100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached
logo-home
Exam Notes for Contract Law B £5.99   Add to cart

Lecture notes

Exam Notes for Contract Law B

 48 views  1 purchase

A comprehensive summary of lecture notes and textbook materials used in preparation for the assessment.

Preview 4 out of 32  pages

  • January 21, 2021
  • 32
  • 2017/2018
  • Lecture notes
  • -
  • All classes
All documents for this subject (2)
avatar-seller
graceliew88
01 MISREPRESENTATION

Duty to disclose
1. General rule: There is no duty to disclose material facts known to one party but not to the
other during contract negotiations (Keates v Cadogan)
 Mere non-disclosure / Silence does not amount to misrepresentation
 A positive action is required: Words / Conduct (Third Equitable Benefit Building
Society v Borders)
 Exception: Uberrimae fidei contracts – Contracts of the utmost good faith
- Obligation to disclose all material information relevant to the transaction under
consideration (e.g. insurance contracts)

Elements of an actionable misrepresentation
2. (1) A statement (2) of fact / law (3) made by / on behalf of the representor (4) to the
representee (5) that is false, (6) induces the representee to enter into the contract & (7) is
material

3. (1) A statement
 Objective test: Its impact on a “reasonable representee in the position of & with the
known characteristics of the actual representee” (MCI WorldCom International Inc v
Primus Telecommunications Inc)
 Statement: “A definite / clear expression of something” (Oxford Dictionaries) that
invites reliance
- Express
 Words: Spoken / written
- Implied
 Actions
 Walters v Morgan: Nod, wink, shake of the head, smile
 Bodger v Nicholls: Taking a cow to a public market states absence of
knowledge of infectious diseases  In determinate contexts, actions that
otherwise bear no special meaning can be deemed to imply precise
representations
 Spice Girls Ltd v Aprilia World Services: The representation implicit in
the approval & use of the promotional material amounted to a
misrepresentation by conduct

4. (2) Of fact / law
 Fact: An expression regarding a determinate state of affairs, past / present
- Exceptions
 Mere puffs (“sales talk”)
 Exaggerated praise which cannot be the basis for an actionable
misrepresentation (Dimmock v Hallett)
 Ratio: Intrinsically unreliable
 Court pleadings
 The purpose of these statements is to advance the case of the party, to
be admitted / denied by the opposing party & ultimately submitted for
judicial decision (Boileau v Rutlin)

- Statement of opinion: Where the representor expresses their subjective views
about a specific matter
 General rule: Not actionable in itself
 Ratio: Intrinsically subjective
 Smith v Land & House Property Corp
o Fact: C purchased a hotel after a tenant was described as most
desirable
o Held: Contract rescinded for misrepresentation

, o Principle: An opinion itself may not form a misrepresentation, but
the facts which formed that opinion may give rise to a
misrepresentation; An opinion must be made with reasonable
grounds supporting it

 Exception: Actionable where the statement implies a statement of fact
 A statement of opinion always implies a statement of fact that the
representor genuinely holds that opinion (Bissett v Wilkinson)
 If the representor has special knowledge / expertise relative to the other
party, / is in a strong position to verify the truth  Implied statement of
fact that there are reasonable grounds to support the opinion
o Esso Petroleum Co Ltd v Mardon
- Fact: Esso severely underestimated the sales of petrol in a
petrol station due to changing circumstances which he was aware
of  Mardon relied on this estimation
- Held: Esso liable (there was reliance & the Hedley Byrne
principle was applicable)
o Bissett v Wilkinson
- Fact: A merchant of land represented that the land was capable
of rearing a certain number of sheep  The land was only
suitable for less sheep
- Held: No misrepresentation (D was not an expert  Had not
provided any assurance)

- Statement of intention: An expression regarding a present plan for future conduct
 General rule: Not actionable (present intention)
 Ratio: Subjective & predictive nature  Intrinsically unreliable
 Exception: Actionable where the statement implies a statement of fact
 A statement of intention always implies a statement of fact that the
representor genuinely holds that intention (Edgington v Fitzmaurice;
Spice Girls Ltd v Aprilia World Services)
 ‘Continuing representation’ principle: If a person states that they have a
particular intention, yet they subsequently change their mind, before the
conclusion of the contract, they must inform the person to whom they
expressed their intention (conflicting authorities)
o Traill v Baring
- Fact: D changed his mind in assurance of a risk
- Held: Contract rescinded (significant statement of intent)
- Preferred authority: Consistent with principles of representations
which are later falsified
o Wales v Wadham
- Fact: Prior to a divorce settlement agreement, the wife
represented that she had no intention of remarrying  Before the
agreement was concluded, her intentions changed, but the
representation was not corrected
- Held: No rescission (the statement was true at the time)

 Law: An expression regarding the state of the law
- Historically not actionable
- Kleinwort Benson Ltd v Lincoln City Council: H/L held for the 1st time that money paid
as a result of mistake of law could be reclaimed by the mistaken party
- Applied in Pankhania v Hackney LBC

5. (3) Made by / on behalf of the representor
 General rule: The statement must’ve been made by the party against whom relief is
sought (Hasan v Willson) / by his agent (Garnac Grain Co Inc v H.M. Faure &
Fairclough Ltd)

,  Exception: A statement made by a 3rd party may be actionable if one of the contracting
parties had notice (actual / constructive) of this vitiating factor (Royal Bank of Scotland
(No. 2) v Etridge)
6. (4) To the representee
 3 categories of representees (Swift v Winterbotham)
- Persons to whom the statement is addressed directly
- Person to whom the representor intended / could expect the statement to be
communicated, despite not addressing it to them directly
- All members of a class to which the statement was generally directed

7. (5) That is false
 General rules
- Onus of proof lies with the representee (Vernon v Keys)
- Objectively assessed: Representor’s beliefs immaterial (R v Aspinall)
- Time of assessment: When statement is acted upon (Ship v Crosskill)
- Assessed from the perspective of a normal person in the position of the representee
(Glasier v Rolls)
 Exception: Where the statement has a special meaning in the particular context
 Assessed subjectively (Woodhouse v Swift)
- A statement is either true / false: Mutually exclusive. jointly exhaustive (Gross v
Lewis Hillman Ltd)

 The criterion to deal with partially inaccurate statements
- As long as it is substantially correct (difference immaterial)  No misrepresentation
(Avon Insurance plc v Swire Fraser Ltd  Raiffeisen Zentralbank Osterreich AG v
RBS)
 Statements that are false, despite appearing accurate
- A partial non-disclosure can amount to a false statement: “Half-truth
 Arkwright v Newbold
 Fact: Corporate case where some information was removed from the
prospectus
 Held: Misrepresentation
- Suppression of material facts can render an otherwise accurate statement false
 Dimmock v Hallett
 Fact: D told C that all farms on the land were fully let  D failed to
mention that the majority of tenants had given notice to vacate
 Held: Misrepresentation
- A statement which is literally true, yet is treated as false because it positively
misleads the representee
 Notts Patent Brick & Tile Co v Butler
 Fact: D informed C that he was not aware of any restrictive covenants,
yet omitted the fact that he had intentionally chosen not to look into this
matter
 Held: Misrepresentation
- Statements that were initially true but became false subsequently, prior to the
conclusion of the contract
 With v O’Flanagan
 Fact: The value of a company declined after it had been correctly
represented to be a certain value prior to the contract’s conclusion
 Held: Misrepresentation
 Principle: “A representation made as a matter of inducement to enter into
a contract is to be treated as a continuing representation”
 “Where the representation has a continuing effect, the representor has a
continuing responsibility in respect of its accuracy” (Cramaso LLP v Ogilvie-
Grant)

8. (6) Induces the representee to enter into the contract: Causation / Reliance / Inducement
 A misrepresentation is actionable only if it “caused” the representee to enter into the
contract (Raiffeisen Zentralbank Osterreich v RBS)

,  Subjective analysis: Impact on the actual representee




 Causation test
- Non-fraudulent misrepresentation
 “But for” causation: But for the representation, the representee would not have
entered that contract / not on those terms (Raiffeisen Zentralbank Osterreich v
RBS)
 Not necessary for the misrepresentation to be the sole / primary cause:
Sufficient to show that it was an effective cause (JEB Fasteners v Marks Bloom
& Co)
- Fraudulent misrepresentation
 Sufficient to show that it was “actively present” in the mind of the representee
(Edgington v Fitzmaurice) (more tenuous causal link than a non-fraudulent one)
- Corollaries of the causation requirement
 If the representee is unaware of the false statement / knows that it is false
(Horsfall v Thomas)  No reliance
 If the judgment of the representee is not affected “in any material degree”  No
reliance (JEB Fasteners v Marks Bloom & Co)
 The fact that the representee could’ve discovered that the statement was false
by conducting the necessary due diligence is irrelevant
 Redgrave v Hurd
o Fact: D misrepresented & C didn’t check the accounts
o Held: Misrepresentation  Contract rescinded
o Principle: There is no duty to verify a representation, even where
it is easy & there is an invitation to do so
 Exception: Where the representor was wholly innocent & the
representee was better placed to acquire accurate information, but failed
to take reasonable steps to do so  No reliance but risk-taking
(Hayward v Zurich Insurance Company)
 Burden of proof lies with the representee

9. (7) Material
 "The statement must be one which would affect the judgment of a reasonable person
in decident whether, / on what terms to enter into the contract” (Treitel)
 Objective analysis: Impact on a reasonable person in the same position
 Arguable whether it is an autonomous requirement for misrepresentation
- In favour
 Treitel: Materiality explains why mere puffs & informal statements are not
actionable
 McDowell v Fraser  Pan Atlantic Insurance v Pine Top Insurance; MCI
WorldCom International v Primus Telecommunications)
- Against
 Chitty, O’Sullivan: Materiality is a significant element of causation (particularly
relevant in causation which gives rise to a rebuttable presumption)  No
independent role
 Exceptions: Where materiality is irrelevant
- Fraudulent representation is actionable whether it was material (Smith v Kay)
- If the contract expressly establishes that specific representations were material 
Irrelevant whether they were in fact material (Andersen v Fitzgerald)

Remedies
10. Rescission
 Primary remedy for misrepresentation
 General rule: Available to the representee whether the misrepresentation was
fraudulent / negligent / innocent (Salt v Stratstone Specialist Ltd)
 Effects of rescission

The benefits of buying summaries with Stuvia:

Guaranteed quality through customer reviews

Guaranteed quality through customer reviews

Stuvia customers have reviewed more than 700,000 summaries. This how you know that you are buying the best documents.

Quick and easy check-out

Quick and easy check-out

You can quickly pay through credit card for the summaries. There is no membership needed.

Focus on what matters

Focus on what matters

Your fellow students write the study notes themselves, which is why the documents are always reliable and up-to-date. This ensures you quickly get to the core!

Frequently asked questions

What do I get when I buy this document?

You get a PDF, available immediately after your purchase. The purchased document is accessible anytime, anywhere and indefinitely through your profile.

Satisfaction guarantee: how does it work?

Our satisfaction guarantee ensures that you always find a study document that suits you well. You fill out a form, and our customer service team takes care of the rest.

Who am I buying these notes from?

Stuvia is a marketplace, so you are not buying this document from us, but from seller graceliew88. Stuvia facilitates payment to the seller.

Will I be stuck with a subscription?

No, you only buy these notes for £5.99. You're not tied to anything after your purchase.

Can Stuvia be trusted?

4.6 stars on Google & Trustpilot (+1000 reviews)

67474 documents were sold in the last 30 days

Founded in 2010, the go-to place to buy revision notes and other study material for 14 years now

Start selling
£5.99  1x  sold
  • (0)
  Add to cart