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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions >> Woodar Investment Development Ltd v Wimpey Construction UK Ltd [1980] UKHL 11 (14 February 1980) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKHL/1980/11.html Cite as: [1980] WLR 277, [1980] 1 All ER 571, [1980] 1 WLR 277, [1980] UKHL 11 |
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Parliamentary
Archives,
HL/PO/JU/18/240
Die Jovis 14° Februarii 1980
Upon Report from the Appellate
Committee to whom
was referred the Cause Woodar Investment
Development
Limited against Wimpey Construction UK Limited,
That
the Committee had heard Counsel as well on Monday
the 19th
as on Tuesday the 20th and Wednesday the
21st days of November
last upon the Petition and
Appeal of George Wimpey & Co.,
Limited of 27
Hammersmith Grove, London W6 7EN praying that
the
matter of the Order set forth in the Schedule thereto,
namely an
Order of Her Majesty's Court of Appeal of
the 26th day of October
1978 might be reviewed before
Her Majesty the Queen in Her Court
of Parliament
and that the said Order might be reversed, varied
or
altered or that the Petitioners might have such other
relief
in the premises as to Her Majesty the Queen in
Her Court of
Parliament might seem meet; as also upon
the Case of Woodar
Investment Development Limited
lodged in answer to the said
Appeal; and due
consideration had this day of what was offered
on
either side in this Cause:
It is Ordered and Adjudged,
by the Lords Spiritual
and Temporal in the Court of Parliament
of Her
Majesty the Queen assembled, That the said Order of
Her
Majesty's Court of Appeal of the 26th day of
October 1978
complained of in the said Appeal be, and
the same is hereby,
Discharged: And it is further
Declared, That the
contract of the 21st of February
1973 was not repudiated by the
notice of recission of
the 24th of March 1974 served by the
Appellants upon
the Respondents: And it is further Ordered,
That the
Respondents do pay or cause to be paid to the
said
Appellants the Costs incurred by them in the Court
of
Appeal and also the Costs incurred by them in respect
of the said
Appeal to this House, the amount of such
last-mentioned Costs to
be certified by the Clerk of
the Parliaments if not agreed between
the parties: And
it is further Ordered, That the Appellants
do pay to the
Respondents the Costs incurred by them in the
High
Court of Justice: And it is also further Ordered, That
the
Cause be, and the same is hereby, remitted back to
the Chancery
Division of the High Court of Justice to
do therein as shall be
just and consistent with this
Judgment.
Woodar Investment Development Limited (Respondents) v Wimpey Construction U.K. Limited (Appellants).
HOUSE OF LORDS
WOODAR INVESTMENT DEVELOPMENT LIMITED (RESPONDENTS)
v.
WIMPEY
CONSTRUCTION U.K. LIMITED (APPELLANTS)
Lord Wilberforce
Lord Salmon
Lord
Russell of Killowen
Lord Keith of Kinkel
Lord Scarman
Lord Wilberforce
My Lords,
The appellants ("Wimpey")
are defendants in this action brought by the
respondents
("Woodar") upon a contract of sale dated 21st February
1973.
This contract related to 14 acres of land at Cobham, Surrey,
near to the site
later occupied by the Esher by-pass. There was
the prospect of planning
permission being granted for development.
The purchase price was £850,000
and there was a special
condition (Condition I) that upon completion the
purchasers should
pay £150,000 to a company called Transworld Trade
Ltd.
Completion was fixed for the earliest of three dates namely
(i) two months
from the granting of outline planning permission
for the development of the
property, (ii) 21st February 1980,
(iii) such date as the purchaser should specify
by not less than
14 days' notice in writing.
The contract contained a special
Condition E under which there was reserved
to the purchasers power
to rescind the contract in either of three events. The
first
related to failure to obtain outline planning permission, the second
to
the failure to obtain an easement giving access to the
property, the third
(E(a)(iii)) was in the following terms:
"[if prior to the date of completion]
"(iii) Any Authority having a
statutory power of compulsory acquisition
"shall have
commenced to negotiate for the acquisition by agreement
"or
shall have commenced the procedure required by law for the
compulsory
"acquisition of the property or any part thereof."
On 20th March 1974 the appellants
sent to the respondents a notice in
writing purporting to rescind
the contract under this provision. The notice
stated that the
ground relied on was that the Secretary of State for the
Environ-
ment had commenced the procedure required by law for the
compulsory
acquisition of 2.3 acres of the property.
It was in fact known to both
parties at the date of the contract that certain
steps had already
been taken in relation to these 2.3 acres. In 1970 the Minister
had
given notice to the then owner of a draft compulsory purchase order,
and
this fact had been published in the local press. Notice had
been given of the
appointment of an Inspector to hold a public
inquiry, and this was held.
A compulsory purchase order was made
on 8th November 1973. On these
facts, the respondents contended
that Special Condition E(a)(iii) could not be
invoked by the
appellants because the relevant procedure for compulsory
purchase
had started before the date of the contract, and so did not
come
within the words "shall have commenced". This
contention was upheld by
Fox J. at the trial and was not the
subject of appeal, so that the appellants'
claim to invoke the
condition has failed.
This gives rise to the first issue
in this appeal: whether, by invoking Special
Condition E(a)(iii),
and in the circumstances, the appellants are to be taken as
having
repudiated the contract. The respondents so claim, and assert that
they
have accepted the repudiation and are entitled to sue the
appellants for
damage.
My Lords, I have used the words
"in the circumstances" to indicate, as I
think both
sides accept, that in considering whether there has been a
repudiation
by one party, it is necessary to look at his conduct
as a whole. Does this indicate
2
an intention to abandon and to
refuse performance of the contract? In the
present case, without
taking the appellants conduct generally into account,
the
respondents' contention, that the appellants had repudiated, would be
a
difficult one. So far from repudiating the contract, the
appellants were relying on
it and invoking one of its provisions,
to which both parties had given their
consent. And unless the
invocation of that provision were totally abusive, or
lacking in
good faith, (neither of which is contended for), the fact that it
has
proved to be wrong in law cannot turn it into a repudiation.
At the lowest, the
notice of rescission was a neutral document
consistent either with an intention to
preserve or with an
intention to abandon the contract, and I will deal with it on
this
basis—more favourable to the respondents. In order to decide
which is
correct the appellants' conduct has to be examined.
One point can, in my opinion, be
disposed of at once. The respondents, in
March 1974 started
proceedings against the appellants: this is one of the
actions
consolidated in the litigation before us. They claimed a
declaration that the
appellants' notice of rescission was not
valid, and the appellants, by their
defence, asserted the contrary
and they counterclaimed for a declaration to that
effect. The
respondents now contend that if the original notice did not amount
to
a repudiation, the defence and counterclaim did. I regard this
contention as
hopeless. The appellants' pleading carried the
matter no further: it simply
rested the matter on the contract. It
showed no intention to abandon the contract
whatever the result of
the action might be. If the action were to succeed (i.e. if
the
appellants lost) there was no indication that the appellants would
not abide
by the result and implement the contract.
The facts indicative of the
appellants' intention must now be summarised. It is
clear in the
first place that, subjectively, the appellants, in 1974, wanted to
get
out of the contract. Land prices had fallen, and they thought
that if the contract
were dissolved, they could probably acquire
it at a much lower price. But
subjective intention is not
decisive: it supplied the motive for serving the notice
of
rescission: there remains the question whether, objectively regarded,
their
conduct showed an intention to abandon the contract.
In early 1974, there was a
possibility that some planning permission might be
granted. If it
were, and unless the purchasers could take valid objection to
it,
completion would (under the Conditions) have to follow in two
months.
Therefore, if a notice of rescission were to be given, it
had to be served without
delay, i.e. before the planning
permission arrived. In this situation, the
appellants' advisers
arranged a meeting with a Mr. Cornwell, who was acting for
the
vendors, or as an intermediary with power to commit the vendors, to
discuss
the matter. This took place on 7 March 1974 and is
recorded as a disclosed aide
memoire dated the next day.
This document was prepared by the appellants, and
we have not the
benefit of Mr. Cornwell's evidence upon it: he had died before
the
trial. But the rest of the correspondence is fully in line with it
and I see no
reason to doubt its general accuracy. After recording
each side's statement of
position, the document contained (inter
alia) these passages:
"He [Mr. Cornwell] stated
that if we attempted to rescind the contract,
"then he would
take us to court and let the judge decide whether the contract
"could
be rescinded on the point we were making."
This "point" was
undoubtedly that relating to the compulsory purchase of the
2.5
acres.
"I told him that our Legal
Department would be serving the Notice to
"Rescind the
Contract within a short while—this would ensure that
the
"company was fully protected and was prudent. He assured
me that he
"would accept it on that basis and not regard it
as a hostile act."
The notice was then served on 20
March 1974. On 22 March the respondents'
solicitors wrote that
they did not accept its validity. On 30 May 1974 Mr.
Cornwell
wrote a long letter to Sir Godfrey Mitchell, President of Wimpey.
3
I refer to one passage:
". . . within a few days of
the original meeting, a notice of rescission was
"served upon
the vendor company by your organisation that the contract
"was
to be rescinded. Simultaneously with that notice or
rescission,
"proceedings were instituted and there the matter
remains so far as the
"legal situation is concerned and both
parties, from the legal point of view,
"must now await the
decision of the court as to the validity of the claim
"made
by Messrs. George Wimpey & Co. Limited that they are entitled
to
"rescind this contract upon the grounds which they have so
stated."
On 4th June 1974 Mr. Cornwell wrote again:
"All I need say now is that
we will retire to our battle stations and it goes
"without
saying I am sure that you will abide by the result as I will."
My Lords, I cannot find anything
which carries the matter one inch beyond,
on Wimpey's part, an
expressed reliance on the contact (Condition E(a)(iii)),
on
Woodar's side to take the issue of the validity of the notice
(nothing else)
to the courts, and an assumption, not disputed by
Wimpey, that both sides
would abide by the decision of the court.
This is quite insufficient to support
the case for repudiation.
There is only one other matter relied on. At the date
of the
contract (21st February 1973) there were arrangements made for a
loan
of £165,000 to be made to the respondents by the National
Westminster
Bank. The appellants guaranteed—subject to three
months' notice of termina-
tion—the respondents'
indebtedness to the Bank up to £165,000 and agreed
with the
Bank to meet interest and other charges. As between the
appellants
and the respondents it was agreed that the appellants
should indemnify the
respondents against all interest on the loan
for seven years or until the contract
should be "fulfilled or
discharged". These arrangements did not form part of
the
contract of sale but were collateral to it.
When the notice of rescission was
served on 20th March 1974, it was
accompanied by a covering
letter, of the same date, referring to the loan
arrangements. It
stated:
"The undertaking was limited
to seven years from the date of exchange,
"or until the
contract was fulfilled or discharged. As the contract is
now
"discharged by the enclosed notice, [Woodar] will now be
liable for the
"charges incurred in respect of this loan."
The appellants also gave three
months' notice to the Bank terminating the
guarantee. Again, in my
opinion, this carried the matter no further. It simply
drew the
attention of Woodar to the consequences which would follow
from
rescission of the contract, nothing more. Woodar, in fact
understood it as
such, for they wrote to the Bank on 8th April
1974 stating that proceedings
had been instituted against Wimpey
for a declaration "which, if successful,
"will reinstate
the arrangements which you now give notice you intend to
"bring
to an end".
My Lords, in my opinion, it
follows, as a clear conclusion of fact, that the
appellants
manifested no intention to abandon, or to refuse future
performance
of or to repudiate the contract. And the issue being
one of fact, citation of
other decided cases on other facts is
hardly necessary. I shall simply state
that the proposition that a
party who takes action relying simply on the terms
of the
contract, and not manifesting by his conduct an ulterior intention
to
abandon it, is not to be treated as repudiating it is supported
by James Shaffer
Ltd. v. Findley Durham & Brodie
[1953] 1 W.L.R. 106 and Sweet & Maxwell
Ltd. v.
Universal News Services Ltd. [1964] 2 Q.B. 699.
In contrast to these is the case
in this House of Federal Commerce &
Navigation Co. Ltd. v.
Molena Alpha Inc. which fell on the other side of the
line.
Of that I said:
"The two cases relied upon by
the owners [i.e. the James Shaffer Case
"and the Sweet
& Maxwell Case] . . . would only be relevant here
if
"the owners' action had been confined to asserting their
own view,
4
"possibly erroneous, as to
the effect of the contract. They went, in fact,
"far beyond
this when they threatened a breach of the contract with
serious
"consequences."
The case of Spettabile
Consorzio Veneziano di Armamento e Navigazione v.
Northumberland
Shipbuilding Co. Ltd. (1919) 121 L.T. 1628 though in some
factual
respects distinguishable from the present, is nevertheless, in my
opinion,
clear support for the appellants.
In my opinion therefore the
appellants are entitled to succeed on the
repudiation issue, and I
would only add that it would be a regrettable develop-
ment of the
law of contract to hold that a party who bona fide relies upon
an
express stipulation in a contract in order to rescind or
terminate a contract
should, by that fact alone, be treated as
having repudiated his contractual
obligations if he turns out to
be mistaken as to his rights. Repudiation is a
drastic conclusion
which should only be held to arise in clear cases of a refusal,
in
a matter going to the root of the contract, to perform contractual
obliga-
tions. To uphold the respondents' contentions in this case
would represent an
undesirable extension of the doctrine.
The second issue in this appeal is
one of damages. Both courts below have
allowed Woodar to recover
substantial damages in respect of Condition I
under which £150,000
was payable by Wimpey to Transworld Trade Ltd.
on completion. On
the view which I take of the repudiation issue, this question
does
not require decision, but in view of the unsatisfactory state in
which the
law would be if the Court of Appeal's decision were to
stand I must add three
observations:
1. The majority of the Court of
Appeal followed, in the case of Goff L.J.
with expressed
reluctance, its previous decision in Jackson v. Horizon
Holidays
Ltd. [1975] 1 WLR 1468. I am not prepared to
dissent from the actual decision
in that case. It may be supported
either as a broad decision on the measure of
damages (per James
L.J.) or possibly as an example of a type of contract-
examples of
which are persons contracting for family holidays, ordering meals
in
restaurants for a party, hiring a taxi for a group—calling for
special treat-
ment. As I suggested in New Zealand Shipping Co.
Ltd. v. A.M. Satterthwaite
& Co. Ltd. [1975] AC 154, 167, there are many situations of daily life which
do not fit
neatly into conceptual analysis, but which require some
flexibility
in the law of contract. Jackson's case may well
be one.
I cannot however agree with the
basis on which the learned Master of the
Rolls put his decision in
that case. The extract on which he relied from the
judgment of
Lush L.J. in Lloyd's v. Harper (1880) 16 Ch D 290,
321 was part
of a passage in which the Lord Justice was stating as
an "established rule
"of law" than an agent (sc. an
insurance broker) may sue on a contract made
by him on behalf of
the principle (sc. the assured) of the contract gives him
such a
right, and is no authority for the proposition required in
Jackson's
case, still less for the proposition, required
here, that if Woodar made a
contract for a sum of money to be paid
to Transworld Woodar can, without
showing it has itself suffered
loss or that Woodar was agent or trustee for
Transworld, sue for
damages for non-payment of that sum. That would
certainly not be
an established rule of law, nor was it quoted as such authority
by
Lord Pearce in Beswick v. Beswick [1968] AC 58.
Assuming that Jackson's case
was correctly decided (as above), it does
not carry the present
case, where the factual situation is quite different. I
respectfully
think therefore that the Court of Appeal need not, and should
not
have followed it.
Whether in a situation such as
the present—viz. where it is not shown
that Woodar was
agent or trustee for Transworld, or that Woodar itself
sustained
any loss, Woodar can recover any damages at all, or any but
nominal
damages, against Wimpey, and on what principle, is, in my
opinion, a question
of great doubt and difficulty—no doubt
open in this House—but one on which
I prefer to reserve my
opinion.
I would allow the appeal.
5
Lord Salmon
My Lords,
This case raises a point of law of
considerable importance in relation to the
repudiation of
contracts.
Between July 1969 and February
1973 prolonged negotiations took place
between Mr. Ronald Cornwell
and the appellants (Wimpey) for the purchase
by Wimpey of 14.41
acres of freehold land known as Mizen's Nurseries at
Cobham. In
January 1973 Wimpey learnt from Mr. Cornwell that the Vendors
were
to be the respondents (Woodar). By February 1973 the purchase
price
had been agreed at £lm. In that month Mr. Cornwell
proposed that part of
the purchase price should be paid to him as
European Agent for the Transworld
Trade Ltd. (Transworld), and a
few days later it was agreed that that part of
the purchase price
should amount to £150,000 and be paid to Transworld
direct.
It was also arranged that the
contract should provide for a loan of £165,000,
secured by a
charge on the land (the subject matter of the contract) to be made
to
Woodar by Wimpey through their bank and that Wimpey should
be
responsible for servicing the loan. Wimpey were, however,
advised that the
loan should be treated separately from the
contract, otherwise the contract
might be void as constituting a
clog on the equity of redemption under the
charge. Accordingly, on
the 21st February 1973 Wimpey's bank lent Woodar
£165,000
and Woodar executed a legal charge on the land in respect of
the
loan. Wimpey gave a written undertaking to the bank to meet
all interest and
other charges in respect of the loan until 21st
February 1980 "or until the
"contract should he
fulfilled or discharged". (The underlining is mine.)
The
facts which I have related are all taken out of Wimpey's
printed Case.
The written contract for the
purchase of the land by Wimpey from Woodar
was also executed on
the 21st February 1973. It specified the purchase price
as
£850,000 and laid down at the end of the contract in Article I
that upon
the completion of the purchase of the whole or any part
of this land, Wimpey
should pay Transworld £150,000.
I will now turn to the material
clauses in the contract. Clause E(a) so far as
relevant reads:
"This Contract shall be
absolutely binding on both parties . . . for a
"period of
seven years from the date hereof but there shall be reserved
"to
the Purchaser only the power to rescind this contract if prior to
the
"date of completion: . . .
"(iii) any Authority having a
statutory power of compulsory acquisition
"shall have
commenced to negotiate for the acquisition by agreement
"or
shall have commenced the procedure required by law for
the
"compulsory acquisition of the property or any part
thereof."
This clause, quite obviously,
refers only to any such negotiation or procedure
commenced after
the execution of the contract and prior to completion but
not to
any negotiation or procedure which had commenced and of which
both
parties were well aware before they executed the contract.
Clause E(c), so far as relevant, reads:
"The power to rescind
reserved to the Purchaser by subclause (a) . . .
"shall be
exerciseable by the service of a notice in writing to that
effect
"upon the Vendor . . . and the Purchaser's liability
under . . . this Contract
"shall from the date of service of
such notice cease."
Clause E(g) provides that
completion shall take place on the earliest of
the three dates it
mentions, namely,
(i) two months after the date on
which outline planning permission for
the development of the
property is granted;
6
(ii) 21st February 1980;
(iii) such date as the Purchaser shall specify but not by less than 14 days'
written notice.
Returning to paragraph E(a)(iii)
of the contract, it is common ground that
Wimpey and Woodar both
knew, well before the contract between them was
executed, (1) that
in 1970 the Minister of the Environment had given notice
of a
draft compulsory purchase order in respect of 2.3 acres of the 14.41
acres
covered by the contract, (2) that this fact had been
published in the local
press, and (3) that notice had also been
given of the appointment of an inspector
to hold a public inquiry
which he had duly held.
Indeed, there is a provision in
the contract under clause G which, so far as
relevant, reads:
"It is hereby agreed that the
Vendor shall not require the Purchaser to
"include in the
Transfer to the Purchaser any part ... of the land hereby
"agreed
to be sold which shall be required by the Surrey County Council
".
. . or any Statutory Authority . . . and the purchase price shall be
abated
"at the rate of £70,000 per acre ... for any
part ... of the land hereby
"agreed to be sold which shall
not be included in the Transfer to the
"Purchaser".
It is to be observed that if the
land is priced in the contract at £70,000 an acre,
the 14.41
acres sold under the contract would, in fact, be priced at about £lm.
By March of 1974 there had been a
very alarming slump in the value of
land. It is quite clear from
one of Wimpey's internal memoranda, written at
the beginning of
that month, that Wimpey had no intention of honouring
their
contract by paying the agreed price of £70,000 an acre for the
land:
that they intended to repudiate the contract but would
gladly enter into a new
contract with Woodar to buy the land at
£48,000 an acre, on otherwise the
same terms as those of the
existing contract.
The relevant part of the memorandum reads as follows:
"Revised broadsheets have
been prepared taking account of the reduced
"selling price of
houses and increased building costs and these indicate
"that
currently to show 20% profit we can offer £48,000 per acre, to
show
"15% profit £53,000 per acre.
"The indications are that
this piece of land could obtain outline planning
"permission
within the next 4 months, in which case we as a company
"would
be obliged to perform in accordance with the obligations of
our
"contract to purchase subject to the various
conditions.
"We propose arranging a meeting with Mr. Cornwell
to discuss formally
"with him:
"(a) Our intention to rescind
the contract so that he is obliged to
"pay the interest on
the loan thereafter from that date.
"(b) To make him a proposal
that we are prepared to proceed with
"the purchase of the
land at the reduced figure of £48,000 per
"developable
acre subject, of course, to the same terms and
"conditions."
On 20th March 1974 a notice was
sent to Woodar by Wimpey in the following
terms:
"Pursuant to Clause E(c) of a
Contract dated the twenty-first day of
"February 1973 and
made between Woodar Investment Development
"Limited of the
one part and George Wimpey & Co., Limited of the
"other
part the said George Wimpey & Co., Limited hereby rescinds
the
"said Contract on the ground that within the meaning of
Clause E(a)(iii)
"of the said Contract the Secretary of State
for the Environment has
"commenced the procedure required by
law for the compulsory acquisition
"of part of the property
(a Compulsory Purchase Order relating to the
"land edged red
on the plan annexed hereto having been made),"
7
I am afraid that I am entirely
unable to agree with the proposition that this
notice of
rescission was a neutral averment consistent either with the
intention
to preserve or with an intention to abandon the
contract. To my mind it was
served with the clearly expressed
intention of bringing the contract to an end.
This notice was
accompanied by a letter of the same date, the last paragraph
of
which reads as follows:
"When Contracts for the sale
and purchase of the above land were
"exchanged, an
undertaking was given by the Company indemnifying
"Woodar
Investment Development Limited against all interest charges
"payable
to the National Westminster Bank Limited as a result of a loan
"by
them to you of a sum of £165,000.00. The undertaking was
limited
"to seven years from the date of exchange or until
the Contract was
"fulfilled or discharged. As the Contract is
now discharged by the enclosed
"Notice, Woodar Investment
Development Limited will now be liable
"for the charges
incurred in respect of this loan." (The underlining is
mine.)
My Lords, it was conceded in this
House on behalf of Wimpey that they
had no right to rescind,
discharge or repudiate the contract. In my respectful
opinion,
Wimpey had made it crystal clear by their notice and letter of
20th
March that they purported to bring their liability under the contract
to
an end by rescinding and discharging it; and that they had no
intention of
paying the contract price for the land in question.
If this does not go to the
root of the contract and evince an
unequivocal intention no longer to be bound
by it, and therefore
amounts to a repudiation of the contract, I confess that I
cannot
imagine what would.
In the court of first instance,
Wimpey sought to justify their notice and
letter of 20th March
1974 on the ground that prior to the execution of the
contract of
21st February 1973, steps had been taken for the
compulsory
acquisition of 2.3 acres out of the 14.41 acres the
subject matter of the contract.
I have already described these
steps and I shall not repeat them. It is common
ground that all
these steps were well known both to Wimpey and to Woodar
at the
time they were taken. The point was nevertheless argued on behalf
of
Wimpey before the trial judge that because of these steps
having been taken
when they were, Wimpey were entitled under
Clause E(a)(iii) of the contract
to rescind the contract and
refuse to perform it. The learned trial judge made
short work of
that point and decided that it was untenable. The point was
so
obviously bad that it was wisely decided by counsel on behalf
of Wimpey
not to be worth taking in the Court of Appeal. It was
however accepted by
Woodar that on the 20th March 1974, Wimpey
honestly believed in the point
which they later abandoned. I do
not understand how Wimpey's honest belief in
a bad point of law
can in any way avail them. In Federal Commerce Ltd. v.
Molena
Alpha Inc. [1978] 3 W.L.R. 309, at p. 342, Lord Denning M.R.
said:
"I have yet to learn that a party who breaks a contract
can excuse himself
"by saying that he did it on the advice of
his lawyers: or that he was under
"an honest misapprehension.
Nor can he excuse himself on those grounds
"from the
consequences of a repudiation". I gratefully adopt that
passage
which seems to me to be particularly apt in the present
case. It certainly was
never questioned in your Lordships' House
when the appeal from the decision
of the Court of Appeal in the
Federal Commerce case [1978] 3 W.L.R. 991
was dismissed.
In Freeth v. Burr (1874) L.R. 9 C.P. 208, Lord Coleridge said at p. 213:
" . . . where the question is
whether the one party is set free by the action
"of the
other, the real matter for consideration is whether the acts
or
"conduct of the one do or do not amount to an intimation
of an intention
"to abandon and altogether to refuse
performance of the contract."
In Mersey Steel and Iron Co.
Ltd. v. Naylor, Benzon and Co. (L.R. 9 App. Cas.
p.
434) Lord Selborne L.C., after approving of what Lord Coleridge said
in
Freeth v. Burr, supra, went on to say at
p. 439:
8
". . . you must examine what
the conduct is, so as to see whether it
"amounts to a
renunciation, to an absolute refusal to perform the contract,
"such
as would amount to a rescission if he had the power to rescind,
and
"whether the other party may accept it as a reason for
not performing
"his part."
In the Spettabile case
(1919) 121 L.T. 628, Atkin L.J. said at p. 634:
"A
repudiation has been defined in different terms—by Lord
Selborne
"as an absolute refusal to perform a contract; by
Lord Esher as a total
"refusal to perform it; by Bowen L.J.
in Johnston v. Milling 16 Q.B.D.
"p. 460 as a
declaration of an intention not to carry out a contract when
"the
time arrives, and by Lord Haldane in Bradley v. H. Newsom
Sons
"& Co. Ltd. [1919] A.C. 16 as an
intention to treat the obligation as
"altogether at an end.
They all come to the same thing, and they all
"amount, at any
rate to this, that it must be shown that the party to the
"contract
made quite plain his own intention not to perform the contract."
In the Heyman v. Darwins Ltd.
case [1942] A.C. 356 at pp. 378, 379, Lord
Wright said:
"There is, however, a form of
repudiation where the party who repudiates
"does not deny
that a contract was intended between the parties, but
"claims
that it is not binding because of the failure of some condition
or
"the infringement of some duty fundamental to the
enforceability of the
"contract, it being expressly provided
by the contract that the failure of
"condition or the breach
of duty should invalidate the contract . . .
"But perhaps the
commonest application of the word 'repudiation' is to
"what
is often called the anticipatory breach of a contract where
the
"party by words or conduct evinces an intention no longer
to be bound
"and the other party accepts the repudiation and
rescinds the contract.
"In such a case, if the repudiation is
wrongful and the rescission is rightful,
"the contract is
ended by the rescission but only as far as concerns
future
"performance. It remains alive for the awarding of
damages ... for the
"breach which constitutes the
repudiation."
In my opinion, the repudiation in
the present case exactly fits the repudiation
which Lord Wright
explains in the passages which I have just cited.
I do not recall that any of these
definitions of a repudiation of a contract
have ever until now,
been questioned. The fact that a party to a contract
mistakenly
believes that he has the right to refuse to perform it cannot
avail
him. Nor is there any authority for the proposition that if
a party to a contract
totally refuses to perform it, this refusal
is any the less a repudiation of the
contract because he honestly
but mistakenly believes that he is entitled by a
condition of the
contract to refuse to perform it.
It would indeed be unfortunate if
the law were otherwise. A mistake in the
construction of a
contractual condition, even such a glaringly obvious mistake
as
the present can apparently easily be made especially perhaps when
the
market price has fallen far below the contract price. It is
acknowledged in
this case that the mistake was an honest one. If,
however, a case arose in
which a mistake of this kind was alleged
to be an honest mistake, but not
acknowledged to be so, it would
be extremely difficult, if not impossible to
prove the contrary.
James Shaffer Ltd. v.
Findlay Durham and Brodie [1953] 1 W.L.R. 106 and
Sweet and
Maxwell Ltd. v. Universal News Services Ltd. [1964] 2 Q.B.
699
were strongly relied upon on behalf of Wimpey. Those two cases
were very
different from each other and even more different from
the present case; in
my opinion they certainly lend no more
support to Wimpey than they did to
the appellants in the Federal
Commerce case [1978] 3 W.L.R. 996. Indeed, if
anything, they
are of some help to Woodar. In the former case, Singleton L.J.
said
at p. 121: "... is it possible to say that the defendants . . .
showed
"an intention to abandon and altogether to refuse the
performance of the
"contract? ... I think not." Morris
L.J. said at p. 124: "I have no doubt
9
"that [the defendants] wanted
to go on with the contract." In the latter case,
Harman L.J.
said at p. 729, "... repudiation really is not in the
picture
"here at all, because if the defendants were not
wholly justified in the attitude
"they took up [on the
construction of the agreement] the plaintiffs were not
"wholly
justified in their attitude either, and they could only treat
the
"defendants' refusal to comply with their demands as
repudiation if their
"demands were wholly right. Therefore .
. . repudiation does not really arise:
"but as it was the
ground of the judgment of the judge below, I think I ought
"to
say something about it. ... there was not that absolute refusal to go
on
"which is necessary ... to arrive at a conclusion that an
agreement . . . has
"been entirely repudiated". Pearson
L.J. said much the same.
The present case is, however,
quite different from the James Shaffer case
and the Sweet
and Maxwell case because Wimpey made it very plain by
their
notice and letter of 20th March 1974 that they had no
intention to go on with
the contract and buy the land at the
contract price.
The case of Spettabile
Consorzio Veneziano di Armomenta e Navigazione v.
Northumberland
Shipbuilding Co. Ltd. [1919] 121 L.T. 628 was also
strongly
relied upon on behalf of Wimpey. The facts of that case
were very strange
and clearly distinguishable from the present.
Goff L.J. made a long and masterly
analysis of that case with
which I agree and gratefully adopt. I do not consider
that that
case is, in reality, of any help to Wimpey.
I cannot accept that the majority
of the Court of Appeal concentrated too
much attention on Wimpey's
rescission notice of 20th March 1974 and not
enough upon its
surrounding circumstances. In any event, it seems to me that
those
surrounding circumstances supported Woodar's case rather
than
Wimpey's. I think that it is obvious from the surrounding
circumstances that
Wimpey had made up their mind at the beginning
of March 1974 (and never
changed it) that, in no circumstances
would they comply with their contractual
obligation to buy the
land in question at the price of £70,000 per acre. This
is
made clear by the language of their memorandum which I have
already
cited and which appears to have been written a day or two
before Wimpey's
aide memoire of 8th March 1974 upon which
Wimpey rely. I do not understand
how that document can be evidence
against Woodar, even if Mr. Cornwell
were still alive. Nor do I
think that even if the document were admissible in
evidence it
could be accepted as being accurate in every detail. Looking at
the
document as a whole, however, it seems to support Woodar's
case rather than
Wimpey's. It indicates (1) that Wimpey made plain
to Mr. Cornwell what was
recorded in the memorandum which I have
cited; (2) that Mr. Cornwell was
anxious to effect a compromise
and suggested that "the money could be paid
"to him over
a period of up to say five years, or that the price could be
lowered
"or a combination of both"; (3) that Wimpey
replied "the mere extension of
"five years would not be
attractive to us, but that if the land value was vastly
"reduced
we would still like to remain with the deal"; (4) that Mr.
Cornwell
then said "that he would go away and consider the
lowest price that he could
"afford to sell it to us and that
below that price he would fight us through the
"Courts."
(The underlining is mine.)
On 22nd March 1974, two days after
the notice of rescission was served by
Wimpey, Woodar's solicitor
wrote that they did not accept its validity. By a
writ of summons
endorsed with a statement of claim served on 29th March
1974
Woodar, amongst other things, claimed against Wimpey a
declaration
that their notice of 20th March 1974 did not rescind
the contract. It may well
be that Woodar considered that once they
commenced legal proceedings,
Wimpey would throw in their hand. If
so, they were mistaken, for Wimpey
served a defence and
counterclaim on 18th May 1974 alleging that the notice
of
rescission of 20th March 1974 was valid and counterclaimed a
declaration
that the contract had been rescinded by that notice.
Mr. Cornwell, who seems to have
done all the negotiations on behalf of
Woodar, was obviously
anxious if possible to settle rather than embark on
10
lengthy and expensive litigation.
He was no doubt disappointed when Wimpey
made it clear by their
defence and counterclaim that they intended to fight.
He probably,
I think, wrote his lengthy letter of 30th May 1974 in one last
effort
to effect a settlement. Wimpey have sought to make much of this
letter
which in my view helps Woodar rather than Wimpey. It seems
to make it
very plain that Mr. Cornwell had consulted counsel on
the notice of rescission
and had been advised that it constituted
a wrongful repudiation of the contract.
I cite one brief passage
from it. ". . . unless some compromise is reached
"and
quickly, then I shall feel obliged to sell immediately in the best
possible
"circumstances with a certain knowledge, so far as
counsel's advice is con-
"cerned, that we have a complete
redress against" (Wimpey). Of course there
was nothing to
stop the parties waiting and doing nothing until the
litigation
constituted by the first action was over as Mr.
Cornwell said earlier in his
letter. But there was nothing to
prevent Woodar from selling immediately
and bringing another
action claiming damages, once they had accepted
the
repudiation to which I have already referred.
At the time when Mr. Cornwell's
letter of 4th June 1974 was written, upon
which my noble and
learned friend Lord Scarman places considerable reliance,
Woodar
had not accepted the repudiation: and a repudiation, however
wrongful
is nugatory until accepted by the other contracting
party.
The result of the first action
must have been in Woodar's favour. They
could have waited until
completion was due under the contract, which could
not have been
later than 21st February 1980. Wimpey might then perhaps
have
completed the contract or they might have failed to complete it, in
which
event they would have had no defence to an action for
specific performance
or damages. There was, however, nothing to
compel Woodar to confine
themselves to the first action. They had
a free choice to do so or to accept the
wrongful repudiation which
would enable Woodar to bring the second action
claiming damages
for an anticipatory breach of the contract.
I entirely agree with my noble and
learned friend Lord Wilberforce that
Wimpey's counterclaim in the
first action did not amount to a repudiation
of the contract. For
the reasons I have given, however, their repudiation of
the
contract had, in my view, been effected by the notice of rescission
dated
20th March 1974 and supported by the letter of the same
date.
Although I cannot agree with
Buckley L.J. that the contract was not wrong-
fully repudiated, I
do agree with his view that if Wimpey's notice of the
20th March
1974 did constitute a wrongful repudiation of the contract of
21st
February 1973, the proceedings launched by Woodar against Wimpey
on
the 29th March 1974 could not preclude them from accepting that
repudia-
tion and bringing another action against Wimpey claiming
damages for an
anticipatory breach of contract. And this is what
Woodar did. On 10th July
1974, through their solicitors, they
accepted the wrongful repudiation of
20th March 1974 and then
launched their action for damages for an anticipa-
tory breach of
contract. The two actions were consolidated and duly tried by
Fox
J. who found that Wimpey had wrongfully repudiated the contract
of
the 21st February 1973 and gave judgment in favour of Woodar
for, in all,
£462,000 damages.
The Court of Appeal by a majority
affirmed Fox J.'s decision on liability
but reduced the damages to
£272,943.
My Lords, for the reasons I have
stated, I would dismiss the appeal on the
issue of liability.
Since, as I understand, the majority of your Lordships are
for
allowing the appeal on liability, the interesting question in
relation to
damages in respect of the claim for £150,000
does not now arise. I do, however,
agree with what my noble and
learned friend Lord Wilberforce has said about
the finding of the
majority of the Court of Appeal (Goff L.J. with reluctance)
on
this topic. I would add that, in my opinion, the law as it stands at
present
in relation to damages of this kind is most
unsatisfactory; and I can only
hope that your Lordships' House
will soon have an opportunity of recon-
sidering it unless in the
meantime it is altered by statute.
11
Lord
Russell of Killowen
My Lords,
The contention advanced by the
purchaser ("Wimpey") was that it was
entitled to rescind
the contract by notice of rescission under special
condition
E(a)(iii) of the contract, because the relevant
authority had "commenced the
"procedure" required
by law for compulsory acquisition not earlier than the
making of
the compulsory purchase order on 8th November 1973, subsequent
to
the contract. Fox J. held that this was incorrect; and that even if
it were a
correct construction of the contract there should be
rectification to make it
clear that steps taken by authority in
that connection prior to the contract
constituted commencement of
the relevant procedure and were not intended
to afford a ground
for rescission under the special condition. From that holding
there
was and is no appeal.
Consequently there was no
justification in law for the notice of rescission,
and the first
question in this appeal is whether the notice of rescission
was
capable of being accepted by Woodar as a renunciation or
repudiation of the
contract by Wimpey. An affirmative answer to
that question was assumed, or
not disputed, before Fox J., and was
given by the majority in the Court of
Appeal (Buckley L.J.
dissenting).
The difference of opinion on this
point in the Court of Appeal and in your
Lordships' House turns
upon a question which can be shortly stated. If a
party to a
contract has a power thereunder totally to rescind and renounce
all
liability to perform any part of its obligations under a contract,
and in
terms purports absolutely so to rescind and renounce on
grounds that in law
are not justified, can there ever be
circumstances which enable the rescinder
to dispute the
renunciatory and repudiatory quality of his action?
My Lords, in my opinion the answer to that question is in the negative.
I do not of course dispute that a
mistaken concept of the rights of a party
under the contract, and
action (or inaction) on the basis of that mistaken
concept, need
not constitute such a renunciation of the contract as to be
capable
of being accepted as repudiation of the contract. Nor do I
dispute
that repudiation is a serious matter not lightly to be
found. Nor do I dispute
that in most cases repudiation or
non-repudiation falls to be decided having
regard to all the
circumstances of a case. But I deny that a clear case of
the
purported exercise of a power of rescission, a total
renunciation of all future
obligation to perform any part of the
contract, such as now concerns your
Lordships, can by any
circumstances be watered down or deprived of its
repudiatory
quality. I further assert that it is fallacious to deny that
totally
renunciatory and repudiatory quality on the ground that
because the action
is purportedly taken under a clause in the
contract it is somehow affirming
rather than repudiating the
contract. The notice of rescission given in this case
by Wimpey
was wholly unequivocal, in effect saying that Wimpey would not
in
any circumstances fulfil the contract: and that flat statement is not
to be
regarded as otherwise than renunciatory of the contract
because Wimpey
genuinely thought that it was entitled in law to
take that attitude.
It is of course true that in
previous discussion with Mr. Cornwell (for
Woodar) it was
indicated that Wimpey's right to rescind on the ground
suggested
would be challenged by Woodar in proceedings. But I see no ground
in
that for watering down the absolute nature (or colour) of the notice
of
rescission as being somehow conditional upon the rectitude in
law of Wimpey's
stance. Indeed I do not accept a view that the
notice of rescission could have
been (a) expressed to be
conditional upon its justification in law but (b) then
operative
to terminate all liability of Wimpey under the contract, as it
was
manifestly intended to be because it was feared that shortly a
planning per-
mission would be forthcoming (though it did not)
which would trap Wimpey
irrevocably into an unprofitable bargain.
I can, my Lords, envisage a
situation in which a party in the position of
Woodar might state
unequivocally in advance that if Wimpey were to serve
12
the notice which it did serve,
Woodar would not, when it was shown in pro-
ceedings that the
notice was unjustified, treat it as repudiatory. But that
would
achieve a position in which Woodar would be debarred from
asserting
repudiation, rather than constitute a circumstance
qualifying the fundamental
renunciatory character of the purported
exercise by Wimpey of the power.
But it cannot be said that such a
position was achieved by anything said by
Cornwell in this case.
I am, my Lords, not led to a
contrary view by the circumstances of the
Spettabile case
at first instance. There the view was taken that if originally
a
communication would have indicated a repudiatory attitude,
subsequent
approach to the court by the "repudiator" for
a decision upon the rights of
the case should be taken as
withdrawal of the original repudiation. That is
not this case. The
resort to the court was not by Wimpey, and Wimpey never
withdrew
its notice of rescission to abide the outcome of the litigation.
It was suggested that the
proceedings by Woodar for a declaration and/or
rectification
somehow constituted an election not to accept the rescission
as a
repudiation, so that Woodar's later purported acceptance of it as
such
was ineffective. In common with, I believe, all your
Lordships I cannot accept
that. Woodar was obliged to take the
steps that it did in order to establish
that the notice was
unjustified in law and therefore an unjustified repudiation.
Accordingly in my opinion Wimpey
wrongfully repudiated the contract by
its notice of rescission,
and Woodar accepted that repudiation so as to entitle
it to
damages for total breach.
In arriving at my conclusion I do
not rely upon the reference to interest
payments in the covering
letter enclosing the rescission notice: nor upon the
defence or
counterclaim of Wimpey. These seem to me to add nothing to
the
repudiatory nature of the notice itself.
In conclusion upon this point I
cannot agree that, if my opinion were correct,
it would be an
unfortunate step in the law. If a party takes such a bold step
he
risks disaster. If he plunges in without first testing the
temperature by a
construction summons asking whether the
rescission remedy is available to
him he runs the risk of catching
a severe cold.
There is no question on this
appeal as to quantum of damage save under
the heading of damages
for breach of special condition I, under which Wimpey
agreed on
completion of the sale to pay £150,000 to Transworld, a Hong
Kong
company. Transworld was in some way connected with Mr.
Cornwell, who
died before action. No evidence connects Transworld
with Woodar, the party
to the contract. No evidence suggests that
Woodar could suffer any damage
from a failure by Wimpey to pay
£150,000 to Transworld. It is clear on the
authority of
Beswick v. Beswick that Woodar on completion could have
secured
an order for specific performance of the agreement to pay
£150,000 to
Transworld, which the latter could have
enforced. That would not have been
an order for payment to Woodar,
nor (contrary to the form of order below)
to Woodar for the use
and benefit of Transworld. There was no suggestion of
trust or
agency of Woodar for Transworld. If it were necessary to decide
the
point, which in the light of the views of the majority of your
Lordships on the
first point it is not, I would have concluded
that no more than nominal damages
had been established by Woodar
as a consequence of the refusal by Wimpey
to pay Transworld in the
light of the law of England as it now stands. I would
not have
thought that the reasoning of Oliver J. in Radford v. De
Froberville
[1977] 1 W.L.R. 1262 supported Woodar's case for
substantial damages.
Nor do I think that on this point the Court
of Appeal was correct in thinking
it was constrained by Jackson
v. Horizon Holidays [1975] 1 WLR 1468 to
award
substantial damages. I do not criticize the outcome of that case:
the
plaintiff had bought and paid for a high class family holiday:
he did not get
it, and therefore he was entitled to substantial
damages for the failure to
supply him with one. It is to be
observed that the order of the Court of Appeal
as drawn up did not
suggest that any part of the damages awarded to him
were "for
the use and benefit of" any member of his family. It was a
special
case quite different from the instant case on the
Transworld point.
13
I would not, my Lords, wish to
leave the Jackson case without adverting
with respectful
disapproval to the reliance there placed by Lord Denning, M.R.
—not
for the first time—on an extract taken from the judgment of
Lush L.J.
in Lloyd's v. Harper L.R. 16 Ch. D. 290.
That case was plainly a case in which
a trustee or agent was
enforcing the rights of a beneficiary or principal, there
being
therefore a fiduciary relationship. Lord Denning at p. 1473 in
Jackson's
case said this:
"The case comes within the
principle stated by Lush L.J. in Lloyd's v.
"Harper
[at p. 321] 'I consider it to be an established rule of law
that
" 'where a contract is made with A for the
benefit of B, A can sue on the
" 'contract for the
benefit of B and recover all that B could have
recovered
" 'if the contract had been made with B himself
".
Lord Denning continued: "It
has been suggested that Lush L.J. was thinking
"of a contract
in which A was trustee for B. But I do not think so. He was a
"common
lawyer speaking of common law". I have already indicated that
in
all the other judgments the matter proceeded upon a fiduciary
relationship
between A and B: and Lush LJ. in the same passage
makes it plain that he
does also; for he says:
"It is true that the person
[B] who employed him [the broker A] has a
"right, if he
pleases, to take action himself and sue upon the contract
"made
by the broker for him, for he [B] is a principal party to
the
"contract".
To ignore that passage is to
divorce the passage quoted by Lord Denning
from the fiduciary
context in which it was uttered, the context of principal
and
agent, a field with which it may be assumed Lush L.J. was familiar.
I
venture to suggest that the brief quotation should not be used
again as support
for a proposition which Lush L.J. cannot have
intended to advance.
In summary therefore, in
disagreement with the majority of your Lordships,
I would have
dismissed this appeal on repudiation. Had I been correct I would,
as
at present advised, have allowed the appeal on the Transworld point,
and
awarded only nominal damages on that point to Woodar, and not
substantial
damages to be paid to Woodar "for the use and
benefit of" Transworld, a
form of order which I cannot see
was justified.
Lord Keith of Kinkel
My Lords,
In deciding the issue of
repudiation which arises in this appeal, the guiding
principle is
that enunciated by Lord Coleridge in Freeth v. Burr
(1874)
L.R. 9 C.P. 208 at p. 213:
"In cases of this sort, where
the question is whether the one party is set
"free by the
action of the other, the real matter for consideration is
whether
"the acts or conduct of the one do or do not amount
to an intimation
"of an intention to abandon and altogether
to refuse performance of the
"contract."
The matter is to be considered objectively:
"The claim being for wrongful
repudiation of the contract it was necessary
"that the
plaintiff's language should amount to a declaration of intention
"not
to carry out the contract, or that it should be such that the
defendant
"was justified in inferring from it such intention.
We must construe the
"language used by the light of the
contract and the circumstances of the
"case in order to see
whether there was in this case any such renunciation
"of the
contract."
(Johnstone v. Milling (1886) L.R. 16 Q.B.D. 460, per Bowen L.J. at p. 474).
The importance of looking at the
whole circumstances of the case was
emphasised by Lord Selborne
L.C. in Mersey Steel & Iron Co. Ltd. v. Naylor,
Benzon
& Co. (1884) 9 App. Cas. 434 at p. 438 and by Singleton L.J.
in James
Shaffer Ltd. v. Findlay Durham & Brodie
[1953] 1 W.L.R. 106 at p. 116.
14
There is a tract of authority
which vouches the proposition that the assertion
by one party to
the other of a genuinely held but erroneous view as to the
validity
or effect of a contract does not constitute repudiation. In the
Spettabile
case (1919) 121 L.T. 628, the plaintiffs sent to
the defendants a letter claiming
that certain contracts were no
longer binding upon them and followed it up
with service of a writ
seeking declarations to that effect. The Court of Appeal
held that
the plaintiffs' conduct did not amount to repudiation of the
contracts.
Warrington L.J. said at p. 633, with reference to the
letter:
"It seems strange to me that
that is not telling the defendants that whatever
"happens,
whatever is the true state of the case, whether the contracts
"are
binding on the plaintiffs or not, they will not perform them:
but
"that they have instructed their solicitors to take
proceedings with the
"object of having it determined that the
contracts are not binding upon
"the plaintiffs and are at an
end;"
and with reference to the writ:
"I think that it is desirable
to say this, that in my opinion where one party
"to a
contract conceives that he is no longer bound by the contract or
has
"a right to have it rescinded or declared null and void,
and issues a writ
"for the purpose of obtaining that which he
believes to be his right, he
"does not by that mean to
repudiate the performance of the contract
"in any event. It
seems to me that he submits to perform it if the court,
"as
the result of the action, comes to the conclusion that he is bound
to
"perform it, and it cannot be taken to be an absolute
repudiation."
Lord Atkin, at p. 635, after
observing that it must be shown that the party
to the contract
made quite plain his own intention not to be bound by it, said:
"The substance [of the writ]
appears to me to be this: that the plaintiffs
"in the action
are asking the court to declare whether or not they are any
"longer
bound by the contracts. It appears to me that that is an
entirely
"different state of facts altogether from an
intimation by the plaintiffs
"apart from the courts of law,
that they in any event are not going to
"perform the
contracts. It is something quite different from a repudiation.
"So
far from expressing the intention of the parties not to perform
the
"contracts, it appears to me to leave it to the court to
say whether or not
"the contract is to be performed, and if
the court says it is, then it impliedly
"states that it will
be performed. I think, therefore, there was no
"repudiation
of the contract."
In two other cases it was held by
the Court of Appeal that the expression
by one party to a contract
of a genuine but erroneous view as to the obligations
which on a
proper construction of it were thereby imposed did not infer
an
intention to repudiate the contract. These cases are James
Shaffer Ltd. v.
Findlay Durham & Brodie (supra) and
Sweet & Maxwell Ltd. v. Universal News
Services Ltd. [1964]
2 Q.B. 699. Finally, it is worth observing that in Ross T.
Smyth
& Co. Ltd. v. T. D. Bailey, Son & Co. [1940] 3 All
E.R. 60, at p. 72,
Lord Wright said:
" . . . a mere honest
misapprehension, especially if open to correction,
"will not
justify a charge of repudiation."
So in the present case the
question comes to be whether, having regard to
all the
circumstances, the conduct of the appellants in relation to their
invoca-
tion of clause E(a)(iii) of the contract was such that a
reasonable person in the
position of the respondents would
properly infer an intention "in any event",
to use the
expression employed by Warrington and Atkin L.JJ. in the
Spettabile
case, to refuse to perform the contract when the
time came for performance.
The terms of clause E(a)(iii) have
been quoted by my noble and learned
friend Lord Wilberforce. It
conferred upon the appellants the right lawfully
to rescind the
contract in the event there described. The appellants had come
to
find the contract burdensome in view of the dramatic collapse of the
property
market. They accordingly desired to be relieved of it and
took legal advice as
to whether there existed grounds upon which
they might lawfully do so. The
advice received was to the effect
that clause E(a)(iii) provided such a ground.
15
The appellants did not, however,
at once give notice of rescission under the
clause. They sought an
interview with Mr. Cornwell, as representing the
respondents,
which took place on 7th March 1974 and proceeded on the
lines
described in the aide memoire which is in evidence.
The appellants informed
Mr. Cornwell of their position as regards
the application of clause E(a)(iii)
and proposed a renegotiation
of the contract, failing which they stated their
intention to
serve notice of rescission in terms of the clause. Mr.
Cornwell
contested the correctness of their position, and
expressed the intention, if the
appellants served notice of
rescission, of taking the matter to court and
obtaining a decision
upon their right to do so. The appellants served their
notice of
rescission about two weeks later, clearly in the expectation, which
was
duly and promptly realised, that the respondents would
initiate legal proceedings
in order to test its validity. In my
opinion there was nothing in the appellants'
conduct up to this
point, there being no dispute about the genuineness of their
belief
that they were entitled to terminate the contract upon the stated
ground,
which might reasonably be treated as inferring that it was
their intention to
refuse performance in the event of a judicial
determination that that belief
was erroneous. The letters written
by Mr. Cornwell to Sir Godfrey Mitchell
on 30th May and 6th June
1974, the material parts of which have been quoted
by my noble and
learned friend, clearly indicate that he himself did not draw
any
such inference. I am unable to regard the appellants' conduct as
evincing
an intention "altogether to refuse performance of
the contract" as Lord
Coleridge put it in Freeth v.
Burr (supra), or as constituting "an
absolute
"repudiation" in the sense in which Atkin L.J.
used that expression in the
Spettabile case (supra).
I would accept without hesitation
the statement of Lord Denning M.R. (in
Federal Commerce Ltd. v.
Molena Alpha Inc. [1978] 1 Q.B. 309, 342) that a
party who
breaks a contract cannot excuse himself by saying that he did it
on
the advice of his lawyers, or that he was under an honest
misapprehension.
If in the present case the time for performance
had passed while the appellants
were still maintaining their
position based on the erroneous interpretation of
clause
E(a)(iii), they would have been in breach of contract and liable
in
damages accordingly. Lord Denning goes on to say:
"Nor can he excuse himself on
those grounds from the consequences of
"a repudiation."
That may be so, but it is first
necessary to determine whether or not there
has been a
repudiation.
The doctrine of repudiatory breach
is largely founded upon considerations
of convenience and the
opportunities which it affords for mitigating loss, as
observed by
Cockburn C.J. in Frost v. Knight (1872) L.R. 7 Exch.
111 at
p. 114. It enables one party to a contract, when faced with
a clear indication
by the other that he does not intend to perform
his obligations under it when
the time for performance arrives, to
treat the contract, if he so chooses, as
there and then at an end
and to claim damages as for actual breach. Where
one party,
honestly but erroneously, intimates to the other reliance upon a
term
of the contract which, if properly applicable, would entitle him
lawfully
to rescind the contract, in circumstances which do not
and are not reasonably
understood to infer that he will refuse to
perform his obligations even if it
should be established that he
is not so entitled, legal proceedings to decide
that issue being
in contemplation. I do not consider it in accordance with
ordinary
concepts of justice that the other party should be allowed to
treat
such conduct as a repudiation. Nor, in my opinion, are there
any considerations
of convenience which favour that course.
I would add that in my view the
lodging by the appellants of their defence
and counterclaim in
answer to the respondents' first writ did not constitute
further
conduct on their part which can itself be regarded as having a
repudiatory
character. They thereby demonstrated nothing more than
an adherence to
their position as they had earlier expressed it.
Further, the action taken by
16
the appellants in relation to the
guarantee arrangements with the National
Westminster Bank appear
to me to have been no more than a natural conse-
quence of the
view taken by the appellants as to their right to terminate
the
contract.
In the circumstances the issue
regarding the respondents' right to damages
in respect of alleged
breach of the appellants' obligation under the contract
to pay
£150,000 to Transworld does not arise for decision. It is
desirable,
however, that I should express my agreement with my
noble and learned friend
Lord Wilberforce that the decision in
favour of the respondents upon this
issue, arrived at by the
majority of the Court of Appeal, was not capable of
being
supported by Jackson v. Horizon Holidays Ltd. [1975] 1 WLR 1468.
That case is capable of being regarded as rightly
decided upon a reasonable
view of the measure of damages due to
the plaintiff as the original contracting
party, and not as laying
down any rule of law regarding the recovery of damages
for the
benefit of third parties. There may be a certain class of cases
where
third parties stand to gain indirectly by virtue of a
contract, and where their
deprivation of that gain can properly be
regarded as no more than a consequence
of the loss suffered by one
of the contracting parties. In that situation there
may be no
question of the third parties having any claim to damages in
their
own right, but yet it may be proper to take into account in
assessing the
damages recoverable by the contracting party an
element in respect of expense
incurred by him in replacing by
other means benefits of which the third parties
have been deprived
or in mitigating the consequences of that deprivation.
The
decision in Jackson v. Horizon Holidays Ltd. is not,
however, in my opinion,
capable of being supported upon the basis
of the true ratio decidendi in Lloyd's
v. Harper
(1880) 16 Ch D 290, which rested entirely on the principles
of
agency.
I would also associate myself with
the observations of my noble and learned
friend Lord Scarman as to
the desirability of this House having an opportunity
of reviewing,
in some appropriate future case, the general attitude of English
law
towards the topic of jus quaesitum tertio.
My Lords, I would allow the appeal.
Lord Scarman
My Lords,
For the reasons given by my noble
and learned friend, Lord Wilberforce,
I would allow the
defendants' appeal. In my judgment the defendants did not
commit,
or threaten to commit, a repudiatory breach of contract. The
principle
of the modern law is now "perspicuous", as my
noble and learned friend
observed in Federal Commerce v. Molena
Alpha [1978] 3 W.L.R. 991 at p. 999.
To be repudiatory, the
breach, or threatened breach, must go to the root of
the contract.
If an anticipatory breach is relied on, the renunciation must be
"an
intimation of an intention to abandon and altogether to refuse
performance
"of the contract"; or, put in other but
equally clear words, "the true question
"is whether the
acts or conduct of the party evince an intention no longer to
"be
bound by the contract": Lord Coleridge C.J. in Freeth v.
Burr (1874)
L.R. 9 C.P. 208 at p. 213. The emphasis upon
communication of the party's
intention by his acts and conduct is
a recurring theme in the abundant case
law. Two well-known cases
illustrative of the emphasis are Mersey Steel and
Iron Co. v.
Naylor, Benzon & Co. (1884) 9 App. Cas. 434 and Bradley
v.
H. Newsom, Sons & Co. [1919] A.C. 16 (see in particular
the speech of Lord
Wrenbury).
Difficulty, however, does arise in
the application of the principle to particular
facts—as the
difference in judicial opinion in the present case shows.
The
dividing line between what is repudiatory and what is not
emerges from three
very persuasive dicta to be found in the case
law. When the Federal Commerce
17
case, supra, was in the
Court of Appeal, Lord Denning M.R. said, [1978]
3 W.L.R. 309, at
p. 342F:-
"I have yet to learn that a
party who breaks a contract can excuse himself
"by saying
that he did it on the advice of his lawyers: or that he was
"under
an honest misapprehension ... I would go by the principle . .
.
"that, if the party's conduct ['contract' must be a
misprint]—objectively
"considered in its impact on the
other party—is such as to evince an
"intention no
longer to be bound by his contractual obligations, then it
"is
open to the other party to accept his repudiation and treat the
contract
"as discharged from that time onwards."
In the Spettabile case, 121
L.T. 628, Atkin L.J. at pages 634-5s aid of the
various
definitions of repudiation:—
"They all come to the same
thing, and they all amount at any rate to this,
"that it must
be shown that the party to the contract made quite
plain
"[emphasis supplied] his own intention not to
perform the contract."
In James Shaffer Ltd. v.
Findlay Durham and Brodie [1953] 1 W.L.R. 106 the
Court of
Appeal had under consideration a breach of a long-term
supply
contract where the defendant, who had undertaken to pass on
orders of not
less than a specified value each year, failed to do
so. He honestly believed his
failure was not a breach of contract:
but the Court of Appeal held that it was,
his construction of the
contract being erroneous in law. The court held, how-
ever, that
the breach did not evince an intention not to be bound by the
contract.
Singleton L.J., who referred to Freeth v. Burr
and the Spettabile case, made
this comment, at page
120:
"Streatfield J. said that
this was a very difficult case and near the line.
"I think
that that is a true description. Sometimes when a case is put in
"one
particular way it has great appeal, and, when it is put in the
other
"way, it has an almost equal appeal. I do not think
that it is right to look
"at the interview of May 18 alone;
as I understand the law, it is our
"duty to have regard to
the circumstances."
Morris L.J. (bottom of page 124)
and Upjohn J. (page 127) said the same
thing.
My Lords, as I see it, the error
of the majority of the Court of Appeal in
the instant case was,
notwithstanding some dicta to the contrary, to con-
centrate
attention on one act, i.e. the notice of rescission with its
accompanying
letter. They failed to give the consideration which
the law requires of all the
acts and conduct of the defendants in
their dealings with Mr. Cornwell—the
"alter ego"
of the plaintiff company. The law requires that there be
assessed
not only the party's conduct but also, "objectively
considered", its impact on
the other party. The error is
neatly exposed in Goff L.J.'s terse conclusion:—
"In my judgment rescission is
repudiation, and if it cannot be justified
"by the terms of
the contract it is wrongful and a breach."
The learned Lord Justice was, with
respect, concentrating too much attention
on one act isolated from
its surrounding circumstances and failing to pay
proper regard to
the impact of the party's conduct upon the other party.
In this case the contract provided
for the possibility of rescission by the
defendants. But the
notice of rescission, which the defendants gave, was not,
in the
circumstances which existed when it was given, one which the
defendants
had any contractual right to give. But they honestly
believed the contract did
give them the right. When one examines
the totality of their conduct and its
impact upon Mr. Cornwell it
is plain, as shown by my noble and learned
friend's analysis of
the facts, that the defendants, though claiming mistakenly
to
exercise a power given them by the contract to bring it to an end,
were not
evincing an intention not to be bound by the contract. On
the contrary, they
believed they were acting pursuant to the
contract. And Mr. Cornwell well
understood the situation. As he
put it in his final letter to Sir Godfrey Mitchell,
the President
of the defendants,
18
"... all I need say now is
that we will retire to our battle stations and it
"goes
without saying I am sure that you will abide by the result as I
will."
It never occurred to Mr. Cornwell
that the defendants, if held not to have been
entitled to give
notice of rescission, would refuse to perform the contract.
In
fact, it would seem that he believed exactly the contrary. Such was
the impact
upon him of the defendants' conduct.
It being the view of the majority
of the House that there was no repudiation,
the appeal must be
allowed, with the result that there is no need to consider
the
other issues raised. But, because of its importance, I propose to say
a few
words on the question of damages.
The plaintiff company agreed to
sell the land to the defendants for £850,000.
They also
required the defendants to pay £150,000 to a third party.
The
covenant for this payment was in the following terms:—
"I. Upon completion of the
purchase of the whole or any part of the
"land the purchaser
shall pay to Transworld Trade Limited of 25 Jermyn
"Street,
London. S.W.1, a sum of £150,000."
No relationship of trust or agency
was proved to exist between the plaintiff
company and Transworld
Trade Ltd. No doubt, it suited Mr. Cornwell to
split up the moneys
payable under the contract between the two companies:
but it is
not known, let alone established by evidence (though an
intelligent
guess is possible) why he did so, or why the
plaintiffs desired this money to
be paid to Transworld Trade. It
is simply a case of B agreeing with A to pay
a sum of money to C.
B, in breach of his contract with
A, has failed to pay C. C, it is said, has no
remedy, because the
English law of contract recognises no "jus
quaesitum
"tertio": Tweddle v. Atkinson (1861)
1 B. and S. 393. No doubt, it was for this
reason that Transworld
Trade is not a party to the suit. A, it is acknowledged,
could in
certain circumstances obtain specific performance of the promise
to
pay C: Beswick v. Beswick [1968] AC 58. But,
since the contract in the present
case is admitted (for reasons
which do not fall to be considered by the House)
to be no longer
in existence, specific performance is not available. A's remedy
lies
only in an award of damages to himself. It is submitted that, in the
absence
of any evidence that A has suffered loss by reason of B's
failure to pay C,
A is only entitled to nominal damages.
I wish to add nothing to what your
Lordships have already said about the
authorities which the Court
of Appeal cited as leading to the conclusion that
the plaintiff
company is entitled to substantial damages for the
defendants'
failure to pay Transworld Trade. I agree that they do
not support the conclusion.
But I regret that this House has not
yet found the opportunity to reconsider the
two rules which
effectually prevent A or C recovering that which B, for value,
has
agreed to provide.
First, the "jus quaesitum
tertio". I respectfully agree with Lord Reid that the
denial
by English law of a "jus quaesitum tertio" calls for
reconsideration.
In Beswick v. Beswick, supra, at
page 72 Lord Reid, after referring to the Law
Revision Committee's
recommendation (1937 Cmd. 5449 page 31) that the third
party
should be able to enforce a contractual promise taken by another for
his
benefit, observed:—
"And, if one had to
contemplate a further long period of Parliamentary
"procrastination,
this House might find it necessary to deal with this
"matter."
The Committee reported in 1937:
Beswick v. Beswick was decided in 1967. It is
now
1979: but nothing has been done. If the opportunity arises, I hope
the
House will reconsider Tweddle v. Atkinson and
the other cases which stand
guard over this unjust rule.
19
Likewise, I believe it open to the
House to declare that, in the absence of
evidence to show that he
has suffered no loss, A, who has contracted for a
payment to be
made to C, may rely on the fact that he required the payment to
be
made as prima facie evidence that the promise for which he
contracted was a
benefit to him and that the measure of his loss
in the event of non-payment is the
benefit which he intended for C
but which has not been received. Whatever the
reason, he must have
desired the payment to be made to C and he must have
been relying
on B to make it. If B fails to make the payment, A must find
the
money from other funds if he is to confer the benefit which he
sought by his
contract to confer upon C. Without expressing a
final opinion on a question
which is clearly difficult, I think
the point is one which does require consideration
by your
Lordships' House.
Certainly the crude proposition
for which the defendants contend, namely
that the state of English
law is such that neither C for whom the benefit was
intended nor A
who contracted for it can recover it, if the contract is
terminated
by B's refusal to perform, calls for review: and now,
not forty years on.