9622092896
9622092896
Blank p. ii
Hong Kong
Contracts
Second Edition
Carole Chui and Derek Roebuck
Contents
ix
xi
1.
What Contracts Do
1.1 Contracts and Other Obligations
1.2 The Functions of Contract
1.3 The Basis of Contract
1
1
2
3
2.
5
5
6
8
10
12
13
3.
17
17
21
22
24
27
31
32
4.
45
45
45
46
46
48
49
50
vi
4.8
4.9
4.10
4.11
Collateral Contract
The Relative Importance of Terms
Implied Terms
The Battle of the Forms
51
52
56
61
5.
Defective Contracts
5.1 Vitiating Factors
5.2 Misrepresentation
5.3 The Remedies
5.4 Mistake
5.5 Rectification
5.6 Duress and Undue Influence
5.7 Unconscionable Bargains
65
65
66
70
74
81
81
84
6.
Discharge
6.1 Methods of Discharge
6.2 Performance
6.3 Agreement
6.4 Accord and Satisfaction
6.5 Acceptance of Breach as Repudiation
6.6 Frustration
89
89
89
92
93
93
95
7.
Remedies
7.1 The Range of Remedies
7.2 An Action in Debt or for the Price
7.3 Damages
7.4 Equitable Remedies
7.5 Tort
7.6 Quasi-contract
7.7 Loss of Remedy
8.
Restrictions on Remedies
117
8.1 Remedies Fixed by the Parties
117
8.2 Liquidated Damages Clauses, Penalty Clauses and Deposits 117
8.3 Liquidated Damages, Penalty and Limitation Compared
120
8.4 The Nature of Exemption Clauses
120
8.5 Construction of Exemption Clauses
122
8.6 Has the Clause been Incorporated into the Contract?
122
8.7 Is the Clause Worded Clearly Enough to Cover the Damage? 132
8.8 Fundamental Breach
133
101
101
104
105
110
112
112
113
Contents
vii
135
137
141
9.
147
147
150
152
153
10.
161
161
162
162
163
166
166
168
171
171
171
174
11.
Table of Legislation
179
Table of Cases
181
Index
187
Blaank p.viii
Times are changing for professional education as for all else in Hong Kong.
The Hong Kong Society of Accountants has recognized the need to bring its
educational demands home to Hong Kong and forward to the present day. All
the law parts of the professional examinations now require the student to
know the law in Hong Kong rather than England. Before the Society could
make those changes it had to be confident that students had appropriate
textbooks from which to study Hong Kong law, and so it asked the members
of an advisory committee on law studies, who represented institutions teaching accountancy students, to write introductory monographs. There are five:
on business associations, cheques, goods and professional liability as well as
this, on contracts. Their purpose is primarily to help students taking the
professional accountancy examinations but we, the authors, hope that they
will be of more general use as introductions to parts of the law which people
in Hong Kong would like to know more about.
The other books in the series are:
Business Associations by Clement Shum
Goods by Judith Sihombing
Hong Kong Contracts by Carole Chui and Derek Roebuck
Professional Liability by Robert Wickens
All will be published in revised Second Editions by the Hong Kong
University Press in 1991.
Derek Roebuck
July 1991
Blank p.x
The aim of this book is different from the authors other books on contract
law. It sets out to provide beginners in Hong Kong with a straightforward text
to help them in their first studies of the law of contract. In particular, it
recognizes the need of the many students who aspire to become accountants
for a book specially written for them.
This book is not a diluted legal textbook, trying to cover everything a
lawyer needs to know and somehow hoping that a beginner will be able to
understand the difficult parts without the depth of explanation that a legal
textbook has room for. We have taken into account the readers starting point
and how much time and effort they can sensibly be expected to spend on this
subject before moving on to other legal topics covered elsewhere. We have
taken advantage of the existence of other books in the series which cover
some topics in depth which we would otherwise have had to include. We
have numbered the paragraphs and sub-paragraphs and all references are to
those numbers and not to pages. We have ended each chapter with Points to
Note, to help readers to understand and to check that they have understood.
We thank the many students we have taught, of accountancy, company
secretaryship, business and management, building, arbitration, as well as law,
who have helped us to clarify our ideas and taught us how to communicate
them. We also thank our colleagues Sheree Leung and Rosita Chan, who
have managed us, our manuscripts and many drafts.
A new edition is needed to take account of important changes in the law
in the last two years. Legislation has reduced the age of majority to 18 and
improved consumers' rights by the control of unfair terms. Recent cases in
Hong Kong and elsewhere have developed the law. The opportunity has been
taken to correct misprints and improve expression here and there. Though
Carole Chui is now with the College of Law in England, we remain jointly
responsible for this edition.
Carole Chui
Derek Roebuck
July 1991
Chapter 1
What Contracts Do
1.1
1.2
What Contracts Do
they have made, but also enter into long term contracts to make sure
that they have enough orders for their goods for a reasonable time
ahead. They may have to enter into contracts with customers under
which they are responsible for servicing the product, or guaranteeing it for a period. They will make contracts with carriers to transport their goods. Carriage contracts are highly developed and complex, particularly if the goods are going abroad, whether by land, sea
or air. In connexion with these goods and also to protect the business
against fire, theft, liability to claims for all kinds of negligence, loss
of profits, workers compensation, and many other possible losses,
they will enter into contracts with insurance companies.
So far it has been assumed that those engaged in business have
enough money of their own or money contributed by partners or
shareholders. This will rarely be so. They will open a current account with a bank, an act which itself creates all kinds of contractual
obligations between the customers and the bank, which are implied
into the relation which exists once a current account is opened, and
which have accumulated over three centuries.
What has been described is a simple model. The more complex
the business the more contracts, and the more kinds of contract, are
used. In particular, the provision of finance and credit has produced
the greatest sophistication of the contract device. Economic growth
depends on finance being made available. Although all governments now control to some extent the supply of finance in their
countries, from both internal and foreign sources, there is still need
in non-socialist countries to encourage private lenders, that is lenders who are not governments or government institutions of some
kind, to lend their money. The provision of adequate contract arrangements is one of the factors which act as an inducement. The
basis of wealth in modern societies is the contractual promise. Most
kinds of wealth are contractual rights: bank accounts, shares in
companies, debentures and other loans and most forms of security.
1.3
Points to Note
1.
2.
3.
4.
Business contracts take many forms and permeate all business activity.
5.
6.
7.
8.
The law of contract has a twofold task: to prevent disputes between the
parties and to resolve those it cannot prevent.
Chapter 2
2.1
Introduction
For legal purposes, the word contract means in English an agreement which the state will recognize as legally binding. If an agreement is not legally binding in this sense, then it is not called a
contract.
Without a law imposed by the state, the relation itself is quite
different, because the parties behave differently if they have to rely
on custom or social pressure or self-help and cannot call on the state
to impose its sanctions. Moreover, because contract has throughout
its modern growth been seen as a technique for allocating risk
between the parties which is one of its major functions if it is
made by business people it has been accepted policy that the law
should be as certain as possible rather than aspire to changing
standards of fairness. That policy has always been mitigated to some
extent by judges determined to do justice between the parties and
has been relaxed in England in the last decade or so. To a greater or
less degree in other common law countries great changes have been
made by statute and by the innovations of the higher courts. Few
such changes have taken place in Hong Kong, which is in danger of
being governed by a superseded model of English law. But it is the
law in Hong Kong which is described in this book. Every separate
legal jurisdiction has its own distinctive law. The law of contract in
Hong Kong is very like that of England but the subtleness of the
differences make them all the more dangerous and therefore all the
more important for the student, the lawyer, the accountant and all
those in business to be aware of.
Most of Hong Kongs contract law cannot be found in legislation. Very few ordinances deal with contract principles, which can
only be discovered by skilful reading of thousands of reports of
cases decided not only in Hong Kong and England but in other
common law jurisdictions. The following chapters try to distil the
law in those cases into intelligible principles.
2.2
Is There a Contract?
This is a question of law, and it may be answered by the parties
themselves agreeing that there is, or accepting the advice of their
lawyers, or, if legal proceedings are begun and the case comes to
trial, by the court. A court can only decide a case on the evidence
presented to it. Judges can only determine whether a contract has
been made by considering the evidence before them, provided by
the witnesses for the parties, usually including the parties themselves, as to what the parties did and wrote and said at the time they
were negotiating for a contract. The judge is concerned with what
they did rather than what they now say they meant to do. To the
judge hearing a contract action, agreement consists of acts (including words) and the state of mind of a party is relevant only exceptionally. Judges will decide that a contract has been made only if
they have before them legally admissible evidence showing the
parties willingness to be bound to one another. The parties must
have exhibited some intention of making use of the authorization
given by the state to those who wish to change their legal relations
with one another by contract. Judges must be satisfied that each
party manifested a willingness to be bound to the other party on
terms agreed between them.
A typical contract arises out of negotiation between the parties
and comes into existence when, after one party has manifested a
willingness to be bound on terms which he or she proposes, the
other party shows assent to the contract on those terms. This process
is usually characterized in the following way: the offer by one party,
called the offeror, gives to the other, called the offeree, the ability to
create a contract by making known acceptance to the offeror. However, it is now recognized that agreement can be manifested by the
parties in other ways. In the process of negotiation there may be
many stages, invitations, offers, counter-offers, rejections and acceptances.
All systems of law need a method of distinguishing agreements
which it is proper for the community to enforce by the application of
its sanctions from those which it should not. In earlier forms of
society great stress was laid on formalities, and many modern systems of law, including the common law, retain traces of this attitude
which are still important. Common law still has the deed, whose
effect is dependent on its form. It also requires contracts for the sale
or other disposition of an interest in land to be supported by written
evidence.
It does not say there is no contract without writing, merely that
writing is the only kind of evidence the court may accept, though
even this is subject to many exceptions. The language of this part of
the law draws a distinction between enforceable contracts, of which
there is evidence that the court will accept and which the courts will
therefore enforce, and valid contracts which are binding but which,
because they are not evidenced in writing, the court may recognize
but must refuse to enforce. But the policy of granting the greatest
possible freedom to exercise economic power, a policy which gains
strength with the growth of capitalism, also encourages the discarding of requirements of form, except in exceptional situations. Therefore, whether it is characterized as freedom of contract in the common law or as autonomy of the will in the laws of other countries,
there is a policy not to require formality for validity or enforceability.
If not some solemn form or token, then what test will distinguish agreements recognized and sanctioned by the state, for that is
what contracts are, from other kinds of agreement which the law
will not treat as binding? In the common law it is consideration:
promises are enforced not because it is wicked to break a promise
seriously made, or a promise intended to be binding at law, or a
promise intended to be relied on, or even a promise in fact relied on
by the promisee, but because one person, who has done or promised
2.3
what terms are contained but disagree about their meaning or relative importance. One party may say that there is a term not expressed in the contract, but which both parties understood would
apply, and which the court ought to imply. The other party may
deny that. Such an implication can arise from a previous course of
dealing between the parties, or because such a term is customary in
their trade, or sometimes because legislation implies a term into that
sort of contract. Occasionally it may be possible for a party to show
that the contract so obviously needs a term implied into it, if it is to
make sense, that the parties must have left it out inadvertently.
Express terms displace implied terms which conflict with them.
Terms implied by legislation are quite common. Sometimes an
ordinance says that a term is implied unless the parties agree that it
should not be; sometimes the term is imported whether the parties
like it or not.
The evidence may show that a contract was made in writing, or
orally, or by conduct of some other kind, or by any combination of
these methods. If it is completely contained in written documents,
then the task of finding its meaning will be performed by the judge,
who will interpret the documents; if it is not, then evidence will have
to be adduced to show what was said and done.
It is not always easy to decide whether something which was
said during negotiations has become a term of the contract, whether
it was a promise or something else. If it was a promise and it has
been broken, then the court will make the promisor either do what
was promised or compensate the disappointed promisee. If it was
not a promise, there may be nothing the promisee can do about it,
unless there is proof that the promisor was fraudulent. By the time of
the action, the parties are unlikely to have an accurate recollection of
what was in their minds at the time of the negotiations, nor are they
likely to agree, if their different interests depend on opposite interpretations. For example: A agrees to sell his car to B for $28,000
and, during the negotiations, A tells B that the car is a 1987 model.
After she has bought the car, B discovers that it is a 1986 model and
worth $5,000 less. If A made his statement of the cars age fraudulently, and B can prove it (which is not likely), then B will be able
to recover damages from A, and it may not matter whether the
statement was part of the contract or whether it was a promise or
not. An action will lie in tort that is, for a civil wrong independent
of contract. But if B cannot prove that A was fraudulent or negli-
10
gent, she can get damages only if she can satisfy the court that As
statement of the cars age was a promise. The court looks to the
intention of the parties. Did they intend it to be a promise? But when
the judge asks the parties what their intentions were, A will insist
that it was no promise and that all he did was to tell B what date
appeared in the certificate of registration. B will say that of course it
was a promise. The value of the car depended on its age, and she
considered As statement vital. She relied on As description, she
was entitled to do so, and she would not knowingly have bought a
1986 model at any price.
The truth is that neither party had any intention which the judge
could ever discover. It is only possible in many situations for the
parties to have an intention one way or the other when told by a
lawyer the distinction between a statement which is a promise and
one which is not. They will certainly have been told that by the time
they get into the witness box, but that is not likely to lead to the truth
coming out. Many techniques for resolving disputes are similarly
based on the courts search, real or supposed, for the intention of the
parties. Judges generally prefer to rely on what is called construction of the contract the search for its meaning in its own words
and the circumstances surrounding its creation rather than impose their own view of what would be a fair solution. In Hong Kong,
since the Misrepresentation Ordinance (Cap 284), whether the purchaser can recover damages no longer depends on whether As
statement was a promise or not. Where that Ordinance applies,
damages may be recovered even for an innocent misrepresentation.
2.4
Defective Contracts
The contract may suffer from any number of flaws, sometimes
called vitiating factors. These may be of greater or less importance
and the law may give them different effect. Misrepresentation, we
have just seen, may allow the victim to refuse to go on with the
contract, to ask the court to set it aside, or claim damages. Fraud is
an even more obvious source of similar remedies, though it is hard
to prove. Parties cannot enforce contracts which they have forced on
others by physical threats, known as duress, or by exercising some
improper control, called undue influence. It will not usually be
possible to get out of a contract by pleading that you made a
11
12
age of majority. Together with the mentally sick and the drunkard,
infants are given special protection by being treated as incapable of
making promises which bind them at law, except for the purchase of
necessary goods and services. The common law also used to protect
married women, in particular from the depredations of spendthrift
husbands, but that protection or disablement has been removed by legislation. The limited company was also considered to
need special privileges, and one of its characteristics is that it can
only make binding contracts for purposes set out in its memorandum
of association, and through officers duly appointed. Within these
limits, though, any person, whether a natural person or a person
created by law like a limited company, can contract validly.
2.5
2.6
13
14
right to damages. If the injured party can show no loss, the damages
will be nominal, a small amount awarded by the court just to show
that the right under the contract has been recognized. But normally a
breach causes a loss, and the loss can be proved, and then the court
attempts to fix the damages at a figure which will compensate for
the failure to perform the contract.
It may well be that damages are a poor substitute for performance of the contract and the party injured by the breach would much
rather have the court force the party in breach to perform the contract. The old common law courts could not do that, but the courts of
equity did. In Hong Kong the jurisdictions of both kinds of court are
exercised by a single system of courts and any court can grant the
remedy of specific performance. But it will not do so on every
breach. Like all equitable remedies, specific performance is discretionary. The court will only grant it, instead of or in addition to
damages, if it can be shown that damages are not an adequate
remedy, that the injured party has acted equitably, and that the court
has the machinery to see that its order is carried out. It will not force
a person to perform personal services.
If the breach of contract takes the form of an act which the
contract forbids, such as using premises for industrial purposes
where the contract requires that they be kept as residential, then the
court can make an order forbidding conduct in breach of the contract. This order, called an injunction, is also an equitable remedy,
and within the courts discretion.
It is vital to remember, however, that a law of contract is needed
not only to resolve disputes and to ensure that the parties get their
contracts performed or compensation for their loss, but also to make
clear to the participants the rules of contractual relations. All members of society must have not only a system whereby their disputes
can be heard and resolved, and their agreements can be enforced,
but also a body of legal rules by which they can regulate their
conduct so that they can avoid disputes as far as possible. The law
itself has an important educational role.
This chapter has given you an overall view of the functions of
the law of contract. Lawyers must know all about all its parts. You,
as a beginner, need not and we have selected only the most impor-
15
2.
3.
Contracts allocate risk. Therefore their usefulness, particularly in business, requires that their meaning be as certain as possible.
4.
5.
6.
7.
Most of Hong Kongs contract law is found not in legislation but in the
reported decisions of the courts in Hong Kong and other common law
jurisdictions.
8.
9.
10.
11.
Negotiation can usually be divided into invitations, offers, counteroffers, rejections and acceptances.
12.
No formalities are usually required, but note deeds and contracts for the
sale or other disposition of interests in land.
13.
16
14.
The basis of contract in the common law of Hong Kong is bargain not
promise. The party wishing to enforce an agreement must show consideration has been given for the others promise.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
Agents may make contracts for their principals, which bind their principals but not them.
23.
24.
25.
26.
Remedies provided by the court include actions in debt, for the price,
for damages, for injunction and for specific performance.
27.
28.
Chapter 3
3.1
3.1.1
3.1.2
3.1.3
18
19
20
21
3.2
Agreement
3.2.1
3.2.2
22
3.3
Offer
3.3.1
3.3.2
23
Auctions. The putting up of goods (or land) for sale by auction is not
an offer. The person who bids makes an offer which the auctioneer
may accept or reject. The Sale of Goods Ordinance (Cap 26) s60
provides that each higher bid destroys all earlier bids. The auctioneers final determination of the successful bid is the only acceptance.
3.3.4
24
you sell us Bumper Hall Pen? Telegraph lowest cash price. The
defendant telegraphed: Lowest cash price for Bumper Hall Pen
900. The plaintiff replied: We agree to buy Bumper Hall Pen for
the 900 asked by you. The defendant denied there was any contract. He had replied to the second question in the original telegram
but not the first. He had not shown an intention to be bound. His
reply was therefore not an offer. The plaintiffs second telegram was
an offer but the defendant had not accepted it. Merely to fix a price
does not imply an offer to buy or sell.
3.3.5
3.4
Termination of Offer
3.4.1
25
one specific car but cars of a stated description, then it is clear the
offeror is willing to make any number of contracts.
3.4.2
3.4.3
26
then the notice could not have been an offer or any part of a contract
between Carlill and the Carbolic Smoke Ball Co. and that case
would have been decided the other way. Similarly, a revocation is
only effective when it is communicated.
3.4.4
Options. It is possible to pay the offeror to keep the offer open for a
stated period. That is called taking an option. An option is a separate
contract between offeror and offeree. A mere promise by the offeror
to keep the offer open does not bind the offeror. As we shall see
(3.7), a promise is binding only if supported by consideration, that is
it has been paid for, or is made by deed.
3.4.5
3.4.6
Lapse. If the offer is neither accepted nor rejected, and the offeror
does not revoke it, it will continue in existence until it lapses. If the
offeror stated a period for the offer to stay open, it lapses when that
time expires. If no period is fixed, the offer lapses after a reasonable
time. What is reasonable depends on the sort of deal the parties are
contemplating and all the surrounding circumstances.
If the offeror dies, the offer will lapse only if the contract would
need the offerors personal performance. If it is to play professional
football, those who succeed to his property cannot perform it. If it is
to sell a flat, they can.
If the offeree dies, then whether the offer lapses should similarly depend on whether it was made to the offeree personally or can
be impliedly extended to those who succeed to the offerees property on death.
There are no cases decided on lapse on death which provide
rules for Hong Kong. Justice and convenience require the rules
suggested here.
27
3.5
Acceptance
3.5.1
3.5.2
28
not when delivered to the offeror. In Hong Kong, telegraphic communication is in the hands of a commercial organization, Cable and
Wireless, which presumably takes the place of the Post Office.
Presumably, also, commercial couriers would be treated like the
Post Office in respect of letters. How the exception works can be
seen from the facts of Byrne v. Van Tienhoven (1880) 5 CPD 344:
1 October Defendants post OFFER to plaintiffs.
8 October Defendants post REVOCATION to plaintiffs.
11 October Plaintiffs receive OFFER and send ACCEPTANCE by telegram.
15 October Plaintiffs send letter confirming ACCEPTANCE.
20 October Plaintiffs receive REVOCATION.
The Common Pleas Division in England held that a contract
was made by an effective acceptance on 11 October, upon the
principle that the writer of the offer has expressly or impliedly
assented to treat an answer to him by a letter duly posted as a
sufficient acceptance and notification to himself.
If the acceptance is not by telegram or letter but by some
electronic means which is nearly instantaneous, such as telephone or
telex, then the postal rule will not apply. There is no need to make
an exception to the general rule that communication is required. The
House of Lords held in Brinkibon v. Stahag Stahl [1983] 2 AC 34
that a telexed acceptance is effective when and therefore where it is
received, unless the parties could be held to have intended otherwise. The same applies to fax messages, though it is a facsimile that
the offeror receives from the machine, not the original document:
Susanto-Wing Sun v. Yung Chi (1988) No A8177.
3.5.3
29
30
3.5.6
31
3.6
Tenders
A person who intends to buy goods or services may advertise asking
suppliers to tender for a contract. By this method the buyer can find
out the lowest price at which goods of the required specification can
be bought. Potential suppliers make offers when they reply to the
advertisement. If the tender is for specified goods or services at a
fixed price, that is if the terms of the offer are clear and need no
further negotiation, there is a contract when the buyer signifies
acceptance of the tender. But sometimes, although the buyers needs
are not able to be fixed, the price and availability must be. So the
buyer advertises for tenders to supply whatever goods of the agreed
specification the buyer shall order from time to time. What the buyer
wants is a standing offer. The tenderer is keen to get the business
32
3.7
Consideration
3.7.1
33
3.7.3
34
part of the bargain when the contract of sale was made. It will not
bind A unless B gave some new consideration for it. B had already
given or promised A the price of the car, and did nothing extra to
buy As new promise.
If at the time when an act is done by A for B, it is understood
between them that B will pay for it, but no price is fixed, then B will
be bound to pay a reasonable price, on the basis of what the law calls
quantum meruit, which means as much as he has earned. If B then
agrees with A to pay A $500 for the job, there is sufficient consideration. Bs promise has merely quantified the obligation. In Pao On
v. Lau Yiu-long [1980] AC 614, where a contractual promise was
said to have been given for a past consideration, the Privy Council
laid down the principle again:
An act done before the giving of a promise to make a
payment or to confer some other benefit can sometimes be
consideration for the promise. The act must have been
done at the promisors request, the parties must have understood that the act was to be remunerated further by a
payment or the conferment of some other benefit, and
payment, or the conferment of a benefit, must have been
legally enforceable had it been promised in advance.
An exception to the rule that past consideration is no consideration is in Bills of Exchange Ordinance (Cap 19) s27(1)(b) which
provides that a cheque or other bill of exchange is sufficiently
supported by consideration to make a holder a holder for value
even if the consideration is an antecedent debt or liability; Cheques
5.2.2.
3.7.4
35
3.7.6
36
to pay up. Perhaps Wong will then be able to repay money owed to
Wu. Wu may promise Chang $1,000 if Chang pays Wong the
$10,000. If Chang does pay Wong and has to sue Wu for the $1,000,
Wu cannot plead that Chang gave Wu no consideration for the
promise to pay $1,000. A promise to perform an obligation owed to
a third party can be good consideration.
Indeed, it is strange that the question should ever have been
asked, for it is clear that mutual promises are good consideration the
one for the other, and it cannot be denied that in our example, where
A owes B $100 and C promises A $10 if A will pay the debt to B,
then if C pays A the $10, C can sue A if A does not pay B. Surely A
will not be allowed to plead that A need not carry out the promise to
C because A had already made the same promise to B. That would
provide an escape for everyone who wished to get out of a contract.
3.7.6.2 A promise to perform an existing public duty. There is no reason
why a promise to perform an existing public duty should not be
good consideration for a promise to pay for that performance by a
private individual who is interested in having the duty performed.
Lord Denning, an outstanding reformer of the common law, has
held that a promise to perform a public duty is in any case good
consideration, so long as it is not against public policy. The other
judges have, however, shown some reluctance to accept this just
principle, and have based their decisions on their ability to discover
some other consideration for the promise than the mere promise to
perform the public duty, but they have had to work hard to find it in
some cases. In Ward v. Byham [1956] 2 All ER 318, A and B lived
as man and wife, though they were not married, from 1949 to 1954.
They had a child in 1950. In 1954, A turned B out but kept the child.
Some months later B wrote to A asking if he would let her have the
child. A replied that he would let B have the child and pay 1 a week
towards its upkeep if Bwould prove that the child was well looked
after and happy and would allow the child to decide, when she was
old enough, whether she wanted to live with A or B. B took the child
and A paid 1 a week until B married another man. Then A stopped
paying and B sued him on the promise contained in his letter. A
pleaded that there was no consideration for his promise as B was
already bound to keep the child, as the mother of an illegitimate
child was bound by statute to support it. The English Court of
Appeal found that there was a promise to do something more than
37
was required by statute and therefore avoided the issue, but Lord
Denning faced the problem and answered as stated above. The
problem is not a pressing one, as the judges will seek to do justice
either directly or by some time-honoured judicial subterfuge.
Clearly if it is against public policy to allow a person to bargain
for the performance of a public duty, the courts should not enforce
the bargain, but that is quite another thing than insufficiency of
consideration. If, when you are being attacked by a thief, a passing
policeman offers his services at a price, you will not be bound by a
promise to pay him, not because your promise was not supported by
sufficient consideration but because to enforce it would be against
public policy.
3.7.6.3 A promise to perform a duty already owed by contract to the same
promisee. If B already has a contractual right to make A do something, and B promises A something more if A will perform or repeat
the promise, then there is no doubt that the price for Bs further
promise is As promise or performance of an act A was already
bound to B to perform. B may well have had good reason to believe
that A would not perform unless B made the further promise, and B
may have thought that this was a good enough price for the promise.
But the law would not previously admit the sufficiency of such
consideration. Until recently the law was found in two old cases
with similar facts. In both, sailors were promised extra pay if they
would work the ship shorthanded. When they had done so, the
shipowners refused to pay them the extra. In Hartley v. Ponsonby
(1809) 119 ER 1471 the sailors succeeded in their claim for the
extra wages. The court held that the shorthandedness was so drastic
that they were asked to perform something quite different from what
their contract demanded. But in Stilk v. Myrick (1809) 170 ER 1168
it was held that the sailors were not entitled to the extra wages
because they had done no more than they were bound by contract to
do. If you or we were asked to cover for a sick colleague temporarily
it would mean extra work but we would usually feel it came within
our duties to do it though only up to a point and we would expect
the law to assist us if we were promised a bonus or overtime and
then refused payment.
The English Court of Appeal in Williams v. Roffey [1980] 1 All
ER 312 considered that it was no longer necessary to be so technical
about consideration. It was a building case. The sub-contractors
38
asked the main contractors for more money than the contract entitled them to. Otherwise, they said, they could not complete on
time. It seems they had run into genuine difficulties. Courts in the
past have not found such difficulties to be relevant unless they
amounted to frustration; 6.6. Contracting parties must perform what
they have promised in return for what they have been promised. But
the main contractor faced a penalty if the work was not finished on
time. So it agreed to make extra payments. But then it refused to
pay. The court held that the key to consideration was to be found in
the fact that the main contractor was worried about the penalty and it
was a benefit to it to have the sub-contract performed on time.
However, the court took care to point out that, if the sub-contractor
had brought any unfair pressure on the main contractor, the main
contractor would have been protected by the doctrine of economic
duress; 5.6.2, which did not exist at the time of the 1809 cases.
3.7.6.4 A promise to forgo contractual rights in return for partial performance of the contract, or a promise of partial performance. One of
the most exciting developments in the law of contract since the
Second World War has been Lord Dennings struggle to establish
the doctrine of promissory estoppel. It arose in this way. There is no
doubt that consideration is necessary for the formation of a simple
contract. Simple in this context means not made by deed. It need
not follow that there must be consideration for a promise to forgo
contractual rights, even less for an immediate waiver or surrender of
contractual rights. Yet the law has extended the requirement of
consideration to these situations. This gave rise to the rule, sometimes known as the rule in Pinnels Case (1602) 5 Co Rep 117a,
which was elaborated in Foakes v. Beer (1884) 9 App Cas 605 and
may be stated as follows:
Payment of a smaller sum than that owed under the contract is no consideration for a promise by the creditor to
release the contractual debt.
If A owes B $100 and B agrees to accept $50 in discharge of
the debt, B may according to this rule take the $50, promise not to
ask for more, then sue for the balance despite that promise. So far,
then, had an outworn economic philosophy taken the judges from
the commonly accepted standards of business people. In Foakes v.
39
40
3.
Note that the doctrine gives equitable rights. Parties who wish
to rely on it must show they have themselves behaved equitably. In
D and C Builders v. Rees [1966] 2 QB 617, D and C, jobbing
builders, did work for A, a builders merchant, and rendered accounts for 746. A paid 250 and was allowed 14 off the bill.
Then, in spite of demands for the 482 balance, A did not pay any
more. He set his wife on to D and C. She spoke to C on the
telephone. She made complaints about the work and said, My
husband will offer you 300 in settlement. That is all youll get. It is
to be in satisfaction. D and C knew that without the 300 their firm
would be insolvent. They accepted the 300 under protest. As wife
insisted that the receipt should state that the sum was received in
completion of the account. Here was a case where unfair pressure
had been put on the creditor. Lord Denning was not prepared to see
the equity arising from promissory estoppel used in this way:
This case is of some consequence: for it is a daily occurrence that a merchant or tradesman, who is owed a sum of
money, is asked to take less. The debtor says he is in
difficulties. He offers a lesser sum in settlement, cash down.
He says he cannot pay more. The creditor is considerate.
He accepts the proffered sum and forgives him the rest of
the debt. The question arises: Is the settlement binding on
the creditor? The answer is that, in point of law, the creditor is not bound by the settlement. He can the next day sue
the debtor for the balance, and get judgment. The law was
so stated in 1602 by Lord Coke in Pinnels Case and
accepted . . . by the House of Lords in Foakes v. Beer . . .
But a remedy has been found. The harshness of the common law has been relieved. Equity has stretched a more
merciful hand to help the debtor.
This principle has been applied to cases where a creditor agrees to accept a lesser sum in discharge of a greater.
So much so that we can now say that, when a creditor and a
debtor enter upon a course of negotiation, which leads the
debtor to suppose that, on payment of the lesser sum, the
creditor will not enforce payment of the balance, and on
41
the faith thereof the debtor pays the lesser sum and the
creditor accepts it as satisfaction; then the creditor will not
be allowed to enforce payment of the balance when it
would be inequitable to do so.
In applying this principle, however, we must note the
qualification: the creditor is only barred from his legal
rights when it would be inequitable for him to insist upon
them. Where there has been a true accord, under which the
creditor voluntarily agrees to accept a lesser sum in satisfaction, and the debtor acts upon that accord by paying the
lesser sum and the creditor accepts it, then it is inequitable
for the creditor afterwards to insist on the balance. But he is
not bound unless there has been truly an accord between
them.
In the present case, on the facts found by the judge, it
seems to me that there was no true accord. The debtors
wife held the creditor to ransom.
In my opinion there is no reason in law or equity why
the creditor should not enforce the full amount of the debt
due to him.
Some problems remain in applying the principles set out in
Ajayi v. Briscoe. First, no one has yet sorted out what has altered
his position means. The interpretation put upon this phrase by the
judges in future cases will determine the scope of promissory estoppel. Secondly, it is important to remember that promissory estoppel
is relevant only where the parties are already bound to one another
by contract. It never takes the place of consideration in the creation
of a contract, only in modifying or discharging it.
Points to Note
1.
2.
The plaintiff must show that the parties intended to create legal relations.
42
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
An invitation to treat differs from an offer because it does not give the
offeree power to create a contract. It is an invitation to make offers.
Similarly, the supply of information is not an offer. Whether a stage in
negotiations is an offer or not depends on the intention of the person
initiating it.
11.
12.
13.
14.
43
15.
16.
17.
Upon acceptance of the offer, the contract comes into existence on the
agreed terms.
18.
19.
20.
Telexes, fax messages and telephoned acceptances take effect according to the general rule, i.e., when communicated.
21.
22.
23.
The parties may agree all the terms but postpone the making of the
contract. The words subject to contract will usually, but not necessarily, have that effect.
24.
25.
Those who want the court to enforce a promise must show they have
paid a price for it.
26.
27.
28.
29.
44
30.
31.
32.
Forbearance to sue is sufficient consideration unless the one who forbears conceals something relevant from the other party.
33.
34.
35.
36.
Chapter 4
4.1
4.2
Statements
First of all, we must do a sifting exercise to see what, of all the
things said and written, amount to terms of a contract. Terms are
contractually binding promises. Not all statements made during
negotiations are terms, but unfortunately it is often far from clear at
first glance which statements are terms and which are not. There is a
spectrum, or a sliding scale, rather than a series of easily recognized
categories.
Nevertheless, a statement has to be categorized if we are to
46
know how to deal with a situation where the statement has turned
out to be false or misleading. There are three basic categories, puff,
representation and term. However, a statement may be classed as
none of these, but as a condition precedent or subsequent, or as part
of a collateral contract. We will concentrate first on the situation
arising when the statement has reference to the main contract that
is, as puff, representation or term.
4.3
Puff or Representation?
No one seriously expects a seller of goods or services to say: Here
is what I have to offer. It is really bad and inferior to others of the
same kind on the market. I really would not buy it if I were you. Not
even if this is the absolute truth. We have to allow for what is known
as traders puff. The amount of poetic licence allowed to traders
tends to vary over the years, and probably a nineteenth-century
trader could have got away with more than a twentieth-century
trader would. The courts tend to look at the circumstances in which
the statement was made, and to whom it was made. Remarks by car
salesmen, for example, tend to be treated relatively severely.
One rule of thumb is that when the remark concerns facts which
can be checked, it is more likely to be a representation. So if a car
salesman says this car has only had one owner, this cannot possibly be a mere puff, for a statement of fact is being made. If he says
this is a delightful little car, that sounds more like a puff.
4.4
Representation or Term?
A representation, we can see, contains a statement which can be
checked. How does it differ from a term of the contract? One way to
answer this is to say that the remedies vary. Remedies are dealt with
at length in Chapter 7. There is no remedy at all for a false puff. The
remedies for false representations are quite different from the remedies for breaches of terms.
A term contains a promise which is an integral part of the
contract, and that is why a broken contractual promise amounts to
breach of contract. A representation is a statement made to lure a
person on into making a contract. It is not part of the contract,
47
Time. Was the statement made at the beginning of long negotiations, to attract the customers attention? And was it never repeated?
If so, it is more likely to be a representation. If the statement is made
or repeated just before agreement is reached, then it is more likely to
be a term.
4.4.2
4.4.3
48
4.5
49
4.6
50
4.7
Construction of a Contract
The rule in construing and interpreting a contract should by now be
quite familiar. The contract is to be construed so as to find and give
effect to the intentions of the parties to it. Recently the Privy Council had to pronounce on a case originating in Hong Kong, Mitsui
Construction Co. Ltd. v. Attorney-General [1987] HKLR 1076,
which concerned a construction contract, involving a tunnel as part
of waterworks. It was difficult to reach a decision, because of the
complexity of the case and the fact that the contract was badly
drafted.
However, the Privy Council stated that the bad drafting did not
give any excuse for moving away from the primary duty to put into
effect the parties intentions as determined from a reading of that
contract. They refused to allow comparison with other contracts
made in similar circumstances.
Apart from this general rule, there are various rules of construction used by the courts to ensure a consistency of approach. The
most important one, and one we shall meet again when considering
exemption clauses (8.2), is known by its Latin title of the contra
proferentem rule (sometimes it is expressed in the plural, as
proferentes). Contra means against, and proferentem is a neat way
of referring to the person relying on the document that is, the
drafter of it, the proferens. Any ambiguities are construed against
the proferens. That is, the drafter never gets the benefit of any doubt.
This is a great incentive to making sure that your drafting is impeccably done.
4.8
51
Collateral Contract
The word collateral in this context simply indicates a contract which
exists alongside a main contract. For instance, a contract of guarantee cannot exist without something to guarantee. Such contracts
generally involve the payment of money compensation if certain
events occur.
The normal contract of guarantee is entered into deliberately,
and is usually in writing (although the law of Hong Kong, unlike the
law of England and Wales, no longer requires this). However,
sometimes the court may construct a contract where none was
specifically entered into. This is usually done where there are three
parties; 9.2.6.
Sometimes, a statement made during pre-contractual negotiations is taken to be part of a collateral contract between the two
parties. This is unusual, and may be done where it is not convenient
to use the remedies for misrepresentation. The device should not be
overused, however. In the case of Dick Bentley Productions v.
Harold Smith Motors (4.4.3), one judge wanted to find that there
was a collateral contract to the effect that the car would be wellvetted. The majority decided that this was not necessary, as the term
could be seen as part of the main contract. Although it was once said
that a collateral contract should not contradict the main terms of a
contract, this does not seem to be true any more. In City & Westminster Properties v. Mudd [1959] Ch 129, the collateral contract
device was used. Mr Mudd had a lock-up shop on lease from the
company. They produced a new lease for him to sign, but he objected, for under its terms he would be prevented from sleeping in
the basement (something he had been used to doing). The owners
told him that he could continue to live in the basement, and so he
signed. The owners then brought an action to forfeit the lease,
because of the wrongful use of the basement as living quarters.
Mudd was able to establish that the promise made to him was part of
a collateral contract. In consideration of it, and in reliance on it, he
signed the main contract.
It may be seen that the promise could not be part of the main
contract (since it contradicted it) even if the court had been prepared
to allow the contract to be partly oral and partly written. Misrepresentation could not produce the correct result. Only the device of
collateral contract allowed the court to give the most effective
remedy in all the circumstances of the case.
52
4.9
4.9.1
53
SOGO s13 is the main section dealing with the division into
conditions and warranties. A condition is an important term, embodying matters central to the contract. A warranty contains collateral matters merely.
Breach of condition entitles innocent parties to behave as though
the contract had been repudiated by the other party (that is, treat
themselves as discharged from all their own obligations), and also
claim damages if need be.
Breach of warranty entitles an innocent party to damages only
and not to repudiate.
It should be pointed out that the remedy for breach of condition
is not compulsory, and is easily lost. That is, the ending of the
contract is at the choice of innocent parties, and they may elect to
take only damages if it suits them to do so. In any case, if innocent
parties show an intention to continue with the contract after breach,
then this shows that they have elected to treat the breach of condition as a breach of warranty only.
Distinguishing between condition and warranty is done by looking only at the contract itself. If we imagine that we have a written
contract before us now, we will go through it in our imagination,
checking each clause. We read clause one, and ask whether, in our
opinion, at the time of contract the parties would have said that this
was a term central to the contract as a whole or not. We are not
allowed to use hindsight. That is, we must confine ourselves to the
time of contract and must not use what we actually know about the
circumstances surrounding the breach of the contract. We do this for
every clause. Note, however, that according to Schuler v. Wickman
[1974] AC 235, what the parties have called the clause is not
decisive. This is because the parties do not necessarily know how to
use the words in the sense prescribed by SOGO. After all, we have
seen at least one other use of the word condition in conditions
precedent and subsequent; 4.6. Also, as the Court pointed out,
sometimes condition is a word used to mean no more than term.
How many tickets have you seen which say for conditions see
back, and how many documents are headed terms and conditions?
This method has its disadvantages, and most of them come
about because to use it we deliberately shut our eyes to knowledge
which we actually have. In most cases it is true that, if an important
term is broken, the result will be drastic, whereas if an unimportant
term is broken, the results will be trivial. But there is no flexibility in
54
this method, because it does not allow for the unusual case. For
example, a term can be technically broken, with no loss resulting. If
that term is clearly, on the construction of the contract, to be classified as a condition, then the contract can be set aside. In Arcos v.
Ronaasen [1933] AC 470 the contract specified half-inch staves.
The staves which were delivered varied minutely from the half inch.
The buyers rejected on the grounds of breach of the term that (in
sales of goods) the goods delivered must be precisely the same as
the contract description. Yet the buyer could have used the staves
for making barrels, the purpose for which they were bought, with no
problem at all.
4.9.2
The modern test. The modern test came about because of dissatisfaction with the idea of making a decision on only part of the
knowledge held by the judge, and it began in a case called Hong
Kong Fir Shipping v. Kawasaki Kisen Kaisha [1962] 2 AC 26. Lord
Diplock stated that the test he wished to use involved taking into
account all factors, including circumstances involved in the breach
of contract, and asking the following question: Has the innocent
party been deprived of most of the benefit which he expected to get
from the contract? If the answer is yes, then the breach is treated
in the same way as breach of condition. If the answer is no, then
the remedy is damages only, just as for breach of warranty.
Lord Diplock described terms which he subjected to this test as
innominate terms. Innominate simply means without a name. Certain terms cannot be pre-classified. In the Hong Kong Fir Shipping
case, the term in question was seaworthiness. Like roadworthiness,
the term covers a whole spectrum of faults. A ship may be unseaworthy if it is a rotten and holed hulk; however, it may technically
be unseaworthy because of a couple of missing rivets. Such a term
obviously cannot be successfully pre-classified, and it makes a great
deal of sense to look at the whole picture, and ask the question
which Lord Diplock asked.
This totally different approach is also useful where it is not so
much the breach of a term which matters, as the breach of a whole
contract. If, for example, we look at a case from the early days of
aerial advertising, we see an example. In Aerial Advertising v.
Batchelor's Peas [1938] 2 All ER 788 an aeroplane, hired to publicize a particular brand of peas, flew over the cenotaph when the
town was observing its annual solemn silence in memory of the war
55
dead on Armistice day. We can see that the effect would be to create
an unfavourable impression of the peas, but it is hard to point to
exactly which term had been broken. In applying Lord Diplocks
test, we can see that the innocent party was deprived of all the
benefit it expected from the contract by the circumstances of the
breach.
At one time, there was a tendency to talk of breaches which
were fundamental or not fundamental, but the concept of fundamental breach led to bad decisions, so it has fallen into disfavour; 8.8.
4.9.3
56
3.
4.10
or a warranty, never intermediate. Business people prefer certainty and you will see the relevance of this if you imagine that
you have ordered a taxi to take you to the airport, to pick you up
by 8:30 a.m. It is 8:35, and the taxi has not arrived. You are
worried, and have no means of knowing exactly how late it will
be. You can still get to the airport if you jump on a bus immediately. If you have any sense, you jump on that bus. You do not
wait until it is clear that you have lost any benefit which was to
be expected from the contract. On the other hand, if you mention a time but do not make it of the essence, the lateness of
the other party does not allow you to refuse to accept performance at a later time.
The agreement of the parties. We have seen that, according to
Schuler v. Wickman (4.9.1), it is not enough to call a term a
condition. If, however, the parties explain what is to happen on
breach, then it is difficult to imagine that the courts could
enforce anything other than that which the parties have agreed
to do. So a cancellation clause may be used. This is a clause
which says clearly that if X does not do as X promised, then Y
may cancel the contract.
Implied Terms
All the terms of a contract need not be spelled out. Whilst it is true
that a contract may fail for uncertainty, the courts will not see a
contract fail if it is possible to find meaning. Sometimes meaning is
found by way of implication of a term which the parties must have
meant to include, but which they did not include in so many words.
This is a difficult area, for the courts refuse to help the parties by
rewriting their contract; the job of a court is simply to find the
meaning given to the contract by the parties themselves. If no such
meaning can be found, the contract must fail, in the last resort.
Implication occurs in two basic ways. First, a term can be
implied because the contract belongs to a particular type of contract,
and in this type of contract certain terms are generally included. In
such a case, it will be assumed that, unless the contrary is shown, the
parties in question also intended to include the term. This is rather
like picking a garment from a rack of clothes intended to fit a range
of people.
57
58
59
60
4.10.2
61
4.11
Points to Note
1.
2.
3.
62
Representation
Condition
Term
Intermediate
stipulation
Discharge
and/or Damages
Collateral warranty
Warranty
Damages
only
Figure 1
4.
The remedies for a broken term always include damages but for a false
representation they may not.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
Any ambiguity is construed against the party responsible for the drafting of it: the contra proferentem rule.
63
14.
Where justice requires it, the court may find a collateral contract.
15.
The need to put terms into categories arises because different remedies
attach to their breach.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
SOGO imports terms into contracts for the sale of goods. They are
either conditions or warranties: conditions that the seller has a right to
sell, that the goods answer the contract description, are fit for their
purpose and of merchantable quality, and (if it is a sale by sample) are
equal to sample; warranties that the buyer will have quiet enjoyment
and will not be disturbed by undisclosed claims; Goods.
21.
22.
23.
24.
64
25.
When both parties try to insert terms by using their own standard forms,
the Court must first decide whether there has been any agreement. If
there has, the meaning must be sought by construing all the documents
together.
Chapter 5
Defective Contracts
5.1
Vitiating Factors
We have seen that what usually matters is the appearance of agreement, and that we may find a hasty agreement binds us to something
we do not want. There are some cases, however, where a person
who says This is not what I expected! can get out of the contract.
These occasions are rare, however, and it is not every disappointing
surprise which gives rise to them. In Hong Kong law, we find that
we must fit our facts into one of a small number of categories,
usually referred to as vitiating factors in the textbooks.
Before looking at those categories, it must be said that there are
two possible effects of the vitiating factors. The most usual one is
that the contract becomes voidable. This is a matter between the
parties, and cannot give any help if third parties have become
involved. Rarely a contract can be made void and this affects all
parties. For example, supposing someone, by a trick, persuaded you
to sell your bicycle in exchange for a cheque which was not met at
the bank. If the buyer still had the bicycle, you could take it back and
it would not much matter whether the contract were void or merely
voidable. But if the buyer had sold the bicycle to a third party, who
knew nothing of the bouncing cheque episode, then to get your
bicycle back from the third party would be very difficult. You would
have to prove that the original sale by you was void. If it was merely
voidable, then the innocent third partys rights would be protected
above yours.
We have put the end at the beginning, because so many students
lose their heads when faced by the vitiating factors. They forget
what the purpose of proving the existence of such factors is, and
become too involved in the details. Bear in mind that what is
happening is an attempt by someone who has got much the worst of
a bargain to find some avenue of escape; and bear in mind that such
paths are hard to find, and narrow and rocky once found.
66
5.2
Misrepresentation
This factor is often met with in real life. It arises where someone is
misled by a statement of another person, and we have already seen
how difficult it sometimes is to tell the difference between a term of
the contract and a representation; 4.4.
We are not concerned at first with the motive for the misrepresentation, for we have a number of points to check. The statement
might be: The car has only had one owner or This book provides
all the information you need in order to build your own air conditioner. The first thing we do is to check the statement against the
following definition:
A misrepresentation is an untrue statement of fact, made by
one contracting party to the other, which statement was
intended to, and did, induce the other party to enter into the
contract.
If we take this statement apart, piece by piece, we will discover
what it is we need to prove to show that a statement is an effective
misrepresentation.
5.2.1
Defective Contracts
67
68
2.
5.2.3
a private sale (for s16, alone amongst the sections, only applies
when the seller sells in the course of a business). Or what about
a statement such as: There is planning permission to develop
this site? Every citizen is taken to know the law, and a misstatement of the law has no effect. A false statement as to the
effect of s16 therefore would not be a misrepresentation. Or
would it? Few statements are made in a vacuum. If you look at
our second statement you will see that, although it concerns the
planning law of the district, it is about a particular site. It could
be said to be a statement of fact as applied to the site. The courts
have classified this as mixed law and fact and treated it as fact.
The statement about s16 is purer law, but even so, gives us a
statement about the particular goods involved. How do you
think the courts would treat it? In general, the courts do not like
to be deterred from doing justice by the statement of law
restriction. In Cooper v. Phibbs (5.4.1) the court held that the
meaning of a will was a matter of law, but the way in which it
applied to the rights of a person was a matter of fact.
Not opinion, not intention. When I give an opinion, I am venturing on uncertain ground. So if I preface my statement with
something like I think, in my judgment, it seems to me, I
am in effect telling you that your guess is as good as mine. So in
Bisset v. Wilkinson [1927] AC 177 a tentative statement by a
seller of land as to the number of sheep the land could support
was held to be mere opinion. It helped that the vendor had never
kept sheep and clearly phrased his statement as an opinion.
However, it should not be imagined that the court will let any
lively rogue get away with the indiscriminate use of tentative
words before a definite statement. Furthermore, if a statement
betrays an opinion no reasonable person could have held, it is a
statement of fact (for the person is making a misstatement about
his opinion). Similar rules apply to intention. When I state my
intention, I am stating only my present state of mind, and there
is no guarantee against change. But if I state an intention when
it is not in my mind, then I am making a misstatement of fact,
for the state of a mans mind is as much a fact as the state of his
digestion, as judges like to put it.
Defective Contracts
69
talking about collateral contracts; 9.2.6. Incidentally, it is still possible to use the collateral contract device even where only the parties
are involved. But this is rare and generally is used where the remedies for misrepresentation would not be sufficient; 4.8.
5.2.4
5.2.5
70
5.3
The Remedies
5.3.1
Defective Contracts
(c)
(d)
5.3.2
71
ered. The picture had, in fact, been there for five years, and
the claim was barred by laches. This was, however, a claim
where the representation had been innocent, and laches by
itself is not a defence in a case of tort.
If restoration is impossible. Sometimes it is not possible to
return to a pre-contractual position. If I buy material from
you and make it into garments, it is now not possible to return
to our pre-contractual position. Generally financial adjustments will not be made over and above simple restoration. A
very few cases have allowed this, but such cases involved a
special relation of trust known as a fiduciary relationship, and
this is not usually involved in a misrepresentation case; 5.6.3.
If third party rights have arisen. Equity will not upset the
rights acquired for value in the subject matter of the original
contract, as long as the third party was not aware of the
problem affecting the original contract. The classic case occurs where a rogue, giving a false name and a false cheque,
persuades a seller to part with property often a car. By the
time the bank returns the cheque, the rogue has sold the car to
an unsuspecting third party. Equity will not allow rescission
in these circumstances. Damages for fraud may be possible
if the rogue can be traced.
72
5.3.3
Defective Contracts
73
they had reasonable grounds for that belief. You may see why this is
called negligent misrepresentation by some. For the sellers have to
show that there was no carelessness involved in the making of the
statement. It is clear therefore that s3(1) applies to innocent, but
careless, statements. It can also be used for fraudulent misrepresentation, if a party chooses not even to try to establish fraud.
Section 3(2) applies to any non-fraudulent misrepresentation. It
is complicated by the fact that it is said to apply in lieu of rescission. This appears to mean that if the right to rescind is lost, then so
is the right to s3(2) damages. When would s3(2) damages be useful?
This would be the only possible way of getting damages where the
sellers in my example above could show genuine grounds for the
belief that the picture was a Chinnery an expert opinion delivered
before the sellers themselves bought the picture, for example, or the
fact that it was bought from a museum. In that case, the only hope of
damages is s3(2), for, remember, reasonable grounds for belief is
fatal to a claim under s3(1); Goods.
5.3.4
74
5.4
Mistake
This takes up an inordinate amount of space in the average contract
textbook or course but not in real life. The only reason that it
remains alive and kicking is that, of all the vitiating factors, this is
the only one which operates at common law to render a contract
void. Remember the equitable bar in 5.3.1(d). If mistake, operative
at common law, had been proved, the third party rights could have
been set aside. But because this is such a ruthless action and does
violence to trust in commerce, it is rarely granted.
Mistake has many theories, and most of the textbooks agree on
some kind of core. However, it is certain that today, given absolute
authority to invent some new kind of code, no one in their senses
would choose to retain the complicated and nonsensical rules of
mistake.
First of all, mistake is a misleading word. Forget the normal
English meaning, and accept mistake as a technical word. Perhaps,
for once, we would have been better off with a Latin phrase.
Mistake is always related to the formation of the contract, and
can sometimes be reduced to sheer lack of subject matter. There
simply is nothing to contract about. At other times mistake will
amount to lack of consensus, since the offer made is not the offer
accepted; 3.2.1.
5.4.1
Defective Contracts
75
76
5.4.3
Defective Contracts
2.
77
78
establish that the original contract was void for mistake operative at common law. In our example, the mistake was as to the
identity of the buyer. This is sometimes given a separate classification as mistake of identity, but is no more than an example
of unilateral mistake.
To prove mistake of identity, we must prove that not only
was there a mistake as to identity, known to the other party, but
that reasonable steps were taken to check identity (in Hong
Kong this must include an identity card check) and the identity
of the person was of great importance. This last one is the
greatest problem, in that usually it does not matter that the
supposed person is creditworthy and the actual person unknown. It would have to be something more vital than that.
After all, I do not usually care that my car goes to a good home,
although with regard to a dog or cat that might be important. All
I care about when I sell my car (unless I am unduly sentimental)
is that I get my money.
The old lady owners of a car succeeded in proving operative mistake in Ingram v. Little [1961] 1 QB 31. It is said that
they succeeded because they were at first unwilling to take a
cheque at all. That is, they agreed to sell their car, but refused to
take a cheque and allow the car to be taken away. However,
their fears were set at rest when the buyer gave a name and a
fine sounding address (on the equivalent of the Peak, one supposes). Having checked that such a person did live at such an
address by looking up the name in the telephone directory, they
allowed the car to be driven away in return for a cheque. The
cheque proved worthless because the man who gave it was not
the person who lived at that address. However, it seems their
reason was merely a financial one, that is, they did not care who
bought their car or who gave them a cheque as long as he
was creditworthy. This does not come within the criteria given
in the previous paragraph and the decision of the English Court
of Appeal is unlikely to be followed in Hong Kong.
The English Court of Appeal in Lewis v. Averay [1972] 1
QB 198, a case also concerning the sale of a car to a rogue
claiming false identity (this time a film star), said that where
persons are physically present it is almost impossible to establish mistake operative at common law. They distinguished Ingram v. Little as confined to its own particular facts, which
Defective Contracts
3.
79
means that they did not admit it was wrong, but stated that it
was unlikely to be followed in future.
So if we fail to establish common law mistake, we are left
with equity. But mistake in equity will not make a contract
void, and therefore it is no use in this situation. It would be
better to sue for misrepresentation, since at least it allows us to
claim damages. The damages are against the rogue, not the
third party of course, and the rogue may be hard to find and
even harder to get money from. However, there is at least the
hope of a remedy here, whereas mistake in equity in this situation gives us none.
There is more chance of establishing mistake operative at common law when parties are corresponding and are not in each
others physical presence. But be careful to differentiate between the case where someone pretends to be an established
trader of whom the other has heard, and the case where a person
merely boasts of assets he has not got. Only in the former is
operative mistake possible and then it is a question of offer and
acceptance; 3.3.5.
In Cundy v. Lindsay (1878) 3 App Cas 459, the rogue
pretended to be the firm of Blenkiron & Co., by setting up in the
same street, and signing his name (which happened to be Blenkarn) in such a way that it could be read as Blenkiron. The court
was satisfied that Lindsay had only intended to contract with
Blenkiron. They had sent an offer to Blenkiron & Co. only.
Blenkarn knew that and could not accept it. But in Kings
Norton Metal v. Edridge, Merrett & Co. (1897) 14 TLR 98, the
rogue set up a back street company and gave it inflated letter
heading claiming depots which he did not possess all over
the world. It was held that the deceived company did nevertheless intend to contract with the rogues company, making a
mistake as to its worth and not as to its identity once again a
matter for equity, and once again with the problem of third
party rights, since the rogue had sold goods obtained on credit.
80
5.4.4
Defective Contracts
5.5
81
Rectification
The equitable remedy of rectification is available where a written
agreement can be proved not to reflect the prior oral agreement. In
this way the court rewrites the document to represent the true intention of the parties and can then give effect to it as rectified; 7.7.
5.6
5.6.1
5.6.2
82
Defective Contracts
83
The relationships include solicitor and client, doctor and patient, trustee and beneficiary. They do not include other professional
relationships automatically. Parent and child is a fiduciary relationship with the parent always presumed to be the stronger party. The
child is never presumed to be stronger. It arises at birth and does not
necessarily end with the childs majority or marriage. It ends when it
can be shown that the child is emancipated from the parent. This
point was made in Lancashire Loans v. Black [1934] 1 KB 380,
where a woman of full age, married and living away from home,
was held to be still in such relationship with her mother. Religious
adviser and disciple is another such relationship. There is no fiduciary relationship in marriage, however.
Because undue influence is hard to prove, a third category has
arisen. In this category, a relationship not normally fiduciary is
proved in the case of these particular parties to be so. Then the
presumption of undue influence arises and must be disproved by the
stronger party. Cases have included engaged couples, housekeeper
and elderly employer, and, of most importance recently, banks and
customers, and pop stars and their managers.
The relationship of bank and customer is at bottom simply a
relationship of debtor and creditor. Nevertheless, it does have some
fiduciary features; Cheques 3.1. For it to be a fiduciary relationship
in every respect would cause problems and undermine the freedom
of the bank to deal with customers deposits with a free hand.
However, traditionally the bank has been a source of financial
advice, particularly in country areas. In such cases the bank has
come to be in fiduciary relationship to a particular customer. This
was decided clearly in the case Lloyds Bank v. Bundy [1974] 3 All
ER 757. Once again, we have the case of a father who dotes on a
profligate son. In this case old Mr Bundy had mortgaged his farm to
the limit and beyond for the sake of his sons doubtful business
ventures. A new bank manager, tidying up the accounts no doubt,
came to visit him with further forms to sign. Mr Bundy, being
accustomed to rely on the bank manager, signed and in consequence
found the bank about to repossess his farm. The court held that a
fiduciary relationship existed, and the document could be set aside.
The change of manager did not matter it was a relationship with
the bank and not the individual.
For a while banks were worried in case fiduciary relationships
became the norm. However, the House of Lords in National West-
84
5.7
Unconscionable Bargains
This is the mystery factor. Hidden for years in footnotes, as an
interesting historical point related to bargains with heirs to catch
their inheritances at a later date, it has come to the fore in recent
cases in England. It is an equitable development to assist those who
have been victimized by a stronger party in cases which do not fall
within the undue influence rules. It remains a rather nebulous area,
and its relationship with the common law doctrine of economic
duress is uncertain. So far, it has not found favour in Hong Kong. It
should be noted that mere imbalance of power is not enough. The
Privy Council said in Hart v. OConnor [1985] 3 WLR 214:
Defective Contracts
85
Points to Note
1.
Vitiating factors or flaws in the contract may have two effects: they
may make the contract voidable or, more rarely, void.
2.
3.
4.
Equity will never declare a contract void or set it aside unless it can do
so without harming innocent third parties.
5.
A misrepresentation is an untrue statement of fact, made by one contracting party to the other, which was intended to (and did) induce the
other party to enter into the contract.
6.
7.
8.
9.
Defective Contracts
87
17.
18.
An action may arise in the tort of negligence for a negligent representation causing physical, or in some circumstances financial, loss.
19.
20.
21.
In such a case, equity would set the contract aside only on terms.
22.
23.
24.
Unilateral mistake arises where one party knows of the others mistake.
It is also a lack of agreement. One party cannot accept an offer in a
sense which it knows the other did not intend.
25.
26.
Non est factum is a defence only if it can be proved that the document
was not what the signer thought it was and that the signer has not been
negligent. Then the contract is void at common law.
27.
28.
29.
88
30.
31.
Chapter 6
Discharge
6.1
Methods of Discharge
A contract may be discharged in any of four ways, by performance,
by agreement, by one party accepting the others breach as repudiation, and by frustration.
6.2
Performance
The contract ends naturally when both parties have done what they
contracted to do. If Ann fully performs her part of the contract but
Benny does not, Ann is discharged and has a right of action against
Benny for breach. It is therefore necessary to find out what fully
performs means. The general rule is that both parties must do
precisely what they promised to do. If Benny fails to perform fully
he is guilty of a breach of contract and has no rights against Ann at
all. He cannot sue under the contract because he has not performed
his part; the right to sue depends upon either complete performance,
or, if the other party is in breach, a willingness to perform if the
other party will. If Benny has only partly performed his obligations,
he cannot sue for a fair price for the work he has done under the
contract. He will not be heard to say that he has done something for
Ann which has brought a benefit to Ann and that he is therefore
entitled to some remuneration. This would be to go against the terms
of the contract, which speak of doing a complete job for a certain
price. A claim for a fair price for a part of the work, which is called
by the technical name of a claim on a quantum meruit (as much as
he has earned), is not based on the terms of any contract, and must
therefore depend upon an implied promise of the other party to pay.
There can be no such promise implied where there is an express
contract covering the same subject-matter, but stipulating complete
performance. An implied term must give way to an express term
90
Substantial performance. If the difference between the work actually done and that undertaken to be done is very slight, the party
who has committed this slight breach may be allowed to recover the
contract price less an allowance for the difference between that
substantial performance and the performance required to meet the
contractual requirements. The difference between substantial performance in this sense and complete performance is a breach of
warranty. The damages for this breach of warranty will equal the
value of the difference. The difference between the remedy for a
breach of warranty and a breach of condition is an illustration of the
difference between substantial performance and insufficient performance. The injured party must be content, where there is substantial performance (or breach of warranty), with damages, or a reduction of the price; but, where there is a breach of condition (or no
sufficient performance), may repudiate the contract.
6.2.2
Discharge
91
prove that that was intended by both parties when the contract was
made. Such evidence may be provided by showing that it was
intended that payment should be made by instalments as the work
progressed, as is usual in building contracts.
6.2.3
6.2.4
6.2.5
6.2.6
92
6.3
Agreement
A contract can be varied or discharged by agreement, oral or written, or by deed. The contract can be discharged or varied orally even
though it was made in writing or even by deed. If the discharging or
varying agreement is made by deed there is no need to show consideration has been given. Otherwise consideration is as necessary for
such an agreement as for any other, except that in this situation the
doctrine of equitable estoppel may be relevant; 3.7.6.
Even if the contract which is to be varied is one which is
required by the Conveyancing and Property Ordinance (Cap 219) s4
(11.2) to be evidenced in writing, that is even though it is a contract
for the sale or other disposition of an interest in land, it may be
Discharge
93
6.4
6.5
94
Discharge
95
discharged of his obligation. It was then too late for B to sue for
anticipatory breach.
6.5.1
6.5.2
6.6
Frustration
6.6.1
96
Discharge
97
contract, read in the light of the contracts nature and the relevant
surrounding circumstances when the contract was made. This part
of the test reveals the scope of the original obligation, that is what
the parties would have to do to carry out the contractual promises in
the original circumstances contemplated by the parties.
Secondly, it is necessary to examine the situation existing after
the event, which is alleged to frustrate the contract, has occurred, to
find out what the obligation of the parties would now be if the words
of the contract were literally enforced in the new circumstances.
Thirdly, a comparison must be made between the original obligation and the new obligation, to decide whether the new is radically
or significantly different from the original obligation, to such an
extent that it would be unjust to hold the parties to the original
obligation.
6.6.2
6.6.3
98
Discharge
99
Points to Note
1.
2.
The contract ends when both parties have performed what the contract
requires.
3.
Partial performance need not be accepted or paid for unless the contract
so allows.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
Tender of payment does not discharge liability but the debtor is relieved
of the obligation of further tender.
9.
10.
11.
100
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
A party may continue performance and sue for the price, but must
mitigate damages.
18.
19.
20.
21.
A lease may be frustrated, if the test set out in The Eugenia is satisfied.
22.
Chapter 7
Remedies
7.1
7.1.1
Putting up with the breach. It is very common for a party who has
suffered a breach of contract to do nothing about it. That may be
because the breach is trivial the car is not quite the shade of
bronze which was ordered. Or it may be that the injured party
accepts the excuse of the party in breach, or realizes that a lawyer
would cost more than the breach is worth. The parties may be old
friends or relatives. The injured party may make handsome and
regular profits from doing business with the party in breach and not
want to lose the business, which would be a likely result of any
102
attempt to recover any remedy for the breach. The injured party may
fear that even a successful action in the courts would bring bad
publicity, or some other damage to reputation or credit-rating. Perhaps the injured partys lawyer may advise, having attempted to
recover some recompense for the breach, that whatever its merits
the injured partys case has too low a chance of success to make an
action worthwhile.
7.1.2
7.1.3
Remedies
103
whose task it is to help them to agree, for instance by acting as gobetween. Such a process is called mediation, or in some contexts
conciliation. The mediator is given no power to decide the dispute,
just to assist in finding a settlement. Mediation procedures are found
in some employment contracts and sometimes in international contracts, particularly with state agencies in socialist countries.
7.1.4
7.1.5
104
a shop and the owner makes it clear she will not pay you for the job,
it would usually be foolish to continue and the law allows you to
discontinue performance of your contractual obligations on the
ground that she has repudiated the contract; 6.5. If you have signed a
contract to sell your flat and have wisely taken a deposit, you can
hold on to it when the purchaser refuses to complete. Some forms of
contract regularly give similar rights. A lease may allow the landlord to forfeit the lease, retain a deposit and eject a tenant who fails
to pay the rent. A hire purchase or hire agreement may allow the
owner to repossess the goods if the hirer fails to pay an instalment.
Whether an injured party may treat the others breach as repudiation is dealt with at 6.5. If the court finds that the other partys
breach did not amount to repudiation or that in some other way the
act of self-help was itself a breach of contract, then that act will give
the other party a right to damages.
Self-help is for that reason always risky. If it involves invading
the premises of the party in breach, or removing property, or even
more obviously any kind of violence, it may be a criminal offence.
Any kind of trespass, that is a wrongful act against the others
person, goods or land, will give rise to an action for damages in tort.
7.2
Remedies
7.3
105
Damages
Every breach of contract gives rise to a right of action for damages.
A contract is an agreement which the courts recognize as legally
binding. The way they show that recognition is by granting damages
for any breach.
7.3.1
Nominal damages. Even if the injured party cannot prove that it has
suffered any loss, the court must make an award of damages, though
in such a case they will be nominal, for example one dollar. In C and
P Haulage v. Middleton [1983] 3 All ER 94, the defendant, the local
council, had granted a contractual licence to the plaintiff, a car
mechanic, of premises on which he could carry on his trade. The
defendant broke the contract by ejecting him ten weeks before the
end of the contract period. The defendant tried to help by allowing
the plaintiff to carry on his work at home, which they could and
would normally have forbidden. So the plaintiff saved the rent of the
premises. He could not show that the defendants breach had caused
him any loss just the contrary. The judge at first instance said, in
effect, If you cannot prove you have suffered any loss, I must find
against you and refuse you any damages. The Court of Appeal
reversed that decision, reaffirming the rule that a party who proves
breach of contract is entitled to an award of damages. In this case
they would be nominal, merely to show that there was a contract and
that the rights under it were recognized by the courts. It may be
unwise, however, to bring such an action because, if the court
considers its time has been wasted or its processes otherwise abused,
it may order costs against the successful plaintiff.
7.3.2
106
7.3.3
Remedies
107
creased that loss. There was no doubt that the defendants breach
caused that increased loss. Could the plaintiff get damages to compensate him for that extra loss? The court said no. The loss did not
arise naturally, according to the usual course of things. It was
common for mills to have spare crankshafts. The plaintiff had not
told the defendant that he only had one crankshaft. The loss which
the delay would cause was therefore not in the defendants contemplation, at the time of the contract, as the probable (i.e., not unlikely)
result of his breach.
But in The Heron II the result was the other way. Again the
defendant was a carrier guilty of delay, in this case in delivering
sugar. When it reached the market the price had fallen. This carrier,
though, knew that the market was unstable. It was not unlikely that
the price would fluctuate. It might well go up but it might just as
easily go down, which it did. The loss that occurred may reasonably be supposed to have been in the contemplation of the defendant,
at the time of the contract, as the probable [not unlikely] result of the
breach of it. Note that probable does not mean a better than evens
chance or more likely than not. Whatever it may mean elsewhere
and whatever dictionaries say, in this context it means not unlikely
whatever that may mean!
7.3.4
108
7.3.6
Remedies
109
Lump sums and interest. If by getting damages the plaintiff gets the
advantage of a lump sum now rather than periodical payments due
under the contract from time to time in the future, then an accurate
assessment of damages will make allowance for that benefit, reducing the damages to account for the acceleration in payment. Similarly, if the plaintiff has had to wait for what was due under the
contract, the court will allow interest in assessing the appropriate
compensation.
7.3.8
Tax. If the damages are not subject to tax in the plaintiffs hands,
the defendant will be ordered to pay only what the plaintiff would
have received if tax had been paid. This allows a bonus to an
employer who wrongfully terminates a contract of employment
because damages in such a case are not usually taxable. The plaintiff
does not suffer. The loss is borne by the state.
7.3.9
Discomfort and distress. There are recent cases where the plaintiff
has recovered damages not only for financial loss caused by the
defendants breach but also for associated distress or annoyance.
There must be some element in the contract and the surrounding
circumstances to show that the defendant should have contemplated
the personal discomfort or distress. In Hardwick v. Spence Robinson
[1975] HKLR 425, the plaintiffs hired the defendant architects to
build them a dream home in Silver Strand Beach Road. The drainage system was badly designed and the house was frequently flooded.
The High Court included in the award of damages an amount to
110
7.4
Equitable Remedies
Common law remedies, such as actions for damages or the price, are
awarded as of right to a plaintiff who can prove breach or nonpayment. If a common law remedy is sufficient to do justice to the
plaintiff, equity will not intervene. If the plaintiff can show that the
common law remedy is inadequate, the court may allow an equitable remedy. The court has a discretion. Equitable remedies cannot
be claimed as of right.
7.4.1
Remedies
111
If the broken contract was an employment contract or to perform other personal services, the court will not force a party in
breach to perform it by a decree of specific performance. The Court
will not lend itself to such an oppressive or futile exercise. If the
implementation of the decree would otherwise require the courts
constant supervision, as most building contracts would, the court
will not usually grant the decree. Nor will the court grant specific
performance if it would cause undue hardship to the defendant. In
Patel v. Ali [1984] 1 All ER 576, A contracted to sell her house to B.
She was then married with one child and in good health. By the time
she was required to give up possession she had two more children,
had lost a leg through cancer of the bone and her husband had gone
bankrupt. She relied on her neighbours and friends in the community, who would help her to pay damages. Specific performance
against her was refused.
On the other hand, a decree can be used to do justice where
damages are not only not sufficient, they are not available at all, as
in Beswick v. Beswick; 9.1.2.
7.4.2
Injunction. The courts order may not be in the form perform your
contract! It may be negative: Do not do something which would be
a breach of contract! Injunction, another equitable remedy, is an
order of the court prohibiting conduct which is a breach of contract.
Like specific performance it may be awarded instead of, or in
addition to, damages, and it may be available where specific performance is not, for example, where the breach is of a continuing or
recurring contractual obligation. It was said above that specific
performance would not be granted of a contract of service, but an
injunction may have practically the same effect. In Warner Brothers
v. Nelson [1937] 1 KB 209, A signed a contract to work as a film
actress for B and for no one else for one year. During the year A
signed a contract to act for C. B was granted an injunction restraining A from performing her contract with C which would have been a
breach of her contract with B. It was not quite the same as a decree
of specific performance. It did not directly compel A to work for B.
But it clearly had that effect. A was not likely to work for someone
else as a waitress. Injunctions are granted to enforce negative promises, promises not to do something. But the promise can be worded
in a positive way and still be enforced by an injunction. In Metropolitan Electric Supply v. Ginder [1901] 2 Ch 799, A agreed to buy
112
Rectification. Where the court finds that the parties have failed to
express in their written contract what both of them agreed on and
wanted to express, then it will order that the written document be
rectified; 5.5.
7.4.4
7.5
Tort
A party to a contract injured by the other partys act or omission
may sometimes be able and prefer to treat it not as a breach of
contract but as a tort. A fraudulent misrepresentation, for example,
may give rise to an action in the tort of deceit; a negligent one in the
tort of negligence.
7.6
Quasi-contract
A party injured by a breach of contract may prefer to seek a common
law remedy in what is called quasi-contract, meaning that though it
is not contractual, it is similar to a contractual remedy. Quasi is a
Latin word meaning as if.
Remedies
113
7.6.1
7.6.2
7.7
Loss of Remedy
A remedy for breach of contract may be extinguished in different
ways. It has been shown that the injured party may agree to release
the other from liability, in exchange for some valuable considera-
114
tion, that is, there may be accord and satisfaction. Another way in
which the right to sue for breach of contract may be lost is by the
passing of time. All restrictions on remedies are the subject of the
next chapter.
Points to Note
1.
When a contract is broken the injured party may do nothing; or negotiate; seek mediation or arbitration; use self-help; or sue for a common
law remedy in debt for the price or other fixed sum or in an action for
damages or in quasi-contract or tort; or seek an equitable remedy.
2.
3.
The advantages of self-help are speed and informality but with the risk
of committing some illegality.
4.
5.
An action for a fixed sum in debt or for the price has the advantage that
the plaintiff need not mitigate, or prove actual damage.
6.
7.
The court must award damages even if the plaintiff can prove no loss.
8.
9.
The plaintiff must prove that the breach caused the loss.
10.
The damage must not be too remote: it must arise naturally according to
the usual course of things or must reasonably be supposed to have been
in the contemplation of the parties, at the time they made the contract,
as the probable result of the breach.
11.
Remedies
115
12.
The court fixes the measure of damages, how much money is needed to
compensate.
13.
14.
15.
The party in breach cannot force the other to accept the breach as
repudiation.
16.
Allowances must be made both for premature and delayed payment and
for tax saved by the plaintiff.
17.
18.
19.
Specific performance will be granted only where damages are insufficient to do justice.
20.
21.
22.
Rectification will be granted only where both parties are proved to have
agreed something different from what they wrote down.
23.
24.
25.
An action in quasi-contract arises where there is total failure of consideration, for money or property transferred.
116
26.
27.
28.
Chapter 8
Restrictions on Remedies
8.1
8.2
118
day that Xu delays, it will have to pay Yan $5,000. This clause is
known as a liquidated damages clause. Liquidated means that the
sum of any claim is fixed beforehand. It may also be known as an
agreed damages clause. The courts like to encourage people to settle
sensibly. They do not want one party or the other to come rushing to
court if the clause turns out not to have been an accurate estimate
after all. The rule is, therefore, that the court does not ask whether
the parties got their estimate right. The court merely asks whether at
the time of contract the clause was, so far as the parties were aware,
a genuine pre-estimate of what the loss was likely to be. The Hong
Kong courts have shown that they are so eager for these out of court
pre-settlements to be attempted, that they will even encourage them
in cases where pre-estimation is extremely difficult. That is the
message of Luen Yick Co. v. Tang Man-kee [1958] HKLR 405. The
case concerned delivery of a machine, and so much per day was
agreed to be the price of delay. The defendant protested that the
circumstances were too complicated to make an accurate forecast of
the loss. The court, whilst agreeing with the defendant on that point,
held that the honest attempt at estimating damages had settled on a
sum which was not wildly extravagant and bound the parties.
8.2.1
Restrictions on Remedies
119
the House of Lords in Dunlop Tyre Co. v. New Garage Co. [1915]
AC 79 and followed in Hong Kong, for example, in Luen Yick Co. v.
Tang Man-kee; 8.2. These are simply methods of deciding whether
the clause is a genuine forecast of loss or not. If the sum chosen is
wildly above what should have been foreseen at the time (the court
deciding what that should be, of course) then it is a penalty; if
several kinds of breaches of different gravity attract the same sum, it
is likely to be a penalty, for it is unlikely that any careful preestimation was done.
8.2.2
Discounts. If A owes B $100, and the contract says that A will have
to pay $150 if the $100 is not repaid on time, this is a penalty.
However, though it is a penalty to demand a greater sum on failure
to pay a smaller sum, there is nothing wrong with giving a discount
for early settlement. Thus the same result can be achieved by careful
drafting. If the market value of goods is $100, the seller can fix the
price at $150, adding that payments made before the end of 30 days
from the date of the invoice are subject to a 33% discount.
8.2.3
8.2.4
120
8.3
8.4
Restrictions on Remedies
121
have been cut down, not out completely. Typically, such a clause
will say that claims will be restricted in type or amount. For instance, a clause might say that goods may not be returned which
allows full damages to be demanded. A laundry may accept your
clothes only on terms that they will be liable for $100 or the full
amount of the loss whichever is the less. An insurance policy
may state that claims must be filed within seven days, or will be lost
completely. The seller of seeds to farmers may restrict damages to
the cost of the seeds. This final case is an example of where money
back is a poor remedy. Think of the time, energy and money expended by the farmer after purchasing the seed. If the seed proves to
be useless, a money back guarantee will meet only a small part of
the claim.
An exclusion clause suggests that no claim will be entertained. For example, the words No responsibility is taken for any
loss, damage or injury howsoever caused may be found on a notice
at the entrance to a car park. They clearly envisage that you will
have no claim at all.
Exception clause is sometimes used instead of exemption,
but does not seem to have any different meaning. You can normally
use exemption or exception clause to mean a limitation or exclusion
clause. We shall stick to exemption clause as the general term.
These clauses are extremely common and once you know what
to look for you will find them everywhere. You will find them when
you park your car, have your clothes cleaned, order goods on behalf
of the firm (they should not be there when you order goods on your
own behalf; 8.5) or enter into almost any other contract. They arise
because people who provide goods and services usually also dictate
the contract to their customers. In their attempt to shift the balance
of favourable terms towards themselves, they will almost certainly
try to alter the consequences of breach of contract.
Exemption clauses, considered in the general context of contract law, present an insoluble problem. If we allow the theory that
in a contract the parties are free, within the law, to contract on
whatever terms they wish, then we must allow the stronger party to
include exemption clauses. Agreement to such a clause is often only
apparent, but this makes no difference at all to the legal position;
8.5. On the other hand, we have seen that no one can expect to get
something for nothing under a contract; 2.2 and 3.7. When I make a
contract with you, I am saying to you: I promise you that I will do
122
this and provide that in return for your money. Your safeguard is
that, if I fail to perform my promise, you can sue me. Yet, if I use an
exemption clause, I say instead: I promise that I will do this and
provide that in exchange for your money. If I do not perform my
promise, there is nothing, or very little, you can do. If you agree to
this, what is the court to do?
At common law, the courts could do no more than check carefully to make sure that there was apparent agreement and that the
wording was clear. Legislation was needed to protect weaker parties. We have already seen that agreement is objectively tested, and
a person may be taken, by the law, to have agreed to something
which he or she has not truly understood and does not really want
(3.2). Hong Kong lagged behind other jurisdictions, but by the end
of 1990 had the Control of Exemption Clauses Ordinance (CECO)
(8.10). However, it is still necessary to look at the common law.
CECO is a last resort. If a clause fails the various common law tests
of validity, it will not be necessary to use the stricter rules of
legislation. Generally, the common law strives to put into operation
the agreement of the parties, whereas the Ordinance tries to make an
unfair contract work fairly.
8.5
8.6
Restrictions on Remedies
123
EXEMPTION CLAUSES:
Questions to Ask
1. Is it incorporated into the contract?
Yes
No
No
Yes
Has no effect
3. Is it clearly worded?
No
Yes
Check effect
Figure 3
124
Restrictions on Remedies
125
4.5. However, once that is done it will be seen that the oral statement
is more powerful than the written one in this case. A written exclusion is overridden by an oral promise. This differs from the example
in 8.6.1.2 above in that there is no attempt to explain the clause; you
are clearly informed that in this case there will be no exclusion
against you.
8.6.1.4 Apart from these three cases, there really is no escape from a
contract which has been signed. That is one reason why it is necessary to read any such contract very carefully. The unpleasant part is
usually hidden away in the body of the document. It is not usually
the last clause, because your eye might well fall on it during the
signing process. You will almost always find that the last clause is
harmless or even pleasant for that reason.
Nevertheless, on principles already discussed, if you are presented with a document in a language you do not feel comfortable
in, then the best thing must be to ask for a translation. Any faults in
translation will then be irrelevant, as you will be able to depend on
what you are told.
8.6.1.5 If you refer back to non est factum (5.4.4.), you will note that there is
rarely any excuse for signing a contract in English when one reads
only Chinese, and vice versa. In Hong Kong business is transacted
in two languages but only a small percentage of the population is
truly bilingual. Most read only one language efficiently. There is no
general legislation to deal with the problems. Many large companies, for example, produce quite complicated forms in English only
and then use them in contracts with the Chinese community. Confusion can also be caused when the contract is in both languages, but
with no clear indication of which is to prevail, and when translations
have to be prepared for the court in order for judgment to be given.
Remember the lum see agreement in 3.5.6.
Nevertheless, on principles already discussed, if you are presented with a document in a language you do not feel comfortable
in, then the best thing must be to ask for a translation. Any faults in
translation will then be irrelevant, as you will be able to depend on
what you are told.
8.6.2
126
reading this book? Turn out your desk drawers and your pockets and
your brief case or shopping bag. Do you have any tickets or brochures on you? Are you in a library, and are there any notices about
the safety of your belongings? Did you leave your car in a car park
and was there a notice on the wall about what would happen in the
event of loss or damage? The wall notices will usually be explicit,
but the tickets (perhaps because of relative size) will be more allusive and say that you are subject to the companys terms and conditions. It is up to you to find out what those terms are, now that you
have notice that they exist. A holiday brochure may tell you that
there is the possibility of a price rise, or that the firm is not responsible if you are not allowed into the country where your holiday is to
be spent.
There is no written, signed contract in existence but, if the piece
of paper you are holding or which is on the wall contains an exemption clause, you may be bound by it.
Unfortunately, this area has been subject to more nonsense than
almost any other area of law, and ticket cases are often completely divorced from reality, as Huggins, J. complained in Wong
Wai-chun v. China Navigation [1969] HKLR 471. He refused to
believe that the general public in Hong Kong had a sophisticated
general knowledge concerning the likelihood of exemption clauses
in steamer tickets; 8.6.2.2.
The basic principle in ticket cases is that the clause must be
incorporated into the contract by notice. To prove that this has been
done, it may be shown that the person knew about the clause when
entering into the contract. This is relatively straightforward but, of
course, difficult to prove. It is not necessary to show this. All that
need be shown is that reasonable steps were taken to bring the clause
to the notice of the other person. In that case, whether or not the
clause was read becomes irrelevant.
What reasonable steps are is a matter of the facts and circumstances of each individual case. There are some points to note,
however.
8.6.2.1 Timing. The clause must be incorporated into the contract, and this
means that it must be brought to the other partys attention before
the contract becomes final. In Olley v. Marlborough Court Hotel
[1949] 1 KB 532, a notice in a hotel bedroom exempted the management from liability for loss of goods from the bedroom. However, if
Restrictions on Remedies
127
you think about the usual arrangements at any hotel, you will realize
that the contract is finalized downstairs, at the reception desk in the
lobby. A notice in the bedroom was too late, for the contract had
been made already.
Note, however, the effect of familiarity. If Mr and Mrs Olley
had been regular visitors to the hotel, they would have had an
opportunity to see that notice on previous visits. Therefore on the
current visit, it might be argued that they had notice of it. It is clear
that one or two visits would not be enough. In Kendall v. Lillico
[1968] 2 All ER 444, a term was incorporated from prior dealing.
The two firms had had hundreds of dealings on the same terms.
There must be a consistent course of dealings, so the visits to the
hotel would have had to be many, and the same notice always
displayed in the same place.
What happens if you buy a ticket over the counter? Surely,
when you get the ticket, the contract has been made and the ticket
always comes too late, because you pay first. The law analyses it
differently: when you pay the clerk for a ticket to your destination,
you make an offer. If the ticket contains an exemption clause not
contemplated in your offer, then it is a counter offer. If you do not
protest, you have accepted the counter offer.
If you buy a ticket from a machine, however, you have no
chance to argue. Therefore, the setting up of the machine is an offer
to you which you accept by placing your coin in the machine and no
clause on the ticket can be effective because it will always be too
late. You should therefore not be surprised to see notices on or by
the machines. These principles were discussed by Lord Denning in
Thornton v. Shoe Lane Parking [1971] 2 QB 163. A machine had
been set up at a car park entrance, and it was clear that a clause
contained in the ticket was ineffective, as was a clause printed on a
notice inside the car park (at least on a first visit).
8.6.2.2 The type of document. Sometimes, a ticket provides proof of purchase or is proof of a right to reclaim an article. Should such a ticket
be expected, in addition, to contain terms of the contract? Some of
the older English authorities make a distinction between tickets
which are contractual documents and those which are not, being
mere receipts. Chapelton v. Barry UDC [1940] 1 KB 532 concerns
a ticket which the court said was only proof of the right to occupy a
beach chair for a certain period, and could not be expected to
128
Restrictions on Remedies
129
130
8.6.3
Restrictions on Remedies
131
Exemption Clause
CONTRACTOR
Action
in TORT
SUBCONTRACTOR 1
SUBCONTRACTOR 2
Figure 4
132
MAIN
CONTRACT
SUBCONTRACT
EXCLUSION
CLAUSE
Figure 5
(a)
(b)
(c)
(d)
8.7
Restrictions on Remedies
133
8.8
Fundamental Breach
All the common law does, with the various tests, is seek the intention of the parties as shown in their agreement. However, the courts
recognize that, in reality, the apparent intention does not reflect the
true understanding of one of the parties usually the less powerful
party who finds action blocked by a carefully worded exemption
134
8.8.2
Restrictions on Remedies
135
8.9
8.9.1
8.9.2
136
Ailsa Craig Fishing v. Malvern Fishing [1983] 1 All ER 101 that the
court should be less severe on limitation than exemption clauses. A
limitation clause often found in left luggage offices or cloakrooms
would say, for example, on breach of this contract no more than the
worth of the article or $2,000 (whichever is the lesser sum) may be
claimed. Although it is not clearly expressed in the Ailsa Craig
case, the rationale is that full exclusion is so severe that it warrants
severe treatment, whereas limitation is more likely to be fair. This is
really a matter of degree, however. A limitation clause can limit the
remedy so severely that it is hardly any better than a full exclusion
clause. Suppose the clause above limited the claim to $10? Is that
much better than nothing at all? It may well be that a careful reading
of the judgment in the Ailsa Craig case would limit it to the exemption of negligence.
8.9.3
8.9.4
Restrictions on Remedies
137
8.10
8.10.1
8.10.2
138
take account of this. Hong Kong has no such Ordinance, and therefore has to be content with a reference to an obligation 'arising by
implication of law from the nature of the contract'.
What both these sections do is to forbid exclusion of s14
SOGO, which promises that the seller has a right to sell, or any
analogous common law terms, in any contract. However, the other
SOGO implied terms (and their common law equivalents in other
goods contracts) are treated in a more complex way. We have to
decide whether or not the transaction was a consumer transaction.
Note that this is not a test of whether the buyer was a consumer. The
test set out in s4 is threefold:
Did the seller sell in the course of a business?
Did the buyer neither buy, nor hold himself out as buying,
in the course of a business?
Were the goods of a kind usually sold for consumer use?
If all three tests are passed, then the exemption clause is void.
Otherwise, a reasonableness test applies, (described in 8.10.6). As to
the test in s4, note that the requirement that the seller must sell in the
course of a business does more than just repeat the general requirement of business liability in s2. Section 16, merchantability and
fitness, is perhaps the most important of the implied terms, but does
not come into the picture here. That is because the section is not
even implied in the first place unless the seller sells in the course of
a business. However, s15, that goods must answer their description,
applies to all contracts of sale, and so does s17 that goods sold by
sample must agree with the sample. In these cases, because the term
is implied into a sale by a private seller, the general requirement of
business liability is relaxed. The odd thing arising out of this is that,
because of the definition of a consumer transaction, a private seller
selling to a private buyer forms a non-consumer transaction.
For example, Steven advertises his private car for sale as 'a
1985 Nissan', and sells it to his neighbour Bill. The car must answer
its description, and if it is an earlier model there will be a breach of
s15 SOGO. If Steven had attempted to exclude any liability for
instance, by saying that 'the car is sold as it stands' such clause
would not be automatically void, because this is not a consumer
transaction even though, loosely speaking, we might have considered Bill to be a consumer.
Restrictions on Remedies
139
Where we are not dealing with contracts relating to goods, there are
two possibilities. For these, we have to decide the mode of breach.
One possibility is that the contracting party was negligent. For
instance, an electrician rewires Clara's flat very badly, so that a
switch becomes live and she is injured, and fire damages her furniture. The electrician did not do this deliberately, but we cannot
escape the conclusion that he was careless, or unskilled. This will be
sufficient to establish a negligent breach of contract under s7. What
is required for negligent breach is defined in s2 and it is clear that
there is no need to establish the duty of care required in the tort of
negligence, although this type of negligence is also caught by the
definition in s2 with regard to notices excluding, say, the liability a
person might have under the Occupier's Liability Ordinance. Having established a negligent breach of contract, we now have to
decide a further matter, just as we did with ss11 and 12 before we
could apply them. However, note that the question of whether or not
Clara is a consumer is irrelevant when considering exclusion of
negligence liability under s7. We ask what sort of harm she has
suffered. As far as personal injury (or death) is concerned the clause
is void. But as to any property damage or other sort of pecuniary
loss, the clause is subject to the reasonableness test (explained
below at 8.10.6).
8.10.4
If we cannot say that the breach was caused by negligence, and the
matter is not related to implied terms in goods contracts, then we
must go to s8. This is phrased pretty widely, and covers any case
where a person uses a clause to restrict or escape from obligations
altogether, or to allow a substitution of a different obligation. For
instance, Peter books a holiday and finds a clause which says that
the holiday company will hold itself able to substitute a different
resort, or a different hotel, or a different week. The Company
substitutes something which Peter finds unacceptable. Peter will
140
8.10.6
Restrictions on Remedies
141
8.11
142
Restrictions on Remedies
143
Limitation clauses in the contract. The parties may fix their own
limitation period in the contract. They are not likely to extend the
periods fixed by the Ordinance but limitation clauses often reduce
the period within which an action can be brought sometimes to as
little as a few days. The courts view such clauses with almost the
same dislike as exemption clauses.
8.11.3
8.11.4
8.11.5
144
Points to Note
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
A party who has signed a contract is bound at common law by all the
clauses in it, including exemption clauses, even if in small print or an
unknown language, but CECO may give relief. Study carefully 8.10 to
8.10.6, explaining how CECO works.
Restrictions on Remedies
145
14.
If the other party can show that the proferens gave an overriding
warranty or misrepresented the effect of the clause, the proferens cannot rely on it.
15.
16.
An exemption clause will protect only the proferens, and not strangers
to the contract.
17.
The proferens may contract for itself and as agent for a third party, so
that the exemption clause protects the third party, but only if:
(a) the intention to protect the third party is clear;
(b) the proferens contracts for itself and separately as agent for the
third party;
(c) the proferens has the necessary authority;
(d) the third party gives consideration.
18.
19.
20.
21.
By SOGO s57 some exemption clauses are void if they exclude liability
for breach of the conditions:
(a) that the seller has a right to sell; or
(b) (in a consumer transaction) the conditions under ss1517.
Other exemption clauses must be reasonable.
22.
23.
146
24.
25.
26.
27.
28.
Chapter 9
9.1
Privity
Only a person who has paid for anothers promise can sue on it
that requirement of consideration was explained in 3.7. We also saw
in 8.4 that only a party to a contract can rely on an exemption clause
in it. There is a general rule: only a party to a contract can sue or be
sued on it. That is the rule of privity of contract.
Chains of responsibility tend to grow in everyday commercial
transactions: manufacturer to wholesaler, wholesaler to retailer, retailer to customer. But the relationship in contract is link to link, and
it is not possible to skip a link. If you were to buy a compact disc
player from a shop in Tsim Sha Tsui, and something went wrong
with it, you would have to look to the shop for your remedy. You do
not usually have a contract with anyone else, unless there is a
guarantee. The implied terms in SOGO do not depend on fault. It is
no excuse for the seller to say: I did not make the machine and it is
not my fault that things went wrong. Sellers are responsible no
matter what the reason for the fault. However, if your seller is right,
if it is not the fault of the shop, it can sue the wholesaler, who must
go back one more step in the chain, to the manufacturer of the
player, or even the manufacturer of a faulty part sold to the manufacturer of the player. Clumsy? Perhaps, although there are procedures to allow a court to hear all cases in a linked chain of responsibility at the same time if it seems reasonable to do so. They will still
be regarded as separate actions on separate contracts.
Multiple hearings on similar chains may arise out of building
disputes between subcontractors, contractors and employers. A person who requires a building will employ one contractor to be responsible for the erection of it. It is never envisaged that the contractor will do all the work. But the contractor is better equipped than
the employer to find the right people to do the plumbing, put in the
flooring, deal with the tiling and so on. Because of the doctrine of
148
149
could not sue in contract. She had made no contract. But she sued
successfully in the tort of negligence.
9.1.2
Benefits for third parties. But why was it so difficult for Mrs
Donoghue? Why should she not sue in a case which arose from a
bottle bought for her pleasure? We need to look more closely at
why and how privity can cause difficulties for a third party. It is easy
to understand the reason behind the doctrine of privity. Contract
consists of promises made by parties to each other which can be
enforced by the machinery of the law. But because the liability
arises from the promises of the parties and not from the general law,
it seems reasonable to restrict enforcement to the parties. If Amy
promises to sell Benny a book, and fails in her promise, then it is for
Benny to take action. If he does not choose to do so, then it is not
possible for an indignant friend, relative or member of the public to
intervene.
But if we may make our contract in any terms we wish (within
the law, of course), why should we not make a contract to benefit
another person? Xu may say to Yan: I will build a house for you,
but you must pay all the proceeds in instalments to my parents.
However, if Yan fails to pay, the person who must sue is Xu. His
parents cannot. Suppose he has gone to Saudi Arabia for a few years
to build a palace. That may be why he arranged to have the money
paid to his parents, to support them in his absence. Why should Xus
parents have no right to sue Yan? Because they are not parties to the
contract. That seems logical but unfair. In Beswick v. Beswick
[1968] AC 58, Mr Beswick had sold his coal business to his nephew
in return for a pension for his life which they agreed would be paid
to Mrs Beswick, if she survived him. Mr Beswick died, the nephew
did not pay and Mrs Beswick sued. Mrs Beswick got her money,
because as administrator of her late husbands estate she was entitled to sue for specific performance of the contract in her husbands
place; and the money was then paid to her in her capacity as widow.
The House of Lords saw no problem in the widows right to sue
as administrator but refused to relax the doctrine of privity to allow
her to sue in her own right.
In general, third parties cannot sue on a contract made for their
benefit. Even more clearly, they cannot be liable under someone
elses contract. However, in the interests of fairness, several exceptions have been allowed.
150
9.2
9.2.1
9.2.2
9.2.3
151
9.2.4
Equity. Equity enters the picture in two ways. First, the creation of a
relationship between two persons by which a third is to benefit
comes extremely close to the concept of a trust. Could it be argued
that when Xu contracted with Yan in 9.1.2, what he was really doing
was setting up a trust with Yan as the trustee, himself as the settlor,
and his parents as beneficiaries? If so, the problem is solved, since
the beneficiaries are able to bring an action against a defaulting
trustee.
In reality, it is rare to read a contract as a trust. The setting up of
a trust requires clear wording. A person who wants to avoid the
privity rule by setting up a trust must do so clearly at the outset. A
trust cannot usually be inferred from the mere intention to benefit a
third party. In most cases that follows the parties intentions. Take
Xus case. If the agreement there had set up a trust, then the subject
matter would be fixed and it would not be open to Xu and Yan to
alter the terms of that contract without Xus parents consent.
The other way in which equity enters the picture is through
assignments. The benefit of a contract could not be assigned at
common law but could be in equity. Now there is a legislative form
of assignment; 9.4.
9.2.5
9.2.6
152
person to enter into a contract with a third party. This is not misrepresentation, because a representation must be made by one contracting party to the other.
In Andrews v. Hopkinson [1957] 1 QB 229, a customer saw a
car which he liked in a dealers showroom. The dealer said to the
customer, Its a good little bus; Id stake my life on it. The
customer then went ahead with the hire purchase contract, by which
the dealer sold the car to the finance company, and the finance
company let the car to the customer on hire purchase. There was
something wrong with the car. In England then, as in Hong Kong
now, the hirer had no right to sue the finance company. The terms
about quality implied in the hire were freely excludable and the hirepurchase agreement excluded them. The court, however, found a
collateral contract between dealer and customer. The consideration
was the promise that the car was sound in return for the promise to
enter the main contract, or the act of entering it. Such a collateral
contract gives rise only to damages, of course. There is no possibility of returning the car since the car was not supplied to the customer
by the dealer under the collateral contract.
A further example shows a case in which it was impossible to
sue on the main contract, which had not been broken. In Shanklin
Pier v. Detel Products [1951] 2 KB 854, the owners of a pier had a
maintenance contract with a building company, under which the
pier owners were to specify materials to be used. They were approached by Detel Products, who said that their paint was good for
seven years in outdoor use, so they specified that paint, which
proved to be useless. However, the building company could not be
sued as they had only done what they were told to do, and any
damage was caused by the paint specified and not by faulty workmanship. The court found a collateral contract by Detel Products on
which the pier company could sue them for damages.
9.3
Agency
Agency certainly modifies the privity rules, and in cases of undisclosed principals sets the rule aside; Business Associations 1.7.
Generally, even a person who did not take part in the making of a
contract can sue on it if proved to be the principal of one of the
persons making the contract.
153
9.4
Assignment
Assignment provides a mechanism to bypass the doctrine of privity.
Assignment may be voluntary or occur by operation of law.
154
9.4.1
9.4.2
155
156
made a contract to buy a television set, but the set has not yet been
delivered, then your right to the television set is still a thing in
action. Any benefit under a contract is a thing in action, which
means you would need to take court action to assert your rights over
the property if it were to be denied to you.
There is usually no problem about assigning a thing in possession. You can just hand over the book to me. That is not usually
thought of as an assignment. If I pay you for it, that is called sale; if
not, gift; or, if we swap it for a pen, exchange or barter.
Assignment, then is of things in action. To take matters further,
a benefit under a contract is a legal thing in action, but there are also
equitable things in action, such as benefits due under a will or a
trust. We shall from now on simplify matters by concentrating on
one type of legal thing in action, a sum of money due under a
contract, and discuss its assignment both legal and equitable.
9.4.3
157
158
9.4.6
159
A negotiable instrument improves on the advantages of assignment. The best known example is the cheque, which is a form of bill
of exchange, itself one kind of negotiable instrument. A negotiable
instrument can be transferred by simply handing it over (if it is made
out to bearer), or by transfer plus indorsement (which means signing
of the name of the person previously entitled). There is no requirement of notice. In most circumstances, a negotiable instrument can
be transferred so as to give the transferee a perfect title, even if the
transferors title was flawed. This means that there can be freedom
from equities, which is not possible in the case of assignment.
Negotiability is dealt with in detail in Cheques.
Points to Note
1.
2.
3.
Third parties cannot sue on a contract made for their benefit, unless
granted that right by legislation; or they sue on a covenant running with
land; or through agency; or under a trust.
4.
5.
The court may find there is a collateral contract with a third party.
6.
An agent may bring the principal into contractual relations with the
other party, without the agent being a party.
7.
8.
9.
160
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
Equity requires an intention to assign plus either an out and out transfer
or a promise to transfer supported by consideration. Notice is unnecessary but has two advantages: it tells the debtor not to pay the assignor
and it fixes the priority of the assignment.
15.
16.
17.
Chapter 10
10.1
Introduction
Contracts are an important area of private law (see Chapters 1 and 2)
and we have seen how they are made (in Chapter 3). However,
contracts do not exist in a vacuum. The people who make them are
citizens and subject to the laws of the place in which they live.
Hence the concept of the illegal contract. But the word illegal must
not be misunderstood. It does not necessarily mean criminal. The
most extreme example of an illegal contract is a contract to do a
criminal act, but milder areas of illegality do exist; 10.2. Once a
court recognizes that a contract is illegal, it will not enforce it.
Whether criminal proceedings are taken is another matter entirely
and, in many cases of illegal contracts, there is no criminal liability
on either party.
10.2
162
10.3
Illegal by Ordinance
A contract may be illegal under the provisions of an ordinance. This
is simply a matter of reading the relevant legislation to be sure. Most
of this kind of illegality is about licences. It is forbidden to drive a
car unless one holds the relevant licences, and it is forbidden to be a
hawker unless one holds the relevant permit.
A problem which arises here, is that the ordinance may provide
a fine for the wrongful behaviour but it may not explicitly say what
is to happen to contracts made in the circumstances. This does not
mean that the contract is invalid. The court must try to discover what
the legislation requires, what mischief it was passed to prevent. In
cases concerning licences, it depends on the purpose of the licence.
In Archbolds v. Spangletts [1961] 1 QB 374 that purpose was to
promote the efficiency of road haulage. The test was does it further
the objects of the legislation to declare the contract void? If not, the
lack of a licence will not affect its validity.
10.4
163
The practical difference is that, in the second case but not the
first, the owner could claim the hiring fee. You will see that this is
also a case where the illegality is on one side only; 10.5.2 and 10.8.
10.5
10.5.1
10.5.2
The court refuses to recognize the contract. The court is not finding
in favour of the party in breach by refusing to order payment for
work performed by the other in a strictly illegal contract. The court
is merely refusing to intervene at all. The court refuses to enforce
the contract in any way: no action for the price, no damages, and of
course no equitable intervention. One apparent exception is where
the contract is illegal on one side only. Then a party who is not
guilty of illegality can, for instance, sue for the price. Perhaps the
164
contract is only illegal because of one sides acts (as in our example
above of the innocent car hire firm). The hiring charges can be
obtained. However, it is not easy to argue that a contract affected by
illegality is only illegal on one side. In Pearce v. Brooks (1886) 1
Exch 213, a carriage manufacturer was not allowed to claim the
price from a prostitute who had ordered a carriage. She was a
notorious woman, and the carriage maker could not have been
ignorant of the fact that she intended to use the fancy, specially
built, carriage to attract attention in the exercise of her occupation.
Courts in England have recognized the human needs of prostitutes and have allowed an action for the price of necessities to one
who supplies them. But in The Ki Hing Lau v. The Shun Loong Lee
Firm (1910) 5 HKLR 83, the court had to consider a claim for the
price of sharks fin soup delivered to a brothel, and came to the
conclusion that, whereas the consumption of the soup was in itself
not objectionable, the effect was to enhance the attractions of the
premises and so the contract was illegal. Prostitutes need to eat to
live but brothels do not need to survive.
10.5.3
165
10.5.4
No return of money paid. Not only will the court refuse to order
payment of the price or damages, it will not order return of money
paid or goods handed over under an illegal contract, even where the
recipient has not performed the contract at all. In Yim Wai-tsang v.
Lee Yuk-har [1973] HKLR 1, the court refused to order a loan
association to give back money to a member. The claim was perfectly proper within the rules of the association. The problem was
that the association had not been registered and was thus illegal. The
parties were regarded as all equally to blame. But the result was
different in Chan Ting-lai v. Same Fair Co. [1986] HKCL 922. A
dealer in commodities had not registered under the relevant legislation. It was held that the purpose of the legislation was to protect the
public, and so, even though the plaintiff knew the dealer was unregistered, he was allowed to succeed in a claim for money back. The
reason was that he was part of a protected class; 10.3.
10.5.5
10.5.6
166
10.6
Public Policy
Contracts may be void because they are against public policy even
though not illegal. The courts, whilst disapproving of them, do not
regard them with the same severity as those which are strictly
illegal. Public policy renders a contract void which attempts to oust
the courts jurisdiction. A clause stating that the courts shall have no
jurisdiction over the contract is void. Remember the gentlemens
agreement; 3.1.4. Where there is no intention to create legal relations, there is no contract. If there is no contract, the courts cannot
intervene at all. What is impossible, though, is to give with one hand
and to take away with the other! You cannot make a binding contract and say the courts have no jurisdiction over it. Arbitration
clauses, if properly drafted, are now made valid by legislation;
7.1.4.
Contracts derogatory to the state of marriage and the family are
also against public policy, since the state sets great store by the
family unit as the basis of society. The courts will not recognize a
contract giving parental rights to another; adoption is not a matter of
contract, but of court orders. People cannot by contract bind themselves not to marry though it is possible to arrange to support
someone only while they are single. Restraints of trade are against
public policy; 10.7.
10.6.1
10.6.2
10.7
Restraint of Trade
The most important kind of contract against public policy is the
contract in restraint of trade. Well-known types are those which
167
10.7.2
168
10.8
Points to Note
1.
2.
169
3.
4.
5.
6.
The legislation which makes a contract illegal may say expressly that it
is void, or that it is valid notwithstanding the illegality, or may make no
express provision for the effect of the illegality.
7.
8.
9.
10.
If only illegal as performed by one party, the other may sue on it.
11.
12.
The Court will not only refuse to award damages or the price, or any
equitable remedy, it will not order the return of money paid or property
transferred under an illegal contract.
13.
14.
15.
16.
170
17.
A clause which is against public policy, in a contract otherwise acceptable, may be severed.
18.
19.
20.
Chapter 11
11.1
Deeds
A contract may be made by a deed. It is then called a specialty
contract. Note: specialty not speciality. A deed is a document which
takes its effect from its formal nature. The formal requirements are a
written document executed as a deed, that is signed, sealed and
delivered. The party bound by the deed must sign it. The signature
must be witnessed. A seal must be affixed. That used to mean that a
blob of sealing wax was heated and dropped on to the deed near to
the signature and the seal (or chop) of the signer was impressed into
the wax before it cooled. Now a little disc of red adhesive paper is
used, or a company seal is impressed with a stamp, or it is even
sufficient to show where the seal is by writing the letters LS, the
initials for locus sigilli, the place of the seal, and drawing a circle
round them.
Few documents need to be made by deed. One is a transfer of
land. Another is the creation of a power of attorney, where the
attorney is given power to create a deed. You note that neither is a
contract. You have seen also that a promise made by deed is binding, even though no consideration is given for it, 2.2, but that in such
a case the court will not enforce it by specific performance; 7.4.l.
11.2
Written Evidence
In general a contract, whatever its purpose, may be proved by oral
evidence. One kind of contract, however, is required by legislation
to be supported by written evidence. Conveyancing and Property
Ordinance (Cap 219) s3 provides:
No action shall be brought upon any contract for the
sale or other disposition of land or any interest in land,
172
11.2.2
173
(5) That the act was not equivocal; that is, it must look like an act of
part performance and nothing else. It is enough if the obvious
explanation of the act is that it was done, not necessarily in
performance of, but with reference to the oral contract. In
Broughton v. Snook (1838) Ch 505 A agreed orally to buy Bs
inn, which was then tenanted. Two months before the tenancy
was due to end, A, with the tenants permission and Bs knowledge, paid for certain alterations and repairs. He pleaded this
act as part performance of the contract to buy when B pleaded
that there was no written evidence. B said that the payment was
equivocal, in that A might have made it because he had taken
over the last two months of the lease from the tenant. The court
held that there was a sufficient act of part performance, even
though an ingenious mind might suggest some other and improbable explanation of the facts. It is not usually, though not
never, enough to make a payment of money, for that is referable
to so many things. Moreover, if the money is repaid, it would
not normally be inequitable to rely on the statute.
It appears that the only remedy the court can grant is specific
performance of the contract, so that if that remedy is for some
reason unavailable to the plaintiff, part performance is of no avail.
This happens where the plaintiff is an infant. Equity demands mutuality, and as a decree of specific performance will not be made
against, it will not be made in favour of an infant; 7.4.1 and 11.2.
11.2.3
174
11.3
Capacity
In Printing and Numerical v. Sampson (1875)19 Eq 462, Sir George
Jessel M.R. said:
If there is one thing more than another which public policy
requires, it is that men of full age and competent understanding shall have the utmost liberty of contracting, and
that their contracts when entered into freely and voluntarily
shall be held sacred and shall be enforced by courts of
justice.
The policy of the law at its formative period was to give the
utmost freedom of contract. Such a policy was demanded by the
growth of trade and industry. The new power of the merchant class
changed many of the privileges which had been built into the law to
protect the landowners, the powerful class of feudal times. One
restraint on freedom of contract was, however, retained and enlarged. Freedom of contract might mean freedom to exploit economic power, but the objects of this exploitation must be men of full
age and competent understanding. Therefore, there had to be protection, at common law and later by statute, of infants, that is persons
of less than 21 years of age. The common law also protected lunatics, as they were then called, and drunkards.
At one time it was thought useful to protect married womens
property from the depredations of spendthrift husbands; society has
so changed that the law on this recondite matter is now obsolete.
175
Infants. In Hong Kong the age of contractual capacity is 18; Interpretation and General Clauses Ordinance (Cap 1) s3 as amended by
Age of Majority Ordinance (Cap 32) 1990. The policy of the common law was to protect infants from the inferior bargaining position
which might be expected to result from their inexperience. It may
well be that small children would not be held to a contract because
they have no mental ability to agree, though the cases are silent on
this point. It is also important to remember that parents are not liable
on contracts made by their infant children unless it can be proved
that the child was acting as the parents agent.
The 1990 Ordinance s18 has removed the anomaly by which
infancy was not a defence in the District Court. By s4 the court may
order the infant to give back any property acquired under an
unenforceable contract; and s3 makes a guarantee of an infant's
unenforceable contract binding on the guarantor.
11.3.2
176
11.3.4
Other remedies. Infants may be sued in tort but not if that would
just be another way of enforcing a contract claim to which the infant
could plead incapacity.
11.3.5
11.3.6
11.3.7
177
Points to Note
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
Part performance requires that: the act was done by the plaintiff; the
contract is enforceable by specific performance; there is sufficient oral
evidence of the contract; it is inequitable for the defendant to plead the
lack of writing; the act was unequivocal.
8.
The lack of writing must be pleaded; the court will not raise the
objection.
9.
The oral contract is not void, and money paid or property transferred
can be kept.
10.
The written evidence may be obtained at any time before the trial.
11.
12.
13.
Even though lacking capacity, a person must pay a reasonable sum for
necessaries delivered.
14.
178
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
Table of Legislation
5.3.3
4.10.1, 8.10.2
8.8.2, 8.10, 8.10.2
Blank p.180
Table of Cases
8.6.3
4.9.2
8.9.2
3.7.6.4, 6.3
3.1.5
9.2.6
7.3.4
10.3
4.9.1
4.10.2
5.6.2
10.7.1
5.2.4
6.5
3.1.3
5.6.1
5.4.1
7.4.1, 9.1.2
10.5.5
5.2.2
10.5.6
3.5.2
4.10.1
3.4.5, 3.5.3
3.5.4
11.2.2
4.11
3.5.2
7.3.1
3.3.2, 3.3.5
4.9.3
182
3.1.4
6.6.1
3.2.1
11.2.3
3.5.6
7.3.6
10.5.3
5.2.1
3.7.6.4
8.8.2
5.4.4, 5.7
10.7.2
7.3.3, 7.3.5
7.3.9
Table of Cases
183
8.6.2.5
9.4.3
4.5, 4.6
9.1.1
8.6.2.1
10.5.2
5.4.3
7.3.3
5.4.3
3.5.6
5.6.3
5.3.1
8.6.1, 8.7
5.4.3
4.10.1
5.6.3
8.2, 8.2.1
6.6.3
5.6.3
184
8.6.3
5.6.2
8.6.2.1
4.4.3
3.7.3
3.3.2
7.4.1
10.5.2
3.3.2
8.8.2
3.7.6.4
11.3
3.2.1
4.10.1
5.2.4
5.4.2
3.1.4
7.6.1
5.6.3
8.8.2
5.4.4
4.9.1, 4.9.3
7.1.4
9.2.6
4.10.2
7.4.1
3.4.2
3.7.6.3
10.5.3
8.8.1
6.2, 6.2.4
5.4.4
10.7.1
3.5.2
Table of Cases
185
9.4.3
3.7.4
8.6.2.1, 8.6.2.5
5.2.1
3.7.6.2
7.4.2
8.9.3
6.5.2, 7.3.6
5.3.2
5.6.3
5.2.1
6.6.3
5.4.3
8.6.2, 8.6.2.3
Index
repudiation, 6.5
Business, 1.1, 1.2, 2.1, 3.1.4
efficacy, 4.1.2
Cable and Wireless, 3.5.2
Capacity, 2.4, 7.6.2, 9.3, 11.3, 11.3.7
Causation, 7.3.3
Certainty, 2.1
Chop, 11.1
Chose in action, 9.4.2, 9.4.4
Chose in possession, 9.4.2, 9.4.4
Collateral contract, 4.2, 4.5, 4.8,
5.2.3, 9.2.6, 10.5.3, 10.6.2
Common law, 2.1, 2.6
Communication, 3.4.3, 3.5.2
Company, 1.2, 2.4, 11.3.3, 11.3.6
Compensation, 1.2, 2.6, 7.3.2, 7.3.4
Conciliation, 7.1.3
Condition, 4.10.1
breach, 7.1.5
distinguished from warranty,
4.9.1, 4.9.2, 6.2.1, 6.5.1, 8.7
precedent, 4.2, 4.5, 4.6
subsequent, 4.2, 4.5, 4.6
Consensus (ad idem), 3.2.1, 5.4
Consideration, 2.2, 3.7, 6.3, 6.4,
7.4.1, 7.6.1, 9.1, 9.4.2, 10.5.3,
11.2.1
executed, 3.7.3
executory, 3.7.3
existing obligations, 3.7.6,
3.7.6.4
forbearance to sue, 3.7.5
functions, 1.2
nature, 3.7.1
188
Index
189
190
Index
Sample, 4.10.1
Seal, 11.1
Security, 8.11.3
Self-help, 1.3, 2.1, 7.1.5
Separation agreement, 3.1.3
Set-off, 9.4.5
Severable, 10.6.2
Signature, 8.6.1, 8.6.2, 11.1, 11.2.1
Silence, 5.2.1
Small Claims Tribunal, 11.3.1
Social agreements, 1.1, 2.1, 3.1.3
Specialty, see Deed
Specific performance, 2.6, 7.4.1,
7.4.2, 8.11.4, 9.1.2, 11.2.2
Sport, 3.1.3, 3.4.6
Standard form, 4.10.1, 4.11
State, role of, 1.2, 1.3, 2.1,
Statements, classification of, 4.2, 4.3,
4.4, 5.2.1
Status, 1.1
Statute-barred, 8.11.1
Sub-contract, 8.6.3, 9.1, 9.1.1, 9.4.2
Subject to contract, 3.5.6
Tax, 7.3.8
Telegram, 3.3.4, 3.4.2, 3.5.2
Telephone, 3.5.2
Telex, 3.5.2
Tender, 3.6, 6.2.6
legal, 6.2.6
offer, 3.6
payment, 6.2.6
performance, 6.2.6
Termination, see Discharge
Terms, 2.3, 4.2, 4.4, 5.2
implied, 2.3, 4.10
innominate, 4.9.2
intermediate, 4.9.3
relative importance, 4.9
191
Ticket, 8.6.2
Time, 4.4.1, 4.9.3, 8.6.2.1, 8.11
Tort, 4.10.1, 7.1.5, 7.2, 7.5, 8.6.3,
8.11.5, 9.1.1, 10.5.1, 10.5.6,
11.3.4
Trade usage, 4.10.1
Transport, 1.2
Trusts, 2.5, 9.1.2, 9.2.4
Uberrima fides, 5.2.1
Unconscionable, 5.4.4, 5.7
Undue influence, 5.6, 5.6.3
Unenforceable, 11.2.3
Usage, 4.10.1
Variation, 6.2.4, 6.3
Vicarious liability, 8.6.3
Vicarious performance, see Sub-contract, 9.4.2
Vitiating factors, 2.4, 5.1
Void, 5.1, 5.45.4.4, 7.6.1, 7.6.2,
8.10.2, 10.2, 11.2.3
Voidable, 5.1, 5.3.3, 5.6.1, 8.6.1.2,
11.2.3
Warranty, 4.10.1, 8.6.1.3
distinguished from condition,
4.9.1, 4.9.2, 6.2.1, 6.5.1, 8.7
Work and materials, 4.10.1
Women, 11.3, 11.3.5
Writing, 2.2, 2.3, 3.3.1, 3.5.1, 4.4.4,
4.5, 6.3, 8.6.18.6.2, 9.4.3, 11.1,
11.211.2.3