Business Law Notes
Business Law Notes
Business Law Notes
Table of Contents
Law Overview 7
Definition and Function of Law 7
Common Law v Civil Law 7
Criminal Law v Civil Law 7
Sources of Law 8
Meanings of Common Law 8
Checks and Balances (Singapore Legal System) 8
Terminology 9
Statutory Interpretation 9
Offer and Acceptance (Chapter 7) (p. 181) 10
What is a contract (p. 181) 10
Types of contracts (p. 181) 10
Offer (p. 183) 10
Situations of invitations to treat vs. offers (p. 185) 11
Advertisements (p. 186) 11
Displays of goods for sale (p. 188) 11
Auction sales (p. 190) 11
Tenders (p. 190) 12
Termination of Offer (p. 191) 12
Revocation (p. 191) 12
Rejection and Counter-Offer (p. 194) 13
Lapse of Time (p. 195) 13
Failure to fulfill a condition (p. 196) 13
Death (p. 197) 14
Acceptance (p. 197) 14
Acceptance must be communicated to offeror (p. 198) 14
General Receipt Rule (p. 198) 14
Acceptance by conduct (p. 199) 14
Acceptance by instantaneous communication (p. 199) 14
Exception: The postal acceptance rule (p. 201) 15
Acceptance by silence? (p. 203) 15
Ignorance of offer (p. 204) 15
Issues with Offer and Acceptance (p. 208) 15
Certainty and Completeness (p. 208) 15
Subject to contract (p. 208) 16
Oral Agreements (p. 209) 16
Completeness (p. 210) 16
Vagueness (p. 211) 16
Fairness (p. 211) 16
Agreement to negotiate (p. 212) 16
Electronic contracts (Chapter 24) (p. 796) 17
ETA Section 13 (despatch and receipt) 17
ETA Section 5, 11, 14, 15, 16 (invitation to treat v offer, validity of contracts, input
errors) 17
Consideration and Intention to Create Legal Relations (Chapter 8) (p. 217) 19
Consideration (p. 217) 19
1. Must be requested by the promisor (p. 220) 19
2. Must not be past consideration (p. 221) 19
1
3. Must move from the promisee (p. 223) 20
4. Must be sufficient (p. 223) 20
(NO) Intangibles and Moral Obligations (p. 224) 20
(YES) Forbearance and Compromise (p. 225) 21
(NO) Existing Public or Legal Duty (p. 226) 21
Existing Contractual Duty (p. 226) 21
(YES) Owed to a third party (p. 226) 21
Owed to the promisor (p. 227) 21
(NO) In return for a promise for more (p. 227) 21
(NO) In return for a promise for less (p. 233) 22
Exceptions: Where Consideration is Not Required (p. 234) 22
Contract by deed (p. 234) 22
Promissory Estoppel (p. 234) 22
Elements of a Promissory Estoppel (p. 235) 23
Clear and unequivocal promise (p. 235) 23
Reliance (p. 236) 23
Inequitable to go back on promise (p. 241) 23
Shield, not sword (p. 242) 24
Effect of promissory estoppel: Suspensive or extinctive? (p. 243) 24
Intention to Create Legal Relations (p. 244) 24
Social and Domestic Agreements (p. 245) 24
Business and Commercial Agreements (p. 246) 25
Terms of Contract (Chapter 10) (p. 292) 26
Law on contractual terms (p. 292) 26
What does the law do? (p. 293) 26
Parol Evidence Rule and the Interpretation of Contracts (p. 295) 26
Exceptions (p. 296) 26
Section 93 of Evidence Act (p. 297) 27
Section 94 of Evidence Act (p. 298) 27
Pre-Contractual Statements (p. 305) 27
1. Puffs (p. 305) 27
2. Representations (p. 306) 27
3. Terms (p. 306) 27
Representation or Terms (p. 306) 27
Request to Verify (p. 307) 27
Importance of statement (p. 307) 27
Timing of Statement (p. 308) 28
Oral statements and written contracts (p. 309) 28
Special skill and knowledge (p. 309) 28
Types of Terms (p. 312) 28
1. Conditions (p. 312) 28
2. Warranties (p. 312) 29
3. Innominate Terms (p. 312) 29
Secondary meanings of “Condition” and “Warranty” (p. 314) 29
Differentiating between Conditions and Warranties (p. 314) 29
“Hong Kong Fir Approach” (p. 316) 29
Two Step Process/Test (p. 318) 30
RDC Concrete Approach used in Common Law before the qualification in Sports
Connection Case (p. 321) 30
Four situations (p. 322) 30
Sports Connection Case (p. 324) 31
Implied Terms (p. 326) 31
Terms implied in fact (p. 327) 31
Officious Bystander Test (p. 328) 31
Business Efficacy Test (p. 328) 31
Officious bystander test v Business efficacy test (p. 328) 32
Other conditions for terms implied in fact (p. 329) 32
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Terms implied by law (p. 330) 32
Implied Obligations (p. 330) 32
Other goals of the courts (p. 331) Error! Bookmark not defined.
Terms implied by statute (p. 331) 32
E.g. Sale of Goods Act (SGA) (p. 331) 33
Terms implied by customs (p. 332) 33
Exemption Clauses (Chapter 11) (p. 336) 34
Incorporation (p. 337) 34
Incorporation by Signature (p. 338) 34
Exceptions (p. 338) 34
Non est factum (p. 339) 34
Misrepresentation (p. 339) 34
Express warranty (p. 339) 35
Collateral contract (p. 340) 35
Incorporation by Notice (p. 341) 35
4 Factors that make a notice reasonably sufficient (p. 341) 35
Type of document (p. 341) 35
Time of notice (p. 342) 35
Adequacy of notice (p. 343) 35
Effect of the Clauses (p. 344) 36
Incorporation by Previous Course of Dealing (p. 346) 36
Construction (p. 347) 36
Three approaches (p. 347) 36
Contra Proferentem Rule (p. 347) 36
Rules in Cases of Negligence (p. 349) 37
Doctrine of Fundamental Breach (not used anymore) (p. 351) Error! Bookmark not
defined.
Statutory Limitations on the use of Exemption Clauses: Unfair Contract Terms Act
(UCTA) (p. 353) 37
Primary Focus (p. 354) 37
Contracts to Which UCTA Does not Apply (p. 354) 37
First Schedule (to the UCTA) (p. 354) 37
Applicability of UCTA to “Business Liability” (p. 355) 38
Applicability of UCTA to Negligence Liability (p. 355) 38
Applicability of UCTA to Breach of Contract (p. 356) 38
UCTA and Sale or Supply of Goods (p. 358) 39
UCTA and Consumer Contracts (p. 358) 39
Test of Reasonableness (p. 359) 39
Second Schedule (to the UCTA) (p. 360) 39
Exception Clauses and Consumer Protection Legislation in Singapore 40
Consumer Protection (Fair Trading) Act (p. 364) 40
Amended by the Consumer (Fair Trading) Amendment Bill (Lemon Law) (p. 365)
40
Misrepresentation (Chapter 13) (p. 401) 41
Operative Misrepresentation (p. 402) 41
Elements of Misrepresentation (p. 402) 41
Statement of fact? (p. 403) 41
Puff (p. 403) 41
Opinion (p. 403) 41
Intention (p. 403) 41
Law (p. 403) 41
Representation by Conduct (p. 404) 42
Express representations (p. 404) 42
Implied representations (p. 404) 42
Silence (p. 405) 42
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Exceptions (p. 405) 42
Ambiguity and Falsity (p. 406) 42
Materiality (objective) (p. 406) 43
Actual Inducement (subjective test) (p. 406) 43
Addressed to the Other Party (p. 408) 43
Types of Misrepresentation (p. 409) 44
Fraudulent Misrepresentation (p. 410) 44
Shared Responsibility Between Principal and Agent (or two agents) (p. 411) 44
Negligent Misrepresentation (p. 411) 44
Negligence at common law (p. 411) 44
Section 2(1) of Misrepresentation Act (p. 412) 44
Measure of damages (p. 412) 45
Burden of proof (p. 413) 45
Innocent Misrepresentation (p. 413) 45
Rescission (p. 414) 45
Restitution impossible (p. 415) 45
Affirmation (p. 415) 46
Lapse of time (p. 416) 46
Third party rights (p. 416) 46
Section 2(2) of Misrepresentation Act (p. 416) 46
Types of misrepresentation (p. 417) 46
Where right to rescind is lost (p. 417) 46
Exclusion of liability (p. 417) 47
Expressly excluding liability (p. 418) 47
Preventing liability from arising (p. 418) 47
Relative knowledge of parties (p. 419) 47
Capacity and Privity of Contract (Chapter 9) (p. 253) 48
Incapacity (p. 254) 48
Minors (p. 254) 48
General Rule (p. 255) 48
Exceptions (p. 256) 48
Binding Contracts for Minors (p. 257) 48
Beneficial contracts for necessaries (p. 257) 48
Beneficial contract of employment, apprenticeship or education and analgous
contracts (p. 260) 49
Voidable Contracts (p. 262) 50
Ratified Contracts (p. 263) 51
Remedies Against a (Protected) Minor (p. 263) 51
MCA Section 3(1) (p. 264) 51
MCA Section 2 (p. 266) 52
Economic Duress, Undue Influence and Unconscionability (Chapter 14) (p. 422) 53
Economic Duress (p. 423) 53
Basis for Intervention (p. 425) 53
Was there coercion of the will? (p. 428) 53
Was the pressure illegitimate? (p. 429) 54
Effect (p. 432) 55
Undue Influence (p. 432) 55
Categories of Undue Influence (p. 434) 55
Class 1: Actual undue influence (p. 434) 55
Class 2: Presumed undue influence (p. 435) 55
Nature of the Parties’ Relationship (p. 436) 56
Class 2(A): Presumed trust and confidence (p. 436) 56
Class 2(B): Trust and confidence must be proven (p. 436) 56
Requirement of “manifest disadvantage” (p. 436) 56
Rebutting the presumption (p. 438) 56
4
Effect of Undue Influence (p. 441) 57
Creditors and Doctrine of “Infection” (p. 441) 57
Two conditions for the doctrine to apply (p. 442) 57
Creditor is put on inquiry (p. 442) 57
Reasonable steps taken to minimize risk (p. 443) 57
Illegality and Public Policy (Chapter 15) (p. 452) 58
Statutory Illegality (p. 453) 58
Contracts Illegal per se v contracts illegal in performance (p. 455) 58
Situations where there is no statutory prohibition (performance is illegal) (p. 455)
59
Illegality at Common Law (p. 457) 59
Types of Common Law Illegality (p. 457) 59
Consequences or Effects of Illegality (p. 458) 60
Recovery of Benefits Conferred Under Illegal Contract (Restitution) (p. 459) 60
Exception 1: Recovery where parties are not in pari delicto (p. 459) 60
Exception 2: Timely repudiation or repentance (p. 460) 60
Exception 3: Recovery when plaintiff does not rely on the illegal contract (p. 461) 60
Contracts in Restraint of Trade (p. 462) 61
Validity of “Restraint of Trade” Clause (p. 464) 61
Employment Contracts (p. 466) 61
Sale of Business (p. 472) 62
Other Categories (p. 472) 62
Severance (p. 474) 63
Severance of Entire Clauses (p. 474) 63
Severance within Covenants: “Blue Pencil Test” (p. 474) 63
Performance, Breach and Agreement (Chapter 16) (p. 479) 64
Discharge by Agreement (p. 479 and p. 484-485) 64
Discharge by Performance (p. 479) 64
De Minimis Defects (p. 480) 64
Vicarious Performance (p. 480) 64
Personal Obligations (p. 481) 64
Time of Performance (p. 482) 65
Entire Obligations and Substantial Performance (p. 504) 65
Apportionment Act (p. 506) 66
Quantum Meruit (p. 506) 66
Quantum Meruit on a contractual basis (p. 507) 66
Quantum Meruit on a restitutionary basis (p. 508) 67
Several or Divisable Obligations and Substantial Performance (p. 508) 67
Discharge by Breach of a Promissory Obligation (p. 484) 67
Manner and Timing of Breach of Contract (p. 488) 67
Repudiatory breaches (“I won’t do it”) (p. 489) 68
Making performance impossible (“I won’t let you do it”) (p. 490) 68
Effects of a Breach of Contract (p. 491) 68
Actual breach giving rise to right of discharge (p. 492) 69
Effect of election to discharge contract for actual breach (p. 496) 69
Effect of election to affirm contract despite an actual breach (p. 496) 69
Anticipatory repudiatory breach (ARB) (p. 496) 69
Effect of election to discharge contract for ARB (p. 496) 69
Effect of election to affirm contract despite an ARB (p. 497) 69
Limits on right of election to affirm contract (p. 497) 69
Frustration (Chapter 17) (p. 513) 71
Elements of Frustration (p. 514) 71
Radically different performance (p. 514) 71
Neither party at fault (p. 515) 71
5
Time of frustration (p. 515) 71
Foresight and foreseeability (p. 516) 71
Classifications of Frustration (p. 516) 71
General Impossibility (p. 5.16) 71
(1) Destruction of subject matter of contract (p. 516) 71
(2) Death or incapacity (p. 517) 72
(3) Unavailability (p. 517) 72
(4) Failure of source of supply (p. 517) 72
(5) Method of performance impossible (p. 518) 72
Illegality (p. 519) 72
Radical Change (p. 519) 73
(1) Frustration of purpose (p. 519) 73
(2) Delay, unavailability (p. 520) 73
(3) Impracticability, increased costs (p. 520) 73
Frustration of a lease/sale of land (p. 521) 73
Self-Induced Frustration (p. 521) 73
Negligence (p. 521) 73
Choosing between several contracts (p. 522) 74
Partial Frustration (p. 523) 74
Express Provision (p. 524) 74
Construction (p. 524) 74
Foresight and Foreseeability (p. 525) 74
Foreseen events (p. 525) 74
Foreseeable events (p. 525) 74
Effects of Frustration (p. 526) 75
Frustrated Contracts Act (FCA) (p. 527) 75
Payments, expenses, benefits (p. 527) 75
Severability (p. 528) 75
Ambit of act (p. 528) 75
6
Law Overview
How does law affect business?
o Guidelines = what to do and what not to do
o When things go wrong (go to court) = get reprimanded or get justice
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o You can be punished on several accounts for the same offense
Sources of Law
Constitution: basic/Supreme law of the land that overrides other laws
Written Law: Acts of Parliament/Legislation Statute
o Includes Subsidiary Legislation (made by the minister)
Case Law: Judge-made laws (precedence)
English law:
o England common/case law
o Statutes (clearly stated to be Singapore law)
o Application of English Law Act – we can import law from England
Customary Law: Religious law i.e. if you are of Muslim background in times of inheritance
and divorce situations they will use Sharia Law
International Law: if Singapore is part of treaties or conventions
8
wants to sentence you to more than 3 yrs then you go up to the District
Court)
Small Claims Tribunal ($10 – $20k)
o Some specialized State Courts
Family Court (divorces)
Juvenile Court (underged)
Coroner’s Court (is it murder?)
Taxation Tribunal
Small Claims Tribunal
Terminology
Stare Decisis: prior decisions are binding if certain conditions are met
o Vertical Stare Decisis: Legal principles that form the basis of decisions of judges in
higher courts must be followed by judges in lower courts when faced with the
same factual situation or highly similar factual situations i.e. Court of Appeal
decisions bind the High Court
o Horizontal Stare Decisis: previous decisions of courts on the same level are
binding on judges in such courts when facing the same factual situation in future
It is not a must for high court judges to follow previous decisions made by
other high court judges
They will usually agree for efficiency purposes
Court of Appeal has no horizontal stare decisis
o For fairness and constancy – no need to appeal over and over again
o When circumstances are really different then you can’t use the stare decisis
o If the stare decisis made by the Court of Appeal then it will take a very long time to
change – it is expensive to appeal to the Court of Appeal and there is no guarantee
that the person will win
Then you must wait until someone is willing to appeal to the Court of
Appeal
Ratio Decidendi: The legal principle which forms the basis of the judgment
o The reason why he decision was made
Obiter dicta: Statement of observation made in passing by the judge which does not form
the basis of the judgment
o It is not binding
o Can be persuasive but has no legal effect
Statutory Interpretation
Literal Rule: the linguistic approach – what is the ordinary meaning of the word/s?
o If there is only one meaning of the word the judge must apply it
Golden Rule: literal rule is followed unless it leads to an absurd result; the apply the
meaning that does not do so
o If there is 2 meanings and one is absurd then you choose the not the absurd one
Purposive Rule: where words are ambiguous (not clear) find out the purpose behind the
statute i.e. what mischief is it trying to cure/prevent/address?
Section 9A Interpretation Act – is an extension of the golden rule. You can look at
parliament speeches, obscure or unreasonable meanings of words etc.
o Can use extrinsic aids to find out purpose of statute i.e. if you can argue that the
statute is unreasonable then you can win the case
9
Offer and Acceptance (Chapter 7) (p. 181)
What is a contract (p. 181)
Contract: a legally binding agreement
o An agreement which gives rise to legal remedies if the promise is broken
o Role: to provide for confident planning of exchanges
Contracts can be
o Orally only
o In writing only (no signature)
o In writing and signed – have proof (cannot lie/forget)
o By conduct only
o A combination of all of the above
Requirements of a valid contract
o Meeting of the minds (consensus ad idem) – seen through offer and acceptance
o Consideration and intention to create legal relations
o Parties must have the capacity to contract
o Parties must freely consent to the agreement
Mistake, misrepresentation, illegality, duress and undue influence may
vitiate free consent
10
2. An expression of willingness to be bound as soon as the offeree manifests
acceptance (power is with the offeree to bind the offeror at the moment they
accept)
3. Power to bind the offeror upon acceptance
Other Elements of an offer
o Can be made orally, in writing or by conduct
o Must be communicated to offeree to be effective – the offeror induces the offeree
to believe that they intend to be bound
Offers to public at large (p. 184) (Unilateral offer)
o An offer to a group or to the whole world
o Any member of the group or member of the public may accept the offer i.e. a lost
purse where anyone who finds it and returns it gets the reward
o Carlil v Carbolic Smoke Ball Company (1893)
Offer distinguished from invitation to treat
o Invitation to treat: when one party invites others to make an offer
An expression to go into negotiation with the other party
o A statement may be an invitation to treat, although it contains the world “offer”
(Spencer v Harding (1870))
11
When the hammer falls then the contract is complete – before the hammer falls the bidder
is free to withdraw (confirmed by Sales of Goods Act)
“without reserve” – auction will be sold to the highest bidder, no matter how low the bid
(Warlow v Harrison (1859))
12
o The offeror does not know if someone has accepted the offer or has begun to
accept the offer
o Sufficient revocation if offeror takes reasonable steps to bring the withdrawal to
the attention of others i.e. if the offer was made by a newspaper advertisement,
then another similar advertisement withdrawing it
o Two-offer approach: a main offer and an implied offer not to revoke the main
offer
If an offeree begins his obligations within a reasonable time from the
making of the offer, the offeror cannot revoke his offer
o Quantum Meruit Approach: offeror allowed to withdraw offer at any time before
full performance subject to compensation being paid to the offeree a suitable sum
for his time and effort
o Daulia Ltd v Four Millbank Nominees Ltd (1978) – qualification that the offeror
cannot prevent the condition from being satisfied, as soon as the offeree starts to
perform the act. Offeror is entitled to require full performance of the condition he
has imposed and short of that they are not bound
o Singapore: (DicksonTrading (s) Pte Ltd v Transmarco Ltd (1989)) once the offeree
has embarked on the performance, it is too late for the offeror to revoke his offer
13
Death (p. 197)
Death of offeree or offeror
Only if the offeree knows that the offeror has died, it will not terminate if the offeree has
no notice of it (Bradbury v Morgan (1862))
Offeree’s acceptance may be valid if made in ignorance of the death of the offeror
o Not accepted if it involves personal services of the offeror
Some offers may survive and be accepted and binding on the personal representatives of
the deceased
If offeree dies before accepting the offer, the offer made to them is no longer capable of
acceptance
14
Cases must be resolved by reference to the intentions of the parties, by sound business
practice and in some cases by a judgment where the risks should lie (Transniko Pte Ltd v
Communication Technology Sdn Bhd (1996))
15
There may be no enforceable contract if terms are conditional, incomplete or vague
16
Electronic contracts (Chapter 24) (p. 796)
Electronic contracts have the same legal effect as paper contracts
ETA Section 5, 11, 14, 15, 16 (invitation to treat v offer, validity of contracts, input errors)
Section 5: parties retain the autonomy to decide whether to exclude or agree to the use of
electronic transactions or to agree to additional requirement as to the form or
authentication of a contract or transaction
o Agreement/consent to use of electronic transactions are clarified to be inferred
from the conduct of the parties
Section 11:
o An offer may be expressed by means of electronic communications
o The contract cannot be denied validity or enforceability on the sole ground that
electronic communication was used for the formation of a contract
Section 14: a proposal to contract that is not directed at a particular party, but is
generally accessible, is only an invitation to make an offer
o Exception: when the offeror specifically and clearly enunciates the stages of the
transaction and when there is a clear offer made
Section 15: a contract can be formed when no natural person reviewed or intervened in
the actions carried out by automated message systems
Section 16: if there is an input error by a natural person in the electronic communication
and the automated message system does not allow the natural person to correct the
error, the person has the right to withdraw the portion of the electronic communication
in which the input error was made. Only applicable if
17
o The person notifies the other party of the error as soon as possible after having
learned of it
o The person has not used or received any material benefit or value from the goods
or services received from the other party
18
Consideration and Intention to Create Legal Relations (Chapter 8) (p. 217)
Consideration (p. 217)
Definition: something that has value in the eyes of the law and given in exchange for a
promise (the price of the promise)
o Value: previous cases have said such an exchange is of value
A promise is only enforceable if it is supported by consideration
o Purpose: to make sure there are some promises that are not enforceable
In benefit-detriment analysis, valuable consideration in the eyes of the law consists of
o Some right, interest, profit or benefit received by one party (promisor) OR
o Some forbearance, detriment, loss or responsibility given, suffered or undertaken
by the other (promisee – who has to show the consideration)
o The law only requires a benefit OR a detriment, not both
o Curie v Misa (1875)
Promisor: maker of the promise, promisee: recipient of the promise
o A party can be both a promisor and a promisee
o Important to specify the promise that is being enforced to see if there is
consideration
Can be in the form of a promise (yet to be performed) or an act (an act already
performed)
Must distinguish between conditions and considerations
o When the fulfillment of the condition is not within the control of the promisee
(i.e. age), the promise is merely a conditional gift
o (Chapell & Co Ltd v Nestle Co Ltd (1960)) – when the fulfillment of the condition
involves a performance by the promisee it is not as clear
Is the condition a detriment to the promisee or simply a condition?
Consideration is an exchange not a gift
o Gratuitous promises, promises that ask for nothing in return, are not enforceable
19
Exception: (Pao On v Lau Yiu Long (1980)) plaintiffs had agreed, at the defendants’
request, not to sell their shares for a year. Defendants agreed to indemnify plaintiffs if
they suffered losses. Plaintiffs suffered and sued defendants on indemnity
o Defendant’s argument: defendant’s promise to indemnify was after the plaintiff’s
promise not to sell therefore past consideration
o Consideration was ruled as valid and enforceable:
Act was done at the promisor’s request (the promisee can initiate but it
can still be at the promisor’s request i.e. do you want me to xx? Yes)
Parties both understood that the act would be compensated
Compensation would be enforceable if it had been promised in advance of
act
o Other exceptions: Sim Tony v Lim Ah Ghee (1995); Rainforest Training Lt and
another v State Bank of India Singapore (2012)
20
(YES) Forbearance and Compromise (p. 225)
Forbearance: an agreement where one party agrees to refrain from enforcing a claim
against another party in return for a promise from the latter
Compromise: when in dispute, one party agrees to surrender their claim in
consideration of the other’s payment or other promises
Generally yes because time and money can be saved by not enforcing the claim
Exception: no consideration when a person promises not to enforce an invalid claim that
they knew was invalid at the time of the promise
o (Wade v Simeon (1846))
o Surrendering a groundless claim is neither a benefit to the other party or a
detriment to themselves
o No need to prove you are giving up a valid claim but rather the right to claim
Often you cannot prove the validity of the claim without a full trial
o Need to prove they had reasonable grounds for the claim, that they honestly
believe they have a fair chance of success and they haven’t concealed anything
that could affect the validity of the claim (Callisher Bischoffsheim (1870))
21
o Hartley v Ponsonby (1857) voyage had become too hazardous so completing the
voyage was more than what was required in their original contractual
undertakings
Paying more for the performance of an existing duty is good consideration if the
promisor stands to gain factual/practical benefits or obtain detriment
o Williams v Roffey (1991) defendants obtained benefits from the plaintiff
completing his existing duty because the defendants avoided being liable for late
completion from another contract and avoided the need to engage another
subcontractor – this case is somewhat inconsistent with Stilk v Myrick
Plaintiff had no money – even if defendant sued the plaintiff for the
damages they owe the third party they would not be able to pay
Does not overrule Stilk v Myrick. If there is no practical benefit then use
Stilk v Myrick, if there is then use Williams v Roffey
o 5 elements to determine if promises to pay more can be legally binding?
A to be in a valid contract with B
At some stage before A has completed the obligations, B has doubts that
A’s ability to complete the obligations
B promises A additional payment for A to complete his remaining
obligations on time
B obtains a practical benefit or obviated a disbenefit
B’s promise was not given as a result of economic duress or fraud
o Exception: Sea-land Service Inc v Cheong Fook Chee Vincent (1994) “practical
benefits” should be understood ‘narrowly’ as real and significant benefits (not
under duress) – this is also inconsistent with the Sharon Global Solutions Pte Ltd v
LG International (Singapore) Pte Ltd (2001) case
22
rent by half. After the war, the landlord sought to restore the rent back to its original
price. Lord Denning, in his obiter, said that if they had tried to claim back the rent before
the war ended they would have been estopped because their previous promise would
have legally prevented them from doing so
Traditionally is used to protect promisee from disadvantage in relying on the promisor’s
promise
23
The Post Chaser (1982) court held it was not inequitable for promisor to recede his
promise because the lapse of two days between reliance (of promisee) and retraction (of
the promise) was too short to have any prejudice to the promisee
o Is it just and equitable? – usually need to look at all the relevant circumstances
(D&C Builders v Rees (1966))
24
Balfour v Balfour (1919) love and affection is not an intention to create legal relations
Jones v Padavattan (1969) informal family arrangements dependent on good faith are
also not intention to create legal relations
Rebutted: Merritt v Merritt (1970) couple was clearly making a serious bargain as the
wife insisted on a written agreement
All surrounding facts of a case are relevant. Two main factors:
o Certainty: the more certain, the more likely the parties have carefully considered
the content and effects of the agreement
o Actual reliance: evidence of such reliance will usually suggest the parties had an
intention to be bound
25
Terms of Contract (Chapter 10) (p. 292)
Law on contractual terms (p. 292)
Rules on how the precise obligations of the parties to a contract are to be determined
and how such obligations should be categorized to determine the remedies upon breach
of such obligations
Purpose: promote contractual efficacy without violating these rules
o Courts do not make contracts for the parties
o Rules are designed to find out and give effect to the intentions of the parties on
an objective basis
26
To prove existence of any oral agreements that the written contract is silent about as
long as it is not inconsistent (s 94b)
To prove subsequent oral agreements to rescind/modify contract (s 94d)
27
Statement asserting a feature of intrinsic significance in relation to the subject matter of
the contract is likely to be a term
o Darwish M K F Al Gobaishi v House of Hung Pte Ltd (1995) seller asserted that all
the gemstones were genuine, natural and not treated
Importance must be accepted by BOTH parties
28
2. Warranties (p. 312)
Less important, secondary obligations
Will not go to root of contract
May seek damages but not termination
If innocent party mistakes a warranty as a condition, terminates the contract and then
enters into another contract for the same performance with a third party, they are liable
in damages as a result of the wrong assessment
29
Focus on the consequences of the breach rather than the intention of the party
Innominate terms cannot be characterized simply by looking at their content
o Possible to imagine both serious and extremely trivial breaches of the term
o Could be a condition or warranty, depending on the nature and consequences of
the breach
o Serious breach = treat it as a breach of condition
i.e. “it goes without saying that, if that happens, the contract is at an end”
(Bunge Corporation New York v Tradax Export SA Panama (1981))
o Not serious = treat it as a breach of warranty
o i.e. a term where a ship must be seaworthy. A missing nail (warranty) v defective
engines (condition)
Critics argue that this approach may mistakenly terminate contracts
Helps promote justice (The Hansa Nord (1964))
RDC Concrete Approach used in Common Law before the qualification in Sports Connection Case
(p. 321)
Came into existence from the RDC Concrete Pte Ltd v Sato Kogyo (S) Pte Ltd (2007) case
Purpose is to synthesise condition-warranty approach and Hong Kong Fir approach
Warranties are like innominate terms
30
(4) Hong Kong Fir approach: court determines the term breached was not a condition
but the breach results in a deprivation of substantially the whole benefit that the
innocent party was to obtain from the contract
o Ascertain the severity of the consequences of the breach – right to terminate if
consequences are serious
31
Officious bystander test v Business efficacy test (p. 328)
Andrew Phang J: “Business efficacy” test and “officious bystander” test are complements
to each other. “officious bystander” test is a practical method by which the “business
efficacy” test is implemented
Any term implied for a particular contract does not set a precedent for future contracts
of the same type
Sembcorp Marine Ltd v PPL Holdings Pte Ltd (2013): 3 step test
1) No contemplation at the time of contract, a gap, not discussed
2) Business efficacy test – imply a term not the term
3) Officious bystander test – imply that particular term
32
E.g. Sale of Goods Act (SGA) (p. 331)
For the smooth functioning of a sale of goods system in a country – allows buyers and
sellers to routinely engage in sales without wasting time focusing on all the minute
details
Allows focus on the main elements of the transactions
Reduces transaction costs and frees up time
Sections:
o s12 (1): seller has a right to sell the goods
o s12 (2): implies a warranty that the goods are free from charges in favour of third
parties
o s13 (1): implies a condition that goods sold by description will correspond with
their description
o s14 (2): when a seller sells goods in the course of his business there is an implied
condition that the goods supplied under the contract are of satisfactory quality
o s15 (2): goods sold by sample will correspond with their sample
33
Exemption Clauses (Chapter 11) (p. 336)
a.k.a. exclusion clauses/exception clauses
Terms that seek to exclude or limit liability of one of the parties in the event of a
breach of contract
Three types
o Exemption (exclusion) clauses: seek to exclude the liability completely
o Limitation of liability clauses: seek to limit liability (i.e. to a certain monetary
amount)
o Indemnity clauses: seek to pass liability (or risk thereof) to a third party
Requirements for an exemption clause to be valid:
o Must be properly incorporated into the contract
o Must be properly construed
o Operation must not be excluded or restricted by statute, namely UCTA (Unfair
Contract Terms Act)
34
Express warranty (p. 339)
Exemption clauses in a written contract can be overridden by express warranty given
at or before the time the contract was concluded
Anti-Corrosion Pte Ltd v Berger Paints Singapore Pte Ltd and another appeal (2012) A
had been verbally assured by B that a sealer coat was not necessary and that
warranty would be provided. Parol evidence rule did not apply in this case
35
Different outcome if the party relying on the exemption clause knows from the
beginning that the other party is disabled
o Geier v Kujawa, Weston & Warne Bros (Transport) Ltd (1970) not adequate as
defendant knew the plaintiff could not speak English but did not take steps to
try and translate the exemption clause
Jet Holding Ltd and others v Cooper Cameron (Singapore) Pte Ltd and another (2005)
not adequate as Court held that exemption clauses should have been brought to the
plaintiff’s attention fairly and reasonably by “pointing them out, more so when the
terms and conditions were not printed on the reverse of the quotation”
36
“load” was ambiguous (weight, goods, people?). Clause could not exclude the
insurer’s liability
Courts tend to apply it more to cases of complete exclusion rather than simply
limiting liability
o Ailsa Craig Fishing Co Ltd v Malvern Fishing Co Ltd and Securicor (Scotland) Ltd
(1983) clause was upheld even though it was ambiguous because limitation
clauses need not be construed as strictly as exclusion clauses
o Limitation clauses tend to be considered part of the bargain (more so than
exclusion clauses)
Statutory Limitations on the use of Exemption Clauses: Unfair Contract Terms Act
(UCTA) (p. 353)
UK Act applicable in Singapore by virtue of Application of English Law Act
Applies to exemption clauses in contractual and non-contractual situations (like tort,
s 2)
Only deals with unfair exemption clauses
Most provisions of UCTA only apply to business liability (s 1(3))
37
Para 2: (ss 2(2)-4 and 7 not applicable except in favour of the “person dealing as a
consumer”)
o Marine salvage or towage contracts
o Ship or hovercraft charterparties
o Contracts for the carriage of goods by ship or hovercraft
Para 3: (ss 2(2)-4 not applicable except in favour of the “person dealing as a
consumer”)
o Contracts involving the carriage of goods by ship or hovercraft where means
of carriage are concerned
Para 4: (s 2 not applicable except in favour of the employee)
o Clauses excluding or restricting negligence liability in contracts of
employment
s 26 (of UCTA): excludes certain international supply contracts (Trident Turboprop
(Dublin) Ltd v First Flight Couriers Ltd (2009))
38
UCTA and Sale or Supply of Goods (p. 358)
s 6 deals with contracts of sale and hire-purchase when party not relying on
exemption clause (buyer) is dealing as a consumer
s 6(1): a seller’s implied undertakings as to title (under SGA s 12 and Hire-Purchase
Act s 6(1)) cannot be excluded or restricted by an EC
s 6(2): a seller’s implied undertakings as to the conformity of goods to their
description or sample or their quality or fitness for a particular purpose (under SGA
ss 13-15 and HPA s 6(2-3)) cannot be excluded or restricted by an exemption clause
s 6(3): in non-consumer contracts, exclusion/restriction of liability is subject to the
test of reasonableness
ss 7(2-3): same principles as s 6 apply in contracts not governed by SGA and HPA in
regard to passing ownership or possession of goods
o Liability for breach of s 2 Supply of Goods Act cannot be excluded/restricted
s 7(4): right to transfer liability in respect of ownership of goods or give possession
or assurance of quiet possession can be excluded/restricted is subject to the test of
reasonableness
39
Examples of the use of Second Schedule p. 360-364
Amended by the Consumer (Fair Trading) Amendment Bill (Lemon Law) (p. 365)
Seeks to protect consumers against defective goods that do not conform to the
contract of sale of goods at the time of delivery
3 criteria
o Transferee (to whom the goods are being transferred to) deals as a consumer
o Goods do not conform to the applicable contract
o Contract was made after 1 Sept 2012
When eligible to rely on the law, consumer has a right to require the seller to
repair/replace the good at the seller’s discretion
If not feasible to do so, the consumer has the right to require the seller to reduce the
amount to be paid accordingly or rescind the contract
40
Misrepresentation (Chapter 13) (p. 401)
Definition: false statement of fact made by one party to another party, which induced
the other party to enter into the contract
Originally, there was only liability of misrepresentation when the misrepresentation
was fraudulent or formed part of the contract
o After Hedley Bryne & Co Ltd v Heller & Partners Ltd (1964) there was also
possibility for negligent misrepresentation
o When not fraudulent or negligent, the innocent can seek for an indemnity
UK Misrepresentation Act 1967: a representee can claim damages for negligent
misrepresentation the same way they could for fraudulent misrepresentation
Hendersen v Merrett Syndicates Ltd (1995) confirmed that the innocent party may
have rights under both contract and tort
Sometimes overlaps with breach of contract
o s 1: the innocent party will not be deprived of the right to rescind for
misrepresentation even if the representation has become part of the contract
41
If statement involves both fact and law, courts tend to regard it as statement of fact
42
o Representor must prove they intended for the statement to be understood as
false – not liable if they honestly intended it in the sense that is true
o Ackerhielm v De Mare (1959)
Ambiguous statement can be fraudulent but not negligent or innocent
misrepresentation – type of misrepresentation is determined by representor’s
intention
43
o i.e. A by misrepresentation induces B to buy an item and B later induces C to
buy the item with a similar misrepresentation. C can rely on the
misrepresentation against A if A knew that B intended to resell and likely
repeat the misrepresentation (Gross v Lewis Hillman (1970))
Shared Responsibility Between Principal and Agent (or two agents) (p. 411)
If agent knowingly makes a false statement within the scope of his authority, the
principal is liable for fraudulent misrepresentation
If first agent knowingly makes a false statement to a second agent intending that
agent to pass the statement onto a third agent, the first agent is liable to the third
party
If agent makes a statement they honestly believe is true but the principal knows is
false there are 2 situations
o If principal was aware and did not intervene they are liable
o If principal was not aware, not liable
o Armstrong v Strain (1952)
44
A non-fraudulent misrepresentation carries the same liability as a fraudulent
misrepresentation
The representor is not liable if they prove they had reasonable grounds to believe
that the statement was true up until the time the contract was made
45
Not precise restitution but substantial restitution
o Returns the subject matter in its altered state and makes allowance for any
diminution in its value or accounts for any benefit the representee derived
from using it
If substantial restitution not possible, representee not barred from rescission should
the diminution be due to defect in the subject matter or external causes (i.e. third
party)
46
Exclusion of liability (p. 417)
Clauses excluding the consequences of misrepresentation, except when representor
is fraudulent, are valid and subject to rules applying to exemption clauses
o s 3: an exclusion clause has no effect unless it satisfies the requirement of
reasonableness of s 11(1) of UCTA
o Burden of proving the clause is reasonable lies with the party seeking to rely
on it
Two types: those that exclude liability and those that seek to prevent liability from
arising
47
Capacity and Privity of Contract (Chapter 9) (p. 253)
Incapacity (p. 254)
Need to protect inexperienced and/or vulnerable individuals
Investors in a corporation deserve protection against their investment being applied
towards unintended purposes
Need to balance this out with the party who dealt fairly with the individual or
corporation
48
o Necessaries can be either goods supplied or services provided
Two considerations if the goods and services are necessaries:
o Are they capable of being “necessaries” at law?
o Does the minor have actual need for the goods or services in fact?
Supplier bears the burden of proving both
For the contract to be binding, the good or service must benefit the minor
Common law defines necessaries as: such articles as are fit to maintain the particular
person in the state, station and degree… in which he is (Peters v Fleming (1840))
s 3(3) of SGA defines necessaries as: goods suitable to the condition in life of the
minor…concerned and to his actual requirements at the time of the sale and delivery
o “suitable to the condition in life” – takes into account social status
Rings, pins and watch-chain (Peters v Fleming), servant’s uniform
(Hands v Slaney (1800))
Articles of mere luxury cannot be necessaries but luxurious articles of
utility can be (Chapple v Cooper (1844))
Real question: “whether it was reasonable for the minor, however rich, to be supplied
with articles of the kind in question”
If minor is adequately supplied, they are not liable for the price even if the supplier
did not know this (Barnes & Co v Toye (1884))
o Nash v Inman (1908) minor was already adequately supplied at the time of sale
and delivery so tailor failed in his claim against him
Fawcett v Smethurst (1914) contract contained a harsh term that the minor was liable
for damage to the car “in any event”, even if the minor was not at fault. Although the
hire was deemed necessary, the court held that it was not to the minor’s benefit
SGA s 3(2) says the minor is only liable if the contract of the necessaries is executed
o “sold and delivered”
For necessary services, executory contracts for services bind the minor where
contracts for education are concerned
o Roberts v Gray (1913) minor’s repudiation was wrongful because the minor
was still partly bound in the contract for teaching and instruction
o Contracts for education that equip a minor with necessary skills to earn a
livelihood are considered contracts for necessaries
SGA s 3(2) only requires the minor to pay a reasonable price
o Minor does not necessarily have to pay the price agreed to the in the contract
Beneficial contract of employment, apprenticeship or education and analgous contracts (p. 260)
Binding if they provide the minor with a means of earning their livelihood
Only binding if the contract is beneficial to the minor
o Clements v L & NW Ry (1849) minor was held bound by contract of
employment because he gave up his statutory right to personal injury benefits
to join employer’s own insurance scheme. Insurance scheme was found to be
to the minor’s benefit
49
Not every contract that is beneficial will be binding (i.e. a minor’s trading contracts do
not bind them no matter how beneficial)
o Cowern v Nield (1912) when a minor trading in hay and straw failed to deliver
the order that had already been paid for, the buyer’s claim to recover price
paid failed
50
o i.e. upon repudiating the lease for a flat, minor is free from future payments
but cannot recover the past months paid unless there is a total failure of
consideration
51
MCA Section 2 (p. 266)
Financial institutions will only grant loans when repayment of loan and interest is
guaranteed by a party with contractual capacity
o Guarantee is thus enforceable against guarantor
52
Economic Duress, Undue Influence and Unconscionability (Chapter 14)
(p. 422)
General rule: very little room for considerations of unreasonableness or lack of
fairness, especially in commercial transactions
o Except for special cases, court must not rewrite the contract on the basis of
unreasonableness or unconscionable conduct
Courts attempt to address unfairness in transactions between parties of unequal
bargaining positions, which involve some element of duress (pressure) or undue
influence (exploitation)
o There are situations where the law deems such pressure or exploitation no
longer legitimate
53
If no, likely NOT economic duress
54
Effect (p. 432)
o Finding of economic duress renders contract voidable (Pao On v Lau Yiu Long (1980))
o Even if contract is held voidable, victim may not be able to rescind it if they have
affirmed it
o North Ocean Shipping Co Ltd v Hyundai Construction Co Ltd (The Atlantic
Baron) (1979): held that they affirmed because it
55
Defendant bears burden of rebutting or countering the inference by proving the
claimant had exercised a truly independent will
56
Effect of Undue Influence (p. 441)
Render the contract concerned voidable
Courts will attempt to restore parties as close to as their original positions as
possible, achieving practical justice (Cheese v Thomas (1994))
57
Illegality and Public Policy (Chapter 15) (p. 452)
General Rule: Court will not assist a person who’s action is based on a contract that
is tainted by illegality or contrary to public policy
o Such contracts are totally or partially unenforceable
In the interest of the greater public good, courts will override contractual rights
Two broad categories:
o Statutory illegality
o Illegality at common law
58
Situations where there is no statutory prohibition (performance is illegal) (p. 455)
General rule: no prohibitions = contract enforceable
o i.e. when a statute only imposes penalties and does not deprive parties of
contractual rights
o In these cases both parties are entitled to sue
o St John Shipping Corporation v Joseph Rank Ltd (1957) contract was
enforceable because statute only imposed a criminal penalty for overloading
Exception: both parties enter the contract with a “guilty intention” to breach a statute
o Neither of them can enforce the contract
o Don’t need to know of the statute but need to know of committing the act
o Ashmore, Benson, Pease & Co Ltd v AV Dawson Ltd (1973) plaintiff’s transport
knew of and participated in the illegality
Rebuttal to exception: if there is only one “guilty party”
o “Guilty party” must have some degree of participation
o Guilty party cannot enforce, innocent party can
o Archbolds (Freightage) Ltd v S Spanglett Ltd (1961) contract was legal when
formed, innocent party was unaware of and did not participate in the illegality
59
Consequences or Effects of Illegality (p. 458)
Exception 1: Recovery where parties are not in pari delicto (p. 459)
pari delicto: not to be equally at fault
Situation 1: one party is guilty of fraud
o Hughes v Liverpool Victoria Legal Friendly Society (1916) plaintiff could recover
the money paid because he entered into the contract through fraudulent
misrepresentation
Situation 2: oppression by one party on the other
o Kiriri Cotton Co Ltd v Ranchhoddas Keshavji Dewani (1960) landlord abused his
property rights to exploit those in need for housing (Rent Restriction
Ordinance – to protect a tenant)
Situation 3: class protecting statute
o A state that protects one group of people against another
o Kiriri: protects tenants from landlords who want inflated rental
Exception 3: Recovery when plaintiff does not rely on the illegal contract (p. 461)
Plaintiff relies on a basis that is separate and independent from the illegality
Main categories to recover:
o Tort of Conversion: when a person wants to assert their rights to goods,
especially rights of ownership, against a person who has the goods (do not
claim back the good on the contract)
Wrongfully taking possession of goods
Wrongfully disposing of them
Wrongfully refusing to give them up when demanded
o Contract of Bailment: delivery of goods by A to B but the goods still belong to A
Bowmakers Ltd v Barnet Instruments Ltd (1945) in an illegal contract of
bailment, the bailor/owner could recover his goods because he was
relying on his proprietary rights and not on the contract of bailment
o Collateral Contracts: entitled to damages for breach of the collateral contract
(that is not tainted by illegality)
60
Strongman (1945) Ltd v Sincock (1955) even though main contract was
illegal, the collateral contract was breached and the builder was
entitled to damages for breach of the collateral contract
Contradiction: if recovery is allowed by way of collateral contract,
plaintiff would be allowed to recover what cannot be recovered under
the illegal contract
Only allowed in exceptional circumstances
61
o Differing nature of the legitimate proprietary interests to be protected (Man
Financial and SMILE)
o Difference in bargaining power (Man Financial and SMILE)
o Public policy: “Every man shall be at liberty to work for himself, and shall not
be at liberty to deprive himself or the state of his labour, skill, or talent, by and
contract that he enters into” (Herbert Morris Ltd v Saxelby (1916))
When employee leaves employer, employer would have already obtained whatever it
has paid in terms of the employee’s services
o To have a covenant in ROT the employer needs proprietary interests to be
protected
Trade secrets
Business connections or clientele – employee must have personal
knowledge of and influence over the customers (Faccenda Chicken Ltd v
Fowler (1987))
Maintenance of a stable workforce (Man Financial)
Employee’s additional skill or knowledge of trade of profession during the course of
employment belongs to the employee and is very hard for the employer to inhibit the
use of
o Mason v Provident Clothing and Supply Co Ltd (1913) ROT provided that the
employee was not allowed to work in any similar business for three years
within 25 miles of London. Court ruled clause was wider than reasonably
necessary and the success of the employee was due to the employee’s natural
gift, less so with the training by the employer
o Fitch v Dewes (1921) unlimited time limit but there was a severely restricted
scope of the clause in terms of locality
o Buckman Laboratories (Asia) Pte ltd v Lee Wei Hoong (1999) legitimate interest
was not specific, geographical scope too wide
Employer cannot use a ROT to protect itself from competition from a former
employee (Stratech Systems Ltd v Nyam Chiu Shin (alias Yan Qiuxin) and others
(2005))
For medical practitioners, solicitors and accountants there is “special and intimate
knowledge of the patients of the business” (Routh v Jons (1947))
o SMILE unreasonable ROT because it was unlimited in duration
Mano Vikrant Singh v Cargill TSF Asia Pte Ltd (2012) unreasonable ROT because it
took away a right/entitlement that already belonged to Mr. Singh
Very difficult to enforce ROTs that forfeit benefits or rights accrued in return for the
employee undertaking the ROT covenant
o Can introduce a new element of benefit (i.e. monetary, new position, additional
paid leave, better terms of employment)
62
o Schroeder Music Publishing Co Ltd v Macaulay (1974) agreement extremely
unfair and totally unfair to the plaintiff court held the agreement was contrary
to public policy
Solus agreement or exclusive purchasing agreement
o Esso Petroleum Co Ltd v Harper’s Garage (Stourport) Ltd (1968) tie of 21 years
was unreasonable and unenforceable. Plaintiff failed to establish an advantage
that a shorter time period wouldn’t have been adequate for
o Alec Lobb (Garages) Ltd v Total Oil (Great Britain) Ltd (1985) tie for 21 years
was reasonable because there was a £35 000 benefit for the tie and plaintiff
was allowed to terminate after 7 years
63
Performance, Breach and Agreement (Chapter 16) (p. 479)
Discharge: contract comes to an end
o Termination: specifically for contracts
o Rescission: for misrepresentation
64
i.e. employment contracts – employees have been undertaken due to their unique
capabilities and attributes so their obligations cannot be fulfilled by someone else and
doing as such would amount to a breach of contract
65
wrong joining of certain rolled steel joists and concrete not properly mixed.
Builders were entitled to recover the contract price, less the amount found to
be defective
Cutter v Powell (1795)
o Cutter was to be paid 30 guineas upon completing the voyage. He passed
away 19 days before the end. The widow could not claim the 30 guineas
because the completion of the journey was a condition precedent to
completing the voyage
66
SGA s 30(1): Where the seller delivers the buyer a quantity of goods less than he
contracted to sell, the buyer may reject them, but if the buyer accepts the goods so
delivered the must pay for them at the contract rate
o Implied in fact at common law
o Where statute applies, partial deliveries must be met with proportional
payment at the contract rate (price per unit measure of the goods)
Can imply an entirely new contract – where innocent party accepts the partial
performance
o Agree to payment for work already done or goods already delivered
o Defendant must have had the option to take or refuse the benefit of the work
done (Sumpter v Hedges (1898)) – this falls more under restitutionary basis
Prevented Performance
One party prevents the other from fully performing
Possible for innocent party to claim some reasonable payment on a Quantum Meruit
basis
Planche v Colburn
67
1) Fails to perform or defectively performs obligations by breaching a condition
or innominate term which goes to the root of the contract (“I couldn’t do it”)
2) “Repudiates” their obligations under the contract (“I won’t do it”) OR
3) Makes further performance of obligations impossible (“I won’t let you do it”)
Actual breach: when one party has failed to perform at the time of performance
Anticipatory breach: when contract is breached in executory stage (before the
obligation is supposed to be performed)
o 2 & 3 can fall under this category
Repudiatory breach: breach allows a termination/renunciation of contract
o Breach of condition or innominate term that deprives substantially the whole
benefit
Non repudiatory breach: breach doesn’t allow for termination/renunciation of
contract
o Breach of warranty or innominate term that does not deprive substantially the
whole benefit
Making performance impossible (“I won’t let you do it”) (p. 490)
Actions of one party make it impossible for the other party to perform obligations
Aggrieved party who wants to discharge contract must prove that further
performance is impossible
o Not enough to prove that a reasonable person would conclude further
performance is impossible
Universal Cargo Carriers Corporation v Ciati (1957) Ciati had not performed its
obligations 3 days before the deadline but indicated he would be willing to perform if
he could – thus had not repudiated the contract. However, it was impossible for him
to perform the obligations without causing delay that would negate the commercial
purpose of the hire contract
Making further performance impossible can be an implied statement of repudiation
68
Actual breach giving rise to right of discharge (p. 492)
When a condition or innominate term depriving a part of substantially the whole
benefit is breached, aggrieved party may
o Elect to discharge
o Elect to affirm
Availability of monetary compensation is not determined by whether the contract has
been discharged or affirmed
69
White and Carter (Councils) Ltd v McGregor (1962) White and Carter supplies
advertising bins. Mcgregor previously placed advertisements with White and Carter’s
bins. White and Carter continued to advertise even when told not to. Contract was
such that full payment would be required if annual payment not made
o It was held that there is no duty to mitigate or act reasonably insofar as the
innocent party has a free choice whether to affirm or discharge the contract.
o However, it goes on to talk about legitimate interest:
Legitimate interest: a reason to carry on (not something you can sue
in damages)
If it can be shown that a person has no legitimate interest, financial or
otherwise, in performing the contract rather than claiming damages, he
ought not to be allowed to saddle the other party with an additional
burden with no benefit to himself
o Therefore, the party seeking to prevent the other party from affirming the
contract must establish that the other party had no legitimate interest
o Can claim full payment if the innocent party
Is claiming a fixed sum as opposed to unliquidated damages
Does not require the cooperation of the party in breach
Has a legitimate interest in continuing the contract
Doctrine of “legitimate interest” (MP-Bilt Pte Ltd v Oey Widarto (1999))
o Does not apply to previously accrued debts
o Does not apply when the innocent party can perform their obligation without
cooperation of the party in breach
o Does not apply when innocent party is under legal obligation or practical
compulsion to complete the performance
70
Frustration (Chapter 17) (p. 513)
Definition: without default of either party, a contractual obligation has become
incapable of being performed because the circumstances in which the performance is
called for would render it a thing radically different that which was undertaken by
the contract (Davis Contractors v Farehamd UDC (1956))
Should not be used to escape what has turned out to be a bad bargain
Parties are free to make contractual provisions in the case of eventualities
71
Even if not the subject matter, if what is destroyed is necessary for performance it
frustrates the contract
Exceptions
o Sale of goods: risk passes from seller to buyer, and once it has, if the buyer
destroys the goods, buyer is not discharged from his duty to pay the seller
o Building contracts: risk of damage or destruction lies with the builder until the
work is completed
72
Doctrine of frustration can be excluded by express agreement, but this does not apply
to illegality
Contract can be frustrated by foreseeable or even foreseen (with no express
provision) illegality
73
Choosing between several contracts (p. 522)
Due to a supervening event, a person is not able to perform all contracts but can still
perform some of them
If the contracting party chooses to perform some of the contracts, they cannot rely on
frustration to discharge them from the other contracts (Maritime National Fish v
Ocean Trawlers (1935))
74
o Low levels of foreseeability may suffice but the application of the doctrine will
be narrow
75
Remedies for Breach of Contract (Chapter 18) (p. 533)
Self Help Remedies (p. 533)
Repudiatory breach = aggrieved party can elect to end the contract
o Both parties will be released from any outstanding obligations
o Discharge of contract is a “self help” remedy – the remedy is in effect without
any intervention of the court
76
Difficulty in assessment is not bar to recovery i.e. speculative sum of money (assess
profits)
77
Unpleasantness of living in deteriorating premises until they became
uninhabitable due to landlord’s delay in repairs (Calabar Properties Ltd
v Stitcher (1984))
o Loss of reputation caused by grossly defective performance of an employer’s
obligations that results in financial loss to the employee
Malik v Bank of Credit and Commerce International SA (1998): implied
term of trust and confidence where employer was obliged to not use
corrupt and dishonest conduct that would tarnish the reputation of the
employees
o Where very purpose of contract was to provide enjoyment or prevent distress
(Jarvis v Swans Tours Ltd (1973))
o Farley v Skinner (2002)
Consider the cause of the inconvenience/discomfort
If cause is simply disappointment that the contract has been breached,
not recoverable
If cause is a sensory (sight, touch, hearing smell etc) experience,
damages can be recovered (subject to remoteness)
(a) “Naturally arising damages” and “damages arising from special circumstances”
Hadley v Baxendale (1854)
o Plaintiff’s mill’s crankshaft broke. Plaintiff needed to send crankshaft to
makers to make a new one. Defendant agreed to deliver shaft to makers.
78
Defendant only knew that the article to be carried was the broken shaft and
that the plaintiff was a miller. Defendant did not deliver shaft on time.
Plaintiff sued defendant for loss of profits owed to delay
Held: circumstances communicated to defendant did not show that a
delay in delivery would result in loss of profits of the mill therefore loss
of profits were too remote (irrecoverable)
Transporter, in this case, would assume the mill would have a
replacement shaft already – no urgency for the transport
o First limb: arising naturally
According to the usual course of things/in contemplation of both
parties at the time of contract
o Second limb: special circumstances
If special circumstances were known to both parties, losses may be
claimed
If special circumstances were wholly unknown to the party in breach,
aggrieved party can only claim losses that would have arisen naturally
If special circumstances were known, usually they would have been
provided for in the contract in special terms
In both cases, the knowledge of the defendant to the probability and nature of losses
of the plaintiff are critical
79
(c) Probability of type of loss (p. 555)
Given the knowledge (either imputed or actually) the defendant has, as reasonable
man must be able to foresee that there was a reasonable likelihood that damage
would result from the breach
Koufos v C Czarnikov Ltd (The Heron II) (1969) degree of probability is not too remote
if it is higher than that in tort
H Parsons (Livestock) Ltd v Uttley Ingham & Co Ltd (1978)
o Defendant provided plaintiff with faulty containers which led to the pig feed
getting mouldly. Pigs died of a rare intestinal disease as a result
o Ruled as being not too remote – reasonable foreseeable that the defective
container would lead to mouldy feed thus resulting in pigs getting ill
o Two tests of remoteness
Where loss is physical, a more relaxed test of “reasonable
foreseeability” of the type of damage as a bare possibility – don’t need
to contemplate extent of loss, only type
Where loss is economic, a stricter approach of “reasonable
contemplation” – should contemplate the extent of loss
(d) Types and extent of loss (p. 556)
H Parsons (Livestock) Ltd v Uttley Ingham & Co Ltd (1978)
o Should focus on whether the type of damage (physical injury/loss of
profit/loss of market) could be reasonably contemplated as liable to occur not
the extent of damage (the pigs dying)
Damages not too remote when
o Defendant ought to have known/actually knew the circumstances surrounding
the plaintiff that resulted in the loss
o Would have been obvious to a reasonable man that breach in contract would
have a significant likelihood of resulting in the type of loss that plaintiff
suffered
(e) The rationale for the rule in Hadley v Baxendale and the role of assumption of responsibility
(p. 559)
Robertson Quay Investment Pte Ltd v Steen Consultants Pte Ltd (2008)
o First limb of Hadley v Baxendale: damage is in reasonable contemplation of the
parties. Even if damage is not expressly provided for, if both contracting
parties thought about it, they would have agreed the contract-breaker should
be liable in damages for the “ordinary” damage
o Second limb: damage is not within reasonable contemplation. Inappropriate
to impute knowledge that such damage would arise from the breach.
However, if there is actual knowledge communicated to the defendant in
advance, they have agreed that should such damage occur, the defendant
would be liable
80
o First principle: aggrieved party to be placed in as good a situation as if the
contract had been performed
o Second principle: aggrieved party has a duty of taking all reasonable steps to
mitigate loss
If defendant took reasonable to steps to mitigate loss and incurred greater loss, those
increased losses are still recoverable (Banco de Portugal v Waterlow & Sons Ltd
(1932))
What is reasonable is dependant on the circumstances of each case (Payzu, Limited v
Saunders (1919))
o Cases of personable service, it is unreasonable to expect the plaintiff to
consider an offer by a party who has grossly injured them
o Cases of commercial contracts, generally reasonable to accept an offer (of
alternative performance) from the party in default
o Plaintiff usually not required to take steps they cannot afford
o Plaintiff not required to take steps that would place its commercial reputation
or good public relations at risk
o Plaintiff not required to take steps that involve complex litigation
Defendant has the burden of proof to show the plaintiff has not taken steps to
mitigate losses
o Courts usually favour the plaintiff even in doubtful cases (Strutt v Whitnell
(1975))
Need to mitigate only arises after contract is discharged
Mitigation has no relevance to the way the aggrieved party wants to have their
damages quantified
o Radford v De Froberville (1977) plaintiff can be awarded damages to provide
what the defendant failed to perform, even if there are more cost effective
ways to achieve the performance
81
(b) Reliance loss (p. 539)
Losses made in reliance on the contract being fulfilled
o i.e. paying for renovations that would have otherwise not been needed if the
contract hadn’t been formed
You make either reliance OR expectation loss. Do not double count (usually reliance
loss is counted in net profit)
(2) Placing the innocent party in the position as if contract was fully performed (p. 540)
General principle: court will quantify damages as to place the aggrieved party in the
monetary position they would have been had the contract been performed (Robinson
v Harman (1848))
o Total losses = Nett expectation loss + reliance loss + incidental loss +
indemnity loss
(a) Expectation or reliance basis: bad bargains, overly speculative expectation loss and pre-
contract reliance expenditure (p. 541)
General rule: aggrieved party is free to choose how best to quantify his or her losses
Bad bargains: reliance expenditure exceeds any expected gains
o CCC Films (London) Ltd v Impact Quadrant Films Ltd (1985): plaintiff has the
choice to claim over wasted expenditure or loss of profit unless the defendant
can prove that the plaintiff wouldn’t have recovered the expenditure if the
contract had been fulfilled
o Usually you will only claim expected loss in bad bargains (put back into
position as if the contract had been properly performed)
Speculative losses: aggrieved party should avoid quantifying damages on an
expectation basis
o Anglia Television Ltd v Reed (1972): profitability of the film was speculative in
nature (impossible to establish what profits would have been made) so Anglia
Television claimed its reliance losses. Anglia could recover both
Expenses incurred following the time of contract forming
Expenses incurred prior to its formation (subject to satisfying the test
of remoteness)
(b) Different bases for quantifying expectation loss: “Diminution in value” or “cost of cure” (p.
543)
Diminution in value: give the plaintiff the financial benefit they would have obtained
if the contract had been performed. Takes 2 forms
82
o Difference between market or resale value of the contractual performance and
the value as stated in the contract
o Where contractual performance entails the production of something that the
plaintiff intends to use in order to generate profit, the loss of user profit which
ought to have been earned had the defendant performed his obligations
o Usual in sale of goods cases
Cost of cure: give the plaintiff a sum of money to repair any defects due to the
defendant’s breach of contract
o Plaintiff is in a position as if the defendant performed their part of the contract
and aims to award the plaintiff the sum which they have paid or would have to
pay for an equivalent substitute performance
Can only claim ONE
o Radford v De Froberville (1977): cost of cure can be recovered even if there is
no diminution in value. Plaintiff hired defendant to erect a wall screening off
their property from another property. Lack of erecting this wall did not
change the market value (diminution in value) but the plaintiff had not been
supplied what was contracted for (cost of cure). Damages were the full cost of
erecting the wall in accordance to the very detailed specification in the
agreement
Cost of cure is reasonable if
o Cure is necessary to mitigate losses
o If P effected the cure or intends to do so?
o P’s intention: sell for profit or personal use?
Usually more reasonable for personal use
o Is the cost of cure proportionate to the loss?
Tito v Waddell (No 2) (1977): courts refused to award cost of cure because it was
unclear whether the plaintiff would use the damages to rectify the defective
performance
Radford v De Froberville (1977) and Dean v Ainley (1987): cost of cure awarded
because plaintiffs satisfied the court that they intended to use the damages to rectify
defective performance
Ruxley Electronics and Construction Ltd v Forsyth (1996)
o Intention for damages is only relevant for reasonableness, not whether it
should be awarded. When an item is irreparably damaged then the owner is
entitled to the value of the article, irrespective of whether they intend to
replace it or spend the money on something else
o Cost of cure not awarded because the construction of the pool was achieved to
a substantial extent. Damages would be disproportionate to the non-monetary
losses. Forsyth could not be allowed “to create a loss, which does not exist”
o Digging up the imperfectly built pool and reconstructing it were deemed
unreasonable
83
o Ascertain damage suffered at the time of breach – this is when the plaintiff
knows of the breach and is able to take steps to mitigating the loss
o If plaintiff did not know of the breach then court will assess damages at the
time of discovery with reasonable diligence
o If impossible to mitigate losses, court may delay assessment until it is possible
to
o If there was a reasonable probability the defendant would make good their
default then time of assessment is when this is no longer probable
o In cases of late performance, time of assessment will be the time of the late
performance (not when it ought to be performed)
o In cases of anticipatory breach, time of assessment is when the defendant
ought to have performed (not at the point of anticipatory breach)
84
o Failure to obey the order by the court can lead to penal sanctions
(fine/imprisonment)
“The court gives specific performance instead of damages, only when it can by that
means do more perfect and complete justice” (Wilson v Northampton and Banbury
Junction Railway Company (1874))
Government Proceedings Act s 27(1)(a): specific performance is not available
against the Singapore Government to which the state is a party
85
Statutory Damages in Lieu of or in Addition to Specific Performance or Injunction (p.
572)
Supreme Court of Judicature Act First Schedule:
o High court has power to grant all reliefs and remedies at law and in equity,
including damages in addition to, or in substitution for, an injunction or
specific performance
o Powers also extended to District and Magistrate’s courts in Subordinate Courts
Act s 31(1) 52
Ho Kian Siang v Ong Cheng Hoo (2000): damages in lieu/in addition to SP and
injunction are discretionary (as opposed to damages for breach of contract which are
available as of right)
86
o Lodder v Slowley (1901): court allowed Slowley to recober on the basis of
quantum meruit for the value of the work he had completed up to the point of
the breach of contract
o Partial performance does not necessarily always mean conferring a benefit –
defendant can “subjectively devalue” the partial performance and argue that
the partial performance had no benefit
o Undeniable benefits:
Receipt of a sum of money (even partially paid)
Partial provision of goods or services that relieved defendant from
inevitable and necessary expenses
o In cases of incontrovertible benefits contract price should be ignored
o “requested for” benefit: sufficient indicator that the person desires and
values the benefit
Can also impliedly request (i.e. encourage)
Usually people regard having been benefitted by receiving part of what
they requested for
o Recovery of advance payments depends on the non-blameworthiness of
plaintiff
Siong Kee v Beng Tiong Trading, Import and Export (1988) Pte Ltd
(2000) when plaintiff himself is at fault, court will not award quantum
meruit
Contractual Basis
Contractual parties forgot to agree on remuneration so court will infer a promise to
pay a reasonable amount
Restitutionary Basis
Obligation is imposed on the parties by the law without reference to any promsi or
agreement
87
Tort of Negligence (Chapter 6) (p. 133)
Tort: a wrong
o Does not have to have a contract
o If there is a contract, then can sue in both tort and contract
o Civil (not criminal) liability enforceable by the individual (not state)
o Usually imposes duty not to act in certain ways
My right = your obligation
Negligent conduct: acts performed carelessly or without proper care
A person must act with reasonable care – if not they MAY be liable to compensate
those to whom they owe a duty
There are legal rules that serve as control mechanisms or devices to define the
circumstances in which a careless act or omission causes harm
o Not all forms of negligent conduct will result in legal liability
88
Test can be used for when careless act or omission caused physical
damage/injury/nervous shock to primary victim and consequential
economic loss
Cannot be used for PURE economic loss or secondary victims of
nervous shock
Anns v Merton London Borough Council (1978): council’s negligent failure to carry out
inspections resulted in inadequate foundations of the structure. Was a duty of care
owed to the lessee (plaintiff)?
o Two stage test:
Is there a sufficient relationship of proximity or neighbourhood such
that, in the reasonable contemplation of the defendant, the carelessness
of the defendant would be likely to cause damage to the plaintiff?
If yes, are there any considerations that ought to negate, reduce or limit
the scope of the duty or the class of persons to whom it is owed or the
damages to which a breach would give rise?
o Criticised for being too broad to state the scope of duty of care
Caparo Industries plc v Dickman (1990): existing shareholder bought additional
shares from the company in reliance on the defendants’ audit report. Accounts of the
company were negligently audited. Plaintiff lost monies as a result. Is there duty of
care owed to the plaintiff to take reasonable care in auditing the accounts?
o Three elements for establishing duty of care
Foreseeability of damage
Relationship of proximity
Whether it is fair, just and reasonable to impose a duty
o Do not use in Singapore
Meaning of “Foreseeability”, “Proximity” and “Fair, Just and Reasonable” or Public Policy (p.
138)
Foreseeability: negligent act is likely to result in the damage suffered by the plaintiff
o Focus on the foreseeable harm and class of persons who may be affected
Proximity: precise relationship between plaintiff and defendant
Fair, just and reasonable or public policy: generally used interchangeably
o Public considerations employed by judges
Need to preempt potentially defensive behavior of defendants
Public benefit
Ensuring consistency between common law and statutory purposes
89
o Preliminary requirement: factual foreseeability
There is factual foreseeability if the defendant ought to have known
that the claimant would suffer damage from his (the defendant's)
carelessness
o First stage: proximity
Focus on relationship between plaintiff and defendant (physical,
circumstantial and casual proximity)
Includes voluntary assumption of responsibility and reliance
If satisfied, prima facie duty of care established. Move onto second
stage
o Second stage: any consideration that ought to negate or limit the duty that
has arisen under the first stage
Floodgates: Open defendant to liability in an indeterminate amount for
an indeterminate time to an indeterminate class. Will negate/limit the
duty
Contractual matrix: according to the contract
Relative bargaining position of parties: might be unfair to make
someone who is in a lower bargaining position liable
Man B&W Diesel SE Asia Pte Ltd and another v PT Bumi International Tankers and
another appeal (2004): contract said MSE would be fully responsible for work
performed by its subcontractors and nothing shall create a contractual relationship
between sub-contractor and Bumi
o Contracting with MSE meant that Bumi should seek redress with MSE for the
faulty engines, not MBS
TV Media Pte Ltd v De Cruz Andrea Heidi and another appeal (2004): negligence
liability for physical damage due to the manufacturer’s defective products is extended
to distributors and wholesalers
90
Defects in construction or functionality are treated as economic loss, not physical
damage
o Defects may or may not lead to actual damage
Generally unproblematic and uncontroversial – physical damage caused by
defendant’s act is direct and obvious
o i.e. car accident where the plaintiff suffers personal or property damage
The Sunrise Crane (2004): Sunrise Crane owed a duty of care to inform the Pristine of
the nature of the cargo immediately prior to the transfer of the contaminate acid as it
was foreseeable that failure to inform the plaintiffs would result in the damage of the
plaintiff’s vessel
General rule: no duty of care arises from mere omissions
o No duty of care for a person to save another person with whom there is no
prior relationship
o Exception: special relationship between plaintiff and defendant with a
voluntary assumption of responsibility
o Exception: defendant knew or ought to know that the third party has created a
source of danger on the defendant’s premises and failed to take reasonable
steps to prevent danger from damaging the plaintiff’s property
Can also get consequential economic loss
o Monetary loss resulting from physical damage/injury i.e. medical fees, repair
cost, loss of income
Use Donoghue v Stevenson under Spandeck
91
Advice was acted upon by the plaintiff to their detriment
Negligent Acts or Omissions Causing Nervous Shock of Psychiatric Harm (p. 152)
Only applies to recognized psychiatric illnesses (not mere mental distress, anxiety or
disappointment) not associated with any physical injury
92
Page v Smith (1996): plaintiff (who is a primary victim) can recover for psychiatric
injury as long as some form of injury was foreseeable flowing from the negligent act
o Due to car crash caused by defendant’s negligence, plaintiff (primary victim)
suffered from chronic fatigue syndrome. Since physical injury was
foreseeable, not necessary for plaintiff to show psychiatric injury was
foreseeable
Ngiam Kong Seng v Lim Chiew Hock (2008): argues there should not be a distinction
between primary and secondary victims. Should have a single test that applies to
both primary and secondary victims
o Duty of care exists if three proximity requirements are satisfied:
Closeness of relationship between plaintiff and primary victim (i.e.
parent-child, husband-wife) (circumstantial proximity)
Proximity of plaintiff to the accident in time and space (physical
proximity
Means by which shock is caused (causal proximity)
Mcloughlin v O’Brian (1983): “the closer the tie (not merely in any relationship, but in
care) the greater the claim for consideration” (in reference to circumstantial
proximity)
o Plaintiff did not see the accident but saw her injured family members in the
hospital. Court allowed recovery
o Use for cases of secondary victims
Show close and loving relationship between plaintiff and sufferer
Proximity in time and space to the accident
The means by which the shock is caused either through actual sight or
hearing of the event or its immediate aftermath
Pang Koi Fa v Lim Djoe Phing (1993): involved medical negligence that eventually
culminated in the death of the plaintiff’s daughter
o First proximity: satisfied, mother-daughter relationship
o Second proximity: plaintiff was proximate in time and space to the tortious
event (death of her daughter) as plaintiff witnessed the negligent diagnosis,
negligent operation and negligent post-operative treatment
93
Bolton v Stone (1951): plaintiff was injured by a cricket ball. Probability
of a person outside the cricketing grounds being hit was very low.
Held: defendant did not breach their duty of care to the plaintiff to
prevent the accident
o If likelihood is serious, higher standard of care required
Paris v Stepney Borough Council (1951): plaintiff was already injured in
one eye, therefore had a higher chance of blindness compared to a
normal person. Held: employer breached duty of care by not providing
goggles plaintiff goggles for his work as a garage hand
Cost of avoiding injury
o Needs to be balanced with risk of harm
o Latimer v AEC Ltd (1953): plaintiff tripped and fell on the floor of a factory
owned by defendant and sued for negligence
Held: defendant did not breach its duty of care
Defendant already took reasonable steps to remove the effects of the
flood and was unreasonable to expect them t close the factory
o Wagon Mound (No 2) (1967): a reasonable man would only neglect a small risk
provided they had a valid reason for doing so (i.e. considerable expense to
eliminate the risk). He would weight it against the difficult of eliminating it
Presence of potential hazards/dangers posed to the plaintiff (i.e. contaminated nitric
acid in The Sunrise Crane)
Presence of industrial standards and regulations (i.e. employer’s duties to employees
(Chandran a/l Subbiah v Dockers Marine Pte Ltd (2010))
Level of plaintiff employee’s experience, training and skills (i.e. Zheng Yu Shan v Lian
Beng Construction (1988) Pte Ltd (2009))
Level of knowledge and commercial sophistication of the plaintiff clients (Go Dante
Yap v Bank Austria Creditanstalt AG (2011))
Standard of Care Relating to Professionals and Professional Standards and Practice (p. 156)
In regard to professionals, standard of care is what is reasonably expected of a
reasonably competent professional with respect to that particular field
Specialist must exercise the ordinary skills of their specialty (Maynard v West
Midlands Regional Health Authority (1984))
Bolam v Friern Hospital Management Committee (1957): Test is based on the standard
of the ordinary skilled man exercising and professing to have that special skill. A
professional need not possess the highest expert skill at the risk of being found
negligent. Sufficient if they exercise the ordinary skill of an ordinary competent
person exercising that particular art
Level of experience is not relevant in determining the standard of care (Wilsher v
Essex Area Health Authority (1988))
Professional can still be liable under tort of negligence even if they met professional
standards
o Professional standards are only a guideline
o Fong Muan Yee v Yoon Weng Ho Robert (1997): not common practice for
lawyers to verify their instructions
Held: breached duty of care
Failing to verify instructions had a foreseeable risk that the defendant
would be acting without authority
94
Defendant lawyer could have avoided risks by taking steps to confirm
his authority to act or warn the plaintiff he was acting without
authority
95
o Barnett v Chelsea & Kensington Hospital (1969): patient would have died even
with correct medical treatment. Held: doctor negligently refusing to examine
patient did not cause the death of the patient
“but for” can be failed due to the presence of variables that cannot be established by
the plaintiff on a balance of probabilities
o Yeo Peng Hock Henry v Pai Lily (2001): GP did not advice plaintiff to see a
specialist or go to the hospital immediately. Plaintiff didn’t get an earlier
diagnosis and lost her sight.
Held: defendant fell short of the standard of care required by a GP
However, GP wouldn’t be expected to detect the actual rare disease that
she had
Whether the plaintiff’s eye could be saved would be subject to variables
Held: plaintiff had not proven, on a balance of probabilities, that if the
defendant had advised her to go to a hospital immediately that her eye
would have been saved
“but for” is not applicable in the context of medical practitioner’s failing to warn
patients about risk of surgery
o Chester v Afshar (2005): insufficient evidence to show that if duly warned if the
patient would not have undergone surgery
“but for” test can lead to absurd results in multiple causation cases (i.e. both causes
do not cause the damage). Therefore use the next section below
96
o Held: defendant’s conduct caused the damage. Remedy was awarded on the
grounds of fairness
o McGhee v National Coal Board (1973): if defendant has sole control over the
agent of harm he may be liable even if plaintiff can only establish that the
defendant negligently increased the risk of harm
Employer failed to provide showers to wash off brick dust employee
was exposed to and materially increased the risk of employee
contracting dermatitis
Held: defendant caused the damage even though it could not be
established that the dermatitis was caused by the brick dust during the
period the defendant failed to provide showers
o Marker v Corus (UK) plc (2006): one of the exposures to asbestos was partly
due to a failure of the plaintiff to take reasonable care of himself
Fairchild exception still applicable
Difference – defendants not jointly and severally liable, liable only
according to their respective contributions to the risks
97
o Facts of case: charterers of the ship breached their duty in spilling fuel oil
which spread to the plaintiff’s wharf, damaging the wharf. Plaintiff’s molten
metal from the wharf caught fire to the cotton waste in the oil
o Held: although fire was directly caused by defendant’s breach, it was not
foreseeable that the oil would catch fire in water. Plaintiff’s claim for
negligence failed
Wagon Mound (No 2) (1967): defendants (shipowners) found liable because fire was
foreseeable and risk could have been eliminated in the circumstances (thus could not
be neglected)
Jolley v Sutton London Borough Council (2000): plaintiff, school boy, suffered spinal
injuries from trying to repair an abandoned boat
o Held: defendants (council that did not remove the boat from the grassed
playground area) were liable
o Hughes v Lord Advocate (1963): as long as the cause of the accident was a
“known source of danger”, the defendant would be liable even if the accident
was caused in a way which could not have been foreseen
98
The plaintiff being involved in a wrongdoing does not provide a good defense
o Ooi Han Sun v Bee Hua Meng (1991): a plaintiff who does not have a permit to
be in the country does not prevent him from claiming damages against the
negligent defendant that caused his injuries. However, plaintiff did not get
compensated on the basis of what he would have earned working illegally
For defence to be valid, plaintiff’s wrongdoing must be sufficiently connected to the
damage and defendant’s damage must be proportionate to plaintiff’s wrongdoing
o Ashton v Turner (1981): plaintiff suffered the injury in the course of
committing a crime together with the defendant
o Clunis v Camden and Islington Health Authority (1998): plaintiff claimed against
the health care authority for their negligent omissions to provide psychiatric
care which allegedly resulted in the plaintiff killing someone
o Stone & Rolls Ltd Moore Stephens (2009): plaintiff company claimed auditors
were negligent in failing to detect fraud by S. S was the sole directing mind
and will of the company, fraud was imputed into the company so auditors not
liable
United Project Consultants Pte Ltd v Leong Kwok Onn (trading as Leong Kwok Onn &
Co) (2005): defence of ex turpi causa can apply to reprehensible or grossly immoral
conduct (along with criminal offenses)
99
(a) shall not defeat any defence arising under a contract
(b) where there is a limitation of liability clause, amount recoverable
shall not exceed the maximum limit
To reduce damages based on contributory negligence, no need for defendant to show
that the plaintiff had been in breach of duty of care (Khoo Bee Keong v Ang Chun Hong
and another (2005))
100
Agency (Chapter 20) (p. 618)
Agent: one who acts on someone else’s behalf
What is agency?
o KS Rajah JC (in Thai Kenaf Co Ltd v Keck Seng (S) Pte Ltd (1992): “the
relationship that exists between two persons when one, called the agent, is
considered in law to represent the other, called the principal, in such a way as
to be able to affect the principal’s legal position in respect of strangers to the
relationship by the making of contracts or the disposition of property”
Agent is in charge of negotiating, concluding and even executing the contract on the
principal’s behalf but is not personally bound between the principal and the third
party
o “Drops out” of picture as soon as the contract is concluded (as long as agent
acts within their authority)
o Recourse is against the principal, not the agent
101
o Need to apply principles for construction of contracts
o Lord Reid (in Ashford Shire Council v Dependable Motors Pty Ltd (1961)):
“extent of agent’s authority, if in doubt, must be determined by inference from
the whole circumstances”
102
If agent professed to be acting on their own or failed to tell the third party they
were acting on the behalf of the principal, principal cannot ratify
Keighley, Maxsted & Co v Durant (1901): agent was authorized to buy wheat at a
certain price for the defendants. Agent acted in excess and bought it at a higher
price from the plaintiffs but in his own name. Defendant ratified the purchase the
next day but failed to take the delivery of wheat. HOL held ratification was
ineffective as agent acted in his own name. Defendant had no contractual
obligations to plaintiff
2. Principal must be in existence at the time the transaction was completed and must be
legally competent then and at time of ratification
Not applicable to companies in accordance to s 41 Companies Act (CA): a
company can ratify a contract, entered into by agent prior to formation, after its
formation. Company will then be bound by and entitled to benefits of the contract
3. General rule: all acts done by the agent, even unlawful ones, can be ratified by the
principal
Contracts void at inception and acts prohibited by statute cannot be ratified
4. Ratification must be in time
If there is a time fixed for the performance of the contract, ratification must be
within that period of time
If there is no fixed time, ratification should occur within a reasonable time of the
principal acquiring knowledge of the unauthorized transaction
5. Principal should be named and identifiable by the agent to the third party
103
offer which can be withdrawn until acceptance (Maugham J in Watson v Davies
(1931))
104
Undisclosed principal’s right to intervene is dependent on agent acting within their
authority and intention to act on the principal’s behalf
Once principal intervenes, agent loses their right to sue and liability to be sued
Once the third party becomes aware of principal’s existence, they can choose whether
to sue the principal or agent
o Earl Carins LC in Kendall v Hamilton (1879): third party “may sue the agent, or
he may sue the principal, but if he sues the agent and recovers judgment, he
cannot afterwards sue the principal, even although the judgment does not
result in satisfaction of debt”
Cannot ratify and there is no apparent/implied authority
105
Representation must come principal or someone who was actually authorized by
principal
o Generally insufficient if representation comes from agent
o Lord Donaldson MR in United Bank of Kuwait v Hammond (1988): “an agent
cannot ordinarily confer ostensible authority on himself”
Interested in two areas
o Authority to enter contract and loss of profits
o Authority to receive the goods
106
(b) Duty not to make a secret profit (p. 636)
Agent not allowed to use their position, without knowledge or assent by principal, to
make a personal profit or for a personal advantage
o Includes property or confidential information
Not allowed to accept bribes or secret commissions from third parties the agent is
dealing with on behalf of the principal
o By accepting the bribe, both agent and third party are criminally liable under
Prevention of Corruption Act (PCA)
o Bribe can also be forfeited or confiscated under Corruption, Drug Trafficking
and Other Serious Crimes (Confiscation of Benefits) Act
107
o Agent agreed to be personally liable
Subject to proper construction of the contract with the third party
Common practice in that particular trade or business
Usual course of business between the specific parties
When principal is undisclosed
o By statute
s 26 of Bills of Exchange Act (BEA): “where a person signs a bill as
drawer, indorser, or acceptor, and adds words to his signature,
indicating that he signs for or on behalf of a principal, or in a
representative character, he is not personally liable thereon; but the
mere addition to his signature of words describing him as an agent, or
as filling a representative character, does not exempt him from
personal liability”
s 41 of CA: renders agent personally liable on pre-incorporation
contracts if they are not subsequently ratified by the company after its
incorporation
o Agent who contracted outside their authority and whose principal does not
ratify, may be liable to the third party for breach of the agent’s implied
warranty of authority
Willes J in Collen v Wright (1857): “a person who induces another to
contract with him as the agent of a third party by an unqualified
assertion to his being authorized to act as such agent, is answerable to
the person who so contracts for any damages which he may sustain by
reason of the assertion of authority being untrue”
If the third party knows or must be taken to know of the agent’s lack of
authority, the agent is not made liable
If principal ratifies, agent is not liable anymore
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Privity of Contract and Third Parties (Chapter 9) (p. 269)
Doctrine of privity of contract: only parties to a contract can sue and be liable to be
sued in respect of rights and obligations under that contract
o First rule: Third party cannot enforce a benefit promised under a contract
Does not allow third parties to interfere
o Second rule: Contracting parties cannot impose a burden on the third party
Protects third parties from being involuntarily burdened by obligations
under a contract they are not privy to
Nature of obligations is that they should voluntary
Rationale: contracting parties need to know their risk of legal liabilities. i.e.: Am I only
liable to the person that I have entered into a contract with?
Beswick v Beswick (1968): nephew to pay uncle £6 10s per week for the rest of his life.
If uncle died, to pay the aunt £5 a week for the rest of her life. When uncle died,
nephew only paid one payment of £5 to the aunt.
o Held: aunt could not personally claim against the nephew since she was not
privy to the contract
o She could claim as administratrix for the uncle’s estate as she was claiming on
behalf of the uncle and he was privy to the contract
As if the HUSBAND is suing
Estate pays for the suit
o She did get the money in the end
Twedle v Atkinson (1861): contract was between the fathers to pay the groom
o One of the father’s died and the groom tried to enforce the contract by suing
the estate
o Held: that the husband did not provide consideration and was not privy to the
contract
Dunlop v Selfridge (1915): Dunlop (manufacturer) sold tires to Dew (wholesaler).
Contract had a term that said cannot sell below a certain price. Wholesaler sold to
Selfridge (retailer). Also had a term that cannot sell below a certain price. Selfridge
sold below the certain price. TWO CONTRACTS
o Contract between Dew and Selfridge was breached
o Dew did not sue because if Selfridge sells cheaper then Dew will get more
business from Selfridge
Suing the retailer might mean no more business between retailer and
wholesaler
o The more expensive the product, the more the manufacturer benefits
o Held: Dunlop was not privy to the contract and therefore cannot enforce
Contracts (Rights of Third Parties) Act (CRTPA)
o s 2(5): “and such remedy shall not be refused on the ground that, as against
the promisor, the third party is a volunteer”
Arguments based on the doctrine of consideration cannot defeat a third
party’s claim
o s 8(1): does not override common law, ad hoc statutory techniques for
avoiding the privity rule nor prevent the creation of new techniques
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Third Party Enforcement of Benefits under Contract: Techniques to Get Around the
Privity Rule (p. 272)
Common law exceptions. The rule can produce injustice
Commercially inconvenient – i.e. agency
Many exceptions created
o Statutory exceptions i.e. car insurance (cars are driven by different people not
just the person that buys it)
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o Emerged from the context of the shipping industry where the benefit of an
exemption clause ought to be shared to third parties (stevedores employed by
the carrier to unload the cargo owner’s goods from the carrier’s vessel)
o Sometimes stevedores negligently damaged the goods in the course of
unloading and the cargo owner sued in tort of negligence. The stevedores
sought to rely on the exemption clause in the contract of carriage they were
not privy to
Scruttons Ltd v Midland Silicones Ltd (1962): held that the stevedores could rely on
the clause if four conditions were met
o Bill of lading (contract of carriage of goods by sea) makes it clear the third
party stevedore is to be protected by the exemption clause
o Bill of lading makes it clear that the carrier is acting as an agent for the
stevedore
o Carrier has authority from the stevedore to do so
o There are no difficulties about consideration moving from the stevedore
o The clause in Scruttons did not meet these conditions as it made no reference
to the stevedores at all
New Zealand Shipping Co Ltd v AM Sattherwaite & Co Ltd (The Eurymedon) (1975):
clause satisfied the four conditions and became known as the “Himalaya Clause”
o 1st condition: exemption clause was to “protect any servant or agent of the
carrier including any independent contractor from time to time employed by
the carrier”
o 2nd condition: “the carrier is or shall be deemed to be acting as agent or trustee
on behalf of and for the benefit of all persons who are or might be his servants
or agents from time to time”
o 3rd condition: carrier is a wholly owned subsidiary of the stevedores, so there
was authority
o 4th condition: there was a unilateral collateral contract. Cargo owners made a
unilateral offer to extend the benefit of the exemption clause to anyone who
unloaded their goods at the port of destination. Stevedores unloading =
acceptance and consideration
s 2(6) and s(7)(a) of CRTPA has a more direct method of enforcing an exemption
clause in a contract to which a stevedore is not privy to
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o If promisee suffered no damages and is suing for the sole benefit of the third
party they can only be entitled to nominal damages
Jackson v Horizon Holidays (1975): Mr. Jackson (the promisee) went on holiday with
his family (third party) but holiday was below the standard promised by Horizon
Holidays (promisor)
o Promisee sued and was awarded £1,100 of which £500 was for mental
distress
o Most of the judges felt that the award was solely for the promisee’s loss (might
have increased due to seeing his family in distress)
o Lord Denning said that in certain contracts promisee should be allowed to
claim for the loss of third parties
Woodar Investment Development Ltd v Wimpey Construction UK Ltd (1980): promisee
cannot be allowed to recover damages on behalf of the third party
o Court suggested that certain types of contracts might warrant special
treatment (however this has yet to be applied to law):
Contracts for family holidays
Meals in a restaurant for a party
Hiring a taxi for a group
Linden Gardens Trust v Lenesta Sludge Disposals (1994): building contractor
(promisor) breached its contract with the owner of the site (promisee). Defects only
showed up after the development was sold to the third party
o Original owner tried to sue on behalf of the third party but promisor argued
that the promisee was only entitled to nominal damages as promisee didn’t
suffer any loss themselves
o House of Lords ruled promisee was allowed to claim in respect to the third
party’s loss by applying a principle in The Albazero (1977)
“where it is in the contemplation of the parties that the proprietary
interests in goods may be transferred from one owner to another after
the contract has been entered into and before the breach which causes
damage to the goods, an original party to the contract, if such be the
intention of them both, is to be treated in law as having entered into the
contract for the benefit of all persons who may acquire an interest in the
goods before they are damaged, and is entitled to recover, by way of
damages for breach of contract, the actual loss sustained by these
persons.”
The 4 criteria to prove is:
Commercial contract for goods
Contemplation of the parties that the proprietary interests in the
goods will be transferred to 3rd parties
After original contract but before the breach
INTENTION of both original parties for 3rd party to benefit in
law
Promisor and promisee contracted with the knowledge that the
development would be occupied and possibly sold to third parties
Prevented the third party from suing on contract
Must have been the intention of the parties that the promisee is entitled
to claim for the third party’s loss due to promisor’s defective
performance
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o Narrow ground: Albazero exception. Only applicable if there is a legal “black
hole”
Legal “black hole”: party with the right to sue has not suffered
substantial loss of the one who did has no such right due to lack of
privity
Defaulting party escapes liability
Promisee only claims nominal damages
Third party cannot enforce contract
No legal black hole if the party suffering substantial loss has the right to
sue
Alters the position of PRIVITY
o Broad ground: third party’s loss is the promisee’s own loss
It is the loss of their performance interest in the contract because they
did not receive what they bargained for
Alter the position of DAMAGES
Alfred McAlpine Construction Ltd v Panatown Ltd (2000): could not use the narrow
ground because the third party was conferred a “duty of care deed” that allowed the
third party a direct right of action against the promisor
o Majority of the judges ruled in favour of the broad ground
Chia Kok Leong and another v Prosperland Pte Ltd (2005): promisee (Prosperland)
was the developer of a condominium. Promisors were the main contractor and
architects
o Contractor and architects defectively performed but this only showed after the
promisee had sold ownership to the third party (MCST)
o Court applied “narrow ground” even though MCST had direct action against
the promisor under tort of negligence
Only express contractual “provision of a direct entitlement” prevents
the application of the narrow ground
Limited right of tort did not remove the black hole
Narrow ground is ratio decidendi in this case
o The broad ground was probably more consistent with principle
The only problem that could arise was that the builder could be
exposed to double liability
Had nothing to do with the “filling up” of a legal black hole
Should not be a prerequisite for the application of the exception under
the broad ground that the building employer had to show that he had
already carried out the repairs or intended to do so
Can only be used in a limited area
Family Food Court v Seah Boon Lock and another (2008): court restates its views on
the general scope and application of the “broad” or “narrow” grounds and consider
whether they could apply to an agent acting on behalf of an undisclosed principal
o Loss recoverable under broad ground must be genuine and subject to an
objective test of reasonableness
To prevent unexpected profits (windfall)
Remedies should be awarded to third party
o Losses recoverable under breach are subject to satisfy the requirements under
remedies (causation, remoteness, mitigation and assessment)
o Broad and narrow grounds cannot be applied simultaneously
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o When an agent is seeking to claim on behalf of an undisclosed principal,
cannot use narrow ground
Albazero exception only applies when, at the time of contract, it was
contemplated that the proprietary interest in the subject matter would
be transferred by the promisee to the third party
Undisclosed principal = no contemplation
o Law unsettled whether agent for an undisclosed principal can use broad
ground
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s 2(2): subject to proper construction
Can be express or implied
Can prevent implication by expressly stating that there is no
intention to benefit third parties
See CLAAS Medical Centre Pte Ltd v Ng Boon Ching (2010) for scope and application of
ss 2(1)(b)and 2(2) (p. 273)
Imposing Burdens on Third Parties: Techniques to Get Around the Privity Rule (p. 288)
Sub-bailment Contracts (p. 288)
Bailment: arises when an owner of goods (bailor) parts with the possession of their
goods by delivering them to another person (bailee) to hold for a time or to have
something done to them before returning possession of the goods to the bailor
o i.e. jewellery taken to jewelers for repair
Sub-bailment: the bailee bails the same goods to a sub-bailee
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Is the third party (original bailor) burdened by the exemption clause contained in the
sub-bailment contract between bailee and sub-bailee?
o If bailor impliedly or expressly consented to the terms of sub-bailment, they
are bound (Morris v CW Martin & Sons Ltd (1966))
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