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GDL Law Notes GDL Contract Law Notes

Terms Part 1 Notes

Updated Terms Part 1 Notes

GDL Contract Law Notes

GDL Contract Law

Approximately 560 pages

A collection of the best GDL notes the director of Oxbridge Notes (an Oxford law graduate) could find after combing through applications from top students and carefully evaluating each on accuracy, formatting, logical structure, spelling/grammar, conciseness and "wow-factor". In short these are what we believe to be the strongest set of GDL notes available in the UK this year. This collection of GDL notes is fully updated for recent exams, also making them the most up-to-date GDL study materials ...

The following is a more accessible plain text extract of the PDF sample above, taken from our GDL Contract Law Notes. Due to the challenges of extracting text from PDFs, it will have odd formatting:

  • Terms either express or implied

    • Implied: In fact (presumed intentions of parties) or In law

Terms or representations

  • Poole: ‘The main distinction …. Is that a term involves a promise as to the truth of the statement, whereas a representation involves no such promise as to truth, although the statement in question does induce the making of the contract’

  • But legal consequences are not the same (distinction less important since Misrepresentation Act 1967)

    • Ability to claim damages : automatic for breach whereas must prove fault for misrepresentation

    • Measure of damages: expectation measure for breach, tortious for misrepresentation

    • Remoteness Rule: in tort you can claim for all direct damage whereas with breach of contract the loss must be in the reasonable contemplation of the parties and/or that other party has ‘assumed responsibility for that loss’ (Transfield Shipping Inc. v Mercator Shipping inc.)

Express Terms

Statements made during negotiations

  • Material statements: 2 groups

  1. Statements of fact which the parties do not intend to be binding – representations if they help to induce the making of the contract

  2. Statements of fact which the parties do intend to be binding – seen as promissory in nature - conditions, warranties or innominate terms

Express term of a contract or a representation

  • Where a statement is made during negotiations with the purpose of inducing the other party to enter into contract there prima facie ground for inferring the statement was intended to be a binding term

    • But this can be rebutted if it is shown that it would not be reasonable to hold him bound by it

  • Objective Test – ‘What would a reasonable man understand to be the intention of the parties, having regard to all the circumstances?’

  • The importance of the statement

    • Will be regarded as a term if it can be shown that the injured party considered it so important that they would not have entered into the contract otherwise

      • Bannerman v White:

        • Negotiations to purchase hops – D was assured that they did not contain sulphur

        • D had right to treat contract as repudiated as the statement was understood and intended by the parties to be a term of the contract

      • Pritchard v Cook & Red Ltd:

        • D produced the manufacturer’s specifications for car which he had copied on to his own headed notepaper – the written contract made no reference to it

        • CA – specifications were a term of the contract on the importance attached test (C had asked to see it) – by copying it down onto his own paper, the D had taken personal responsibility

  • Timing

    • If said at the time of contracting then more likely to be a term: if there is a delay then it will be less likely

      • Routledge v McKay: seller told buyer in good faith a week before contracting, that a car was a 1941 or 1942 model (was in fact a 1930): lapse of time meant that it was a representation

  • Reduction of the contract into writing

    • Routledge v McKay: oral agreement wasn’t included in the written contract, suggesting that it was not significant (as parties would have ensured inclusion if it was)

    • But this is not conclusive: other factors taken into account

      • Birch v Paramount Estates: written contract made no reference to statement – but CA still saw statement as contractual term – here D was held to have special skill and knowledge

  • Special knowledge or skill

    • Contrasting cases:

      • Oscar Chess Ltd v Williams: C (car dealer) and D (customer): D confirmed the wrong registration date on his car, in good faith, so received more for it than it was worth - HELD: age of the car was not a term of the contract – no breach by the D

      • Dick Bentley Productions v Harold Smith (Motors) - skill/expertise was in the hands of the statement maker and thus the statement DID amount to a term of contract – CA distinguished Oscar – D was a car dealer who should have had superior knowledge

    • Statement may become a term where the vendor expressly accepts the responsibility of the soundness of the sale item in question

      • Schawel v Reade – C attempted to examine horse before purchase but was told that he didn’t need to look for anything as horse was fit for stud: 1) did D represent that horse was fit 2) did the C rely on it: answer to both was yes so statement deemed to be a term

        • Difficult to reconcile with Hopkins v Tanqueray: about a horse again – ‘I assure you that he is perfectly sound in every respect’ – Court of Common Pleas held that the D’s statement was a representation

        • In Schawel v Reade the contract was made on the same day that the statement was made whereas in Hopkins v Tanquearay there was delay

        • Also in Schawel v Reade the D actually dissuaded the C from making checks - contrast Ecay v Godfrey – seller of a boat said it was sound but advised buyer to have it surveyed –did not intend his statement to be taken as a term

Express Terms

  • Difficulties may arise in adducing evidence which is extrinsic to a writing agreement

The Parol Evidence Rule

  • States that if the contract is written then that writing is the whole contract and the parties cannot adduce extrinsic evidence, especially oral evidence, to ‘add to, vary, or contradict that writing’ (Henderson v Arthur)

  • Used to be applied strictly – but exceptions - collateral contracts + all implied terms

    • Does not apply where the written agreement is not the whole agreement – (circular argument)

  • J Evans & Son (Portsmouth) Ltd v Andrea Merzario Ltd – oral promise DID have contractual force as D attached great importance to the carriage of goods under deck and on the basis that he would not have agreed to the new mode of carriage but for the promise

    • Oral assurance was an express term as the contract was partly oral and partly written

  • Same result in Couchman v Hill – documents were held to form not the whole, but only part of the contract – oral assurance could be held side by side with them so as to constitute a single and binding transaction

The effect of signature

  • L’Estrange v E. Graucob Ltd:...

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