward.[107] More significant problems arise where parties to a contract wish to vary its terms. The old rule, predating the development of the protections in the law of economic duress, was that if one side merely promises to perform a duty which she had already undertaken in return for a higher price, there is no contract.[108] However in the leading case of Williams v Roffey Bros & Nicholls (Contractors) Ltd,[109] the Court of Appeal held that it would be more ready to construe someone performing essentially what they were bound to do before as giving consideration for the new deal if they conferred a "practical benefit" on the other side.[110] So, when Williams, a carpenter, was promised by Roffey Bros, the builders, more money to complete work on time, it was held that because Roffey Bros would avoid having to pay a penalty clause for late completion of its own contract, would potentially avoid the expense of litigation and had a slightly more sensible mechanism for payments, these were enough. Speaking of consideration, Russell LJ stated that, "courts nowadays should be more ready to find its existence... where the bargaining powers are not unequal and where the finding of consideration reflects the true intention of the parties." In other words, in the context of contractual variations, the definition of consideration has been watered down. However, in one situation the "practical benefit" analysis cannot be invoked, namely where the agreed variation is to reduce debt repayments. In Foakes v Beer,[111] the House of Lords held that even though Mrs Beer promised Mr Foakes he could pay back £2090 19s by instalment and without interest, she could subsequently change her mind and demand the whole sum. Despite Lord Blackburn registering a note of dissent in that case and other doubts,[112] the Court of Appeal held in Re Selectmove Ltd,[113] that it was bound by the precedent of the Lords and could not deploy the "practical benefit" reasoning of Williams for any debt repayment cases.
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Privity
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See also: Privity in English law and Privity of contract
The common law of privity of contract is a sub-rule of consideration
because it restricts who can enforce an agreement to those who have
brought consideration to the bargain. In an early case, Tweddle v Atkinson,
it was held that because a son had not given any consideration for his
father in law's promise to his father to pay the son £200, he could not
enforce the promise.[122]
Given the principle that standing to enforce an obligation should
reflect whoever has a legitimate interest in its performance, a 1996
report by the Law Commission entitled Privity of Contract: Contracts for the Benefit of Third Parties,
recommended that while courts should be left free to develop the common
law, some of the more glaring injustices should be removed.[123] This led to the Contracts (Rights of Third Parties) Act 1999.
Under section 1, a third party may enforce an agreement if it purports
to confer a benefit on the third party, either individually or a member
as a class, and there is no expressed stipulation that the person was
not intended to be able to enforce it.[124] In this respect there is a strong burden on the party claiming enforcement was not intended by a third party.[125]
A third party has the same remedies available as a person privy to an
agreement, and can enforce both positive benefits, or limits on
liability, such as an exclusion clause.[126]
The rights of a third party can then only be terminated or withdrawn
without her consent if it is reasonably foreseeable that she would rely
upon them.[127]The 1999 Act's reforms mean a number of old cases would be decided differently today. In Beswick v Beswick[129] while the House of Lords held that Mrs Beswick could specifically enforce a promise of her nephew to her deceased husband to pay her £5 weekly in her capacity as administratrix of the will, the 1999 Act would also allow her to claim as a third party. In Scruttons Ltd v Midland Silicones Ltd[130] it would have been possible for a stevedore firm to claim the benefit of a limitation clause in a contract between a carrier and the owner of a damaged drum of chemicals. Lord Denning dissented, arguing for abolition of the rule, and Lord Reid gave an opinion that if a bill of lading expressly conferred the benefit of a limitation on the stevedores, the stevedores give authority to the carrier to do that, and "difficulties about consideration moving from the stevedore were overcome" then the stevedores could benefit. In The Eurymedon,[131] Lord Reid's inventive solution was applied where some stevedores similarly wanted the benefit of an exclusion clause after dropping a drilling machine, the consideration being found as the stevedores performing their pre-existing contractual duty for the benefit of the third party (the drilling machine owner). Now none of this considerably technical analysis is required,[132] given that any contract purporting to confer a benefit on a third party may in principle be enforced by the third party.[133]
Given that the 1999 Act preserves the promisee's right to enforce the contract as it stood at common law,[134] an outstanding issue is to what extent a promisee can claim damages for a benefit on behalf of a third party, if he has suffered no personal loss. In Jackson v Horizon Holidays Ltd,[135] Lord Denning MR held that a father could claim damages for disappointment (beyond the financial cost) of a terrible holiday experience on behalf of his family. However, a majority of the House of Lords in Woodar Investment Development Ltd v Wimpey Construction UK Ltd[136] disapproved any broad ability of a party to a contract to claim damages on behalf of a third party, except perhaps in a limited set of consumer contracts. There is disagreement about whether this will remain the case.[137] Difficulties also remain in cases involving houses built with defects, which are sold to a buyer, who subsequently sells to a third party. It appears that neither the initial buyer can claim on behalf of the third party, and nor will the third party be able to claim under the 1999 Act, as they will typically not be identified by the original contract (or known) in advance.[138] Apart from this instance relating to tort, in practice the doctrine of privity is entirely ignored in numerous situations, throughout the law of trusts and agency.
Construction
Main article: Contractual terms in English law
If an enforceable agreement - a contract - exists, the details of the
contract's terms matter if one party has allegedly broken the
agreement. A contract's terms are what was promised. Yet it is up to the courts to construe
evidence of what the parties said before a contract's conclusion, and
construe the terms agreed. Construction of the contract starts with the
express promises people make to one another, but found in other
documents or notices. The general rule for incorporation of terms into
agreements is that reasonable notice of the term is needed, and more
notice is needed for an onerous term. The meaning of those terms must
then be interpreted, and the modern approach is to construe the meaning
of an agreement from the perspective of a reasonable person with
knowledge of the whole context.
The courts, as well as legislation, may also imply terms into contracts
generally to 'fill gaps' as necessary to fulfil the reasonable
expectations of the parties, or as necessary incidents to specific
contracts. English law had, since the 19th century, adhered to the laissez faire principle of "freedom of contract"
so that, in the general law of contract, people can agree to whatever
terms or conditions they choose. By contrast, specific contracts,
particularly for consumers, employees or tenants
were built to carry a minimum core of rights, mostly deriving from
statute, that aim to secure the fairness of contractual terms. The
evolution of case law in the 20th century generally shows an ever
clearer distinction between general contracts among commercial parties
and those between parties of unequal bargaining power,[140] since in these groups of transaction true choice is thought to be hampered by lack of real competition in the market. Hence, some terms can be found to be unfair under statutes such as the Unfair Contract Terms Act 1977 or the Unfair Terms in Consumer Contract Regulations 1999 and can be removed by the courts, with the administrative assistance of the Office of Fair Trading.Incorporation of terms
Main article: Incorporation of terms in English law
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When a contract is written down, there is a basic presumption that the written document will contain all the terms of an agreement,[144] and when people sign documents every term referred to in the document binds them[145] (unless it is found to be merely an administrative paper, or under the very limited defence of non est factum[146]). This matters most in commercial dealings, where businesses place a high value on certainty. If a statement is a term, and the contracting party has not signed a document, then terms may be incorporated by reference to other sources, or through a course of dealing. The basic rule, set out in Parker v South Eastern Railway Company,[143] is that reasonable notice of a term is required to bind someone. Here Mr Parker left his coat in the Charing Cross railway station cloakroom and was given a ticket that on the back said liability for loss was limited to £10. The Court of Appeal sent this back to trial for a jury (as existed at the time) to determine. The modern approach is to add that if a term is particularly onerous, greater notice with greater clarity ought to be given. Denning LJ in J Spurling Ltd v Bradshaw[147] famously remarked that "Some clauses which I have seen would need to be printed in red ink on the face of the document with a red hand pointing to it before the notice could be held to be sufficient." In Thornton v Shoe Lane Parking Ltd[148] a car park ticket referring to a notice inside the car park was insufficient to exclude the parking lot's liability for personal injury of customers on its premises. In Interfoto Picture Library Ltd v Stiletto Ltd[149] Bingham LJ held that a notice inside a jiffy bag of photographic transparencies about a fee for late return of the transparencies (which would have totalled £3,783.50 for 47 transparencies after only a month) was too onerous a term to be incorporated without clear notice. By contrast in O’Brien v MGN Ltd[150] Hale LJ held that the failure of the Daily Mirror to say in every newspaper that if there were too many winners in its free draw for £50,000 that there would be another draw was not so onerous on the disappointed "winners" as to prevent incorporation of the term. It can also be that a regular and consistent course of dealings between two parties lead the terms from previous dealings to be incorporated into future ones. In Hollier v Rambler Motors Ltd[151] the Court of Appeal held that Mr Hollier, whose car was burnt in a fire caused by a careless employee at Rambler Motors' garage, was not bound by a clause excluding liability for "damage caused by fire" on the back of an invoice which he had seen three or four times in visits over the last five years. This was not regular or consistent enough. But in British Crane Hire Corporation Ltd v Ipswich Plant Hire Ltd[152] Lord Denning MR held that a company hiring a crane was bound by a term making them pay for expenses of recovering the crane when it sunk into marshland, after only one prior dealing. Of particular importance was the equal bargaining power of the parties.[153]
Interpretation
Main article: Interpreting contracts in English law
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Reflecting the modern position since unfair terms legislation was enacted,[160] the most quoted passage in English courts on the canons of interpretation is found in Lord Hoffmann's judgment in ICS Ltd v West Bromwich BS.[154] Lord Hoffmann restated the law that a document's meaning is what it would mean (1) to a reasonable person (2) with knowledge of the context, or the whole matrix of fact (3) except prior negotiations (4) and meaning does not follow what the dictionary says but meaning understood from its context (5) and the meaning should not contradict common sense. The objective is always to give effect to the intentions of the parties.[161] While it remains the law for reasons of litigation cost,[162] there is some contention over how far evidence of prior negotiations should be excluded by the courts.[163] It appears increasingly clear that the courts may adduce evidence of negotiations where it would clearly assist in construing the meaning of an agreement.[164] This approach to interpretation has some overlap with the right of the parties to seek "rectification" of a document, or requesting from a court to read a document not literally but with regard to what the parties can otherwise show was really intended.[165]
Implied terms
Main article: Implied terms in English law
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In specific contracts, such as those for sales of goods, between a landlord and tenant, or in employment, the courts imply standardised contractual terms (or terms "implied in law"). Such terms set out a menu of "default rules" that generally apply in absence of true agreement to the contrary. In one instance of partial codification, the Sale of Goods Act 1893 summed up all the standard contractual provisions in typical commercial sales agreements developed by the common law. This is now updated in the Sale of Goods Act 1979, and in default of people agreeing something different in general its terms will apply. For instance, under section 12-14, any contract for sale of goods carries the implied terms that the seller has legal title, that it will match prior descriptions and that it is of satisfactory quality and fit for purpose. Similarly the Supply of Goods and Services Act 1982 section 13 says services must be performed with reasonable care and skill. As a matter of common law the test is what terms are a "necessary incident" to the specific type of contract in question. This test derives from Liverpool City Council v Irwin[174] where the House of Lords held that, although fulfilled on the facts of the case, a landlord owes a duty to tenants in a block of flats to keep the common parts in reasonable repair. In employment contracts, multiple standardised implied terms arise also, even before statute comes into play, for instance to give employees adequate information to make a judgment about how to take advantage of their pension entitlements.[175] The primary standardised employment term is that both employer and worker owe one another an obligation of "mutual trust and confidence". Mutual trust and confidence can be undermined in multiple ways, primarily where an employer's repulsive conduct means a worker can treat herself as being constructively dismissed.[176] In Mahmud and Malik v Bank of Credit and Commerce International SA[177] the House of Lords held the duty was breached by the employer running the business as a cover for numerous illegal activities. The House of Lords has repeated that the term may always be excluded, but this has been disputed because unlike a contract for goods or services among commercial parties, an employment relation is characterised by unequal bargaining power between employer and worker. In Johnstone v Bloomsbury Health Authority[178] the Court of Appeal all held that a junior doctor could not be made to work at an average of 88 hours a week, even though this was an express term of his contract, where it would damage his health. However, one judge said that result followed from application of the Unfair Contract Terms Act 1977, one judge said it was because at common law express terms could be construed in the light of implied terms, and one judge said implied terms may override express terms.[179] Even in employment, or in consumer affairs, English courts remain divided about the extent to which they should depart from the basic paradigm of contractual freedom, that is, in absence of legislation.
Unfair terms
Main articles: Unfair terms in English contract law, Unfair Contract Terms Act 1977, Unfair Terms in Consumer Contracts Regulations 1999, and UK consumer protection
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"None of you nowadays will remember the trouble we had - when I was
called to the Bar - with exemption clauses. They were printed in small
print on the back of tickets and order forms and invoices. They were
contained in catalogues or timetables. They were held to be binding on
any person who took them without objection. No one ever did object. He
never read them or knew what was in them. No matter how unreasonable
they were, he was bound. All this was done in the name of "freedom of contract."
But the freedom was all on the side of the big concern which had the
use of the printing press. No freedom for the little man who took the
ticket or order form or invoice. The big concern said, "Take it or leave it."
The little man had no option but to take it. The big concern could and
did exempt itself from liability in its own interest without regard to
the little man. It got away with it time after time. When the courts
said to the big concern, "You must put it in clear words," the big
concern had no hesitation in doing so. It knew well that the little man
would never read the exemption clauses or understand them. It was a bleak winter for our law of contract."
Lord Denning MR in George Mitchell (Chesterhall) Ltd v Finney Lock Seeds Ltd [1982] EWCA Civ 5, [1983] QB 284, 297
Relatively few cases are ever brought directly by consumers, given the complexity of litigation, cost, and its worth if claims are small. In order to ensure consumer protection laws are actually enforced, the Office of Fair Trading has jurisdiction to bring consumer regulation cases on behalf of consumers after receiving complaints. Under Unfair Terms in Consumer Contracts Regulations 1999 regulations 10-12, the OFT has jurisdiction to collect and consider complaints, and then seek injunctions in the courts to stop businesses using unfair terms (under any legislation). The UTCCR 1999 are both broader than UCTA 1977 in that they cover any unfair terms, not just exemption clauses, but narrower in that they only operate for consumer contracts. The UTCCR 1999 definition of a consumer is also narrower, under regulation 3, where a consumer must be a natural person (and never a legal person, like a company[188]) who contracts outside his business. However, while the United Kingdom could always opt for greater protection, when it translated the Directive into national law it opted to follow the bare minimum requirements, and not to cover every contract term. Under regulation 6(2), a court may only assess the fairness of terms which do not involve the "definition of the main subject matter of the contract", or terms which relate to "price or remuneration" of the thing sold. Outside such "core" terms, a term may be unfair, under regulation 5 if it is not one that is individually negotiated, and if contrary to good faith it causes a significant imbalance in the rights and obligations of the parties. A list of examples of unfair terms are set out in Schedule 2. In DGFT v First National Bank plc[189] the House of Lords held that given the purpose of consumer protection, regulation 6(2) should be construed tightly and Lord Bingham stated good faith implies fair, open and honest dealing. This all meant that the bank's practice of charging its (higher) default interest rate to customers who had (lower) interest rate set by a court under a debt restructuring plan could, under regulation 6(2), be assessed for fairness, but that under regulation 5 the term did not create such an imbalance given the bank wished only to have its normal interest. This appeared to grant a relatively open role for the Office of Fair Trading to intervene against unfair terms. However in OFT v Abbey National plc[190] the Supreme Court held that if a term related in any way to price, it could not by virtue of regulation 6(2) be assessed for fairness. All the High Street banks, including Abbey National, had a practice of charging high fees if account holders, unplanned, exceeded through withdrawals their normal overdraft limit. Overturning a unanimous Court of Appeal,[191] the Supreme Court viewed that if the thing being charged for was part of a "package" of services, and the bank's remuneration for its services partly came from these fees, then there could be no assessment of the fairness of terms. This controversial stance was tempered by their Lordships' emphasis that any charges must be wholly transparent,[192] though its compatibility with EU law is not yet established by the European Court of Justice, and it appears questionable that it would be decided the same under the proposed Unfair Contract Terms Bill.[193]
Conclusion and remedies
Although promises are made to be kept, parties to an agreement are generally free to determine how a contract is concluded, can be terminated and remedial consequences for breach of contract, just as they can generally determine a contract's content. The courts have fashioned only residual limits on the parties' autonomy to determine how a contract concludes. The courts' default, or standard rules, which are generally alterable, are first that a contract is automatically concluded if it becomes impossible for one party to perform. Second, if one party breaches her side of the bargain in a serious way, the other party may cease his own performance. If a breach is not serious, the innocent party must continue his own obligations but may claim a remedy in court for the defective or imprecise performance he has received. Third, the principle remedy for breach of contract is compensatory damages, limited to losses that one might reasonably expect to result from a breach. This means a sum of money to put the claimant in mostly the same position as if the contract breaker had performed her obligations. In a small number of contract cases, closely analogous to property or trust obligations, a court may order restitution by the contract breaker so that any gains she has made by breaking the agreement will be stripped and given to the innocent party. Additionally where a contract's substance is for something so unique that damages would be an inadequate remedy courts may use their discretion to grant an injunction against the contract breaker doing something or, unless it is a personal service, positively order specific performance of the contract terms.Performance and breach
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See also: Breach of contract
Generally speaking, all parties to a contract must precisely perform
their obligations or there is a breach of contract and, at the least,
damages can be claimed. However, as a starting point, to claim that
someone else has breached their side of a bargain, one must have at least "substantially performed" their own obligations. For example, in Sumpter v Hedges[194]
a builder performed £333 worth of work, but then abandoned completion
of the contract. The Court of Appeal held he could not recover any money
for the building left on the land, even though the buyer subsequently
used the foundations to complete the job.[195] This rule provides a powerful remedy in home construction cases to a customer. So in Bolton v Mahadeva[196]
Mr Bolton installed a £560 heating system in Mahadeva's house. However,
it leaked and would cost £174 to correct (i.e. 31% of the price).
Mahadeva did not pay at all, and the Court of Appeal held this was
lawful because the performance was so defective that there could not be
said to be any substantial performance. However where an obligation in a
contract is "substantially performed", the full sum must be paid, only
then deducting an amount to reflect the breach. So in Hoenig v Isaacs[197]
Denning LJ held a builder who installed a bookcase poorly, with a price
of £750 but costing only £55 to correct (i.e. 7.3% of the price), had
to be paid minus the cost of correction.[198] If a contract's obligations are construed as consisting of an "entire obligation", performance of it all will be a condition precedent (a requirement before) to performance from the other side falling due, and allowing a breach of contract claim.In the simplest case of a contractual breach, the performance that was owed will merely be the payment of a provable debt (an agreed sum of money). In this case, the Sale of Goods Act 1979 section 49 allows for a summary action for price of goods or services, meaning a quick set of court procedure rules are followed. Consumers also benefit under sections 48A-E, with a specific right to have a broken product to be repaired. An added benefit is that if a claimant brings an action for debt, she or he will have no further duty to mitigate his loss. This was another requirement that common law courts had invented, before a claim for breach of contract could be enforced. For instance, in contracts for services that spanned a long period of time (e.g. 5 years), the courts would often state that because a claimant should be able to find alternative work in a few months, and so should not receive money for the whole contract's duration. However, White & Carter (Councils) Ltd v McGregor[199] an advertising company had a contract to display adverts for McGregor's garage business on public dustbins. McGregor said he wished to cancel the deal, but White & Carter Ltd refused, displayed the adverts anyway, and demanded the full sum of money. McGregor argued that they should have attempted to mitigate their loss by finding other clients, but the majority of the Lords held there was no further duty to mitigate. Claims in debt were different from damages.
Shylock: My deeds upon my head! I crave the law, The penalty and forfeit of my bond...
Portia: ... prepare thee to cut off the flesh. Shed thou no blood; nor cut thou less nor more, But just a pound of flesh: if thou tak’st more, Or less, than a just pound, be it but so much As makes it light or heavy in the substance, Or the division of the twentieth part Of one poor scruple; nay, if the scale do turn But in the estimation of a hair, Thou diest, and all thy goods are confiscate.
Portia: ... prepare thee to cut off the flesh. Shed thou no blood; nor cut thou less nor more, But just a pound of flesh: if thou tak’st more, Or less, than a just pound, be it but so much As makes it light or heavy in the substance, Or the division of the twentieth part Of one poor scruple; nay, if the scale do turn But in the estimation of a hair, Thou diest, and all thy goods are confiscate.
W Shakespeare, The Merchant of Venice, Act IV, scene i
Frustration and common mistake
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Main articles: Frustration in English law and Mistakes in English law
While the early common law held that performance of a contract always
had to take place, and no matter what hardship was encountered
contracting parties had absolute liability on their obligations,[207]
in the 19th century the courts developed a doctrine that contracts
which became impossible to perform would be frustrated and automatically
come to an end. In Taylor v Caldwell Blackburn J held that when the Surrey Gardens Music Hall
unexpectedly burnt down, the owners did not have to pay compensation to
the business that had leased it for an extravagant performance, because
it was neither party's fault. A "condition precedent"
to or underlying all contracts is that they are possible to perform.
People would not ordinarily contract to do something they knew was going
to be impossible. Apart from physical impossibility, frustration could
be down to a contract becoming illegal to perform, for instance if war
breaks out and the government bans trade to a belligerent country,[208]
or perhaps if the whole purpose of an agreement is destroyed by another
event, like renting a room to watch a cancelled coronation parade.[209]
But a contract is not frustrated merely because a subsequent event
makes the agreement harder to perform than expected, as for instance in Davis Contractors Ltd v Fareham UDC
where a builder unfortunately had to spend more time and money doing a
job than he would be paid for because of an unforeseen shortage of
labour and supplies. The House of Lords denied his claim for contract to
be declared frustrated so he could claim quantum meruit.[210]
Because the doctrine of frustration is a matter of construction of the
contract, it can be contracted around, through what are called "force
majeure" clauses.[211]
Similarly, a contract can have a force majeure clause that would bring a
contract to an end more easily than would common law construction. In The Super Servant Two[212] Wijsmuller BV contracted to hire out a self-propelling barge to J Lauritzen AS, who wanted to tow another ship from Japan to Rotterdam,
but had a provision stating the contract would terminate if some event
made it difficult related to the ‘perils or dangers and accidents of the
sea’. Wijsmuller BV also had a choice of whether to provide either The Superservant One or Two. They chose Two
and it sank. The Court of Appeal held that the impossibility to perform
the agreement was down to Wijsmuller's own choice, and so it was not
frustrated, but that the force majeure clause did cover it. The effect
of a contract being frustrated is that it is that both parties are
prospectively discharged from performing their side of the bargain. If
one side has already paid money over or conferred another valuable
benefit, but not got anything in return yet, contrary to the prior
common law position,[213] the Law Reform (Frustrated Contracts) Act 1943 gives the court discretion to let the claimant recover a 'just sum',[214] and that means whatever the court thinks fit in all the circumstances.[215]A related doctrine is "common mistake", which since the decision of Lord Phillips MR in The Great Peace[217] is essentially the same in operation as frustration, except that the event making a contract impossible to perform takes place before, not after, a contract is concluded.[218] A "common mistake" differs from the "mistakes" that take place between offers and acceptance (that mean there is no agreement in the first place), or the so-called "mistake about identity" cases that follow from a fraudulent misrepresentation (which typically makes a contract voidable, not void, unless in a written document and concluded at a distance), because it is based on performance becoming seriously difficult to perform. For instance, in Courturier v Hastie[219] a corn shipment had decayed by the time two businesspeople had contracted for it, and so it was held (perhaps controversially) that the seller was not liable, because it was always physically impossible. And in Cooper v Phibbs[220] the House of Lords held that an agreement to lease out a fishery was void because it turned out the lessee was in fact the owner. It is legally impossible to be leased something one owns. Again, the doctrine of common mistake may be contracted around, so in McRae v Commonwealth Disposals Commission[221] it was held that despite the fact that a wrecked ship off the Great Barrier Reef never in fact existed, because a salvage business was actually promised by the Australian government that it was there, there was no common mistake. Like frustration, the doctrine operates only in narrow confines. In Bell v Lever Bros Ltd[222] Lord Atkin stated that a mistake must be of such a ‘fundamental character as to constitute an underlying assumption without which the parties would not have entered into the agreements’. Post-war, Denning LJ added to the doctrine, beyond its narrow legal confines, in line with the more permissive approach recognised throughout civil law countries, most of the Commonwealth and the United States. In Solle v Butcher[223] he held that in equity a contract could be deemed voidable (rather than outright void) if it would be 'unconscientious' for a court to hold someone to a bargain. This gave the courts some flexibility in the kind of remedy they would grant, and could be more generous in the circumstances they allowed escape. But in The Great Peace, Lord Phillips MR said that this more permissive doctrine had been contrary to the House of Lords authority in Bell v Lever Bros Ltd. Although it probably would not have been avoidable under the mistake in equity doctrine anyway, Lord Phillips MR held that a rescue company could not escape from an agreement to save a ship because both parties were mistaken that the distressed vessel was further than they originally thought. The result is that English contract law jealously prevents escape from an agreement, unless there is a serious breach because of the conduct of one party, which gives rise to the right to terminate.
Termination
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While when a contract is silent a court must essentially make an informed choice about whether a right to terminate should exist, if a contract deals with the matter the courts' general approach is to follow the parties' wishes. The drafters of the old Sale of Goods Act 1893 distinguished between "conditions" (major terms, which when breached confer a right to terminate) and "warranties" (minor terms, which do not), and under the present Sale of Goods Act 1979 some terms, such as descriptions about quality, are conditions by default.[228] A third kind is an "innominate term", which is typically a vague term like citrus pulp pellets being "in good condition",[229] or a ship having to be "seaworthy". Because such a term could be breached in both a major way (e.g. the ship sinks) or a trivial way (e.g. a lifejacket is missing) the court will determine whether the right to terminate arises based on how serious in fact the consequences of the breach were. So in The Hong Kong Fir, Lord Diplock held that a ship crew being too incompetent to properly operate the vessel did not breach the contract's "seaworthiness" term in a serious enough way as to allow for termination, because the charterers still got a working boat and could have replaced the crew. If a contract specifies that a particular obligation is a "condition" the dominant approach of the courts is to treat it as such. Nevertheless, concerned with the ability of a stronger party to specify the terms it finds most convenient as "conditions" at the expense of the weaker, courts retain the ability to construe an agreement contra proferentum. In L Schuler AG v Wickman Machine Tool Sales Ltd[230] the majority of the House of Lords held that clause 7 of a contract, stating it was "a condition of this agreement" that Mr Wickman would visit 6 major car companies "at least once in every week" to try selling panel presses, was not really a condition in the technical sense. So when Mr Wickman was found to have visited much less, Schuler AG could not dismiss him. This was because clause 11 said that 60 days of warning was needed before Schuler AG could terminate, so the whole contract read together meant the clause 7 had to be subject to clause 11. The language in the contract is not decisive. If the word "condition" is not used, but the contract describes a right to terminate, such as the contract being terminable for "any breach" of obligation, the issue is, again, one of construction and the courts may be reluctant to give effect to the plain meaning if it would have "draconian consequences" for the weaker party.[231] By contrast, in Bunge Corporation v Tradax SA[232] the House of Lords held that giving notice for a ship to start loading the soya bean cargo four days late, when the contract expressly stipulated the date, should allow the right to terminate regardless of the actual consequences of the breach. In mercantile contracts, ‘broadly speaking time will be considered of the essence’, and so it is highly likely the courts will enforce obligations to the letter.
Damages and injunctions
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Main articles: Remedies in English law, Measure of damages in English law, Remoteness in English law, Damages, and Specific performance
Whether or not a contract is terminated, every breach of a
substantially performed contract gives rise to the right to a remedy. A
court's power to award remedies is the final sanction against
non-performance and, unless the defendant is insolvent,
the objective is to achieve full compensation for the innocent party as
if the contract were performed. This measure of the remedy to protect
"expectations" forms a principal distinction between contracts as
obligations from torts or unjust enrichment. In cases where performance
is defective, the courts generally award money for the cost of curing
the defect, unless the sum would be disproportionate and another sum
would adequately achieve the same compensatory objective. In Ruxley Electronics Ltd v Forsyth[233]
although a £17,797 swimming pool was built 18 inches too shallow, the
land's market value was exactly the same. The House of Lords' solution,
rather than awarding the cost of rebuilding it at £21,560 and rather
than reject any award at all, was to reflect the forgone "consumer surplus" or the "loss of amenity"
with an award of £2,500. Greater recognition of benefits in contracts
other than purely financial ones has also been seen in cases concerning
contracts where pleasure, enjoyment, relaxation or the avoidance of
stress are construed as being "important terms". In Jarvis v Swans Tours Ltd
Lord Denning MR held that a council worker could get not just his money
back, but also a small sum to reflect his disappointment after his
dream-holiday to the Swiss Alps, contrary to the promises in Swan Tours'
travel brochure, proved a boring disaster, complete with sub-standard yodelling.[234] And in Farley v Skinner[235] the House of Lords held that a homebuyer close to Gatwick
airport could recover money for lack of peaceful enjoyment, and the
disruption of what would otherwise be his "quiet contemplative
breakfast" from the house surveyor who assured there would be no noise.
The market value of the property was unchanged, but ensuring peace and
quiet had been an important term in their agreement. The courts have,
however, remained reluctant to allow recovery for disappointment over
any breach of contract, particularly in employment where a flood of
people might claim damages for stress and upset after a wrongful dismissal.[236]In addition to damages for not getting the thing promised itself, a contract breaker must compensate for the costly consequences of the breach that one would reasonably expect to exist. There must be a causal connection between the breach and the consequence complained of. In Saamco v York Montague Ltd[239] it was held a bank could not recover damages from property valuer for all of the difference in what the properties it bought after getting the valuations were assured to be and actual property values, because a large part of the difference resulted from generally depressed market prices following "Black Wednesday" in 1992. In a business deal, calculation will typically be based on the forgone profits that one could reasonably have expected to make. This could also include the "loss of a chance" to profit, so in Chaplin v Hicks an entrant in a beauty contest wrongfully excluded from the final round was awarded 25% of the final prize money to reflect her 1 in 4 chance of having won. One limit lies at consequential losses that are too "remote", or are not a natural result of the breach, and are not in the parties' contemplation. In Hadley v Baxendale[240] a miller tried to recover damages from Baxendale's delivery company for the lost profits from his mill grinding to a halt, after they were late delivering a crankshaft back from being fixed. But Alderson B held that because millers would usually be expected to keep spare crank shafts, and because he had not informed Baxendale of the importance of the timely delivery, an award for profits could not be compensated. More recently in The Achilleas[238] the majority of the House of Lords preferred to express the remoteness rule as one of construing the contract to reflect the parties' "background of market expectations". Transfield Shipping returned The Achilleas late to its owner, Mercator, which led Mercator to lose a lucrative contract with Cargill that would make over $1.3 million, an occurrence that was plainly a natural consequence of the breach and easily foreseeable. Yet because the standard practice and expectation in the shipping industry was that if a ship were returned late only the ordinary sum for hire would be due, this was the limit on recovery.[241] It is also possible to lose one's entitlement to damages if steps are not taken to mitigate further losses, that any prudent person would, rather than sitting back and letting losses run up.[242] But the burden of proof of a failure to mitigate is on a contract breaker, to whom the courts are unlikely to be sympathetic.[243] A contract breaker could may also, if a concurrent liability arises in tort, argue a claimant's damages should be reduced to reflect their contributory fault, and the courts can reduce an award to achieve a just and equitable result.[244] Sometimes potential profits will be too uncertain, or a general fall in market prices means that even claiming damages for the thing itself would leave one in a negative position, and so the courts allow a claimant to choose whether to sue, not for a failure in expectations, but to cover her expenses in preparing for the contract, or the "reliance interest". In Anglia Television Ltd v Reed[245] a TV channel successfully sued Robert Reed for not turning up for shooting a film. It was unclear whether the film would make any profits at all, and so Anglia TV got compensated for its wasted expenses in preparing the set.[246] The level of damages is generally assessed at the date of the breach, but this is variable if the court thinks another time would be fairer.[247]
By way of exception, alternative remedies to compensatory damages are available depending on the contract's nature. If damages would be an inadequate remedy, for instance, because the subject matter was a unique painting, or a piece of land, or was to deliver petrol during an oil crisis,[248] a court may compel literal or specific performance of the contract's terms. It can also compel a defendant to refrain from actions that would continue a breach of contract.[249] Injunctions are discretionary remedies, and so they are not awarded in cases where it might cause hardship, like compelling conveyance of property when it would mean an unexpectedly disabled inhabitant would lose her home.[250] Additionally, the courts have, at least since the Slavery Abolition Act 1833, refused to grant specific performance of contracts involving personal services. This is part of a more general principle that two (potentially hostile) parties to litigation should not be made to work in a long term relationship. In Cooperative Insurance Ltd v Argyll Ltd[251] although a shop broke its contract with a shopping centre to keep its business operating, and actual performance was important to keep flagship businesses and so attract more customers to the centre generally, specific performance was not granted because compelling a potentially loss making business to keep operating was draconian and probably not capable of being policed by the court. No award can be made which punishes, or makes an example of a defendant, even for a cynical and calculated breach of contract.[252] However, in limited situations, a claimant may succeed in a claim for restitution of the contract breaker's gains, as is routinely available in cases involving trustees or other fiduciaries who profit from transactions where they have a conflict of interest. In the leading case, Attorney General v Blake[253] a former secret service agent's profits from book sales, which recounted government information in breach of Blake's employment contract, were stripped. While Lord Nicholls stated, other than compensatory damages are not an adequate remedy, that "no fixed rules can be prescribed" and their Lordships were eager to not hamper the development of the law, the cases where such awards have been made in contract have all involved some quasi-proprietary element. In an earlier case, Wrotham Park Ltd v Parkside Homes Ltd,[254] Brightman J awarded a percentage of gains resulting from building a lot of homes in breach of a restrictive covenant, based on a sum that the parties would have been likely to contract for had they struck a bargain.[255] More recently in Experience Hendrix LLC v PPX Enterprises Inc[256] Mance LJ held that a percentage of profits made by PPX breaching the intellectual property rights on songs by Jimi Hendrix would have to be paid up. So if in the course of a contract one party is in a position to take advantage of another's rights without their fully informed consent, a restitutionary remedy can be awarded.
Cancelling the contract
Because contracts concern voluntary obligations, the courts employ a number of protections to ensure only people who give informed and true consent are legally bound. Before 1875, the common law courts only allowed escape from an agreement and damages if someone was induced to enter an agreement by fraud or was put under physical duress, or suffered from a lack of legal capacity. The courts of equity, however, were significantly more generous because they allowed "rescission" (i.e. cancellation) of a contract if a person was the victim of any misrepresentation, even an innocent one, and any "undue influence", beyond influence by physical threats.[257] In these situations the victim of the misrepresentation or unconscionable behaviour has the option to avoid the contract. If avoided, the parties are both entitled to have returned whatever property they had already conveyed, so nobody remains unjustly enriched (though this terminology was not used till the 20th century). As the 20th century unfolded, the courts and statute expanded on the range of circumstances in which a person could claim damages for negligent misrepresentation, on top of fraud.[258] As concern over the use of unfair terms grew, there were calls to recognise a positive duty on contracting parties to disclose material facts as part of a broader duty of "good faith" and some judges attempted to follow the American Uniform Commercial Code by fashioning a broader doctrine of "unconscionable" bargains, procured through inequality of bargaining power. This development was, however, stopped by the House of Lords, so that problems of unfair contract terms continued to be dealt with through targeted legislation. The courts also declare contracts void if they were for an illegal purpose, and refuse to enforce the agreement, or give any legal remedy if doing so would require a person to rely on their illegal act.Disclosure and misrepresentation
Main articles: Good faith, Misrepresentation in English law, Mistakes in English law, and Misrepresentation
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Hence, in the general law of contract, negotiating parties have a duty to not make false statements of fact or law,[265] or misrepresent themselves through conduct.[266] Statements of opinion, "mere puff" or vague "sales talk" (e.g. "this washing powder will make your clothes whiter than white!"), are generally not considered factual. However representations of people who profess special skill or knowledge are more likely to be actionable, as they warrant their opinions are based on concrete facts.[267] So in Esso Petroleum Co Ltd v Mardon[268] Lord Denning MR held that Esso's expert opinion that a petrol station would have 200,000 gallons worth of business was an actionable misrepresentation. If someone is induced to enter a contract by any misrepresentation, whether fraudulent, negligent or innocent, they are entitled to rescind the contract and get back the property they have conveyed. As a remedy originating in the courts of equity, this right to rescind could be lost, in four situations that courts regard as unfair to allow a claim. First, if a claimant takes too long to claim, the lapse of time (or "laches") will create a bar to rescission.[269] Second, if a claimant affirms a contract by expressly showing they still consent to a deal even though they are aware of a misrepresentation, rescission is barred.[270] Third, if a third party's rights have intervened, when that third party is a bona fide purchaser rescission will be barred to the extent that property cannot be recovered from the third party (although a claim in damages can still exist against the misrepresentor).[271] Fourth, and important in practice to prevent unjust enrichment is that counter-restitution must be possible. There is confusion over whether in cases at law, rather than in equity, counter-restitution must be precise (i.e. a thing received must be given back in specie) or whether, as in Erlanger, substantial counter-restitution may be in money.[272]
Depending on how a court construes negotiations, a representation could become a term of the contract, as well as one giving rise to the right to rescind. A misrepresentation that is a term, will entitle the misrepresentee to a simple breach of contract claim, with "expectation damages" for loss of potential profits (subject to remoteness and the duty to mitigate). If the misrepresentation is not a term, then damages may also be available, but only "reliance damages" for losses that have been incurred. Until 1963, the general rule was that only for fraud (i.e. an intentional or reckless misrepresentation) were damages available. For fraud, damages are available for all losses that flow directly from the misrepresentation.[274] However, in its Tenth Report the Law Reform Committee recommended that damages should also be available for negligent misrepresentations.[275] This led to the drafting of the Misrepresentation Act 1967, and just before the Act was passed, the House of Lords also decided in Hedley Byrne & Co Ltd v Heller & Partners Ltd[276] there should be a new claim for negligent misrepresentation at common law. While Hedley Byrne remains an important case for an independent action in tort, MA 1967 section 2(1) was instantly more generous than the common law. It allows damages if the claimant shows a defendant has made a false representation, and then the defendant cannot prove that they had reasonable grounds for making a statement and honestly believed it was true. So while the common law would put the burden of proof on a claimant to show a defendant made a negligent misstatement, MA 1967 s 2(1) shifts the burden of proof to the defendant. The measure of damages is also more generous under the Act than at common law, because just as the Law Reform Report was drafted, the House of Lords was introducing a limit on the quantum of damages for negligence to losses that are reasonably foreseeable.[277] MA 1967 section 2(1), however, was drafted by reference to state the same damages were available as for fraud. So in Royscot Trust Ltd v Rogerson,[278] the Court of Appeal held that even where a representation is negligent, and not fraud, the same quantum of damages is available as for fraud. This is controversial among academics who argue that fraud is more morally culpable than negligent behaviour, and should therefore deserve a more severe limit on compensation, though it is not entirely resolved what the proper circumstances for remoteness ought to be.[279] Under section 2(2) the court has the discretion to substitute the right to rescind a contract for a small misrepresentation with an award of damages.[280] Under section 3, a court has the power to strike down clauses excluding remedies for misrepresentation if they fail the reasonableness test in the Unfair Contract Terms Act 1977.[281]
An exception to the law on misrepresentation - that contracts are voidable at the instance of the misrepresentee, but the right to rescission can be barred inter alia by the intervention of third party rights - arises when someone is induced by the fraudulent misrepresentation to enter an agreement through a written document at a distance (and not when a transaction is face to face). In Shogun Finance Ltd v Hudson[282] a crook obtained Mr Patel's credit details and bought a Mitsubishi Shogun on hire purchase contract at a car dealer. Shogun Finance was faxed through Mr Patel's details, and agreed to finance the purchase of the car, letting the crook drive away. Subsequently Mrs Hudson bought the car from the crook. The crook disappeared. Then Shogun Finance, who had predictably never been paid, found Mrs Hudson and sued to retrieve the car. A bare majority in the House of Lords held that to protect the certainty of commercial dealings through a signed document, the contract between the finance company and the crook was void (the same consequence as if there had never been any offer mirrored by an acceptance). They had only ever intended to contract with Mr Patel. And because nobody can convey property they do not have (nemo dat quod non habet) Mrs Hudson never acquired legitimate title to the car from the crook and had to give back the car.[283] The minority held that this situation should follow ordinary law of misrepresentation, and should mean that the right of the finance company to rescind the contract would be barred by the intervention of Mrs Hudson's rights as a bona fide third party purchaser, just like all of Europe, the United States, and previous decisions of the Court of Appeal suggest.[284] However, because of the majority's decision this special category of "mistake about identity" cases remains a general exception to the English law on misrepresentation.[285]
Unconscionability
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Parallel to the slow development of common law duress, the courts of equity allowed escape from a contract if any form of undue influence was used against a contracting party. "Actual undue influence" is now essentially the same thing as duress in its wider form. In these "class 1" cases, a claimant proves they were actually put under undue influence. Most relevant are the cases on "presumed undue influence", of which there are two sub-classes.[291] "Class 2A" cases involve someone being in a pre-defined relation of trust and confidence with another, before which they enter a very disadvantageous transaction. In Allcard v Skinner, Miss Allcard joined a Christian sect, the "Protestant Sisters of the Poor", run by her spiritual adviser, Miss Skinner. After taking vows of poverty and obedience she gave the sect almost all her property. Lindley LJ held that if she had not been barred from the claim by letting 6 years lapse, it could be presumed that Miss Allcard was unduly influenced and she would have been able to rescind the transfer. Other class 2A relationships include doctor and patient, parent and child, solicitor and client, or any fiduciary relation (but not wife and husband). Where the relation does not fall into one of these, it stands with "class 2B" cases. Here, a claimant may first prove that there was in fact a strong relation of trust and confidence. If that is done, and there is a disadvantageous transaction, it will be presumed to result from undue influence.[292] It will then be up to the recipient of the property to rebut the presumption. This takes on greatest significance in cases involving banks typically lending money to a husband for his business, and securing a mortgage over the husband and wife's jointly owned home. Significant problems arose, particularly after the early 1990s housing, stock market and currency crashes, where the husband's business failed, the bank attempted to repossess the house, and the wife claimed she never understood the implications of the mortgage or was pressured into it.[293] Even though a bank may have played no illegitimate role, if it had "constructive notice" of undue influence (i.e. if it was aware that something was potentially wrong) the bank would lose its security and could not repossess the house. In Royal Bank of Scotland plc v Etridge (No 2)[294] the House of Lords decided that in such situations a bank should ensure that the spouse has been independently advised by a solicitor, who in turn confirms in writing there is no question of undue influence, before giving out a loan.
As opposed to duress and actual undue influence, where illegitimate pressure is applied, or presumed undue influence which depends on a relationship of trust and confidence being abused, further cases allow a vulnerable person to avoid an agreement merely on the basis that they were vulnerable and exploited. In The Medina[295] the Court of Appeal found that a group of pilgrims shipwrecked on a rock in the Red Sea did not need to pay £4000 they promised to a rescue ship, because the "rescuers" had exploited the pilgrims vulnerable position. To prevent unjust enrichment, the Court substituted an award of £1800. Similarly, in Cresswell v Potter, Ms Cresswell conveyed her ex-husband her share of their joint property in return for release from mortgage repayments, later making him £1400 profit. Because Potter took advantage of Ms Creswell's ignorance of property transactions, Megarry J held the agreement was voidable.[296] One potential exception to this pattern, and now very heavily restricted, is the defence of "non est factum", which originally applied in favour of illiterate people in the 19th century allowed a person to have a signed contract declared void if it is radically different from what was envisaged.[297] In Lloyds Bank Ltd v Bundy,[298] Lord Denning MR proposed it was time that all cases be placed into one unified doctrine of "inequality of bargaining power".[299] This would have allowed escape from an agreement if without independent advice one person's ability to bargain for better terms had been heavily impaired, and would have essentially given courts broader scope to change contracts to the advantage of weaker parties. The idea was disapproved by some members of the House of Lords from 1979.[300] There is specific legislation, such as the Consumer Credit Act 1974, the Landlord and Tenant Act 1985, or the Employment Rights Act 1996 which create targeted rights for vulnerable contracting parties, in the same way specific legislation circumscribes a duty of disclosure and good faith. The common law, subject to the existing exceptions, nevertheless retains an essential foundation of freedom of contract.
Incapacity
Main articles: Capacity in English law and Capacity (law)
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In a fourth case, the consequences of incapacity are more drastic. Although the Crown Proceedings Act 1947 made it possible for the government or emanations of the state to be sued on contracts in the same way as a normal individual, where statute confers power on a public body to do certain acts, actions by representatives beyond that power will be ultra vires and void. The result is the same as it was for companies before reform in 1989, so that whole chains of agreements could be declared as non-existent.
Illegality
Main articles: Illegality in English law and Ex turpi causa non oritur actio
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Theory
Main article: Contract theory
- Law of obligations, tort, unjust enrichment and trusts
- Economic tort, Lumley v Gye (1853) 2 El & Bl 216, tort of interference with a contract
- Assumption of responsibility and pure economic loss
- Freedom of contract and regulation
- Autonomy
- Bargaining power and inequality of bargaining power
- Will theory, promise
- "Promise" in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
- Arthur Linton Corbin
- Adverse selection, moral hazard, information asymmetry
- Complete contract and default rule
- Agency cost, principal–agent problem
- Codification, common law and the European civil code
- Specific contracts: Agency. Arbitration clauses. Bailment. Bills of exchange and banking. Building contracts. Carriage by air. Carriage by land. Construction contracts. Credit and security. Employment. Gaming and wagering. Insurance. Restrictive agreements and covenants. Sale of goods. Suretyship.
See also
- Unidroit Principles of International Commercial Contracts of 2004 (text and commentary)
- Principles of European Contract Law of 2003
- Uniform Commercial Code of 1952
- Restatement (Second) of Contracts of 1979
- South African contract law
- US contract law
- German contract law
- French contract law
- Canadian contract law
- Australian contract law
- UK commercial law
- UK company law
- UK labour law
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