Mistake Flashcards
What do vitiating elements render a contract?
Void: the contract is treated as if it never existed (void ab initio)
(When the breach goes to the heart of the contract)
Voidable: the contract will continue on foot unless the injured party elects to rescind or avoid the contract
(When there is breach of a lesser term)
TRUE or FALSE
Mistake is a vitiating element
TRUE
What is ‘Mistake’?
It is an error in a contract
How is the nature of an agreement determined?
It is determined objectively
TRUE or FALSE
Contract law will allow the exploitation or the error of others
FALSE
What will mistake render a contract?
Void ab initio (as if the contract never existed)
How certain are the courts with the doctrine of mistake?
They are uncertain on the doctrine of mistake due to its uneven application - they are not entirely sure what it is
What are the different types of mistake?
- Bilateral or Mutual mistake: both parties have made a mistake on the same thing differently
- Common Mistake: both parties have made a fundamental mistake at the time of or before the formation of the contract - goes to the root of the contract ; performance is impossible or very different
- Unilateral mistake: one party is mistaken
Give an example of a ‘Bilateral/mutual’ mistake
- Absence of genuine agreement
What are the categories for ‘Common’ mistake
- Mistake as to subject matter of contract
- Mistake as to subject matter
- Mistake as to title/ownership
- Mistake as to possibility of performance of a contract
Give an example of a ‘Unilateral’ mistake
- Mistake as to identity
What is said about the risk of Mistake and in what case?
Where the risk of mistake is explictly or implidely allocated to one of the parties the doctrine of mistake will not apply. Triple Seven MSN Ltd v Azman Air Services (2018)
What are the effects in law of Mistake?
- Contract is made VOID - there is no contract and there has never been a contract
- Contract void ab initio - contract not recognised at common law at all
- Mistake nullifies consent - Lord Atkin in Bell v Lever Bros (1932) ; therefore preventing any agreement from arising so there is no contract or it has no effect at all
Give a case law example of bilateral/mutual mistake
This case was the starting point for this doctrine
Raffles v Wichelhaus (1846) 2 H&C 906
- Wichelhaus agreed to buy from Raffles 125 bales of cotton ‘ to arrive [in Liverpool] ex Peerless from Bombay’
- There were two ships called Peerless and both sailed from
Bombay! - Wichelhaus meant a Peerless which sailed in October, and Raffles a Peerless which sailed in December
Held:
- There was no contract (void as it goes to the heart of the contract)
It was impossible to determine which cargo was the subject of the contract and the seller admitted that the buyer was thinking about the other ship
What is the general rule of Mistake as to quality ?
A mistake that made by both parties and is generally NOT sufficient to render the contract void since such mistake does not render performance under the contract impossible
Give case law examples of ‘Mistake as to quality’ under Common mistake
Bell v Lever Bros Ltd [1932]
- B was the chairman of a company controlled by LB
- LB terminated B’s employment and paid B £30,000 as compensation as part of a termination agreement
- LB then discovered B had committed breaches of fiduciary duty for which employment contract could have
been terminated - LB attempted to set aside compensation agreement because it was entered into on mistaken belief that he did not have the right to terminate B’s employment contract
- Bell argued he did not fraudulently conceal the breaches – he simply did not have them in mind when negotiating the compensation payment
Held:
* Lord Atkin: mistake as to quality ‘…will not affect assent unless it is the mistake of both parties’… and the existence of that quality makes the subject completely different from what it is believed to be
* The contract was nothing to do with the £30,000 (this was the quality of it) but concerned Bell’s contract of service which was adressed when it was terminated
* The money should therefore not be repayable because it does not render the contract impossible
Leaf v International Galleries [1950]
- C bought a painting believed to be by Constable and it had also been represented by D (seller) as a Constable
- Five years later C tried to sell the painting and it was discovered that it was not a Constable; C argued that the original contract for the sale of painting should be set aside and sued for misrepresentation, but his action failed because of lapse of time
- CA considered obiter the situation in the context of mistake and stated that no alternative remedy for mistake would be available because this was a mistake as to quality only. The fact that the mistake was fundamental/essential did not impact performance under the contract, which indeed had been performed.
- Argument that C contracted to buy a Constable was rejected. Lord Evershed MR commented at p. 93 that ‘what he contracted to buy and what he bought was a specific chattel, namely, an oil painting of Salisbury Cathedral (and) it remains true to say that the claimant still has the article which he contracted to buy’ - therefore held that there was no grounds for mistake
Triple Seven MSN 27251 Ltd v Azman Air Services Ltd [2018]
- Where the mistake is explicitly or impliedly allocated to one of the parties, the doctrine of mistake will not apply
- Defendant was to lease two aircraft from Claimants for 5 years, to transport passengers from West Africa to Saudi Arabia for Hajj and Umrah pilgrimages
- Defendant’s participation in the airlift of pilgrims for the 2016 Hajj was approved by the Nigerian authorities (NAHCON) in May 2016
- BUT on 15 June 2016 defendant ‘s notified that Saudi authorities (GACA) had not given approval
- Notification was received after execution of lease agreements
- Defendant tried unsuccessfully to persuade Saudi authorities to reconsider
- Claimants tried deliver the aircraft but the defendant informed them that it could not take delivery
- Defendant argued that the lease agreements were void for common mistake –> Both parties had made some sort of mistake on the delivery
Held:
- Likely neither party would have entered into the leases had they been aware that the Saudi authorities had withheld approval –> no mistake on the part of Azman
- BUT this was NOT sufficient to render the contract void
- High Court noted the leases were for five years and not just the period of the 2016 Hajj pilgrimage, so that although Azman had been barred from airlifts for the 2016 Hajj, this did not mean it would be barred from future Hajj airlifts as well
- Contract can still be performed
What precedent did the case of Bell v Lever Bros Ltd (1932) create?
In no case since Bell v Lever Bros has it been held that a mistake as to quality rendered a contract void and seems like there will be no such case - limits the scope of what can make a contract void
What are the elements of common mistake which have the effect of rendering a contract void?
(1) When contract concluded, there must have been an assumption, substantially shared between the parties, about the existence of a state of affairs
(2) That assumption must have been fundamental to the contract
(3) That assumption must have been wrong at the time contract concluded (Azaman did not know that Saudi Arabia has rejected the details until after)
(4) Must be a fundamental difference between the assumed and actual states of affairs
Because the assumption was wrong, the contract or itsperformance would be essentially and radically different from what the parties believed at the time contract concluded OR, the contract must be impossible to perform having regard to the common assumption (contract must be impossible to perform - contract could still be performed as there was still 4 years remaining)
(5) The parties, or at least the party relying on the common mistake, would not have entered into the contract had the parties been aware that the common assumption was wrong
(6) No provision was made in the contract in theevent the common assumption was mistaken
What case set out the elements of common mistake that have the effect of rendering a contract void?
Triple Seven MSN 27251 Ltd v Azman Air Services Ltd [2018]
- Defendant was to lease two aircraft from Claimants for 5 years, to transport passengers from West Africa to Saudi Arabia for Hajj and Umrah pilgrimages
- Defendant’s participation in the airlift of pilgrims for the 2016 Hajj was approved by the Nigerian authorities (NAHCON) in May 2016
- BUT on 15 June 2016 defendant ‘s notified that Saudi authorities (GACA) had not given approval
- Notification was received after execution of lease agreements
- Defendant tried unsuccessfully to persuade Saudi authorities to reconsider
- Claimants tried deliver the aircraft but the defendant informed them that it could not take delivery
- Defendant argued that the lease agreements were void for common mistake –> Both parties had made some sort of mistake on the delivery
Held:
- Likely neither party would have entered into the leases had they been aware that the Saudi authorities had withheld approval –> no mistake on the part of Azman
- BUT this was NOT sufficient to render the contract void
- High Court noted the leases were for five years and not just the period of the 2016 Hajj pilgrimage, so that although Azman had been barred from airlifts for the 2016 Hajj, this did not mean it would be barred from future Hajj airlifts as well
- Contract can still be performed
What is the latin name for Existence of the Subject Matter under Common Mistake?
Res Extincta
Give case law examples of ‘Existence as to Subject Matter’ under Common Mistake
Associate Japanese Bank (international) Ltd v Credit Du Nord (1998)
- Non-existent textile machines were sold to C for over £1million the then immediately leased back
- D had guaranteed the payments due under the lease
- This was a fraud- the perpetrator defaulted on the lease payments and disappeared with £1million
- C then sought to enforce the guarantee given by D
Held: guarantee subject to condition that the machines existed; since they did not exist, the guarantee did not become effective and D could not be liable under it
McRae v Commonwealth Disposals Commission (1950) (Australian Case)
- The defendants invited tenders for the purchase of a wrecked oil tanker stated to be lying at a named spot. The plaintiffs made an offer, which was accepted, and incurred expenses in fitting out and sending an expedition to the spot.
- In fact, it was proved that the tanker did not exist and never had existed.
Held: The High Court of Australia held that the plaintiffs were entitled to recover from the defendants damages for breach of the contract promising that there was a tanker at the given locality; that the case was not one of a purported contract nullified by mistake, and that, even if it was one containing an element of mistake, the defendants could not rely on the mistake as it was induced by their servants; and that the damages to be recovered were the purchase price paid and the expenditure wasted in reliance of the promise.
Couturier v Hastie (1856)
- Cargo of corn, was shipped from the Mediterranean to England
- Before corn arrived, Hastie entered into contract of sale for the corn
- Hastie did not know, before he entered into contract for sale, that corn had become heated during voyage, and had perished - the captain has put into the port and sold it
- Contract was concluded, there was in fact no cargo in existence since it had already been sold. The question was whether the buyer was nonetheless liable to pay the contract price.
- The seller argued that the buyer was liable because, in truth, the contract was for the sale of ‘the adventure’—the commercial enterprise which the seller had set in motion
- The seller’s obligation was therefore not to deliver a cargo of corn, but rather to deliver the shipping documents representing the adventure, which the seller was able to do.
- On the other hand, the buyer argued that what was at issue was simply a straightforward contract for the sale of a cargo of corn.
- But both the Court of Exchequer Chamber and the House of Lords held that it was a contract for the sale of the cargo - The seller had not performed his contract and therefore was not entitled to the price.
Held:
- Purchaser was not liable to pay for the corn because the cargo had not been delivered
- Did not decide that the contract was void - therefore it was not authority for any general proposition that a contract of sale is void where the subject matter of the sale ,without the knowledge or fault to the seller, had ceased to exist but it was commonly understood as such - this was incorrect
Per Lord Cranworth LC: “…it plainly imports that there was something which was to be sold at the time of the contract, and something to be purchased.”
What legislation did Couturier v Hastie (1856) influence?
It influenced the wording of Section 6, Sale of Goods Act 1979
Describe two interesting things about the Mcrae v Commonwealth Disposals Commission (1950) case
- Australian case so it is not binding as it not part of UK common law - but could be persuasive
- Not actually a case for mistake but rather fruadulent misrepresentation or because of the judgement of the courts and that it was the fault of the defendants and Res Exctincta only arises where unknown to BOTH parties , the subject matter ceased to exist or never existed at the time the contract was entered into
What is the latin phrase for Mistake as to title/ownership?
Res Sua