Terms Flashcards
What are the difference between express and implied terms?
Express = statements made by parties by which they intend to be bound (writing/oral/mixture)
Implied = not formed by parties but law otherwise deems they exist (because courts/law require this)
Terms = contents of contract defining rights/obligations arising from it
What is the difference between mere puffs, representations, and terms?
- Mere puff = statement of no legal significance
- Representation = statements of fact or law which parties do not intend to be binding
- Terms = statements of fact which parties intend to be binding
What is the difference between representations and terms not being fulfilled?
Term not fulfilled = breach of contract; innocent parties claim damages/remedies
Representation not fulfilled = misrepresentation - not breach but party can still obtain remedy
What is the test for deciding whether parties intended to be bound by a statement made by them?
I.e. representation or term
Objective: what would a reasonable person understand to be the intention of the parties having regard to the circumstances
Where a statement is made during negotiations for the purpose of inducing other party into contract, what does this prima facie create?
A prima facie ground for inferring that statement was intended to be a binding term of contract
How can a prima facie ground of a binding term be rebutted?
If party making statement can show it would not be reasonable to hold them bound by it
What factors are considered when court decides if parties intended a statement to be binding?
- The importance of the statement
- Timing of the statement
- Reduction of contract into writing
- Special knowledge/skill of person making it
- Assumption of responsibility
How will importance of the statement help to determine whether it is a term?
If it can be shown that injured party considered it so important that it would have entered contract but for that statement
Bannerman - D said ‘if they have been treated with sulphur, I am not interested’ - D enquired if samples contained suphur and P said they did not - small amount of crop had been treated with sulphur - D treated contract as repudiated and court held it was a term
How will timing of the statement help to determine whether it is a term?
Made at time of contracting v delay
- If statement made at time of contracting = more likely to be a term of contract than if made at earlier stage in negotiations
- Delay between making statement and entering contract = less likely to be a term
Routledge - seller told buyer in good faith that motorcylce was a 1941 or 1942 model and one week later entered into a contrwact of sale (written memorandum did not mention year of model) - bike was 1930 and buyer sued for breach - CoA held that lapse of time between statement and entering into contract meant statement re year was representation and not a term
How will reduction of contract into writing help to determine whether it is a term? Is this decisive?
If considered a term, parties would have ensured inclusion in written agreement
Not necessarily decisive!
Routledge - fact that motorcylce was a 1941 or 1942 model was not included in written memorandum
How will special knowledge/skill help to determine whether it is a term?
Where the party making statement had exclusive access to information/knowledge cf with other party, likely to be considered in latter’s favour
Oscar Chess - seller of car who had no knowledge of cars gave wrong date of car when they sold it to a car dealer - even though seller made the statement it was held to be a representation as the skills lied with the buyer
Dick Bentley - car dealer got mileage on car wrong, and this was held to be a term having sold it to the buyer
How will special assumption of responsibility/further checks help to determine whether it is a term?
Where vendor expressly accepts responsibility for soundness of sale item in question (to potentially deter checking by buyer) - statement may become term
Advising buyer to have it checked would have opposite effect
Schawel - seller of horse said the buyer did not need to look for anything because the horse was sound in every way - as seller represented horse was fit for sale and purchaser acted on this, the statement was deemed to be a term of contract
What is the process of ascertaining express terms of contract?
I.e. who is the observer and what will they think
A search to ascertain what an objective observer would think parties intended to be bound by
In what 4 ways is intention to be bound demonstrated?
Express terms
- A signed written contract (in almost all cases signing of a contrac)
- Incorporation by notice
- Incorporation by course of dealing
- Other ways of agreeing express terms provided parties adequately express intention
Will parties intend to be bound by a signed written document even if they have not read the terms/understand what they mean?
Yes
What are the exceptions to a written contract in ascertaining terms?
Intended…orally…
I.e. exceptions to the fact that parties intend to be bound by a signed written document even if they have not read/understood terms
- If document signed was not one intended to have contractual effect (e.g. document acknowledging receipt of goods; post-contractual document)
- A party has orally misrepresented meaning of clause to other party
What is needed for terms to be incorporated by notice?
Reasonable steps have been taken to bring them to C’s attention
Persistence with transaction suggests intention to be bound
What constitutes ‘reasonable steps’ for incorporation by notice? What does not?
- Reasonable: By reference to a different document (e.g. ticket referring to terms contained in railway table)
- Unreasonable: Notice not referred to clearly (e.g. not on front of document) or clause illegible
How can an onerous express term be incorporated by notice?
By clearly bringing to other party’s attention (‘something startling’; red hand rule)
How are onerous terms treated in a document containing contractual terms where a party signs it?
Party bound by onerous terms even if offending clause is onerous
If a term is being incorporated by notice, when must reasonable notice be given? What happens if not given then?
Before or at the time of contracting - will not amount to binding term if communicated only after contract made (e.g. reasonable notice not given until it is stated on the ticket which has been purchased)
Thornton - C returned to car in car park after buying ticket and going about business and was then severely injured while attempting to put belongings in car - D claimed ticket (bought by C when entering car park) was contractual document and it incorporated a condition exempting them from liability for injurty to customer occurring when motor vehicle is in car park - court held contract was formed before machine produced ticket and conditions referred to on ticket (or later) were not incorporated into the contract - NB did not matter that he did not read after buying it; court acknowledged no one actually does this
If a term is incorporated by a document, when will the incorporation not be effective?
Where the document giving notice was not intended to have contractual effect
Chapleton - C hired deck chair and was given a ticket which containd additional terms; held not to be binding because an observer would only have understood this to be a receipt
When will a term be incorporated by a course of dealing?
Where course of dealing has been consistent over a period of time and regular (i.e. not a few occasions over a number of years)
McCutcheon - attempt to incorporate by course of dealing unsuccessful because written terms relied upon had not been consistently incorporated in the past (sometimes, signed for, sometimes not)
What is an entire agreement clause? What will it not be effective for?
A clause providing that a particular (set of) document(s) constitutes the entire agreement of the parties
Would not be effective for misrepresentation liability
When will verbal statements be considered to have formed part of the contracts?
Where they are important and made near to the time the contract was written
If the parties intended
What is a term implied in fact?
I.e. what are they based on?
3
- Trade/professional customs: based on assumption that parties intended to be bound by well-known customs of particular trade
- A course of dealing between the parties: consistent pattern over many occasions over long period of time
- Business efficacy: without implied term, arrangement would be so unworkable that it would not have been entered into