Mistake Flashcards
Who can plead a mistake C or D?
- Both
What does Vitiation of contracts deal with?
- situations where something has “gone wrong” at some stage in the formation of the contract and this renders the contract legally invalid.
What are 4 vitiating factors?
- Mistake,
- Misrepresentation,
- Duress,
- Undue influence.
What are the two types Vitiation?
- Voidness
- Voidability.
What does Voidness vitiation mean?
- What we mean is that there never was, as a matter of law, a binding contract.
- It might seem that the requirements of formation have been met, but, actually, there has not, at any point in time, been a binding contract
What does voidable vitiation mean?
- until avoided by the mistaken party, the contract remains perfectly valid and binding
- C has a right to elect to affirm or rescind the contract
What happens if a mistaken party elects to rescind?
- The contract is wound up pro- and retrospectively
- I.e., all that has been given under the contract must be given back, and any future “obligations” cease to bind the parties, so it is then as if there was never any contract
What happens if the elected party chooses to affirm?
- The contract is fully valid and binding.
What 3 things could amount to a mistake?
1- The subject-matter is fundamentally different from the actual subject-matter?
2- His co-contractor is someone else, when the identity of his co-contract is fundamentally important to C?
3- The terms of the contract are different from the terms of the contract propounded by D?
What is a mistake?
- A mistake is a belief that can be proved incorrect at the time of formation of the contract.
- It is not an opinion
- It must be provable (or disprovable, of course)
- And it must be provable (or disprovable) now
- It is not a mis-prediction, something that can only be proved wrong later
What are the so-called ‘Coronation Cases’?
- Many owners of flats overlooking the planned procession route for the coronation of King Edward VII let rooms for viewing the procession
- Due to the King’s illness, the procession was postponed
- In most cases, the letting contracts had been made prior to the decision to postpone had been taken.
- Therefore, the “mistake” in these cases was not a mistake at all; it was a mis-prediction
Griffith v. Brymer (1903)
- One of the coronation cases where the contract for letting was formed after the date was rescheduled so he made a genuine mistake thinking it was still due to occur on the same day
- If the “mistake” relates to something in the future, the issue is one of frustration, not mistake
What happens when the mistake relates to to something in the future?
- It is an issue of frustration not mistake
What is the similarity and link between frustration and mistake?
- Both a mistake and a frustrating event seriously affect the nature of the parties’ obligations.
What happens as a result of frustration?
- frustration merely terminates the contract (so the contract was fully valid and binding up until the time of the frustrating event), because it does not happen until after the contract is made.