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SECOND DIVISION, INNER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION
[2024] CSIH 3
XA27/23
Lord Justice Clerk
Lord Malcolm
Lord Pentland
OPINION OF THE COURT
delivered by LADY DORRIAN, the LORD JUSTICE CLERK
in the Appeal
by
ALAN KING
Pursuer and Appellant
against
(1) BLACK HORSE LIMITED
Defender and First Respondent
(2) PARK'S AYR LIMITED
Third Party and Second Respondent
and
THE COMPETITION and MARKETS AUTHORITY
Interveners
________________
Pursuer and Appellant: Mitchell KC, Haddow; TC Young LLP
Defender and First Respondent: Thomson KC, Adam; TLT LLP
Third Party and Second Respondent: MacColl KC, Tosh; DWF LLP
Interveners: Middleton; Office of the Advocate General
2
31 January 2024
Introduction
[1]
This is an appeal arising from an action in the Sheriff Court for declarator and
payment concerning a contract for hire purchase of a jaguar vehicle. The first respondents
are the company who supplied the car and provided the finance therefor, all under a
contract of hire purchase. The second respondents and third parties are the dealership
through which the contract was brokered. In the appeal the Competition and Markets
Authority has been given permission to intervene.
Background
[2]
The appellant maintains that the vehicle was defective for reasons connected with
non-performance of the diesel particulate filter. He intimated his rejection of the vehicle.
[3]
In the initial writ he sought (1) declarator inter alia that the vehicle was not of
satisfactory quality at the date supplied or any point thereafter; and that he validly rejected
it; as well as decree for payment for two separate sums, namely (2) £34,769.40; and (3) £1000.
Neither the craves nor the pleas-in-law make any reference to the Consumer Rights Act
2015. By process of deduction and inference, however, it may be deduced from the
pleadings as a whole that the appellant maintains that the car was rejected under the 2015
Act; that the first sum sought is meant to represent a figure for repetition and refund of
sums paid by the appellant under the hire purchase agreement, all in terms of that Act; and
the second sum is meant to represent a further sum for common law damages.
[4]
To say that the pleadings are a mess is to make a statement of extreme generosity to
the drafters thereof, in respect of all parties. Somehow they have managed to extend
pleadings for this simple scenario to a record of about 80pp. It is abundantly clear that no-
3
one has taken the time to analyse the circumstances of the case in terms which clearly
specify the alleged legal consequences said to arise out of the facts, the legal duties which
follow, or to specify clearly the remedies sought and their basis. The Sheriff's restrained
observations as to the pleadings are stated thus:
"To say that I found the format and content of the Record confusing may be to
understate the position. `Bloated' may be a fair description of the pleadings. It
contained many typographical errors."
[5]
After the date on which the appellant intimated rejection of the car he continued to
make the payments due under the contract and to tax and use the vehicle. This led to a
successful motion for summary decree of absolvitor, granted by the Sheriff and affirmed by
the Sheriff Appeal Court. For the detailed reasons which follow, we consider that the appeal
must succeed.
Decisions of the Sheriff and Sheriff Appeal Court
[6]
The essence of these decisions rests on the proposition that at common law there was
an absolute bar on the continued use of goods after rejection by the buyer. This had its
origins in the decision of Ransan v Mitchell (1845) 7 D 813, and remained unaffected by the
terms of the 2015 Act.
The Appeal
[7]
The primary issue raised in the appeal is thus whether the Ransan bar subsists,
meaning that a consumer is automatically barred from insisting on the right to reject goods
under the Consumer Rights Act 2015 where they have continued to use the goods after
communicating that rejection to the supplier. A further issue arises as to whether this
should have resulted in summary decree of dismissal standing that the appellant maintains
a case of common law damages for breach of contract.
4
[8]
The parties have entered into a Joint Minute asking the court to proceed on the
hypothesis that the appellant communicated a valid rejection of the vehicle, without
prejudice to the parties' ability to insist in a contrary position in the event of matters
ultimately being remitted to the Sheriff Court. The Joint Minute also agrees the nature and
extent of the pursuer's post rejection use of the vehicle, additional mileage recorded and so
on.
Sale of the vehicle
[9]
The Joint Minute specifies a further factor which shows that the factual position has
otherwise altered significantly from that upon which the Sheriff and Sheriff Appeal Court
proceeded. This is that on 31 March 2023 the appellant made a payment of £17,579.98 to the
respondents corresponding to the sum required to repay all sums outstanding under the
hire purchase agreement; and that on the same date he sold the vehicle to an unrelated
person for £20,233.
[10]
Although junior and senior counsel for the appellant initially maintained that the
sale of the vehicle made no difference to the arguments, and that this court should reach a
determination on the legal effect of the disposal of the vehicle, senior counsel was eventually
driven to accept that this was not a realistic proposal. The pleadings in the case are now of
largely historic interest. The appellant has not sought to amend and the court cannot know,
and should not speculate as to, the manner in which he might seek to reformulate the claim,
were he to seek, and be given, permission to do so. On the face of it there is such a major
difference between post rejection use and sale to a third party as might take matters outwith
the scope of the Act but it would not be appropriate for the court to consider that issue
when it was not the subject of written pleadings. Senior counsel for the appellant ultimately
5
recognised that on the pleadings as they stand this court could not address the effect of sale
of the vehicle.
[11]
We recognise that the effect of the sale means that the appellant's case can no longer
be advanced on the basis of the pleadings, and the remedies sought may no longer be
relevant. However, given the general importance to consumers of the issue raised, and the
unsatisfactory state in which the decision of the Sheriff Appeal Court would have left the
law, we considered that it was in the public interest for us to address the matter. Should any
application to amend be forthcoming, it will be entirely a matter for the Sheriff to consider
that issue, on the basis of what is proposed at the time, and assessing whether the sale of the
vehicle takes matters outwith what is envisaged by the statutory scheme
Statutory Provisions
Directive 1999/44/EC
[12]
The Directive of the European Parliament and of the Council of 25 May 1999 on
certain aspects of the sale of consumer goods and associated guarantees had as its specified
purpose: the achievement of a high level of consumer protection (recital 1); the minimum
harmonisation of rules governing the sale of consumer goods, which were somewhat
disparate across Member States (recitals 3-4); and the creation of a common set of minimum
rules to strengthen consumer confidence (recital 5).
[13]
Recital 6 recognised that the main difficulties consumers encountered and the main
source of disputes related to the non-conformity of goods with the contract. Remedies that
the Directive provided national law should make available were: repair or replacement,
where possible and proportionate; price reduction; or rescission of the contract, where repair
or replacement was not available (recitals 10 and 11; article 3). There could be deduction for
6
use since delivery and the detailed arrangements for rescission of the contract were to be
laid down by national law (recital 15). These rights were not to be restricted or waived by
the common consent of the parties (recital 22). On the contrary, more stringent provisions,
which ensured a higher level of consumer protection, were allowed (recital 24).
Consumer Rights Act 2015
[14]
The protections enshrined in the 2015 Act were based, in part, on the terms of the
Directive and the provisions of Part 5A of the Sale of Goods Act 1979 which had previously
been inserted pursuant to the Directive, by regulations in 2002, to provide additional rights
for buyers in consumer cases.
[15]
Chapter 2 of the 2015 Act applies to contracts for the trader to supply goods (section
1(3)(a)), including hire-purchase agreements (section 3 (2)(c)). Where the goods do not
conform to the contract section 19 provides for the consumer's right to enforce terms about
the goods, which are three-fold:
"(a) the short-term right to reject (sections 20 and 22);
(b) the right to repair or replacement (section 23); and
(c) the right to a price reduction or the final right to reject (sections 20 and 24)."
[16]
The consumer is not precluded from seeking other remedies for breach of contract,
including (a) claiming damages; (b) seeking an order for specific implement; (c) relying on
the breach against a claim by the trader for the price; and (d) exercising a right to treat the
contract as at an end (subsections (9)-(11)). In terms of subsection (13), "treating a contract as
at an end means treating it as repudiated".
[17]
The right to reject generally, set out in in section 20 of the Act, whether a short-term
right to reject, subject to section 22, or a final right to reject, subject to section 24, entitles the
7
consumer to reject the goods and treat the contract as at an end (subsection (4)), which
means treating it as repudiated (section 19(13)). Relevant parts of section 20 include that:
"(7)
From the time when the right is exercised--
(a) the trader has a duty to give the consumer a refund, subject to subsection
(18), and
(b) the consumer has a duty to make the goods available for collection by the
trader or (if there is an agreement for the consumer to return rejected goods)
to return them as agreed.
...
(9)
The consumer's entitlement to receive a refund works as follows.
(10)
To the extent that the consumer paid money under the contract, the consumer
is entitled to receive back the same amount of money.
...
(14)
If the contract is a hire-purchase agreement or a conditional sales contract and
the contract is treated as at an end before the whole of the price has been paid, the
entitlement to a refund extends only to the part of the price paid.
(15)
A refund under this section must be given without undue delay, and in any
event within 14 days beginning with the day on which the trader agrees that the
consumer is entitled to a refund."
[18]
The conditions attached to exercising the short-term right to reject are prescribed by
section 22. We say no more about this provision given the present case is concerned with
the final right to reject.
[19]
In respect of the final right to reject and the right to a price reduction a consumer
may only exercise either of, but not both of, these rights. Section 24 provides:
"(8)
If the consumer exercises the final right to reject, any refund to the consumer
may be reduced by a deduction for use, to take account of the use the consumer has
had of the goods in the period since they were delivered, but this is subject to
subsections (9) and (10).
(9)
No deduction may be made to take account of use in any period when the
consumer had the goods only because the trader failed to collect them at an agreed
time.
8
(10)
No deduction may be made if the final right to reject is exercised in the first 6
months (see subsection (11)), unless-- (a) the goods consist of a motor vehicle, or (b)
the goods are of a description specified by order made by the Secretary of State by
statutory instrument."
Submissions for the appellant
[20]
The 2015 Act created a comprehensive, simple and UK-wide scheme of consumer
rights and remedies, including a new and substantially reformed right to reject, which
replaced the previous law on contracts for the sale and supply of goods as far as it concerned
consumer contracts. The right to reject under the 2015 Act was significantly different to that
which had been available under the 1893 and 1979 Acts. The Sheriff Appeal Court erred, in
construing the 2015 Act, by leaving out of account the legal and economic context of that
legislation and the practical effect of the competing interpretations argued for by the parties.
[21]
The SAC erred in failing to consider the Act's purpose and scope. It could be
presumed that the Act was intended to mitigate the imbalance of power and resources as
between traders and consumers, and to strengthen the position of consumers. The court
could infer from the legislative history of the 2015 Act, including that it was passed in order
to implement the EU Consumer Rights Directive ( by then Directive 2011/83/EU), that
Parliament intended to create a comprehensive, comprehensible and straightforward set of
remedies, focused on the rights of consumers. It was unlikely that Parliament would have
intended that consumers would require sufficient knowledge of the common law in order to
be fully aware of the extent of their rights under the statute.
[22]
The appellants in their note of argument pointed to the absurdity of the argument
that the Ransan bar remained good law:
"... insistence that the common-law Ransan bar survived the reforms enacted by the
2015 Act piles absurdity upon absurdity. As the CMA points out (at [8] of its Written
9
Submissions), Paragraph 16(2) of Schedule 1 to the 2015 Act, by inserting a new
section 15B(1A) into the 1979 Act, specifically disapplied the right to reject under
section 15B of that Act in favour of the short term right to reject and the long term
right to reject under the 2015 Act. Consequently, for the Ransan bar to have survived,
it would be necessary to take Parliament as having chosen to abolish the pre-existing
statutory provisions as to right to reject, but to leave standing a common law
provision which pre-dated the legislative reform in 1893 and subsequent reforms.
This is not consistent with the evident policy of the 2015 Act in providing a clear and
easily accessible code (as discussed above) and undermines the rights accorded to
consumers by the 2015 Act and, in respect of the final right to reject, the rights and
remedies accorded to consumers under the Directive."
Submissions for the respondent
[23]
The Directive by recitals 6 and 15 allows for controls to be imposed on the right to
reject in national law. The statute has given effect to the requirement that a right to reject be
provided as a minimum standard. But it is not required to be inviolate. The statute did not
oust the common law. The right of rejection in the statute must be understood to mean
rejection according to known legal principles as espoused in Electric Construction Co Ltd v
Hurry & Young (1897) 24R 312. Rejection brought the contract to an end, with the result that
post-rejection use of goods was entirely prohibited. Actions which are inconsistent with
rejection, such as continued use of the goods, result in the right of rejection being lost. In the
absence of terms in the 2015 Act indicating a clear and precise intention to change the
common law, that principle continued to apply.
[24]
The statute provides that rejection entitles the buyer to treat the contract as at an end,
as repudiated. There arises an immediate right to a refund and, since the contract is at an
end, the buyer has no obligation to continue to pay instalments under the contract. In
providing (section 24(8)) that any refund may be reduced by a deduction for use the statute
must be taken to mean deduction for use during the period between delivery and rejection,
given the effect of the common law, and the terms of section 20(14). The latter restricts the
10
refund under a contract of hire purchase "only to the part of the price paid", with the effect
that the quantification of the refund is crystallised at the moment of rejection.
Submissions for the third party
[25]
The consequence of rejection is that the contract is treated as being at an end. To
determine the effect of that one looks to the common law, under which the contract is
rescinded. That has the effect of bringing the possessory interest of the hirer to an end, and
consequently they no longer have any entitlement to make use of the goods. The Act
contains an unqualified requirement that the buyer must make available the goods after
exercising his right to reject (section 20(7)(b)). The Act has not changed the law that rejection
ends the contract- it says so in terms. The Act does not create some new possessory right
post rejection.
[26]
As to the provisions relating to refund, the sum falls to be crystallised and calculated
at the point of rejection, and any reference to use since delivery of the goods must mean use
between delivery and rejection.
Interveners
[27]
The effect of the new right in the 2015 Act is that the consumer is entitled to treat the
contract as at an end (not bring it to an end). It is an unconditional right, a far wider and
more powerful remedy than the old common law one, under which exercise by the buyer of
the remedy of rejection, even if validly made, did not entitle him to treat the contract as
being at an end- this was entirely dependent on the reaction of the seller. If the seller
accepted the rejection, the contract came to an end, but otherwise the buyer had to treat it as
enduring until resolved by the court, hence the obligation to put the asset into neutral
custody and refrain from using it.
11
[28]
However, the 2015 Act disapplied the common law right to reject in consumer
contracts, as well as the rights contained in the Sale of Goods Act 1979. The 2015 Act
prescribed a detailed statutory scheme setting out the consequences which followed a
consumer exercising his right to reject, as well as the conditions that attached to the exercise
thereof (section 20(4) and (7)). Nothing contained therein suggested that Parliament
intended it to be subject to the limitations which had formerly applied. Rather, the explicit
disapplication of the 1979 Act to consumer contracts suggested the contrary.
[29]
The final right to reject (section 24) was derived from EU Directive 1999/44/EC. From
the recitals to the Directive, the following principles could be derived. First, conferral of high
level protection upon consumers was intended (recital 1). Second, limitation on the right to
rescind would contradict its purpose, to achieve a "common set of minimum rules of
consumer law" (recital 5). Article 8 provided that it was intended to be a sui generis remedy
setting a minimum level of protection, thus one which Member States should not weaken by
the adoption, or maintenance, of national measures. Third, it was not intended that rights
could be indirectly waived or restricted by the consumer (recital 7). Rather, it was intended
that parties could not by common consent restrict or waive the right to rescind (recital 22).
Fourth, detailed arrangements by which rescission may be effected did not relate to
restrictions or qualifications of the right (recital 15).
[30]
By providing for deduction for use, and that no deduction could be made in respect
of use after the trader has agreed to take repossession of the goods, Parliament had clearly
envisaged continued use post-rejection without the right to a refund being lost. To hold
otherwise would be seriously to weaken the consumer's position as against the rest of the
UK. Unless post-rejection use was possible, the trader could simply delay the refund and
collecting the goods in order to circumvent the right to reject.
12
[31]
No exception would have been taken to arguments presented on the general
principles of personal bar, under which there would have been inquiry into the facts
concerning the circumstances of the rejection, and the nature and whole circumstances of
any use of the vehicle, including the practicability of alternatives, to determine whether it
was of such a degree and extent to be entirely inconsistent with the maintenance of rejection.
The problem was the absolute nature of the ban imposed, which hands what is in many
cases a decisive advantage to a trader who may wish to avoid paying a refund, contrary to
the purpose of the legislation.
Analysis and decision
Preliminary observations
[32]
The Sheriff essentially started addressing the case on the basis that it was an aspect of
the operation of the principles of personal bar, but seems to have reached the conclusion that
any use was sufficient to constitute an absolute bar, notwithstanding the terms of the statute,
and to endorse the observations made in Electric Construction. The Sheriff Appeal Court
took a different tack, and concluded that "the rule that defective goods should not be used
after rejection is not governed by the general principles of the concept of personal bar." It is
a more specific and more restrictive rule, as explained in Ransan, the effect of which is that
any continuing use of the goods constituted adoption of the contract and a retraction of the
rejection. The fact that cases such as Ransan were concerned less with consumer rights than
with rights between merchants did not prevent its continued application to the former
situation, since the rule had survived the introduction of the 1893 Sale of Goods Act and the
introduction of the remedy or reduction and damages. When the 1893 Act spoke of
rejection, it was taken to mean rejection "according to known legal conditions" (Electric
13
Construction) and those conditions included a rule that post rejection use of the goods was
absolutely barred.
[33]
We should point out that the issue is a narrow one: it was accepted in argument that
the ordinary principles of personal bar may apply, in which case the question whether the
consumer was personally barred from insisting in the rejection would be determined by an
assessment of the whole facts and circumstances of the case, following inquiry. As the
interveners noted, in that case the issue would, to a greater or lesser extent require an
investigation into the facts. If the circumstances of the use are such that the trader seeks to
establish that the consumer has personally barred himself from standing on the rejection,
there would generally be an inquiry into the circumstances to ascertain whether his actions
have been of such a degree to justify the conclusion that he has abandoned the rejection and
affirmed the contract. The situation between a consumer and a trader is one in which a great
deal of power remains with the trader; and this, together with the practical consequences to
the consumer, including the cost, affordability and inconvenience, of taking any other course
of action, would be relevant. The question though, would not simply be whether the
consumer has continued to use the goods, or pay the finance, but whether his whole actions,
in light of all the circumstances, were such as to personally bar him from insisting on the
rejection. Moreover, in the present case we were not called upon to consider what actions
might now be such as to constitute a bar, nor the scope of such a bar, having regard to the
terms of the statute. The learned editors of Chitty on Contracts (34th edition, 2023), suggest
that
"it seems clear that the omission of any reference to the loss of the consumer's right
to reject the goods by committing an act inconsistent with ownership was also a
deliberate choice on the part of the legislature".
14
Whether, and how, that impacted upon notions of the principles of personal bar in this field
were matters beyond the scope of the arguments presented in this case.
[34]
The criticism was fixed on the approach of the Sheriff Appeal Court which admitted
of no inquiry into the facts and proceeded on the basis that there was an absolute bar on use
post-rejection, notwithstanding the terms of the 2015 Act.
[35]
The appellants presented the case on the basis that (i) the Ransan bar was never good
law, and Electric Construction was wrongly decided; (ii) even if it had been good law, it had
never applied to contracts of hire purchase; and (iii) in any event it is not compatible with
the 2015 Act, given its scope and purpose. It was accepted that if the appellant was correct
about this third point, the remaining points would not arise for consideration. It would not
be necessary to determine whether Ransan (which was not actually referred to by any party)
justifies the conclusions drawn from it, nor whether the reasoning in Electric Construction
withstands scrutiny. We therefore start with consideration of the statute, without examining
whether the Sheriff Appeal Court was right in the inferences it drew from the two cases just
mentioned.
The 2015 Act
[36]
The starting point for an exercise of statutory construction must be the words of the
statute itself, and where the statute was enacted pursuant to a European Directive, the policy
and words of the Directive. Examination of the directive makes clear that enhanced
consumer protection was at the heart of it. The recitals speak of "achievement of a high level
of consumer protection" (recital 1); of measures which "will strengthen consumer
confidence" (recital 5); of a "growing concern to ensure a high level of consumer protection"
(recital 23). Recital 7 notes that in some legal traditions it might be useful specifically to
15
provide that agreements which directly or indirectly waived or restricted consumer rights
resulting from the Directive are not binding on the consumer. Recital 20 commences:
"Whereas the parties may not, by common consent, restrict or waive the rights
granted to consumers, since otherwise the legal protection afforded would be
thwarted;".
These Recitals are echoed in Article 7(1) which provides that:
"Any contractual terms or agreements concluded with the seller before the lack of
conformity is brought to the seller's attention which directly or indirectly waive or
restrict the rights resulting from this Directive shall, as provided for by national law,
not be binding on the consumer".
Again this suggests an intention to achieve a high level of protection for the consumer, and
that the rights conveyed by the Directive should not be subject to undue limitation.
(Section 31 of the 2015 Act serves to prevent traders from contracting out of the consumer's
rights under the Act.)
[37]
The Directive sets out minimum standards. It provides that the rights under the
Directive "may all be exercised without prejudice to other rights which the consumer may
invoke under the national rules". This makes plain that the rights must not be subject to
limitations imposed by national rules. As ever, the Directive allows States to adopt more
stringent measures, "to ensure an even higher level of consumer protection" (recital 24 and
article 8). The UK did this by the introduction of the short term right to reject, which is a
national protection not provided for in the Directive. It is obvious that Parliament clearly
had in mind a purpose of significantly strengthening consumer rights by the provisions of
the 2015 Act.
[38]
In our view it is clear that the scheme of the Act differs in substantial ways from the
protection previously offered to consumers. Once rejection is intimated the consumer is
unequivocally entitled to treat the contract as at an end, and this applies whether or not the
16
trader accepts the rejection. The power imbalance which previously existed between
consumer and trader, in favour of the trader, is thus to a substantial degree inverted. There
are still consequences which hinge on whether the trader accepts the rejection (see e.g.
section 20(15)), but the whole aim appears to be to prevent a dilatory trader from eroding a
consumer's rights by failure to engage. The scheme is essentially consumer-centric, putting
more power in the hands of the consumer.
[39]
From the moment that rejection is intimated, the trader is under an obligation to give
a refund; and the consumer is under an obligation to make the goods available for collection
(section 20(7)). Continued use by the consumer is not incompatible with that latter
obligation.
[40]
The provisions as to how the statutory right to a refund works say that the consumer
is entitled to get back the same amount of money as he has paid (section 20(10)). There is no
time limit put on this, and it must surely mean that the consumer gets back whatever he has
paid up to the point of the refund being given (subject to appropriate deduction for use, if
any). On the face of it this supports the possibility of post-rejection use. Vis a vis a HP/PCP
contract, if it is treated as at an end before the whole price is paid the entitlement is only to
that part of the price which has been paid (section 20(14)). This again is consistent with post
rejection use.
[41]
The refund must be paid without unreasonable delay and in any event within
14 days of the trader agreeing that the consumer is entitled to a refund. This surely indicates
that there must be anticipated a period of post-rejection use. The mere fact that some delay
in payment of a refund is permissible implies as much. Essentially, the Act envisages post
rejection use and then provides recourse for the trader to make sure he is not disadvantaged
thereby. It would have been very easy to specify that there should be no use post-rejection
17
but that has not been done and the statute clearly envisages that there might be such use,
which may be reflected in a reduction of the refund should the circumstances so merit.
[42]
The consumer may only pursue rejection or reduction of price on certain conditions
(section 24(5)). These are that post repair/replacement the goods remain disconform; that
repair/replacement is impossible or disproportionate; and that the trader having been
required to repair/replace has not done so within a reasonable time. Immediate cessation of
use by the consumer post-rejection is not a condition for the exercise of either of these rights.
[43]
If the consumer does exercise the final right to reject, any refund may be reduced by
a deduction for the use which he has made of the goods "in the period since they were
delivered"(section 24(8)). These are very similar to the words used in the Directive
(recital 15), transposed to the statute. The only end point reasonably to be inferred from this
is the date at which the refund is to be given and calculated. The "period since they were
delivered" does not suggest a period ending with the date of rejection. The period in
question is the period from delivery to refund, not the period from delivery to rejection. The
effect, if any, of continued use may be reflected in a suitable deduction in favour of the
trader, if justified by the whole circumstances. There is to be no such deduction in respect of
use when the consumer only had the goods because the trader failed to collect them at an
agreed time, see section 24(9). Whether this envisages that parties had agreed a collection or
whether it envisages a situation where the trader had failed to make arrangements to set an
agreed time, the provision necessarily envisages a period of post-rejection use, which in such
circumstances would not result in any deduction.
[44]
We agree with the submission for the interveners that if use of the goods after
rejection resulted in the consumer losing his or her right to a refund, there would be no need
18
to qualify the trader's right to reduce the refund, as the consumer would not be due any
refund at all: section 24(9) would be redundant.
[45]
The arguments for the respondents would result in placing a strict limitation on the
consumer's rights under the Act, and in many circumstances make it impossible for the
consumer, who is in the weaker position, to insist in his rejection of the goods. It would
return the trader to a position of undue strength and allow a dilatory, or unscrupulous
trader, to thwart the consumer's ability to exercise his statutory rights. The effect would be
that the automatic right to refund, which is a strong step forward in favour of consumer
rights, would become somewhat illusory, because the effect of a complete ban on post-
rejection use would place undue economic pressure on the consumer, the weaker party. It
would be artificial not to recognise the practical issues which might arise where the
consumer exercised the right of rejection, but the trader refused to engage. For example, it is
highly likely that if the consumer stopped payment under the contract the trader would take
action under the Consumer Credit Act 1974 and the consumer's credit rating might be badly
affected; the Act provides a sensible way to avoid this undesirable consequence which
would clearly weaken rather than strengthen consumers' rights. If the consumer continues
to pay the finance and use the goods, he is not automatically to be taken as thereby affirming
the contract. He will remain entitled to a refund of all sums paid by him, subject to any
deduction which is appropriate for use.
[46]
In any event, there is one remaining issue, namely the fact that the appellant has on
the pleadings a claim for common law damages for breach of contract. He is entitled to
pursue such a claim as well as his statutory claim although he is not entitled to recover twice
for the same loss. The damages claim flows from the allegation of material breach of
19
contract, and is a matter for inquiry, which should not have resulted in decree of absolvitor
at debate.
[47]
It follows that in our view the decision of the Sheriff Appeal Court was wrong, both
in respect of the damages claim, and, in so far as it applies to the pleadings as they stand, in
respect of the claims under the 2015 Act. The interlocutor of that court must be recalled
along with those of the Sheriff dated 6 and 27 April 2022, and the matter remitted to the
Sheriff to proceed as accords.
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